Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Mercy or “The Law” – God or Man?

My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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I am writing to you, directors, staff, associated contributors, and volunteers working together at and for EWTN and Catholic Media on the topic of Pope Francis in general, and in particular, regarding the critical stance being taken most notably from what could be called an “elite sector” in Western society. This criticism may best be symbolized in the title question “What about Pope Francis vs His Critics – Mercy or “The Law”?”

Almost from his very first day in office, Pope Francis has enthralled many while also irking others. Born 17 December 1936, Jorge Bergoglio lived and served as a Jesuit, mostly in Argentina, for 55 years until his election as Bishop of Rome, the 266th Roman Pontiff, the 265th successor of Saint Peter, on March 13th, 2013, just two weeks after Pope Benedict XVI’s historic resignation on February 28th. He immediately manifested preference for the poor, the suffering, the marginalized, and those who are neglected, abandoned, and cast aside.

Then, just two and a half years later, Pope Francis inaugurated the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, a period of prayer from 8 December 2015, the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception, to 20 November 2016, the Feast of Christ the King. During this time Pope Francis called on all the clergy to extend God’s mercy to the faithful, encouraging people to trust in God’s mercy and come back to the reception of the sacraments. He made it easier for priests to show mercy over making strict applications of the law. He also created numerous opportunities for the faithful to obtain plenary indulgences.

Ever since then, in particular, a resistance movement has arisen among both laity and clergy, including prominent bishops and even cardinals, that is highly critical of Pope Francis, going so far as to hold him as incompetent and in contempt of his role as Pope. As we step back to take a wide view of the situation, what becomes most apparent is a series of parallels with the People of Israel, the Apostolic Age, and Church history.

While they were in the desert and on the way to the Promised Land, the People of Israel complained about their harsh conditions and on numerous occasions declared loudly and long that they were much better off in Egypt, asking Moses to bring them back. They preferred going back into slavery rather than rough it for a while on the way to the fulfillment of God’s promises to them. They preferred the familiar to following God.

Much the same happened during the Apostolic Age. Even as Saint Paul brought the Good News to the pagan world and welcomed many converts to faith in Jesus Christ, there was no lack of Jewish Christians who not only wanted to keep the practice of The Law, but also insisted that all male pagan converts be circumcised and obliged to follow all the demands of The Law as well. They preferred a familiar Moses to following Jesus.

Paul called those people “Judaizers” and “circumcisers” and denounced them for preferring the old life of law and order rather than following Jesus and putting their trust in Him. They preferred the familiarity of The Law to this new adventure of trust in God’s mercy and they were loath to no longer live by their own will but in God’s love and mercy with trust in the Holy Spirit. They were afraid to leave the familiarity of “The Law”.

This same tension persisted throughout the history of the Church founded by Jesus Christ on his Apostles as well as the history of the People of Israel. Jesus calls us all to put our trust in God the Father and in Him, his Son, whom the Father sent into the world. Being baptized, receiving the Holy Spirit, and living a new life required leaving behind everything of the old way of living, including habits of sin. During the first millennium, countless people, including Emperor Constantine, uncertain of being able to follow the Gospel thoroughly, delayed being baptized. Later on, it was the Sacrament of Confession that people delayed until their death bed, when the forgiveness of sins could only be given once in a lifetime as a “second chance” after Baptism.

God in Jesus Christ offers humanity a new life of communion in the Most Holy Trinity; so why would we want to go back to a life of slavery under the scrutiny of The Law which no one was able to observe perfectly anyway? It can only be the allure of control, or of the illusion of control. It doesn’t take long before those who prefer to have everything “under control” try to “take charge” rather than obey and put their trust in God.

The religious leaders of Jesus’ day, as those who preceded them also did, stood firmly on The Law because it gave them control over the people and the affairs of the Temple. They could judge who was faithful and who was not, who were the pure and impure, and rule their society accordingly. They didn’t have to rely on God. It also hearkens back to the day when the people demanded of Samuel a king like the other nations all around them. God replied to Samuel that it was not the prophet that the people had rejected, but they were rejecting God as king over them in preference of a human king. It has always ever been about control.

It is not a small thing to call into question the Bishop of Rome at any time in the history of the Church. It is even bolder if not arrogant to do so in our time; when the popes have been men with incredible credentials, experience, and wisdom. In the face of all these detractors, I feel rather powerless. Who am I, anyway? I'm nobody, with no doctorate but only a B.A. in English literature with double minor in philosophy and theology 50 years ago, a civil and also an ecclesiastic Bachelor of Theology., and an M.A. in Pastoral Studies, General Ministry 40 years ago, a retired priest doing part time ministry in Montreal, Québec.

I know that saints and servants of God like Catherine de Hueck Doherty, the Foundress of the Madonna House Apostolate, would react strongly to those who criticize and spread doubt about the Pope. They would declare loudly that "the voice of the bishop is the voice of God". If, as his detractors claim, Pope Francis is the product of a false or flawed election, if he is either incompetent or stupid, if he really is leading the Church and the world astray; then Jesus has gone on vacation, or is asleep as He was on the boat, or has resigned as Lord. These scenarios are unthinkable. It would be to claim that Jesus is no longer faithful to his promise as recorded by St. Matthew at the end of his Gospel; that He would be with us until the end.

It could be said that the trend to denounce Pope Francis is rooted at least in part in a white elite – both clerical / religious and lay / secular in the U.S.A. deeply invested in their long experience of power, influence and control as churchmen and churchwomen in their society; as well as having a long history as a nation of dictating to the whole world what is required of them in order to align themselves correctly with “American interests”. Pope Francis challenges them, as Jesus did, and they hate him for it. In this sense, they are doing to Pope Francis exactly as the Jewish religious leaders did to Jesus in his day. Why people anywhere have uncritically joined this trend, I don't know and can't understand, but perhaps it's not for me to know.

All this confusion and controversy around Pope Francis has to do, at least in part, with the possibility of admitting to Holy Communion people whose marriage situation is irregular. As I understand it, Pope Francis wants us to get close enough to people to "get dirty", that is, to be affected by their struggle in order to come to understand their plight more closely, specifically, and intimately. Only then can we bring some clarity from the Gospel to them and help them learn to discern God's will for them. This process of discernment cannot be done in a "cookie cutter" kind of way, but only one unique person at a time. We are not to tell people what to do or have the temerity to claim to discern for them or on their behalf, but what God does expect us to do, in charity and humility, is to help them become more familiar with and understanding of the Scriptures, our faith Tradition and the teaching of the Church since the Apostles, and to help awaken their conscience to discern God’s will.

In some cases, such as when a party has been abused or victimized by a divorce, that is, abandoned by their former spouse, and they clearly bear no part of responsibility for the divorce; if the person is manifestly being called by the Lord to Communion and have a great need of the Bread of Life, a pastor could very well receive them after a good confession. Of course, the pastor would have to do all he can to help the person take the steps necessary for them to have their status clarified or regularized, such as through the nullity process, but this is not always possible for people, for one reason or another, or their life situation may not afford enough time.

It seems as though it is due to such cases that Pope Francis wants us to understand the Church more as a field hospital than a museum or an organization for the rewarding and acknowledgement of the worthy. As pastors, we are called to serve people personally, one person at a time, rather than "rule from on high" and try to make sweeping policies. We are not to “parade in public” as the Pharisees, Sadducees, scribes, lawyers, and priests did in Jesus’ day, and strutting about lording it over ordinary people, most egregiously the poor.

Those who take objection with Pope Francis want a universal "one size fits all" moral policy, perhaps so as to avoid the trouble of "getting dirty" by getting “too” close to people and their miseries. I believe many of them are sincerely troubled by the state of the world, of society, and of the suffering of souls, and they want to help, but they are impatient with this personal pastoral approach. They are highly resistant to and intolerant of Pope Francis’ unrelenting insistence that we all “go to the peripheries” where people are judged, condemned, pushed, isolated, relegated, and abandoned by our obsession with law and order. We demand an expedient universal and legal solution; maybe afraid people might abuse God's mercy and try to enjoy grace and sin simultaneously.

I believe that Pope Francis trusts us to have more judgment than that and he expects us to discern such cases of abuse and to personally warn people to repent such attitudes and behaviors. It seems clear enough from Pope Francis' preaching and talks that he is more than well versed in our Catholic tradition and moral teaching and never provides shadows or opportunity to misinterpret God's will or his laws. On the contrary, Pope Francis is known for giving very practical counsel in his homilies, talks, and encounters.

I believe one reason that Pope Francis irks many is precisely because he is addressing our inclination to be parsimonious with God's mercy; whereas God in Jesus is extravagantly generous with his mercy. The sincerity and authenticity of Divine Mercy as Jesus revealed Himself to Saint Sister Faustina is such that his voice would shame anyone trying to abuse his mercy, so warm and personal is his invitation to come to Him. God is quite capable of scrutinizing souls and He doesn't need us to probe people's consciences. The “scrutiny” of the Holy Spirit, reaches deeply into human spirits and consciences, for the Spirit is (Heb 4:12-13) “penetrating indeed, (and) the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing until it divides soul from spirit, joints from marrow; it is able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart. And before him no creature is hidden, but all are naked and laid bare to the eyes of the one to whom we must render an account.”

It is sufficient for us to declare the Good News, all of it, to allow ourselves to be touched by the miseries and troubles of souls, and let the Holy Spirit do the rest. God's ways are far above our ways, and He is patient towards souls so that they might repent willingly and enter into his love and mercy. There are those who are impatient with the Lord's ways as they are with Pope Francis, and they would want to "lay down the law".

This is how I understand the controversy between mercy and laying down the law. Pope Francis' call for us to "do mercy" and "bring God's mercy" to people and to the world in no way trumps or cancels the moral law or the Church's tradition. They are both essential and complementary. As a Church for centuries we were simply too heavily leaning on the side of law and order, with abundant threats of hell fire, and without mercy.

While it may be true that people generally have lost a sense of sin as such, they are not without having troubled consciences. They tend to know when they are being too selfish or unkind to others, when they have “messed up” and are not their best selves, and even when they may not be honest and true towards God. When we walk kindly with people and show them that we genuinely love them and are worthy of their trust, all the painful truth tends to come out. I don't think we will help souls is we demand the Pope apply generalizations about morality and the conditions of souls in a “one size fits all” manner more suited to the marketplace.

The more we encourage doubt about the moral leadership of Pope Francis; we will actually do more harm to souls. His entire approach is to call everyone, from the most learned to the least, to understand and to practice the discipline of discernment. It is the only way for people to find their way to God; lest we intrude between souls and God pretending we know better than souls how to discern the will of God for them.

When pastors tried to do that in the past few centuries, they merely succeeded in showing people that their clergy were unworthy of trust. For generations clergy would not let people discern in their own consciences, not trusting them to do it. It was felt that only those well versed in moral theology could discern what is right and wrong in specific instances. People were taught to go ask the pastor, rather than use their own judgment. We can see today the result in the almost universal abandonment of the Church by people in many places.

When we take too much place in people's interior lives, we actually move in on the private place within souls that the Most Holy Trinity reserve to them. That is a serious offense against souls and against God, and I believe it is this danger that has been troubling me about this whole controversy over Pope Francis' pontificate. Our distrust of Pope Francis reveals our unwillingness to fully trust in God and his reign in hearts, minds, and souls. We don't trust that God is managing very well; so we feel He needs us to step in and make things clear. This controversy isn't really about Pope Francis, but about us and our unwillingness to really trust in God and obey Him even in these matters. We are unwilling to be lambs as Jesus was, with complete trust in his Father. As we have clung for centuries to our hegemony over the entire world; so now we want to push the Lord aside and take over management of the Kingdom of God.

This worldwide controversy is about power and influence, prosperity, affluence, wealth, and control. By analogy, nations like the U.S.A., Canada, and the other G7, and even China; all carry the conviction that their understanding of the world and the way things should be is the only way. They are blind to how they "shout over" the voices of the poor, little, and less powerful nations; like rich, healthy, and powerful people do over the timid voices of the poor, convinced that they know better. This is the cause of many conflicts worldwide.

All the while, all too often, leaders of nations and rebellions are blind, as we are blind to the ways in which we exploit the poor and enjoy too much of what the Creator intends for all to enjoy. I've heard Raymond Arroyo and other commentators on EWTN and other mass media criticize Pope Francis, and they seemed to me to be the picture of this blindness of the affluent, blinded by their own self interest and that of their class.

In all of this, I don't hold myself guiltless; on the contrary, I struggle with being a citizen of this nation in Canada that continues arrogantly in its self-assurance to enact policies and behaviors that remain to this day very much in the "colonizing" mentality of the first Europeans who came here and had a "free for all" with the abundant resources they saw in this land, among which native peoples trod with reverence. Since then we have very irreverently trodden down on them in our greed to grab all the goods that we can as quickly as we can.

Among those who go with this currently trending discourse that is critical of Pope Francis; it is felt that his insistence on extending the mercy of God to contemporary society coincides with a failure to clarify the moral demands of the divine law as revealed in the Scriptures. This trend in the broader Catholic culture seems to look nostalgically to the anathema statements of many of the councils which preceded Vatican II and regrets the “softer approach” taken since Vatican II in an effort to present the Good News to contemporary society in a manner which can capture the mind and heart of people much as Jesus did during his brief ministry on Earth.

This line of thinking goes something like this: “What is the use of proclaiming God’s mercy to people who have no sense of sin? Convinced as they are that they have no sin, they have no sense of being in need of God’s mercy.” This view is held to show the need to proclaim loud and long the Decalogue, the Ten Commandments, and to make practical applications to ceaselessly denounce all contemporary behaviors that go against God’s law, much as the religious leaders did in Jesus’ day. It is felt that people can only begin to understand their need of God’s forgiveness and mercy once they realize they are breaking God’s law. So, all those who hold this view are understandably critical of Pope Francis, in part due to the fact that they do not understand what he is trying to do or why he is trying to do it. They want the highest voice in the Roman Catholic Church to never tire of proclaiming the demands of moral law and consequences people must expect to suffer for each transgression.

Pope Francis is not of the view that the Church needs to “lay down the law” so that people can come to realize that they are breaking it. On the contrary, Pope Francis is of the view that the Holy Spirit is already at work in people’s spirits and consciences, and they already have a sense that all is not well in the kingdom of Denmark. Human beings today, as in all generations, realize full well that, for all their posturing and demands, they are not satisfied or at peace or entirely happy. Something is missing in their lives. Pope Francis teaches and models St. Ignatius’ method of discernment of spirits to help people learn to distinguish the voice of God.

Pope Francis’ view of life and of ministry, of the Church’s mission, is that we must follow in the steps of Jesus and “go out to the peripheries” in order to encounter people up close, to walk with them, get to know them, and as they discover that we are genuinely interested in them and their welfare; they will open their minds and hearts to us, much as Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman did with Jesus. Only then, only once they put questions to us, can we find words to speak the good news to them, as is done by good Christians everywhere.

The Holy Spirit at work in them will draw them to listen to the Holy Spirit speaking through us, but only once they know that we truly love them. The first thing people need is the love and mercy of God, and for many if not most people, they will only get their first glimpse of God’s love and mercy when we show them God’s love and mercy by loving and having mercy on them ourselves. People only need to be exposed to God’s life-giving love and mercy once in order to be touched by God. Only then can they want to know what God wants and how they can please Him. Only then will morality and a moral life make any sense and seem good to them.

Our Church took the “law and order” approach for centuries, and for the most part, it produced people who were literate to some degree in Christianity but who did not know God or his love and mercy. Once the trials and temptations of modern progress came, they did not last, like the seed thrown among thorns or in rocky soil. Not having root, they dried up and left the Church or the faith or God. Look at Quebec and Ireland, among other places, even including the U.S.A. Jesus did not form disciples by preaching morality but by loving them. He called them to follow Him and showed them how to love and care for the sheep. He corrected them in very personal ways and was patient and understanding with them to the end, showing them love to the point of death.

There is one author who has known Jorge Bergoglio personally, and who understands the depths of Pope Francis’ theology and pastoral approach and who has been able to trace his interior and ecclesial itinerary and demonstrate with specific applications in real instances what it is that Pope Francis has been doing since his election and how and why he is calling us to join him in this approach or mercy to people today.

In “The Great Reformer. (2014) Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope” Austin Ivereigh traces Jorge Bergoglio in his journey through life, vocation, and ministry, drawing out the unifying threads whereby God formed him to become the universal pastor needed by our Church today. Ivereigh is a Catholic “British writer, journalist, and commentator on religious and political affairs who holds a doctorate from Oxford University.

His work appears regularly in the Jesuit magazine America and in many other periodicals.” He published a sequel in 2019 titled “Wounded Shepherd. Pope Francis and His Struggle to Convert the Catholic Church”. In this second work, among other things, the author addresses Pope Francis’ statements, actions, and positions that became controversial in the media or for Catholic critics or both. He explains with great insight what the Pope is doing and why he is doing it; as well as why he generally does not rebut his critics directly, but takes note of them and on occasion says something about those situations when and where he thinks it is appropriate. In this sense, Pope Francis deliberately walks in the steps of Jesus who was also generally “silent as a lamb before its shearers”. As a man of discernment, he ever seeks to do everything for the glory of God.

It would be wise for those who are critical of Pope Francis to read these two volumes before continuing to lead people to join them in doubting the Pope’s reliability. It is ironic that, as a Jesuit, Jorge Bergoglio is far better educated and far more deeply formed and spiritually mature than the vast majority of us, and even than his fiercest critics. It very much seems a case of the more ignorant being critical of one who is far wiser, precisely because they are not capable of understanding him, his approach, or his motives. That is what happened to Jesus and how He was treated by the religious leaders of his day, who were also far less intelligent and far less “formed spiritually” than Jesus, and hence quite incapable of understanding Him. Ultimately, this is a question of humility, docility, willingness to learn, and willingness to listen and obey; as Jesus did his Father.

This seems to be the inevitable pattern of the original sin, that we human beings, creatures who are the works of God’s hand, turn around in judgment and accuse our Creator, precisely because we cannot reduce Him to the narrow confines of our understanding. Since He doesn’t fit our categories; therefore He must be wrong, He must be guilty. Pope Francis doesn’t fit our categories; so he must be wrong and incompetent.

My distinct impression is that Pope Francis has more confidence in us than we are willing to have in him. He knows that there is already sufficient record of God’s laws in human culture and society, in terms of the Ten Commandments, but in other terms as well. What is most lacking is sufficient tangible and personal, up close demonstration of God’s infinite love and mercy. Jesus seems to agree because He troubled Himself to form and establish Saint Sister Faustina Kowalska as “his secretary of Divine Mercy” for the world in the 1930’s.

What seems obvious in Pope Francis’ approach as Bishop of Rome and universal Pastor is that, in his view, looking at the Church in the world as a whole, we clergy are far too inclined to “lay down the law” from the comfort of our residences, as from behind our fortresses, rather than get “out there” where we are most likely to “get dirty” and “take on the smell of the sheep”. Were we to really walk with people – those farthest away from God and the Church especially – and genuinely listen to them and care for them; they might meet Mercy.

Pope Francis is calling on all the clergy, all the missionary disciples, and all the laity of the Church to “go out to the peripheries”, to find the lost sheep, to care for those “beaten up and left for dead at the side of the world’s roads”, “do mercy”, and become God’s mercy for them. Once they are touched by the love and mercy of God and discover that He is real and that He truly loves them; their spirits will perceive the Holy Spirit and want to know all that pleases and all that displeases Him, all that promotes life and all that harms life. Of course, we must all continue to preach the Good News and to proclaim God’s law and explain it on a regular basis, but our focus is not to be on “laying down the law”, but rather on becoming and doing Divine Mercy. Rather than try to “line people up in the sights” of our “morality guns”; we are called by the Lord Jesus to approach people humbly and with open faces, empty hands, and broken hearts.

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My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Sunday, May 23, 2021

Let us choose life and every Sunday worship God with gratitude for all He does for us - and avoid scandalizing little ones which is what we do when we stay home.

My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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YEAR OF THE COVID-19 WORLDWIDE PANDEMIC


As soon as churches open up again, I think it would be a matter of life or death for us all to make a point of making time to go to church together all of us, particularly families with children, little ones, teenagers, and young adults. Worshipping the Lord and taking the whole of the Lord's Day to rest is not a suggestion from God, but it is the 3rd commandment. These are serious truths, that if we go against them, we do ourselves mortal harm, to our spirits and to our whole lives, as well as to all those we influence by example through our decisions, words, actions, attitudes, choices and behaviours.

God doesn't need our worship, but if we don't give it to him, we are harming ourselves. We cannot take anything away from God, but we can choose to live and have more life or we can choose to die and waste away... the choice is ours every day of our lives. Thankfully, as Pope Francis keeps repeating, God never tires of forgiving us. To this we too can give witness by accepting what God offers.

One of the greatest obstacles the enemy of all mankind puts in our spirits is the impression that even thinking about going to church is a burden, a chore, stealing or wasting time to do more important things like rest. The danger of these thoughts and feelings is that the enemy is a liar, Jesus told us, and the father of lies. His favourite trick is to slip these dark thoughts into our minds in such a way that we have the impression that these are our own thoughts, feelings, opinions, and convictions.

The truth is that the more we turn to God and make a point of putting our trust in the Lord, and not in ourselves, then the more God can refill us again and again with his Holy Spirit and give us the vitality we otherwise lack. Our very breath comes to us from God, the Source of all life. 

Jesus wasn't kidding or speaking symbolically when He said that unless we eat his flesh and drink his blood we HAVE NO LIFE within us. In Reconciliation God restores our loving relationship with the Father and fills us anew with his life and vitality, and in Holy Communion, Jesus gives us a TRANSFUSION of the divine life He has with the Father in the Holy Spirit. These realities may be spiritual and often invisible to our senses, but they are more real than what we can see.

Take great care, dear Parents, not to scandalize your children by harming them with contradictions. On the one hand you are telling them how important it is to receive God's life and love in Confession and Holy Communion, but then, by not going on Sunday to church, your actions will tell them the opposite, that it's not important at all, and that anything and everything else is more important than God. Such actions on the part of too many parents cause their children to learn to distrust God and to no longer believe in Him and then to close their minds, hearts, and spirits to Him. The divine life bleeds out of their souls and they begin to die a long and lonely dying....

Jesus warned us not to scandalize the little innocent ones, because their angels are constantly standing in the Presence of God.... Let these words not frighten you, but rather strengthen your resolve to ask Almighty God to help you and your spouse make the resolution to go to Church to worship the Lord. Let it be a resolution to go together and manifest your gratitude for his countless blessings and the strength you need to get through the hard times. Thank Him as well for the ability to really enjoy the good times. Make Sunday worship part of your Sunday ritual and custom and remain faithful to it. 

You can expect the enemy to try to discourage you, because he seeks to destroy the children of God and keep they out of heaven for all eternity. However, the tougher the resistance within you and the countless obstacles the enemy throws onto your path, all the more go in the opposite direction of the temptation and go... go... go.... I am eternally grateful to my parents for going to Church with us all my growing up years into young adulthood until I left home and beyond. They never stopped....

Peace to you all, and Blessed Solemnity of Pentecost! 


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My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Pope Francis - What on Earth is he doing?

My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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Christ is risen, alleluia!

There is so much controversy and confusion surrounding polemics around the pandemic and vaccines that it is hard to find the truth. I have read reliable testimony that many of the stem cells used in research were not from aborted babies at all but were taken ethically from ordinary people... all human beings have stem cells.... There are also innumerable other controversial issues surrounding Pope Francis that he really does merit a closer look and a great deal of reflection and introspection....

It is true to say that Pope Francis is, at first view, very confusing; that is, until we realize what it is that he is actually doing.

Jesus is a human being, now risen from the dead and at the Father's "right hand" in heaven. He is also the only-begotten Son of the Father, which makes Him infinitely rich, wonderful, deep, and attractive. No single pope could ever completely represent Him. Jesus seems to have been pleased to allow his chosen popes to represent "something" of Him in each generation....

Pope Pius XII represented Jesus in his scholarly, rabbinical dimension... among other things....

Pope John XXIII represented Jesus in his human, grandfatherly dimension, but also as a reformer... among other things....

Pope Paul VI represented Jesus in his thoughtful, prayerful dimension, and as a "man rejected"... among other things....

Pope John Paul I represented Jesus in his warm attractive dimension, and as one who died young... among other things....

Pope John Paul II represented Jesus in his outgoing missionary dimension, and as a bold lover of God... among other things....

Pope Benedict XVI represented Jesus in his authentic one-on-one dimension, and as brilliant teacher... among other things....

Pope Francis is representing Jesus in his fierce dedication to sinners, the poor, the outcasts, as a fearless reformer, and as a joyful man of peace close to the ordinary people... among other things....

All these wonderful popes have been gifts of God to his Church and to humanity, bringing nobility and profound qualities of humanity to be "put on display" before all of humanity. All of them have been authentic and faithful witnesses to Jesus, "the way, the truth, and the life", adhering closely to the Word of God, the Tradition of the Faith, and the teachings of the Magisterium. I would challenge anyone to prove any of these bishops of Rome as defaulting in any of these respects. Pope Francis, in particular, is probably one of the best formed of all these popes, having been schooled as he has in Saint Ignatius of Loyola's "Rules for the Discernment of Spirits".

If you are interested, Dear Reader, I would highly recommend as the absolute best biographer and "interpreter" of Pope Francis Austen Ivereigh, who has known him personally since the time he was a bishop in Argentina. He has published three authoritative "biographies" of Pope Francis:

2014 - "The Great Reformer" Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope

2019 "Wounded Shepherd" Pope Francis and His Struggle to Convert the Catholic Church

2020 "Let Us Dream" The Path to a Better Future - the author is actually Pope Francis because these are all his words, but Austen worked with the Holy Father in a close dialogue to help the Pope develop this text.

You know, my genuine impression is that Pope Francis is giving us a taste of exactly what it was like for people - religious leaders as well as ordinary people - when they encountered, saw, and heard Jesus. Jesus definitely comforted the disturbed and disturbed the comfortable, much as Mother Teresa and all the saints have done in every age.

Our western world definitely has a strong bias in favour of the wealthy, influential, and powerful, which explains why such a large segment of the world population is confined irremediably to the peripheries of life. It was exactly so in Jesus' day too. As Jesus put the sinners, tax collectors, prostitutes, lepers and other "undesirables" front and centre - and why the religious leaders ground their teeth at Him; so too does Pope Francis do this. This is the principal reason why he is so hated, misunderstood, and maligned worldwide, and especially in the U.S.A., the most favoured nation on Earth with one of the greatest gaps between the wealthy and powerful and the rest of society.

When in 2004 I was on a 4-month sabbatical in Chicago, at a market at a booth I met a representative of a sort of association representing what they call the "working poor". These are people who don't want welfare and hold 1 or 2 or 3 jobs but still can't afford proper health insurance. At that time they numbered 75 million, which was around 22% of the population. I was shocked to discovery that what we take for granted here, in Canada, as a normal family home and life - in the U.S.A. for a family to live as an ordinary family here lives - the couple both need professional salaries in the six figures. This is due to the high cost of health care, among other things, such as the high cost of legal fees. People are constantly at risk of being sued by some shark out to destroy them or seize their assets. Only the poor don't need to worry too much about lawyers, but if they get sick, then they lose their homes and they're out on the street, literally. Pope Francis preaches against financial and economic interests that treat people as disposable.

Pope Francis doesn't put people from the peripheries into the centre for political reasons or to make any points. He does it because Jesus did it and calls us to do the same. When I was in seminary, our professor for the mission of the Church told us that all of our Church history, the Magisterium, the Scriptures, Canon Law, and Jesus Himself all make the same point, namely, that we cannot "be Church" without all categories of the poor and discarded in our very midst, in the very centre of us. Without them, all we can be is a variety of "country clubs" of those who are young, beautiful, talented, well established, comfortable, healthy, and successful. I was shocked, and quite frankly, this truth continues to be very shocking, and this is one of the reasons why they felt that Jesus had to be killed, He had to disappear. It is the principal reason they hate Pope Francis, though they may deny it or not even be conscious of it.

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My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Monday, March 15, 2021

Response of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to a doubt regarding the blessing of the unions of persons of the same sex

My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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Artistic rendering of Adam and Eve

Responsum of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to a dubium
regarding the blessing of the unions of persons of the same sex 

March 15, 2021

TO THE QUESTION PROPOSED: 
Does the Church have the power to give the blessing to unions of persons of the same sex?

RESPONSE:
Negative.

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Article of Commentary on the Responsum ad dubium, 15.03.2021

The new statement of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is a response to a question – in classical terms, to a dubium – occasioned, as is normally the case, by pastors and faithful who require clarification and guidance concerning a controversial issue. When questions are triggered by problematic assertions or practices in important areas of Christian life, an affirmative or negative response is provided, along with a statement of the reasoning that supports the response presented. The purpose of such interventions is to help the universal Church to respond better to the demands of the Gospel, to settle disputes, and to foster healthy communion among the holy people of God.

In the present case, a disputed question has arisen in the framework of the “sincere desire to welcome and accompany homosexual persons, to whom are proposed paths of growth in faith” (Explanatory Note), as indicated by the Holy Father Pope Francis at the conclusion of two Synodal Assemblies on the family: “so that those who manifest a homosexual orientation can receive the assistance they need to understand and fully carry out God’s will in their lives” (Apostolic Exhortation Amoris laetitia, n. 250). These words are an invitation to evaluate, with appropriate discernment, projects and pastoral proposals directed to this end. Among these are blessings given to the unions of persons of the same sex. It is therefore asked whether the Church has the power to impart her blessing: this is the formula contained in the quaesitum.

The answer - the Responsum ad dubium – is explained and motivated in the attached Explanatory Note of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, dated February 22, 2021, to the publication of which Pope Francis himself has given his assent.

The Note is centered on the fundamental and decisive distinction between persons and the union. This is so that the negative judgment on the blessing of unions of persons of the same sex does not imply a judgment on persons.

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CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH

CONSIDERATIONS REGARDING PROPOSALS
TO GIVE LEGAL RECOGNITION
TO UNIONS
BETWEEN HOMOSEXUAL PERSONS

June 3, 2003 

INTRODUCTION

1. In recent years, various questions relating to homosexuality have been addressed with some frequency by Pope John Paul II and by the relevant Dicasteries of the Holy See.(1) Homosexuality is a troubling moral and social phenomenon, even in those countries where it does not present significant legal issues. It gives rise to greater concern in those countries that have granted or intend to grant – legal recognition to homosexual unions, which may include the possibility of adopting children. The present Considerations do not contain new doctrinal elements; they seek rather to reiterate the essential points on this question and provide arguments drawn from reason which could be used by Bishops in preparing more specific interventions, appropriate to the different situations throughout the world, aimed at protecting and promoting the dignity of marriage, the foundation of the family, and the stability of society, of which this institution is a constitutive element. The present Considerations are also intended to give direction to Catholic politicians by indicating the approaches to proposed legislation in this area which would be consistent with Christian conscience.(2) Since this question relates to the natural moral law, the arguments that follow are addressed not only to those who believe in Christ, but to all persons committed to promoting and defending the common good of society.

... text continues... 

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My purpose in these posts is to help spread the contributions of a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Thursday, March 11, 2021

"Hail Mary, full of grace, the LORD IS WITH THEE..."

My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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"THE LORD IS WITH THEE!"

 It was the Archangel Gabriel who came from Heaven to the young maiden Myriam of Nazareth - she who would come to be known to us as the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, Mother of Jesus and of his Church and of all Christians - and in bringing her his "Annunciation", Gabriel announced something of the Divine Will and of Divine Revelation. Gabriel declared to Mary, in current commun English usage: "Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee (you)...." So what did it mean, exactly, that the Lord is with her?

"26 In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a town in Galilee called Nazareth, 27 to a virgin engaged to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. The virgin’s name was Mary. 28 And he came to her and said, “Greetings, favored one! The Lord is with you.”[b] 29 But she was much perplexed by his words and pondered what sort of greeting this might be. 30 The angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. 31 And now, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus. 32 He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his ancestor David. 33 He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.” 34 Mary said to the angel, “How can this be, since I am a virgin?”[c] 35 The angel said to her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born[d] will be holy; he will be called Son of God. 36 And now, your relative Elizabeth in her old age has also conceived a son; and this is the sixth month for her who was said to be barren. 37 For nothing will be impossible with God.” 38 Then Mary said, “Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word.” Then the angel departed from her."         Luke 1:26-38 (All quotes from NRSVCE) 

God our Creator is present and active at human conception. 

God Himself has revealed to us what happens at the moment of our conception in our mother's womb, and this is true for every human being, found in
Jeremiah 1:4-5:

"4 Now the word of the Lord came to me saying, 
5 “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
and before you were born I consecrated you;
I appointed you a prophet to the nations.”

We know that we are conceived in the moment of union by our mother with our father, and this Word of the Lord gives us a glimpse at the moment our immortal soul is created by the hand of our Creator God.... We owe our existence as an invaluable gift to the planned cooperation between God our Creator and our human parents. This means that we are all intimately related to God our Creator even from before we are conceived in that God loves us and desires that we come into existence even before we do so. We already have a Father in Heaven who loves us and desires us. This is no negligible matter but a wondrous one.

However, we must all contend with the "original sin"

While it remains true that we have a loving Father in Heaven, we must all of us contend with the disastrous consequences of the original sin. We are not conceived into a perfect and harmonious relationship with our Creator God, but in a state of rebellion and distrust. As we grow up and older we do not spontaneously trust in God and love Him but instead we spontaneously distrust God or are afraid of Him or simply ignore Him at best or hate and despise Him at worst. Actually, perhaps being indifferent to Him is much worse. In any event, it is because our Creator God is our loving Father that He has not abandoned us but has sent his only-begotten Son into the world as one among us in order to be our Saviour.

In the case of Mary, we know through Divine Revelation and the teaching of our Church that at the moment of her conception she was granted the privilege of exemption from the dark consequences of the original sin committed by our first parents, the first human couple Adam and Eve. This divine privilege was granted by God to Mary in anticipation of her vocation, her future role and mission as Mother of God, and this gift has been called the "Immaculate Conception" by Pope Blessed Pius IX December 8th, 1854 in his Encyclical "Ineffabilis Deus" and then less than four years later at Lourdes the Blessed Virgin Mary confirmed this privilege when she identified herself, saying, "I am the Immaculate Conception." This statement caused clerics of the day to become distraught as they failed to understand how Mary seemed to confuse her identity with the privilege granted her by God. So this means then that Mary from even before her conception was granted by God a very special and privileged relationship of intimate love with our Heavenly Father. The Lord, our Father, was truly "with her" all along and continued to be "with her" even until now. Pope Saint Pius X reaffirmed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception 50 years later in his Encyclical "Ad Diem Illum Laetissimum." 

"Venerable Brethren, Health and the Apostolic Blessing. An interval of a few months will again bring round that most happy day on which, fifty years ago, Our Predecessor Pius IX., Pontiff of holy memory, surrounded by a noble crown of Cardinals and Bishops, pronounced and promulgated with the authority of the infallible magisterium as a truth revealed by God that the Most Blessed Virgin Mary in the first instant of her conception was free from all stain of original sin. All the world knows the feelings with which the faithful of all the nations of the earth received this proclamation and the manifestations of public satisfaction and joy which greeted it, for truly there has not been in the memory of man any more universal or more harmonious expression of sentiment shown towards the august Mother of God or the Vicar of Jesus Christ."

Clerics wondered "How can Mary say she is conception?"

When Bernadette Soubirous reported to the clergy the name that her "Lady" had given herself, they were perplexed. Their first and most obvious objection was that conception is an action; so the lady could not possibly take the name of an action. In his final writings before his arrest by the Nazis on February 17, 1941, Father Maximilian Maria Kolbe OFM continued his long reflection on Mary, who identified herself to Saint Bernadette as "The Immaculate Conception". His insight was about the unique and God-given relationship between the Holy Spirit - "Uncreated, Eternal Immaculate Conception" between the Eternal Father and the Eternal Son in the Most Holy Trinity - on one hand, and on the other hand, Mary of Nazareth as the "created Immaculate Conception". He saw this relationship as a spousal relationship, in which Mary was granted as a privilege the name of her Spouse.

From the very beginning, then, Mary was a privileged "work of the Holy Spirit" from the moment of her own conception immaculately in the womb of her mother Saint Anne. The Holy Spirit continued to dwell in Mary as in a Temple made "by God's hands" and so God was "with Mary" all along. It is our understanding from Jesus' own testimony and teaching that the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit are always one in all things. So, God was "with Mary" all along; while particular "roles" of each Divine Person were highlighted at different moments in Mary's life. Mary existed in the love of the Father from all eternity. She came into existence "under the bright shadow" of the Holy Spirit who remained with her; until the moment of this Annunciation, when the Son of God became more manifest.

The Father, the Holy Spirit, and now, the Son Eternal Word

So, we now see how the Father was always "with Mary", and the Holy Spirit was also always "with Mary", and now, finally, the Eternal Word, the only-begotten Son of the Father, also came to be "with Mary" at the moment she gave her affirmative reply to the Archangel Gabriel: 

“Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word.” Luke 1:38

The extravagant generosity of Almighty God to humanity

This reflection brings us to realize that humanity stands abundantly blessed in the presence of Almighty God our Creator. Not only do we have an Eternal loving Father in the Heavens, but we also have a brother and Saviour in his only-begotten Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ; moreover, since the day of Pentecost, we have all been brought - along with Blessed Mary the Immaculate Conception - into the Family of God the Most Holy Trinity by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit into all those who believe in God and in the One whom He has sent into the world. In addition, in the Blessed Virgin Mary, Our Lady of Lourdes, of Fatima, and of many other places of her visitations as decreed by God, in Mary then, we also have a Mother, we continue to receive her as a gift from God, Queen of the Apostles, of Martyrs, and of all the Saints, the "Women clothed with the sun..." as she appeared to Saint Juan Diego on the outskirts of Mexico City in December, 1531.

"12 A great portent appeared in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars." Rev 12:1

Here are only a few of the gentle, gracious, and heart-rending words addressed by Our Lady of Guadalupe to Juan Diego:

“Know for certain, least of my sons, that I am the perfect and perpetual Virgin Mary, Mother of the True God through whom everything lives, the Lord of all things near and far, the Master of heaven and earth. It is my earnest wish that a temple be built here to my honor. Here I will demonstrate, I will exhibit, I will give all my love, my compassion, my help and my protection to the people. I am your merciful mother, the merciful mother of all of you who live united in this land, and of all mankind, of all those who love me, of those who cry to me, of those who seek me, of those who have condfidence in me. Here I will hear their weeping, their sorrow, and will remedy and alleviate all their multiple sufferings, necessities and misfortunes.” 

https://queenoftheamericasguild.org/history-of-the-apparitions/

Benedict XVI stated: “When the Virgin of Guadalupe appeared to the native Indian Saint Juan Diego, she spoke these important words to him: “Am I not your mother? Are you not under my shadow and my gaze? Am I not the source of your joy? Are you not sheltered underneath my mantle, under the embrace of my arms?” Shrine of the Aparecida, Brazil, May 13th, 2007

So, the Lord is "truly with Mary"

The Most Holy Trinity - the Father and the Son, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit genuinely also want to be "with us" as well. To this end, God sends Mary, now and again, to Earth with the same simple message of God's invitation to us human beings to open our minds, hearts, souls, and bodies to the loving, forgiving, merciful, life-giving presence and action of God within us; so that, "with God", we may work together to advance God's work of salvation among human society, from one person to another, one family to another. 


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My purpose in these posts is to help spread the contributions of a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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Thursday, January 21, 2021

A Catholic wants to come back to the Church... Where do you begin?

My purpose in these posts is to bring a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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You're a Roman Catholic who simply walked away, or were in some way hurt or turned away, or who may actually have been "drawn" by God to other churches for a number of years. Now, you have begun to feel dissatisfied with your isolation or with various points and elements in those various Christian churches or "exotic" religions, and, ironically, you feel drawn - again by the Lord - to have another look at the Roman Catholic Church.

Where do you begin?

Well, a good place to start would be of course to ask God to guide you as you try to follow his calling and to continue to do your best to walk in the steps of Jesus. Then, as you continue to pray in this way every day, even several times a day and night, take a step. Visit a Catholic church, or if your city is in lock-down and the churches are closed, visit nearby R.C. parishes via their websites. In addition, you can visit Pope Francis via the Vatican website, and through various Catholic news outlets, you can "listen in" on Pope Francis' homilies and read his writings.

You could then take a more personal step by getting in touch with your local Parish and then your Parish Priest. If you don't like the reception you get, shake the dust off your feet and try another parish and another priest until you find the "one" to whom the Lord is guiding you; where you feel welcomed, respected, and where you sense you can bring your questions and not be given a "bum's rush".

During this exploration, you will also benefit from praying every day, often during the day - which just means "visiting with God" within your spirit - and opening the Word of God in the Bible to "listen" to the Lord speaking. It is, after all, his millenially inspired and "living Word". You can also explore various additional sites and resources on the Internet.

So here are a few links which will help you find additional resources for your ongoing study, reflection, and prayer; as, like Mary the Mother of Jesus, you "ponder" the "things of the Lord and his ways" and allow the Most Holy Trinity to continue to guide and form you from within. Here now is a link to my "Home Page" on Blogger leading to a number of other pages. I regret this somewhat "impersonal" or distant connection, but those Blogger pages provide a good overview of the essentials of the Christian faith and life in response to the Lord Jesus' call in the Roman Catholic Tradition. This is not exhaustive, because after all, this Tradition has been developing for two millennia. Also, most Catholics take a lifetime to become more personally connected with the Most Holy Trinity by faith through Jesus Christ, and over time, more intimately familiar with all the riches of what God is offering to humanity through his Church in Jesus and the Holy Spirit.

The Pillar, Heart, and Soul of discipleship in Jesus is of course the Most Holy Trinity, God Himself.

God manifests his presence and ongoing creative and life-giving action in Nature or the Universe, sometimes called the "Book of Creation"; so we do well to walk outside, look up at the stars, and contemplate the wonders of Creation. This is also done by scientists and us who read their work as they contemplate the intricacies of biology, astronomy, and so on. As we explore we can "wonder as we wander" and send up glory, praise, and thanks to God our Creator.

The Father manifests his will in his Son Jesus as He founds his Church on Simon Peter, aka "Petros" which in Greek means "Rock" or, in American English, "Rocky". There is only one Church as testified in the Nicene Creed, which is common to all principal Christian denominations. Our RC Tradition witnesses to the Church as the "Mystical Body of Christ" of which He is our "Head". Where He has gone first, we hope to follow, that is, through death and resurrection. 

So the Church is all those who have been baptized, in whom the Holy Spirit has come as in a temple with the Father and the Son, and begun the work of sanctification - also called divinization - whereby the Most Holy Trinity distills into a human soul the divine life of the Most Holy Trinity; granting us to participate by spiritual adoption through faith in Jesus in the divine life enjoyed by the Most Holy Trinity - in a partial way for now - but which will become full in eternity, in heaven.

So the Church is made up of all the baptized, whether we are aware of them or not, whether they belong to "our group" or not, whether on Earth (the Church militant) or in Purgatory (the Church suffering) or in Heaven (the Church triumphant). At the end of time all things will be accomplished in accord to God's holy will and all will be in their proper places in accord with the choices they have made.

Purgatory will no longer exist, for it is simply the "time of purgation" needed by those souls destined for heaven but who are not yet ready for heaven because something of Earth still clings to their soul; such that they are still in need of God's mercy to set them completely free of mortality or "sinful attachment or inclination"; until such time as there remains in them only the one holy desire given by God, namely, to love God above all things and to love everyone for love of God.

The first step is opening your mind, heart, and soul to God; then reaching out to his Church

The next steps are guided by the Holy Spirit and take up the rest of our lives on Earth

RESOURCES and PILLARS FOR THE CHRISTIAN LIFE OF FAITH AND DISCIPLESHIP

The Liturgy of the Hours
The Sacred Scriptures
Prayer: alone, with spouse, with family, with community
The Sacramental Life - encountering Jesus in accord with his wishes through his mysteries
Christian disciplines and resources

THE LITURGY OF THE HOURS - The Prayer of the Church - for example in the app Divine Office

The Prayer of the Church - which originated with the "fathers of the desert" who learned the Scriptures by heart and recited them in prayer and fasting to escape the sinful distractions of the big city and await the coming of Jesus in glory or the end of their earthly lives, whichever would come first. Over the centuries this sacred and life giving practice developed into the normal way of daily prayer for clergy - deacons, priests, and bishops - and for religious - all men and women who sought to help each other live the Christian life by turning away from the ways of the world in order to erect a "Christian society" and community, such as in monasteries.

Since Vatican Council II from 1962-1965 in Rome, the Liturgy of the Hours has been renewed in many languages and the laity are invited to pray as much of it as they can; meanwhile the clergy and religious make a life long commitment to pray all the hours daily. You can sign up for it at this link, there is no cost because they work on donations alone, and this link is for today, Thursday. Once you're "in" it, read the brief bio of the saint of the day, Saint Agnes, and then click on the Morning Prayer tab and you will find there a typical "hour" which includes a hymn, psalms, a reading from the Word of God, intentions, the Lord's Prayer, and a concluding prayer and blessing.

Today's Morning Prayer expresses well a key dimension of the life of faith and discipleship in the Roman Catholic Tradition. We understand that Jesus, in Himself as divine pre-existing Son of God and as human son of Mary is in effect and in fact a "marriage" between God and humanity. That is why Jesus refers to Himself as the Bridegroom with his Church (all of us) as his Bride. John wrote that Jesus' first "sign" He performed at the wedding banquet at Cana where he turned water into wine at the request of his Mother Mary. The Wedding Banquet is an image of Heaven where we will be immersed in the joy of the "Wedding Feast of the Lamb of God". DIVINE OFFICE:     https://divineoffice.org/0121-mp/?date=20210121

THE SACRED SCRIPTURES - THE DIVINELY INSPIRED WORD OF GOD - The Bible contains the Jewish Scriptures and the Christian Scriptures - in our day there are many versions available, even on line, such as the NRSVCE - New Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition - which is used at Mass in English

The Apostles were the first - actually Jesus was the first as witnessed by Luke in Luke 24:13-35 (Jesus meets the two disciples on the road to Emmaus) - to interpret everything in the Old Testament - the Jewish Scriptures - that applied to Him as the Messiah, the Lord, send by God the Father for the salvation of humanity. Thus began the divinely inspired INTERPRETATION of the Jewish Scriptures as correctly and truthfully applicable to Jesus as Lord and Saviour.

The initial interpretations, teachings, and writings of the Apostles became the letters, Gospels, Acts, and Revelation of the New Testament. After that first generation, those who followed them came to be known as the "Fathers of the Church" and these continued to "ponder" as Mary did the "ways of the Lord" and to further develop this sacred tradition of divinely inspired interpretation of the Old Testament in light of the New. In their preaching, teaching, life witnessing, writing, and dying, these Fathers of the Church made practical applications of the Word of God to everyday living and faith in action.

The Church has prepared a banquet of all this sacred Tradition of the Word of God and the teaching, preaching, and witnessing of the Church in the Liturgy of the Hours, and especially in the Office of Readings, which gives us every day a lengthy passage from Scripture (both Testaments) and a second lengthy passage from the Fathers and Saints of the Church.

In addition, zealous Christians accept the grace offered by God and the invitation of the Holy Spirit to open the Bible every day and "feed on" the Word of God. The Liturgy of the Hours provides a "carefully prepared diet and banquet" from the Lord, and personal reading of the Bible is a more spontaneous initiative and approach. Both are needed: our personal initiative and the guidance God offers us through his Church.

PERSONAL, SPOUSAL, FAMILY, AND COMMUNAL PRAYER - Praying daily alone, with one's spouse, with one's family, and with one's community of faith. You can check out my various web pages on Blogger where you will find an abundance of resources. Here is Father Gilles' "Home Page" with several links to other pages, some of which also lead to even more pages....

Prayer is simply "visiting with God". All the Gospels give witness that Jesus spent a lot of time in prayer with his Father. Jesus' entire life was focused on his Father's love, to do his Father's will, and to commune with his Father. Luke testifies that even at 12 years of age Jesus had a highly developed sense of being called to "be about his Father's business". In the prologue to his Gospel, John declares that "to all who believe in Jesus He gives the power to become children of God. All the baptized are called to remain open to God, to welcome the Most Holy Trinity within them, in their soul, and to be open to communing with the Father, in Jesus, by the Holy Spirit. God grants us to become more familiar, to come to know and to love the Father, and Jesus his Son, and the Holy Spirit. We can pray to each singly as well as to all three together.

Whenever we address one or more of the saints - Mother Mary, Joseph, Peter, Paul, Agnes, Francis of Assisi, Anthony of Padua, Dominic, Benedict, his sister Scholastica, Brother André, Pope John Paul II, etc.... - we are merely "communing" with our sisters and brothers in Christ, and this "great cloud of witness" amplify our own zeal and love of God and encourage us on our way of faith, hope, and love. All good prayers and hymns addressed to one or more of the saints always end with a doxology, that is, giving glory and praise to the Most Holy Trinity.

Prayer alone can be silent, or include "murmuring" or moving the lips, or voicing out loud, or two or all three of these ways. We can let Scripture lead us into prayer, especially the psalms, but there are hymns also embedded in other sacred Bible books, including the New Testament; such as Jesus' own prayer to the Father in John 17 or N.T. hymns also called canticles, e.g. Phil 2:6-11; Ephesians 1:3-10; Colossians 1:12-20; 1 Peter 2:21-24; Revelation 4:11, 5:9, 10, 12; Rev 11:17-18, 12:10b-12a; Rev 15:3-4; Rev 19:1-7. Of course the most famous and frequently used canticles are the Canticle of Zechariah - Luke 1:46-55; of Mary also called the Magnificat - Luke 1:68-79; and of Simeon - Luke 2:29-32.

Spouses and families need to explore and configure their ways of praying together in such ways as to include everyone, to respect everyone, and to include both silence and oral (out loud) texts and prayers. Different postures can also enhance praying: standing, kneeling, prostrations, sitting, lying down, even walking. Intentions can also be voiced and shared so as to create oneness of mind and heart in making intercession to God.

THE SACRAMENTAL LIFE - encountering Jesus in accord with his wishes through his mysteries

Jesus fully intended to remain faithful and fulfill his promise - recorded in Matthew 28:16-20 - to remain always with us: "And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age." That is why He initiated immediately or allowed the Apostles to develop in response to emerging needs what are now called the Seven Sacraments. You can find a lot on the Internet from Catholic sources, most of which are good and true, but one must always be vigilant.

BAPTISM - Jesus clearly commanded his apostles to "make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you." 

CONFIRMATION - After his resurrection, Jesus clearly poured out his spirit, the Holy Spirit, onto his apostles. The Holy Spirit confirmed this divine gift at Pentecost by coming down upon and filling all 120 people gathered to wait and pray for "the promise of the Father".

HOLY EUCHARIST - Jesus never intended to leave a "symbolic meal" but literally commanded his Apostles to eat his body "broken for you" and drink his blood "poured out for you" and that they should "do this in memory of me." The Apostles, the authors of the N.T. Letters, and the Evangelists all offer united testimony that they all experienced this gift of Jesus are real, true, authentic, and although illogical from a human point of view, God's wisdom and truth for God's outpouring of his divine life into us who believe and receive Jesus in faith. The N.T. references are too numerous to list here. RC's are under obligation to receive Holy Communion at least once a year during the Easter Season. Since Jesus declared what unless we eat his flesh and drink his blood we have no life within us; it is highly recommended and useful to our soul to receive the Lord at least every Sunday, if not also during the week. During a pandemic such as we now endure, when churches are closed, we are encouraged to welcome the Lord into our soul by way of a "Spiritual Communion".

PENANCE & RECONCILIATION aka CONFESSION - Jesus went about for three years forgiving sins, even that is not what people asked. He was preceded and his way was prepared by his cousin John the Baptist who preached a baptism of water for repentance, declaring that one greater than he was coming after him who would baptize "with Spirit and with fire". Jesus clearly gave the Apostles, in the person of the one He chose to lead them, Peter, the authority to forgive sins or to retain sins. This has always been clearly understood from the time of the Apostles through the time of their successors, later known as the "Fathers of the Church".

How this "mysterious encounter" with the Risen Lord Jesus happened and was offered to the faithful evolved over time as the society changed and the needs of the faithful for repentance and forgiveness changed; until this sacrament took its present form around 1200 A.D. In the early Church, for the first half of the first millennium, the confession of sins was made in public in front of the bishop, and the penance was also public; such as wearing sack cloth with ashes on one's head for months or even years, depending on the gravity of the sin and its impact on the community of faith; such as in the case of sexual scandals or offering sacrifice to the Roman gods so as to avoid execution.

Since the 13th century it has been our experience that the Lord Jesus effectively forgives sins, as He once did in Palestine, and also reconciles the sinner to Himself and to the living Body of his Church, through this Sacrament of Reconciliation consisting of confession to a priest, sincere regret and contrition, a firm resolution to repent and live a life of ongoing conversion, a brief, discreet, and respectful dialogue as needed, absolution worded by the priest and given by Jesus, and an appropriate penance for the sake of reparation and some step or steps towards doing the will of God by prayer or action or both.

RC's are under obligation to confess at least once a year if they have serious sin. However, this sacrament has been experienced universally as a great aid in coming closer to Jesus and opening more widely the gates of our heart to Him and also to forgiving others.

Here is Bishop (Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, CA) Robert Barron's YouTube Channel, where you will find a number of short talks on various topics of interest. He also has his own website and Internet apostolate called Word on Fire where you will find different resources.

CHRISTIAN DISCIPLINES AND RESOURCES

FASTING, PENANCE, ALMS, AND WORKS OF MERCY - Unlike many Protestant denominations which minimize the importance of works and over emphasize the place of justifying faith; the Roman Catholic Tradition has always understood, taught, and preached a proper balance between faith in Jesus Christ as our Lord and Saviour (by which God justifies us in Jesus' Blood shed) on the one hand, and on allowing this grace of God to unfold and bear fruit, thereby giving honour and praise to God, in a whole variety of practices, such as fasting, penance, and mortification of the flesh, and works of mercy - both physical or corporal works of mercy and spiritual works of mercy - to the benefit of those who receive these acts of love. In 2016 Pope Francis called on all Christians to add an 8th work of mercy: "Care for our common home".

PONDERING THE MYSTERIES OF THE MOST HOLY ROSARY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY - Our RC Tradition understands the practice of praying the Rosary of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary and the Life of Jesus to have developed over time from the middle of the first millennium until the middle of the second millennium - over a period of around a thousand years - to the form it has today. Then in 2002 Saint Pope John Paul II published his "Apostolic Letter Rosarium Virginis Mariae to the bishops, clergy, and faithful on the Most Holy Rosary". In this letter he declared the Rosary to be his favourite prayer because in the course of meditating on the Mysteries of the Most Holy Rosary - so many windows in the life of Jesus which also includes his Mother Mary - she actually accompanies us and helps us to "contemplate the light shining on the face of Jesus".

In the history of the Church the praying of the Rosary with faith, devotion, and trust in God has been the occasion for God to work wonders and miracles, as reported in the Wikipedia article linked above. I was told and later confirmed by research on the Internet that in the mid-1950's the Archbishop of Vienna together with all the bishops of Austria - which since 1945 had been occupied, oppressed, and controlled the the U.S.S.R. - appealed to all the faithful of Austria and all people of good will to unite in pledging to meditate prayerfully the Rosary everyday as an offering to God of one million people united in prayer of the Rosary; as a plea to God through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary to free Austria from the yoke of the U.S.S.R.

Well, since 1945 the governments of France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States had divided Austria into for zones of occupation. In the 1950's they talked of re-establishing the independence of Austria, but the U.S.S.R. in particular dragged their feet. In 1954 - the centenary of the Papal Declaration of the God given privilege of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary - the bishops called on the people to pray the Rosary with the intention of reaching one million pledges of daily Rosary praying. Once that goal of one million pledges was achieved and surpassed, on May 15th, 1955 those four occupying governments signed what they called the "Austrian State Treaty"; thereby agreeing to lift their occupation and leave. The treaty came into effect July 27th and on October 25th the country was free of occupying troops. Our Lady interceded with God in response to the people's prayers and God helped the process along which had been stuck and stalled. At the time people were stunned that it actually worked and, especially, that the Soviet Union left.

LIVES OF THE SAINTS, DEVOTIONS, & SPIRITUAL READING - This whole dimension of R. C. Tradition is our "hall of heroes", the stories of our "elder sisters and brothers in the faith", a "great cloud of witnesses" that spur us on to victory in the Kingdom of God. Paul in chapter 11 went through the list of the key Israelite witnesses; so in our time, that would include all the martyrs and saints since Jesus' day. We can only be enriched by getting to know them, allowing the Holy Spirit to activate the "communion of saints" to grant us a living connection with the saints - as we have in our own families on Earth - and confiding in them our hopes and fears, needs and aspirations; that they might join us through the communion of saints in presenting to God our prayers for ourselves and others. The various "devotions to the saints" are like a family home having a "rogue gallery of family pictures", and venerating relics of the saints (particles of their bone or clothing or hair) is like families keeping a lock of hair of their children in the family album. Relics are better and more effective "bonds of love" to the saints because the saints are right now alive in God's radiant Presence in Heaven.

PILGRIMAGES & RETREATS - One can go on pilgrimage as simply as visiting a church or cemetery or monastery or site of supernatural apparitions. A pilgrimage is a journey of faith undertaken by a Christian in order to get in touch with the roots of our faith or with one or more of the saints; for the purpose of growing in faith, in knowledge and love for God, and in personal experience of our faith Tradition and Church. Spiritual Retreats are pockets of time during which we stay put in a particular place in an appropriate environment where we can remain in safety, in silence, in prayer, and hopefully also in community of faith, and there to experience daily spiritual exercises such as the celebration of Holy Mass, communal prayer, and silent adoration.

SPIRITUAL ACCOMPANIMENT, GUIDANCE, or DIRECTION - Since the time of the Apostles, as shown by Luke in 24:13-35, Christian disciples have shared their faith and struggles with one another, encouraged one another, and sought the Lord together. This happens in many ways, at many levels, and with varying degrees of competence and authority. There is in Montreal "The Ignatian Spirituality Centre" which offers spiritual accompaniment and formation at various levels of progress in the faith journey. There are throughout the Church many such centres, but one must always remain vigilant to assure that what is offered does not include any admixture of "new age" confusion that only try to take our attention and focus away from the Lord Jesus Christ.

VOCATIONAL DISCERNMENT, COMMITMENT, & ONGOING FORMATION - The Roman Catholic Tradition witnesses to the development of the Church Jesus founded into dioceses under the spiritual leadership, pastoring, and fatherhood of a bishop appointed by the Bishop of Rome, the Pope, and answerable to him. Each diocese is an independent "living cell" of the universal Church, the Body of Christ. However there is a kind of "oversight" exercised by the Pope and his officers to assure that bishops don't stray from the truth or from the essentials of the RC Tradition, Teaching, and Practice. In each diocese, the Bishop ordains and sends out deacons and priests to assist him in caring for the Lord's flock. These are all responsible and answerable to their bishop. No cleric can just "hop" from one diocese to another; they can only move to another diocese with the approval of both bishops. Here is Montreal Diocese.

FORMATION TOWARDS DISCIPLESHIP & STEWARDSHIP - There is a great variety of materials on the Internet touching on what it means to be a Disciple of Jesus and to exercise good Stewardship as his Disciple. Another document explores these two dimensions of our faith response to the Lord as "Making the Journey of Discipleship & Stewardship". The primary reason why there are such materials is because we can simply benefit from the experience of others, which includes what pitfalls to avoid.

MISSIONARY DISCIPLESHIP - In his letter "The Joy of the Gospel" Pope Francis wrote about our call as Christians to be "missionary disciples" and respond to Jesus' call to go out into our world to proclaim the Good News; so that, hearing our words and seeing our example, people who do not yet know God or his love and mercy might look up towards Jesus and "recover their sight". Here is a report on what Pope Francis means and how that is essential to our faith response to the Lord Jesus in our own lives. Along these lines, here is a R.C. site that gives witness to what the Holy Spirit is now doing, right now, in R.C. parishes throughout Canada, the U.S.A. and around the world. Here is another, more personal reflection on this topic from the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

CARRYING THE CROSS, PERSECUTION, MARTYRDOM, & FORGIVENESS OF ENEMIES - This is a topic and a basic dimension of the Christian faith and life in the steps of Jesus which is often forgotten or outright avoided by denominations or churches preaching a "prosperity gospel", which as Saint Paul warned in his letters, is a "different gospel or different Jesus" than the one he preached. Jesus made it abundantly clear - and all the Gospels testify to this truth - that if we want to truly be his disciples, we must deny ourselves, carry our cross, and follow Him. Moreover, we should not expect better treatment from the world than the treatment He himself got, namely, persecution, false accusation, false condemnation, torture, and death. Some literally follow Jesus in all these steps, but most Christians only do so to lesser degrees. However, there is no avoidance of the cross in one shape or other.

THE COMMANDMENTS & THE BEATITUDES - The Ten Commandments are the absolute minimum requirements for human beings to live a good life, a life that avoids offending God. However, Christians are called to far surpass this minimum, and in his sermon on the mount, Jesus summed up the new life He has come to offer in God in the Eight Beatitudes. These give the key points or elements in our new life in Jesus as children of God. There are unlimited reflections and meditations on the Beatitudes in print and on the Internet. Again, we must be vigilant to weigh what we find and, with the help of the Holy Spirit and the Church's teaching, keep what is good and reject what is defective.

God's peace to you and to your family, dear sister, dear brother in the Lord Jesus.... Happy, Healthy, and Holy New Year!

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My purpose in these posts is to help spread the contributions of a variety of Christian and other writers in a desire to share significant writings that in my estimation contribute to the common good and directly or indirectly give glory to God and extend the Lord's work of salvation to all of humanity. G.S.

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© 2004-2021 All rights reserved Fr. Gilles Surprenant, Associate Priest of Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montreal  QC
© 2004-2021 Tous droits réservés Abbé Gilles Surprenant, Prêtre Associé de Madonna House Apostolate & Poustinik, Montréal QC
 

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