Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Driving Nails

Folks,

I think we all know who the protangonist is that is speaking in the first person singular below. I was caught by the phrase, "Driving nails into my soul, angels from my door..."

Driving Nails
by Demon Hunter

[Verse 1:]
I was the light
I was the quiet heart
I was the place we used to dwell
And when the cold would tear your life apart,
I was the warmth that you had felt (What have I become?)

[Pre-Chorus]
What have I become?
Thoughts like shadows swelling through my mind
What have I become?
Something else inside...

[Chorus 1:]
It's driving nails into my soul
Angels from my door
Driving nails into my soul
Something inside...

[Verse 2:]
I was the blood inside your broken heart
I was the stone that you had held (What have I become?)

(Pre-Chorus)

[Chorus 2:]
It's driving nails into my soul
Angels from my door
Driving nails into my soul
Something else inside...

(Chorus 1)

[Bridge:]
I close my eyes
Search for you
Retracing every step

(Chorus 1)

Nails into my soul
Angels from my door
Driving nails into my soul
Something else inside...

(Chorus 2)

Tonight's Humor - Three Holy Men and a Bear

Folks,

I received the following short story from a friend with whom I once worked and who is now stationed at a nuclear power facility in the northeast. Do enjoy!

THREE HOLY MEN AND A BEAR

A Priest, a Pentecostal Preacher, and a Rabbi all served as Chaplains to the students of Northern Michigan University in Marquette. They would get together two or three times a week for coffee and talk shop.

One day, someone made the comment that preaching to people isn't really all that hard. A real challenge would be to preach to a bear. One thing led to another and they decided to do an experiment. They would all go out into the woods, find a bear, preach to it, and attempt to convert it.

Seven days later, they're all together to discuss their experience.

Father Flannery, who has his arm in a sling, is on crutches, and has various bandages on his body and limbs, goes first. "Well," he says, "I went into the woods to find a bear. And when I found him I began to read to him from the Catechism. Well, that bear wanted nothing to do with me and began to slap me around. So I quickly grabbed my holy water, sprinkled him and, Holy Mary Mother of God, he became as gentle as a lamb. The Bishop is coming out next week to give him first communion.”

Reverend Billy Bob spoke next. He was in a wheelchair, with an IV drip in his arm, and both legs in casts. In his best fire and brimstone oratory he claimed, "WELL, Brothers, you KNOW that we don't sprinkle! I went out and I FOUND a bear. And then I began to read to my bear from God's HOLY WORD! But that bear wanted nothing to do with me. So I took HOLD of him and we began to wrestle. We wrestled down one hill, UP another and DOWN another until we came to a creek. So I quickly DUNKED him and BAPTIZED his hairy soul. And just like you said, he became as gentle as a lamb. We spent the rest of the day praising Jesus."

The Priest and the Reverend both looked at the Rabbi, who was lying in a hospital bed. He was in a body cast and traction with IVs and monitors running in and out of him. He was in really bad shape.

The Rabbi looks up and says, "You know, looking back on it, circumcision may not have been the best way to start!"

Glenn Beck and Religion

Folks,

While Glenn Beck's rally at the Mall in Washington, DC to restore national honor is a good and noble thing, we must remember that Mr. Beck himself is a Mormon and Mormonism is an outright heresy which says that God the Father was once a man and had to earn His divinity in order to be God of this world, Jesus is the brother of Lucifer, the truly faithful who tithe regularly to the Mormon Church will on death gain their own world to rule as gods with their spouses, and contrary to what Jesus told the Saducees, marriage and families last for eternity (Matthew 22:30).

Sarah Palin, who joined Mr. Beck at the Mall, is herself a Pentecostal, a member of one of the innumerable Protestant denominations denying both 2nd Thessalonians 2:15 (the teaching of Sacred Tradition) and 1st Timothy 3:15 (the Church, the pillar and foundation of Truth). Most importantly, Sarah Palin and like-minded people deny the Real Presence of Jesus Christ (His Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity) in the Holy Eucharist contrary to what Jesus Himself declared in Matthew 26:26-29 and explained at length in John 6:26-71. How can one have honor with a person who claims to follow Jesus and believe in every word the Bible states, yet denies what those very passages of Scripture clearly teach?

So Michael Voris' latest video from Real Catholic TV is all the more important, and his quote from Jesus speaking to Pontius Pilate is all the more apropos: "My kingdom is not of this world" (John 18:36). This is the whole thing that is wrong with the left-wind social justice crowd in the Catholic Church: they think they can create God's kingdom on Earth and they are just as dead wrong as their opponents on the right-wing: Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin and the rest. God's Kingdom will be manifested only when Jesus Christ returns again to Earth as Revelation 19:11-16 describes. There will be neither honor restored in America (Glenn Beck's dream) nor hunger and homelessness wiped away (Matthew 26:11) until He returns. Now that doesn't mean we give up on being honorable and righteous people, or we give up on carrying for the needy (Matthew 25:31-46). It means that we lose our arrogance in thinking our good works bring either honor (all man's righeousness is like filthy rags - Isaiah 64:5) or prosperity. Those things are God's gifts from the bounty of His mercy, and we deserve neither, yet we often think quite erroneously that such is our payment for doing simply as we ought to do.

I really like how Michael Voris talks about this whole issue.

Glenn Beck and Religion

Monday, August 30, 2010

More Debunking of the False Liberal Gospel of Social Justice

Folks,

Today's Scripture Readings include the account of Jesus visit to the synogague in Capernaum as recorded in Luke 4:16-30. The paraphrase translation known as the Message gives us the following text for verses 23 through 27:

He [Jesus] answered, "I suppose you're going to quote the proverb, 'Doctor, go heal yourself. Do here in your hometown what we heard you did in Capernaum.' Well, let me tell you something: No prophet is ever welcomed in his hometown. Isn't it a fact that there were many widows in Israel at the time of Elijah during that three and a half years of drought when famine devastated the land, but the only widow to whom Elijah was sent was in Sarepta in Sidon? And there were many lepers in Israel at the time of the prophet Elisha but the only one cleansed was Naaman the Syrian."

As the reader may recall, the story of Elijah and his raising from the dead the son of the widow at Sarepta in Sidon is recorded in 1st Kings 17:8-24, and the story of Elisha having cured of his leprosy Naaman the army cammander for the King of Aram is recorded in 2 Kings 5. Both the widow in Sarepta (or Zaraphath) and Naaman the Syrian were (obviously) non-Jews, that is to say, not members of the chosen people. Yet God through His prophets decided to heal them and NOT any member of the chosen people. Why? Because the chosen people were living in sin. They were completely given over to adultery, fornication, baby murdering and idol worship. So God decided NOT to heal any of their members. Instead, He sent His prophet to the outcasts.

Now there are many liberals who will say that if only the social conditions of the people living in Israel and Judah were improved (more food, better health care and all the rest), then they would straighten up and fly right, because after all, it's social conditions that cause people to turn away from God, right?

WRONG! Improving social conditions never ever makes people straighten up and fly right. Elijah knew that. Elisha knew that. And Jesus knows that, which is exactly why He referenced both the widow at Sarepta and Naaman the Syrian to the people at Capernaum. Let's face it: the people at Capernaum wanted their physical needs met. They had NO intention of repenting. So guess what? They got no physical needs met. Our good Lord let them stew in the social conditions that their sin had caused.

Repentance and conversion, righteousness and holiness come BEFORE, never after social justice. Furthermore, the people of these United States are living the same kind of sinful lives that the children of Israel and Judah lived so long ago: adultery, fornication, homosexuality, abortion, idolatry and all the rest. So we deserve NO social justice, and by golly, we aren't going to get any either. But we sure are going to get a whole lot of God's loving in the form of His eternal justice. The Lord loveth those whom He reproveth.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Debunking Liberal Social Justice from the Bible

Folks,

Yesterday's daily scripture readings and today's are noteworthy in debunking the liberal propaganda of social justice that has infected the Church, the Body of Christ, like a terminal cancer that won't go away until the offending members are cut off and cast away exactly as described in John 15:2 and Romans 11:21-22.

Yesterday's Gospel reading was about the story of the ten virgins awaiting the bridegroom as recorded in Matthew 25:1-15. Five wise virgins brought enough oil with them for their lamps and five foolish ones did not. The bridegroom was late in coming and the lamps of all ten had dimmed. At the sound of the imminent arrival of the bridegroom in the dark of the night, the five wise ones trimmed their lamps and were prepared. The five foolish ones who lacked foresight did what any liberal would tell them to do and preyed upon the charity of the five wise virgins for the oil that the foolish ones failed to bring for themselves. Of course the five wise virgins said no, because their duty to the bridegroom came before any false sense of charity. So the foolish virgins went out into the market place to purchase oil from the merchants, but by the time they returned, the bridegroom had already arrived and the five wise virgins had accompanied him into the wedding feast. The door was shut, but the foolish virgins begged to be let in. They were denied. The bridegroom said exactly the opposite of what a liberal thinks is charity: "Amen, I say to you, I do not know you."

Today's Gospel reading was about the three servants and the talents entrusted to them as recorded in Matthew 25:14-30. We all know this story. A man going on a long journey entrusted his possessions to his servants. To one he gave five talents who invested the sum and earned a profit of five more talents. To another he gave two talents who likewise invested the sum and earned a profit of two more talents. To the last he gave one talent who did what any profit-hating liberal would tell him to do: he buried the money. The master on returning commended the actions of the first two "profit-hungry" servants. But the third exclaimed that he feared his master and so took no risk, instead burying his talent for safe keeping. How like liberalism: take no risk unless 100% safety is assured 100% of the time. The master, however, did not agree with this fallacious point of view and did what any good capitalist would do: he fired the worthless servant and gave his meager talent to the most "profit-hungry" servant - the one who was willing to risk everything. We might exclaim how uncharitable of the master to do this. But his action was actually most charitable. He let the worthless servant reap the consequences of his actions. Doing what liberalism tells us to do - redistribute wealth from the first two servants to the third - would keep the worthless servant in bondage to his fear and make him dependent - even addicted - on the hard work of others.

It is high time we see these parables as they are and not as they are constantly being re-interpreted by the liberal cancer that infects the Church today. It is time to destroy the false gospel of social justice and cast its proponents into outer darkness where they belong. That's what happened to the five foolish virgins and the worthless servant given one talent. As St. Paul wrote in 2nd Thessalonians 3:10:

In fact, when we were with you, we instructed you that if anyone was unwilling to work, neither should that one eat.

Work or starve: that's the choice. No false pretense of charity can any longer be afforded.

Friday, August 27, 2010

The Liberal Doctrine of Climate Change and the USCCB

Folks,

Once again, Michael Voris of Real Catholic TV exposes the hidden socialist agenda behind that greatest of liberal democrat causes, anthropogenic global warming, and the support given to it by United States Council of Catholic Bishops. It is more than high time that the Bishops in Washington, DC start jettisoning all this liberal democrat baloney over social justice, global warming, the common good and the rest of the nonsense that is nothing other than the talking points of the Democratic Party. It is time for our Bishops to start preaching the true Gospel of repentance and conversion, righteous and holiness. Please watch Mr.Voris' latest short video and the associated report from the Catholic Investigative Service:

The Climate and the Bishops
CIA Investigates: Global Warming Unmasked - The Hidden Agenda

The Logic of Purgatory by Jim McCrea

Folks,

Something about which we rarely hear from the pulpit any longer is the Doctrine of Purgatory. It is almost as though St. Paul's words in 1st Corinthians 3:12-15 and St. Peter's in 1st Peter 1:6-17 had never been written:

If anyone builds on this foundation with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, or straw, the work of each will come to light, for the Day will disclose it. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire (itself) will test the quality of each one's work. If the work stands that someone built upon the foundation, that person will receive a wage. But if someone's work is burned up, that one will suffer loss; the person will be saved, but only as through fire.

In this you rejoice, although now for a little while you may have to suffer through various trials, so that the genuineness of your faith, more precious than gold that is perishable even though tested by fire, may prove to be for praise, glory, and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.

Indeed, paragraphs 1030 through 1032 in the Catechism of the Catholic Church are quite clear:

All who die in God's grace and friendship, but still imperfectly purified, are indeed assured of their eternal salvation; but after death they undergo purification, so as to achieve the holiness necessary to enter the joy of heaven.

The Church gives the name Purgatory to this final purification of the elect, which is entirely different from the punishment of the damned. The Church formulated her doctrine of faith on Purgatory especially at the Councils of Florence and Trent. The tradition of the Church, by reference to certain texts of Scripture, speaks of a cleansing fire:

As for certain lesser faults, we must believe that, before the Final Judgment, there is a purifying fire. He who is truth says that whoever utters blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will be pardoned neither in this age nor in the age to come. From this sentence we understand that certain offenses can be forgiven in this age, but certain others in the age to come.

This teaching is also based on the practice of prayer for the dead, already mentioned in Sacred Scripture: "Therefore [Judas Maccabeus] made atonement for the dead, that they might be delivered from their sin" [2nd Maccabees 12:42-46]. From the beginning the Church has honored the memory of the dead and offered prayers in suffrage for them, above all the Eucharistic sacrifice, so that, thus purified, they may attain the beatific vision of God. The Church also commends almsgiving, indulgences, and works of penance undertaken on behalf of the dead:

Let us help and commemorate them. If Job's sons were purified by their father's sacrifice [Job 1:5], why would we doubt that our offerings for the dead bring them some consolation? Let us not hesitate to help those who have died and to offer our prayers for them.

Jim McCrea goes to explain the logic of Purgatory in the following short essay:

The Logic of Purgatory
by Jim J. McCrea

To understand the need for purgatory, first we must know that there is a distinction between the guilt of sin and the effects of sin. What Christ's death on the Cross does is free us from that guilt that sin causes. However, after we have been forgiven (or after we have been converted), the effects of sin often still remain.

Often, Protestants accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior. However, they find that their old tendencies to sin remain. Even after they confess a particular sin - to lust say - they find that they are still committing it. It is the same with other sins. They are dismayed because after being "born again" it seems that little has changed. What has happened is that even if they have acquired supernatural grace because of the acceptance of Jesus, all the effects of sin remain. And that includes the tendency to commit sin. It is only suffering, with prayer and mortification, that in time diminishes these effects bit by bit. This is the weakness of evangelical Protestantism that they do not understand this (as the properly informed Catholic does). They think that all is taken care of with the alter call. In truth, our salvation is a process that lasts all our life.

The effects vs. the guilt of sin can be seen in the nature of sin. If I were to steal your watch, and then ask you for forgiveness, you would forgive me, but you would also ask me to give the watch back. In addition to forgiveness, there is also reparation to be made. In confession, we are forgiven through the ministry of the priest, but that is not enough. We are also given penance. In addition to forgiveness there is the reparation of the assigned penance. The forgiveness takes care of the sin, and the penance takes care of the effects. A further analogy given by Bishop Fulton Sheen is that sin may be likened to hammering nails into a block of wood. If the nails are removed (the sins forgiven) the block is not the same as before. It now has a bunch of holes (the effects). And so it goes.

With sin, a stain or distortion is left within our soul (even after forgiveness). It takes penance, prayer, charity, and offering our sufferings to cleanse us of that stain. If this process is not completed in this life, that is what purgatory is for. We must be absolutely pure before entering heaven.

A root reason why Protestants reject purgatory while Catholics accept it, is based in their differing theologies of salvation. For the classical Protestant, faith in Christ is like a blanket of pure snow that covers a manure pile. The person is still rotten and filthy inside, but the Father only sees the pure snow of His Son's holiness covering the sinner, so He imputes the sinner as just. With Catholicism, we are meant to really become holy, so we must really become transformed into Christ's holiness to the depths of our being. For the classical Protestant then, the one time acceptance of Christ is sufficient to cover us with the holiness of Christ. With Catholicism, if our inner being must be made holy and conformable to Christ's holiness, it can be seen why it is a process that takes time. If there is not time enough in this life, there is still the next life in purgatory to do the job.

St. John of the Cross likened it to putting a piece of green wood in a fire. If it stays in the fire, the wood is slowly transformed. The nature of the wood is slowly changed to be adapted to the fire. It is heated and dried by the fire. Then at some point it catches fire, and as the wood proceeds to be transformed, the fire reaches more and more into its interior, until it is all fire. That is what sufferings do in this life. It is a kind of fire (when accepted properly and offered to God) that more and more transforms us into the likeness of Christ - driving out all sorts of impurities. That is why we are to welcome a certain amount of suffering in our life. It shortens our purgatory (Masses, prayers, sacraments, and charitable deeds do this also). Purgatory is an intensely painful fire because it is consuming those effects of sin which cling to us.

It is better to be purified in this life than in the next, because in this life our purification is effected in conjunction with our free will, whereas in the next, in purgatory, free will is gone - therefore purification takes place in a type of mechanical manner that makes it much more painful and prolonged.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

More Thoughts on 2nd Thessalonians 3:10

Folks,

As the reader may recall, some people at the Church in Thessalonica thought that they were entitled to a free ride off the God-mandated charity of others. St. Paul has a few words to say about that:
In fact, when we were with you, we instructed you that if anyone was unwilling to work, neither should that one eat.
A friend of mine with whom I once worked when I was employed at a pressurized water reactor in downstate New York has expanded on that with the following corollaries:
  1. You cannot legislate the poor into prosperity by legislating the wealthy out of prosperity.
  2. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.
  3. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else.
  4. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is the beginning of the end of any nation.
  5. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.
St. Paul understood this. However, neither the Bishops in the USCCB nor the politicians in the US Congress who call themselves Catholic either understand this, or if understanding it, are willing to act in accordance with it. Even St. Paul recognized that some people simply do deserve to starve.

NO, I am NOT talking about the penniless widow or the terminally ill elderly or the homeless child or similar examples, nor was St. Paul. Indeed it is our job as members of the Body of Christ to care for such people (James 1:27), and if we have an ounce of the charity that St. Paul wrote about in 1st Corinthians 13, then we wouldn't need government doing what God told us His very own adopted sons and daughters to do as members of the Kingdom of God, and we wouldn't be having this conversation about the false gospel of social justice and peace at any price.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Dueling Bishops

Folks,

Michael Voris of Real Catholic TV again has an excellent video on what's wrong within the Church in America where liberalism - the smoke of Satan himself - has infected the Body Elect. In Nashville, Tennessee a local priest disseminates liberal hogwash from the pulpit and is ordered by his bishop to retract his statements or face punishment. In El Paso, Texas a local priest upholds the Doctrine of the Faith on the inherent evil of homosexual acts and his bishop states he isn't compassionate, tolerant, embracing of diversity and all that liberal nonsense.

Now the renegade apostate priest in Tennessee wants the Pope to apologize for enforcing doctrine on the inherent evil of contraception, homosexuality and abortion, but his Bishop (being authentically Catholic) upbraided him. The authentic Catholic priest in Texas did just the opposite in stating the inherent evils of these acts and his Bishop (being a liberal apostate) upbraided him too. Thus has 40 years of drift broken in two the Church in America.

Here are the facts of the matter:

1. Only God gets to determine when live begins and when life ends. Violating this was the whole point of the sin committed in the Garden of Eden. Satan told Eve that by eating of the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, she and Adam could be like gods, determining what is good and what is evil. Next would surely come the fruit of the Tree of Life. No one gets to get of that Tree without Christ. So no one gets to determine when life begins and when it doesn't. Thus, no one gets to use contraception and prevent new life from forming. If one does not want a baby, then do not have sex. Are we wild animals like the Democrats (and some liberal Republicans who are called RINOs), given to the passion of the moment, and we just have to "get off" no matter what? Keep it zipped up - that's the best form of contraception.

2. Abortion is murder, pure a simple. It is a violation of one of those Ten Commandments, "Thou Shalt Not Murder." As soon as a human egg is fertilzed by human sperm, new life independent of his parents has been formed. It does not matter if that new life is simply a fertilized egg or a fully formed baby. No one gets to take away life. Again, the same rules apply: don't be a liberal Democrat (or a RINO) - if you don't want to have a baby, then do not have sex. Behave like a human being with the brains that God gave you instead of like a wild baboon.

3. Again and again throughout the Bible and in all of the Church's 2000 years of teaching, homosexual acts have been described as the evil perversion that they are. It is NOT an human right for the act of penile insertion into the anal or oral orifice of another man to be consecrated as marriage. It is NOT marriage. It is a disgusting, filthy and rotten act, and if that's what one likes doing, then one indeed is a very sick human being.

I am done with being nice, compassionate, tolerant and supportive of diversity. The compassionate thing to do is to warn people who engage in such activities that mortal sin leads to hell. Yes, I understand many have made the mistake in our modern culture of using condoms and sex is all over the TV and internet; so confess and repent before the Cross. Yes, I understand that women are often vicitimized into having an abortion, and that many good men and women alike have been so afflicted; the solution is the same - confess and repent before the Cross. And yes, many good men and women through no fault of their own have same sex attraction; they are called to live the same kind of life that any unmarried person must live: complete sexual abstinence. No one ever died from not having sex, but plenty have died from the venereal diseases and AIDS which are transmitted through illict sexual encounters. Homosexuality, adultery and fornication (which today is softened into the phrase "pre-marital co-habitation") are SIN and lead to the damnation of one's soul into an eternity of the fires of hell.

Now am I perfect? No. Do I deserve to go to hell? Yes. So what makes me (or any authentic Christian for that matter) any different? Repentance. None of us are perfect. As St. Paul says, for all have sinned and come short of the glory of God. That is exactly why Jesus suffered and died on a Tree (the REAL Tree of Life) - because He loved us so much that He took our punishment on Himself in our stead. So if we refuse His forgiveness by continuing to engage in evil acts such as contraception, abortion, homosexuality, adultery or fornication, then we send our own selves to hell because that's where we obviously want to go in having defied and rejected God's love. That was the point of the priest in El Paso and the point of the Bishop in Nashville. It is the same point that is rejected by Bishop in El Paso and equally rejected by the priest in Nashville. Authentic Catholics accept the teaching of the Church. Renegage liberal perverts want it changed. It is that simple.

Hold fast to the Truth. Remain loyal to Sacred Scripture, the Sacred Tradition of the Church, and Pope Benedict XVI. Pray the Rosary daily. Read the Bible daily. Attend Mass often. Avail yourself of the Sacrament of Reconciliation and Penance often. Read the Pope's Encyclicals. Indeed, I have yet to meet a liberal so-called Catholic who those things with any consistency, for those are the things that protect against the evils of today's society, and can give one the discernment needed to recognize and reject the liberalism disseminated by renegade clerics and politicians alike.

Dueling Bishops

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Is Obama Muslim?

Folks,

What follows below is another excellent video by Michael Voris of Real Catholic TV. I could comment at length on this. Suffice it to say that Obama actually has no religion other than his own narcissist self-worship, and his god is none other than whom he sees in the mirror when he shaves every morning.

The web link to the text of the interview on Obama's religion to which Michael Voris refers is also provided below in additon to the link to his video. Obama is simply the current culmination of 493 years of dissent from and rebellion against Holy Mother Church that started with the nailing of those Ninety Five Theses to the door of All Saints' Church in Wittenberg, Germany. As Mr. Voris explains it, with 33000 different denominations each claiming to be THE way, THE truth, who can blame the American public for being confused about Obama's relgion, or even Obama himself for believing that his mixture of New Age, Islam, and Rabbinical Judaism with Christianity makes him Christian?

Obama's Fascinating Interview with Cathleen Falsani

Is Obama Muslim?

Monday, August 23, 2010

A Note on a Blessed and Holy Priest

Folks,

Of late I have been attending Mass at a small church in the country where a great many Hispanic people live. The priest is himself a Hispanic, having come from a country in South America. I am pleased to report that he stands head and shoulders above many of his clerical colleagues. Without fear of intimidation, on several occasions he has flatly and unabashedly stated that those who remain in persistant and unrepentent defiance of Church norms on homosexuality and abortion should repent or leave the Church. He acknowledged that many will cry that the Church has to remain open and welcoming to diversity. But diversity is NOT flaunted disobedience, and he included clerics and laity alike in his statement directly from the pulpit.

Now that, my friends, is a CATHOLIC priest in the best of Sacred Tradition, and I personally don't give a hoot if he's Hispanic, Nigerian, Japanese or German. He typifies the kind of shepherds we need. I pray for God to bless him and keep him safe against whatever forces of evil may now conspire against him, and those forces will indeed so conspire because Satan HATES truth and the truth is this:

Repent and convert, for the Kingdom of God is at hand.

P.S., I started attending Eucharist Adoration at this church on Wednesday afternoons when I am let loose from work because the chapel itself is but a short drive directly up the road where my place of work is located. Within a matter of a few weeks, I got volunteered to help out with Catechism classes and all kinds of stuff. I only went there to silently pray for two hours and have some sanity, and now look at what happened. The lesson to be learned is this: when you go where God wants you to be, then He will give you the job He wants you to do. So don't try to run away from it. Just suck it up and do it.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

A Note to Humanists, Secularists, Atheists and Agnostics

Folks,

A secularist attempted to post a comment on this blogsite's recent entry, "Why the World Hates Christianity by Jim McCrea." Apparently this secularist feels as though Christianity is the majority religion in these United States, and that atheists, agnostics and Islamists are in the minority, hence deserving equal time. In fact, he maintained that the Islamists should be allowed to build a mosque at the 9-11 WTC site that they had destroyed.

It has been several days since I drafted this post. After much reflection and prayer, I have decided NOT to reproduce or even debate the merits of this individual's arguments (and there are no such merits). I shall NOT hold dialogue with him or any other humanist, secularist, atheist or agnostic. I won't be drawn into a trap where everything breaks down into one great big angry argument. And I won't allow anti-Christian comments to be posted at my blogsite.

Yes, I do censor - against anything opposed to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Gospel of repentance and conversion, the Gospel of righteousness and holiness. I do NOT claim to be righteous or holy myself. I am in need of daily repentance and conversion. But at the same time I won't allow this my very own Catholic blogsite to be polluted by the secular refuse of what currently passes for Western Civilization and what Obama and men like him exemplify in word and deed.

Now yes, I will post and respectfully respond to genuine comments on and legitimate inquiries into the Faith once delivered unto the Saints no matter who the author may be. But secularism, humanism, atheism and agnosticism has already shown its track record for murder and mayhem in Nazi Germany, the former USSR and communist China. It continues its track record of murder and mayhem in these United States through abortion, gay marriage and the equivocation of Islam with Christianity. Indeed I may and do fear the political ascendency that such people have gained under the Obama's rule. But quite frankly, I do NOT respect their beliefs or their practices, and I won't give them the time of day at a blogsite that I run. If this is offensive, then the reader is free to create his own blogsite to disseminate whatever his ideas may be. Obama has not yet destroyed that opportunity. But not here and not on my turf.

So to humanists, secularists, atheists and agnostics, my only word of advice is this: repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand.

The Queenship of Mary

Folks,

According to the Catholic Culture web site, today (August 22nd ) is the Memorial of the Queenship of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Just as Bathsheba, the mother of Solomon, was the Queen of Israel and Judah before whom Solomon himself bowed and paid homage (1st Kings 2:19), so also is Mary, the Mother of Jesus, the Queen of Heaven and Earth.

Just as the Ark of the Old Covenant spent three months in the abode of Obed-edom in the hill country of Judah (2nd Samuel 6:10-12), so also did the Ark of the New Covenant spend three months with her cousin Elizabeth in the hill country of Judea (Luke 1:39-56).

Thus did Jesus on the Cross give His Mother to the Apostle John and hence to the Church (John 19:26-27).

And thus was the Ark of the New Covenant revealed in Heaven (Revelation 11:19) with the coronation of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Queen of Heaven and Earth (Revelation 12:1-5).

So is fulfilled the promise in Genesis 3:15: "I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; He will strike at your head, while you strike at his heel."

All these things and more are discussed at length in Pope Pius XII's Encyclical Ad Caeli Reginam. Please left click your mouse cursor on the aforementioned link to read Pope Pius's proclamation.

Hail Mary, Full of Grace,
The Lord is with Thee.
Blessed Art Thou among Women
And Blessed Is the Fruit of Thy Womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God,
Pray for Us Sinners
Now and at the Hour of Our Death
Amen.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

The Dynamics of Good and Evil by Jim McCrea

The Dynamics of Good and Evil

By Jim J. McCrea

The twentieth century Catholic philosopher, Dietrich von Hildebrand, maintained that the morally good person prefers the objectively important, while the morally bad person prefers the subjectively satisfying. The objectively important is what is important in itself - that is, what is important for its own sake, independent of the personal good it can confer - while the subjectively satisfying is what is merely personally pleasing. In contrast to this idea, a famous success guru says that the underlying reason for all human actions is that they are done to maximize personal pleasure or to minimize personal pain. For example, according to him, both Donald Trump and Mother Teresa are motivated by basically the same thing. He says that Donald Trump is motivated to avoid the pain of being poor and Mother Teresa is motivated to avoid the pain of seeing people destitute. Some may believe that this is a profound insight, but others may be more accurate in sensing that something is wrong with it. That is an example of how something can be falsified in attempting to get to the bottom of it. In contrast to what this success guru says, the very essence of moral goodness is to transcend the ego and to promote the good simply for being the good, and to do what is right simply because it is right. This is the true meaning of integrity. One who responds to any situation with the question: "what is in it for me?" is not a morally good person. Goodness, above all, is expressed in the supernatural virtue of charity. It is the highest and purest expression of moral goodness to love God simply for His own sake, and to love one's neighbor for God's sake and for the fact that one's neighbor is made in the image and likeness of God.

The titanic struggle today within the individual, within the Church, and within society is whether the preference for the objectively important or the subjectively satisfying will constitute the main motivating force. It is the titanic struggle between love and sin. This struggle is expressed in many and varied ways. As a main motivator, the objectively important vs. the subjectively satisfying is manifested in:

(1) A vision of woman as nurturers and bearers of life vs. radical feminism;
(2) A vision of men as protectors and providers vs. predators and seekers after pleasure, power, and material possessions;
(3) Teaching the young that sexuality is a gift from God and that sexual activity is to be used only in holy matrimony to generate life and strengthen the marital love bond vs. teaching the young that the purpose of sex is mere pleasure and that they should only know how to have sex "safely";
(4) Pro-life vs. pro-choice;
(5) social justice vs. a capitalism which values profits above all else and disregards people.by morality and ethics] which values profits above all else and disregards people.

Many more such dichotomous pairs could be listed. The struggle of the objectively important vs. the subjectively satisfying, as a main motivating force, is the struggle between the Culture of Life and the culture of death in our society today.

It is the traditional Aristotelian viewpoint that the ultimate final cause (goal) of all human acts is happiness - that no matter what is done by a person, happiness is the ultimate motivating force. Morality, according to this, is the means by which this ultimate end is sought. This idea of morality as concerning the choice between good or evil (which are intermediate ends) means to achieve happiness, has dominated much moral philosophy. However, Dietrich von Hildebrand sees this as too narrow. For von Hildebrand, morality concerns the choice between two distinct ends --- again, the objectively important and the subjectively satisfying. It would not necessarily be evil to do something for one's own satisfaction. The evil would be in indulging our personal satisfaction when something important in itself calls us to duty. For example, it would be evil to continue to enjoy a hobby when a mother or father seriously needs our help. What the will always seeks is some form of good. To prefer the subjectively satisfying is to be motivated by the forces of pride and concupiscence. To prefer the objectively important is to be motivated by reverence and love. It is not a contradiction to say that in moral evil a good is sought. The evil in this consists in goodness being sought for oneself alone and in treating others as a mere means to this goodness. Moral goodness indeed includes seeking our own good, but it also includes being equally interested in seeking the good of others for their sakes (and not so that we will receive something in return). We are morally good in seeking our own good because we ourselves are part of what is objectively important (God has willed us and loves us). One only becomes infected with evil to the extent that one treats oneself as more important than others simply because oneself is the self. This is the evil of egoism from which all other evils flow.

This raises a question: If the human soul has been created to love and serve God and others, how is the moral evil of satisfying the self at the expense of others possible? To answer this, we must look at the psychology of human consciousness. From our own point of view, it seems as if we are at the center of reality. A first fundamental act of consciousness makes it appear that we are at the center of a gigantic sphere. In this first act of consciousness, we have maximum awareness of what is closest to us and the further away from us that things are, the less awareness we have of them. We would have maximum awareness of ourselves because we are at the center of the sphere. Subjectively we would see ourselves as having the most reality and the further away things are, the less reality they would have. What the evil person does is to take this subjective viewpoint and raise it to an absolute. For the evil person, he really is the "center," and all others are merely a means to serve him. For moral goodness, a second fundamental act of consciousness is required. In this second act, this sphere is transcended and is seen as a mere creation of one's subjectivity and not as things really are. It is then seen that others are centers of equal legitimacy (with God as the ultimate center of reality). The morally good person acts in accordance with this second fundamental act of consciousness.

This preference for moral goodness or moral evil reflected in the choice between the objectively important and the subjectively satisfying can be seen in the test of the angels. Angels are finite but purely immaterial beings which exist mid-way between man and God. It is generally believed that they were created before the physical universe. After their creation, God put them to a test to determine their worthiness for heaven. Tradition holds that Lucifer, being the chief angel, rebelled first against God, and if Revelation 12:3-4 is understood in a given way, one third of the angels followed him. It is often asked, if Lucifer fell first, what tempted him to fall, since he is the first in the line of tempters? The very fact that he is a self tempted him to fall. He too in a first fundamental act of consciousness perceived himself at the center of a sphere of reality. By his own free will, he failed to act upon a second fundamental act of consciousness which saw this sphere as the result of his own subjective view point and God as the true center. He choose to make the sphere an absolute. All of the angels were tested to see if they would make this leap out of their own subjective sphere to embrace objective reality.

At the moment of their test, they were simultaneously given a vision of two realities. On their right they had a vision of God being honored and worshipped above all else and all other creatures being loved and enriched (this is the objectively important with the self being subordinate to it). On their left they had a vision of themselves alone being honored and enriched, and all others acting as a mere means to this (--this is the subjectively satisfying being affirmed with all others serving it). The test, for each angel, was to determine which reality he would choose. As mentioned above the majority choose the reality on the right. As a reward, they were immediately granted the beatific vision. The angels, who became evil, choose the reality on the left. In choosing to have themselves served and honored above all else, they choose that the happiness and goodness of all others would be sacrificed to this end. In this, they incurred a monstrous degree of guilt. As a punishment, they were immediately cast down into hell.

** footnote: It may be true, as a tradition states, that the good angels were found worthy because they accepted the God-man Jesus Christ as their king and the Blessed Virgin as their queen, and the evil angels fell because they rejected that. There may have been many things which constituted the content of these two simultaneous visions. The acceptance / rejection of Jesus and Mary may have been at the center of them. The inability of the fallen angels to repent is based on the fact that they knew exactly what the light was and utterly and willfully rejected it. This utter rejection of goodness, in the light of perfect understanding, makes repentance for the fallen angels impossible. In no way was their rejection of goodness based on some form of misunderstanding, as it is most often the case with humans.

II.

We will now look at the source of all goodness which is God. The following analysis will be a combination of natural and revealed theology.

All finite things owe their existence to God. God exists because He is Existence Itself (Exodus 3:14). Being Pure Existence He has all possible perfections to an infinite degree. God, therefore, is Life Itself. This is because life is better than non-life. Having all possible perfections, God will always have what is greater rather than what is less. His is an infinitely intense Life of understanding and love. Now the nature of life is to be fruitful. God Himself must, therefore, be fruitful. Of course He is externally fruitful in that He has created. However, this creation was free. For anything God created, he could have created something different. He could just as well have chosen not to create at all. God, however, is also internally fruitful. This fruitfulness is necessary and not a result of His free will. This fruitfulness is as necessary as His being. It is infinite and identical with His life, as His life is identical with His being. The infinite perfection of God demands that His attributes are identical with each other and with His being. If this were not the case, to HAVE life or power as attributes distinct from Him would mean that He would depend on something which is not Himself for His perfections. Any sort of dependence would contradict absolute and infinite perfection. Being an infinite act of fruitfulness which God has and which is identical with God, that which is generated by Him is also infinite. God's fruitfulness must be infinite. That which is generated is His own Son (Jn 3:16). The Son is truly God because that which is generated, being total and infinite, cannot have anything lacking to it.

The specific act of generation of the Father is that of intellection. The Father generating the Son is the act of a thinker thinking a thought, the fathers say. This is because the highest kind of fruitfulness is that of intellection. Most fundamental to personality is the ability to know. God must be personal. This is because the personal is greater than the non-personal. Love is most ultimate, but knowledge is most fundamental and foundational because one cannot love what one does not know (teaching of St. Thomas Aquinas). That is why the Son is called the Word or Wisdom of God. He contains everything the Father knows as His one and infinite concept. The Son is Jesus Christ. The Son is Infinite Truth. This raises a question. If the Son is Truth, what is He a truth of? Truth must have some content. The Son is a truth of Love. The Son being God, must be Love, because God being infinite must be the greatest thing possible. St. John the Apostle said that "God is Love." (1 John 4:8) This is the ultimate truth of reality. It is that for the sake of which all other things exist. Jesus is Truth, but more ultimately, Jesus is Love. The love of Jesus is the truth content of Jesus.

The love of the Son is identical with Himself. This is based on the absolute simplicity of God. Love, however, is outgoing. It has a target. The love which the Son is, is love for the Father. The very essence of the Son is inclination to the Father. The Son is Pure Willing the Good of the Father and Pure Rejoicing in the Good of the Father. This is because the object of the Son's love, being infinitely perfect, must be the greatest thing possible. The Love which is the Son not only embraces the Father, but everything that the Father wills. The Son, therefore, is also love for each of us. The Father has everything the Son has because the Father is the source of the Son. The Father, therefore, is Love as well. The Love which the Father is, is love for the Son. He is Pure Willing the Good of the Son and is Pure Rejoicing in the Good of the Son. The Father is also love for us because His love not only embraces the Son, but all that the Son wills. Now this love of the Father for the Son and the Son for the Father is fruitful. This Love, One-for-the-other, is a Single Mutual Love, which "leaps forth" so that another person proceeds. This One-for-the-other Love, as proceeding, is the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is infinite and lacks nothing. He is, therefore, is all knowing and all powerful. The Holy Spirit, Himself, is truly God. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is the Blessed Trinity.

** footnotes: The above is not an attempt to prove the Trinity from reason. This analysis could only be done after the fact of the Trinity being revealed by God. It is of Catholic Faith that the fact of the Trinity cannot be derived by reason, but must be revealed.

** It may be asked, if the Son and the Holy Spirit, being God, has all that the Father does, why would they not be fruitful in producing another person, since their essence is also Life? The answer to this is that since the Son and the Holy Spirit are infinite and total, along with the Father, they can only be distinguished from the Father and each other by their relations of origin. The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit lack nothing which would enable them to be distinguished from one another on the basis of what they are. The Father is distinguished from the Son by the mere fact that the Father begets and the Son is begotten. The Holy Spirit is distinguished by the mere fact that He proceeds from the Father and the Son. Only the Father can generate because that is precisely what distinguishes Him in the Trinity. God-as-generating is the relation which is the Father. Since "what" the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are is identical, they are one God.

The above analysis was conducted to indicate that the form of all intelligibility and goodness, in creation, has its source within the Trinity which is necessarily intelligible and good to an infinite degree. The infinite intelligibility of God is based on the fact that He must be the way He is, and that He cannot be otherwise. Truth is a transcendental. This means that truth is an intrinsic property of being. Truth as an intrinsic property of being means that being is intelligible or understandable to an intellect. When we say that something is intelligible we mean that it "makes sense" or "is logical." A sudden grasp of the intelligibility of something is often expressed by the exclamation "ah-ha." When we grasp something as intelligible, we see with the eyes of the intellect that it has to be the way it is to be right. It is an intuition which transcends---step by step---reasoning. The opposite is something which makes no sense or what we would call "illogical." We can intuitively see that a senseless thing is out of place, and that its component parts do not constitute something meaningful. Now the Trinity is infinitely intelligible. The Trinity makes an infinite amount of sense, is infinitely necessary, and is infinitely "logical." The Trinity is the transcendental of truth to an infinite degree. The above analysis was a sketchy way of attempting to indicate this.

Goodness is also a transcendental. It is the nature of being as being to be good. Evil is a privation of some due good (i.e. the lack of sight in a man or the lack of moral goodness in a soul). If something is good it does not exist for itself alone, but is of service to other things and persons. In this, it is modeled on the love of the Trinity. Even if we cannot articulate it, we recognize evil as something awry, out of place, - as something which does not truly serve but subverts the whole ---as something inappropriate. The human body is good in its integrity because we can determine that every element in it, from the individual organs, to the individual cells, down to the biochemicals, serves the whole. We can see that some disease element, such as a tumor or a virus, is evil, because it does not serve the whole (Indeed, it may harm the whole). Similarly, society has the integrity of goodness if each member serves the whole or what is called the common good (even if this service is patiently accepting the will of God in complete disability). Society lacks the integrity of goodness if the members work to enrich themselves at the expense of the whole. Since social policy, in our Western nations today, is oriented to individuals enriching themselves at the expense of the whole, we live in a culture of death. Christians must work for a Culture of Life, where social policy is geared to individuals serving the whole. Social policy today is constructed so that the preference for the subjectively satisfying is facilitated. A culture of life would have social policy structured so that it facilitates the objectively important. A law which allows the killing of the unborn through abortion facilitates the self being served at the expense of the whole. A law which protects the unborn, by outlawing abortion, facilitates the individual serving the whole.

Now the Trinity is the source of all goodness. Ours is often a culture of death and evil to the extent that it has been separated from the source of all goodness which is God. The result is meaningless, despair, and ultimately violence in society. Integrity, goodness, and happiness will return to society when it is reunited with God. There is a deep philosophical connection between the transcendentals. Goodness is also truth. What is good and integral is also intelligible. Goodness makes sense to the human intellect as what ought to be the case. This is the basis of the human intellect's ability to understand the natural law which tells us what is right and what is wrong. Pride and concupiscence, which is the basis for one's preference for the subjectively satisfying, blinds the intellect so that it cannot see the natural law. The natural law is intelligible as such, but it would not be intelligible to an intellect which has been blinded by vice. Being caught in the subjective sphere, where self is the center of reality, blinds the intellect to objective reality. Love and reverence, which is the basis for one's preference for the objectively important, makes the natural law intelligible and eminently reasonable. Purity of heart is much more important for understanding reality rightly than natural intellectual gifts. There is a form of stupidity which is always associated with viciousness of heart, no matter how great the natural gifts. On the other hand, if someone is not particularly gifted, if his heart is good, he demonstrates a form of wisdom.

"All men have sinned and are deprived of the glory of God." (Romans 3:23) When Adam sinned by preferring self to God, we all inherited this original sin. In this we all merited eternal death. By suffering and dying on the Cross, Jesus Christ gave us all the chance to attain eternal life. We will attain it by accepting Him and His mercy and doing His will. Jesus gave us the fullness of truth and the fullness of the means of salvation to the Holy Roman Catholic Church which He founded. The Church teaches that "outside the Church there is no salvation." This does not mean that those who are not Catholics cannot be saved. It means that if someone who is not Catholic is saved, the means of salvation which exist within the Catholic Church are applied to him for his salvation. Conversely, if someone is Catholic and he does not make use of Her means of salvation, he will not be saved. Indeed, he will be more severely judged.

The fullness of God's revealed truth (public revelation) and means of salvation (priesthood and sacraments) exists within the Catholic Church alone. However, elements of truth and sanctification can be found outside of Her visible bounds. For example, most of the Protestant confessions hold Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. If given the light they have, they correspond to the grace of Christ, they will be saved. However, there is a grave defect in Protestantism in that they do not recognize the ordained priesthood and the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist (which no Christian of note doubted for the first thousand years of Christianity). God's grace can even work in the adherents of other world religions. However, these religions have even more serious defects than Protestantism. If Christianity is true, the Islamic denial of the Trinity and the divinity of Christ cannot also be true. This is because Christianity and Islam contradict each other on this point. Similarly, if Christianity is true, the Buddhist's denial of the goodness of being cannot be true. This contradicts the Christian teaching that being is essentially good, and that evil is a privation of due good. It is possible for people of these religions to be saved, but they would be saved in spite of the teachings which contradict Christianity, not because of them.

One unique feature of the Catholic Faith is that it is the one which is fully intelligible, reasonable, logical, consistent, organic, and natural. This has its roots in the intelligibility, reasonableness, logic, consistency, organic nature, and naturalness of the Trinity. All other religions, more or less, have elements which are artificial or arbitrary. For example, let us examine the Protestant rejection of the Catholic honoring of the Virgin Mary. Now it is rational and reasonable that we honor our own mothers. We cannot simply make note of the fact that they gave us birth and then proceed to treat them with indifference. We cannot simply treat them as a tool to be discarded once they have performed their function. This is what most Protestants do with Mary. They maintain that her sole function was to give birth to Jesus and to raise him. They say that we are not to honor her or relate to her, but we are to "go to Jesus alone." If we are to always honor our own mothers (fourth commandment), how much more would Jesus continue to honor His mother, since she is the mother of a divine person. Jesus honors His mother, not simply because she is His, but because she is intrinsically honorable. Since Mary, being the mother of God, is intrinsically honorable, it is His will that we honor her as well, since He wishes us to live in accordance with the truth. In a life crisis, we as Christians would certainly pray to Jesus, but we would naturally ask our mothers to pray for us as well. Implicit in this is the understanding that our own prayers are not necessarily powerful enough, so we need help. For a similar reason, Catholics certainly go to Jesus, but it makes eminent sense for them to ask Mary to intercede as well. Mary's prayers are extraordinarily more powerful than those of any earthly mother. This is one example of how a given Catholic belief is reasonable and natural relative to a contradictory non-Catholic belief.

The Catholic Church is virtually the one entity on earth which defends the moral truth in its entirety. It does this in a sea of general moral breakdown in the world. Catholic moral teaching has been supernaturally revealed by God as binding on each human being. This moral truth is not a "Catholic thing" but is based on the very nature of man qua man. This moral truth is the law by which God has meant man to operate. However, even though it has been supernaturally revealed, much of this moral truth is intelligible and can be seen as true in the light of natural law by unaided reason. On a practical level, because the human intellect tends to be weak, it needs help. This is why that which can be seen by the light of natural law is also supernaturally revealed.

The greatest way in which the natural law is being violated today is in the legalization of abortion, and its widespread practice. Few things are more organic, natural, and intelligible as good, as mother with unborn child. I think it was the ancient Chinese who said that a pregnant woman is the essence of goodness. Nothing is as violent, arbitrary, and unnatural as taking a foreign instrument and destroying this mother-child bond through the killing of abortion. Such a thing should be obvious. Science has demonstrated beyond a shadow of a doubt that when conception occurs, a human being is created with its own genetic code and directional orientation to development to maturity. It is obvious simply by looking at the unborn child, in most of her stages of development, that she is human. It is also evident that abortion causes the woman immense harm on the physical, psychological, and spiritual levels. It is logical that the violent destruction of the mother-child bond, through induced abortion, would do this (this type of harm does not happen through spontaneous miscarriage). Many pro-abortionists argue that men should not concern themselves with the issue of abortion, since only woman bear children. The answer to that is that the unborn is not just the woman's child, but everyone's brother or sister in a common humanity. Everyone, therefore, should be concerned. That such a thing is legal in our society is incredible! It is only legal because large numbers of people in our society today are blinded by pride and concupiscence. They put selfish gain over the principles of goodness and justice. All Christians should pray for the conversion of the large numbers who are hard of heart.

Homosexuality has gained an acceptance which it did not have forty years ago. A while ago, an acquaintance of mine discussed this topic. He said: "that part is not supposed to go there." (I am paraphrasing. He used cruder terminology). He was not a practicing Christian, but he knew that from the design and function of the human body, homosexuality was neither right nor natural. He could see this in the light of natural law, apart from revelation. The vast majority could see this forty years ago. It is a straightforward and intelligible truth. Indoctrination of the general public, into erroneous philosophical ideas, by the mass media and public education has blinded many to this natural truth. The thinking is so twisted today that if you speak out against homosexuality they say that something is wrong with you. For those who oppose homosexuality they have fabricated the disorder of "homophobia."

God's law against premarital sex can also be seen in the light of natural law. A few decades ago, when a Christian world-view was predominate in our culture, most people adhered to God's law and waited until marriage to have sex. In this day and age, when Christian culture has been largely rejected, most people do not wait until marriage for sex. Much of the rejection of Christian culture has been caused by the academia. Although there can be a valid science of psychology, as psychology is taught today, it claims that all actions are motivated by some sort of personal gain - that we only do good to receive some benefit in return. It is not acknowledged that good can be done simply because it is good. All transcendence is denied with this. This is related to the practice of sex before marriage. In the modern anti-Christian secular humanist world view, one's partner is seen only as a means of procuring pleasure and happiness for the self. One enters into an exclusive romantic partnership as a form of a bargain, with each one hoping receive in gain something equivalent to or better than what one gives. That is not the Christian view at all. With a Christian mindset, one loves one's partner for his or her self. The partner is loved because he or she is intrinsically valuable and precious. The motive is not to gain for oneself, but to make the partner happy. Paradoxically, it is in this seeking of the happiness of the other which secures a genuine and profound happiness for the self. To seek happiness for the self, and to use others as a means to this, is to miss happiness. The most miserable people in the world are those who attempt to find happiness by using others as a mere means to that happiness. Similarly, God's commandment that sex must be reserved for marriage is based on the fact that sex is a sign of one's commitment to the other and a sign of genuine love for the other that has declared publicly that one will stay with the other until death do them part. Sex outside of marriage declares that one loves the other only as long as one receives the desired benefits. This is because sex is not performed within the context of a life long commitment, but within the context of fond feelings. Feelings come and go, while a commitment is permanent. When sexual activity is motivated by fond feeling alone, one is saying that the partner is a mere means for personal gain. When one has sex in the context of commitment, one would be saying that the partner is valuable for his or her own sake.

The evil of contraception can be understood by natural law as well. Contraception is the deliberate insertion of a dysfunction into the human body (the pill) or the sexual act itself (the condom) to avoid conception. The evil of contraception is primarily ontological. In contraception that which is eminently personal is being disrupted in its integrity (this is why natural forms of birth control, when used appropriately, are not wrong). The personal transcends the non-personal. It is permissible to manipulate the non-personal, within bounds, for human advantage (such as the cutting of trees or the killing of animals for human consumption). However, it is not permissible to do this sort of thing with the human person. While the non-personal is a means, the personal is an end in itself. The personal has a sanctity or a dignity so that it is wrong to treat it as a mere means. The integrity of the personal sphere must never be disrupted for personal advantage. this is because the personal is that for the sake that other things exist. This is exactly what contraception does. It causes a dysfunction in the personal sphere for personal advantage. Therefore, it treats the personal sphere as a mere means to be disposed of as one pleases. That is why contraception is evil.

** footnote - legitimate medical procedures that disrupt the body (such as the amputation of a limb or the removal of an organ) are not wrong because it is done to facilitate the integrity of the whole which would otherwise suffer. They are not done merely to procure a subjective pleasure advantage.

There is a connection between contraception and euthanasia. With euthanasia the personal sphere is also treated as a mere means. It could be the means to pleasure, power, status, or possessions. If this is the case, when a human being is deemed unfit to procure these advantages, the euthanasia mindset says that that human being must die. The euthanasia mindset also fails to see that the personal is an end in itself. Like the contraceptive mindset, the euthanasia mindset declares that what is personal is to be disposed of for selfish gain. The abortion mindset says the same thing. This euthanasia mindset is also present in those who would mistreat a person, if that person cannot procure some advantage for them, or if that person stands in the way of their own selfish advantage. Many of these adult bullies are around today. With the personal, there is a dignity and a sanctity with the personal sphere in which a certain reverent distance must be maintained. This is the exact opposite of treating what is personal as something to be "consumed." God has endowed each person's life with profound meaning and purpose. This applies to the most disabled. Extreme disability or suffering can profoundly purify a soul. This, however, would be meaningless those who see a person's ability to produce goods rather than seeing personal goodness as important. Disability and suffering can also train caregivers in great virtue. The actions of caregivers also serves as an example to other people as to how others are to be treated. Mother Teresa was a profound example of how to love one's neighbor.

Apart from Revelation, it is difficult to find a direct proof from natural law for the inviolability, sanctity, and dignity of the human person. This is because what is readily visible is the human person as that which procures pleasure, power, or possessions for society. Many people, seeing only these visible aspects believes that this is the purpose of human life. True love and reverence opens the eyes to the intrinsic value of the human person. Pride and concupiscence, on the other hand, causes blindness in this sphere. Many in our society are not esteemed as valuable if they do not produce for society. However, an indirect rational proof for the intrinsic value of human life can be given. We can do this by looking at the consequences of denying it. We can study communism as it existed in the former Soviet Union. Countless millions were killed, enslaved, or unjustly imprisoned under this regime. It's basic premise was that the human individual was simply a means for the machinery of the state. The human person was not recognized as having value in his or her own right. The horrors of the Soviet system flowed from this. Much of Nazi Germany was based on the eugenics movements of the early twentieth century. In this, the human person is not an end, in which a reverent distance must be maintained, but a mere means - that is, as something to be improved for the sake of society so that he can be a more efficient instrument for society. Nazi Germany followed this idea by killing all who were "unfit." When man is seen as a mere means, it begs the question: a means for whom? The answer would always be that he is a means for the strong - that is, a means for those who have the power to impose their will. Justice and goodness can only have a foundation in the recognition of the intrinsic value of the human person. In this, one is given one's due simply because it is one's due based on a fundamental sanctity of human life.

Divine justice is also organic and natural, rather than arbitrary and artificial. God does not set such-and-such a standard, and if we fail to live up to this standard He condemns us. It is not like that at all. Hell, rather, is the natural consequence of one's option for evil. When mortal sin is committed, something seriously wrong is chosen for selfish advantage. Taking someone's life because you want his property is an example. More common, is modern idolatry where God and His law are ignored for selfish advantage. This act of choosing a serious evil causes a hideous deformity to appear in the soul. A deformed act of will causes a deformed state of soul. This is a natural cause and effect link. Now the grace of God is completely incompatible with this deformity, so that when this deformity appears God's grace must depart. Mortal sin and God's grace are contradictory so it is impossible for them to be simultaneous. If a soul dies unrepentant - that is, if the soul dies with this horrible deformity and without God's grace, it enters eternity without the friendship of God. This eternal state of being without the friendship of God is hell. Hell is eternal because after death, the core of one's being enters a state of timelessness. After death, therefore, one is fixed in either good or evil. In Hell, God inflicts nothing. Hell is intense suffering because it is the absence of God who is infinite happiness, and it is the absence of God's ordering power which gives peace and repose. Hell is just because it is based on the soul's willingness to reject God.

Heaven is the natural result of choosing the will of God over self. When self is emptied (in humility and self giving charity), God has room to enter. When God indwells a soul He brings order to it. A soul with God has peace. When a soul enters eternity in this state, the happiness which is given is infinite. God is an infinitely simple principle who perfectly harmonizes and unites everything in heaven around Him. Happiness is the abiding in harmony and unity. In hell, rather than everything being harmonized, everything acts independently. Each person, and each faculty within each person vies for supremacy. The result is unending conflict and torment. This is the end result of attempting to be one's own god. The forces of liberalism in society, which turns authentic freedom under law into arbitrary license, is creating hell on earth. The attraction of liberalism is an apparent freedom from constraint. However, it is a refusal to act in accordance with natural and divine law which brings harmony and happiness. Pride and concupiscence motivates this. Instead of freedom, it brings slavery to the lower forces of our nature. Union with God does not take away our freedom, but makes us eminently free. This is because in being united with God we are united with the very cause of our being and action. We can see that the justice of God is natural rather than artificial.

III.

In this last section we will discuss the nature of suffering and God's permission of it. God's permission for suffering also is natural and organic, rather than artificial and arbitrary. Anger directing at God for the permitting of suffering is unjustified since God has eminently logical reasons for it. It says in My Imitation of Christ: " Indeed if there had been anything better and more beneficial to man's salvation than suffering, Christ certainly would have showed it by word or example." (Book II, Chapter 12). Although suffering is a mystery in this life, we can gain some insight into the reasons for it and the supreme value that God holds for it. C.S. Lewis said in his book The Problem of Pain says that suffering is the one thing we cannot ignore. Suffering is the one thing which we must take seriously when we are experiencing it. This is part of the essence of suffering. The deeper suffering is, the more seriously we must take it. Because of its unique effect of being taken seriously, it has a unique ability to affect us and change us. When sin is experienced as suffering we are much more motivated to get rid of that sin. Suffering, by its very nature, contradicts the pleasure which is at the root of pride and concupiscence. It, therefore, has the power to dissolve pride and concupiscence like nothing else. Since we are all part of a fallen race, we all have some degree of pride and concupiscence, therefore, we all require suffering. Of course there is a deeper dimension to the value of suffering which has been recognized by all the saints. It unites us to Christ suffering on the Cross, so that we can share in his Resurrection. In uniting our sufferings to Christ's, we participate in his work of redemption, and therefore, assist him in the salvation of souls. Being God, Christ has no absolute need for us. However, He has willed that we be useful in His plan of salvation.

It is God's will that our activity in heaven be modeled on the activity within the Blessed Trinity. God's activity is a tripolar current of life, truth, and love which flows continuously between the persons of the Trinity. What each person receives is immediately offered up to the other two. There is no self sufficient self in the Trinity which halts and absorbs the flow of the goodness of God. The life of God is the ecstasy of transcendence. It is the willing and beholding of the goodness of the OTHER. Similarly, our life in heaven will be a willing and beholding of the goodness of the other. In heaven we will fully understand others as important in themselves, and not at all as a mere means for personal advantage. To see the superiority of others will not cause envy, but inconceivable joy. This is the complete opposite of the envy of socialism and radical feminism. We do not have this attitude in its full purity on earth. We are all, to some degree, subject to pride and concupiscence, which is the result of original and personal sin. We are all, to some degree, caught in the sphere, where we see ourselves as the center. The experience of the Apostles on mount Tabor could not last because they were, to a degree, caught in the sphere. When Peter said how good it was to be with Jesus in His transfiguration, there was an attachment to personal joy. For Peter to be liberated from this attachment, and to be liberated from the sphere completely, so that his response to goodness would be utterly pure and unattached (which is only possible in heaven), he had to go through the scandal of the Cross and the suffering of his martyrdom. It is the same with us.

Another way of looking at evil and disorder in the world is that God does not will it directly. Many people ask why God does not stop wars, famines, natural disasters, etc. Many people ask the same question about the disorders in our personal lives. The answer to that is that God's light and love are always shining with an infinite brightness on any situation. The fault for a disordered system is not God's but simply that a disordered system is by its very nature resistant to the harmonizing light of God. Look at a chaotic system such as a riot. Even though God is omnipresent, the dynamics of the system repulses the light of God by its very nature. In it is an incompatibility with the light of God. It would be the same with economic unrest or unrest within an individual. Of course God is omnipotent and He can bring stillness to any chaotic system. The calming of the storm by Jesus, when the disciples were in the boat, is an example. However, to do this he has to override nature. Overriding nature has to be the exception, rather than the rule, because if it were the rule then the nature of nature, with its distinct function and laws, would cease to have meaning. It is through the distinct function of nature that God fulfills much of his will in nature. For example, if God were to continuously override the nature of a man, so that he was constantly acting like some other thing, that man would cease to have the dignity he is supposed to have as his nature as a man. The dignity that things have and the respect that God has for them, it based on the fact that it is the norm that they act in accordance with their nature, and that exceptions to this are rare. It is simply this respect that God has for the nature of nature that evil is allowed to flourish given that man sins and refuses God's will. Evil, however, does not have the last word. As St. Augustine says, God only permits evil to draw a greater good from it in the end. From the above, we can see that God's permission for evil is logical, and in accordance with intelligent providence, rather than arbitrary and without proper reason.

Tonight's Humor? - The Iranian Bomb - The Song

Folks,

My friend Catawissa Gazetter posted the following video at his blogsite. Hilarious - yes. And sadly very truly all at the same time. The Obamination of Desolation is simply out of his league.

The Iranian bomb - The Song

Feed My Sheep

Folks,

There is a very pretty lady from a South American country who recently lost her husband to illness, leaving behind her and children. She attends one of the local Catholic Churches and is very devout. Over lunch the other day she told me a little bit of her story, and she shed tears when recollecting how her six year exclaimed fears (however unfounded) over losing Mommy also. I felt pity towards her and her circumstances which surely are equal to if not worse than my own divorce and subsequent estrangement from my children. So I went to a local Christian bookstore and bought for her a leather-bound bi-lingual Bible with the Spanish in one column and the English in the other. In that Bible I highlighted Psalm 121 and Matthew 6:25-34. Interestingly enough, she exclaimed that a waterproof copy of Psalm 121 is hung in her shower.

Later she sent me via e-mail a thank you note. Using an on-line translator, at the bottom of my return I had included the Spanish phrase "En amor de Cristo" for the Latin Phrase "In Caritate Christi" that I normally include on most of my correspondence. I was treating her no differently than anyone else except to show the extra level of courtesy to translate said phrase into her native language.

Now of course I recognized the Spanish word "amor" from its Latin root and was curious as to whether or not Spanish differentiated between degrees of love as New Testament Greek and Latin did. When I made that inquiry, she responded by stating she did not understand my question; apparently this nuance of language was not readliy apparent. So by using John 21:15-19 from the Greek New Testament, I explained the difference between "agape", "philia" and "eros", and how in the Vulgate Bible the Latin noun caritas would be used for the Greek noun "agape" and the Latin noun "amor" for the Greek noun "philia". It the case of verbs, it would be the Latin "diligo" for the Greek "agapeo" and the Latin "amo" for the Greek "phileo". I wondered if Spanish did a similar distinction. Then I had the bright idea of actually checking the Reina-Valnera 1995 translation on the internet myself. Having done so, I happily discovered that the Greek verb "agapeo" is translated as the Spanish "amo" (that meaning something higher than its Latin root word), and the Greek verb "phileo" as the Spanish "quiero".

So why is all this linguistic machination important? Well, yesterday when I began my discussion with this lady, I did NOT realize that today is the Memorial of Pope Pius X, and that the Gospel reading would be John 21:15-17. So when Padre at the Church to which I went to Mass this Saturday morning decided to use the readings for the Saint of the Day instead of the normal daily liturgical readings, I was quite surprised. This is one of those instances that my second sponsor in Alcoholics Anonymous used to always tell us pigeons about: coincidence is simply God revealing His anonymity, so you better sit, listen and fly straight - God is speaking. Now I will cover Padre's sermon in a separate blog entry because it deserves special treatment; he declared from the pulpit what most clerics are too timid and cowardly to say - namely, the unvarnished truth. Let me therefore get back to my story.....

So again, why is all this linguistic machination important? Because how Jesus used the word "love" when he questioned Peter, and how Peter actually responded is perfectly clear in the Greek, Latin and Spanish, but is obfuscated by the nebulosity (is that a word?) of and lack of precision in the English rendering for love. The first two times Jesus asks Peter if Peter loves Him, He is asking him, "Do you love me with all your heart," and Peter (remembering hos he denied Christ three times) replies, "I love you as a friend, a brother." Then on the third time Jesus concedes to Peter's self-recognition of his own inability by asking, "Do you love me as a friend, a brother." Here Peter becomes "contristatus" in Latin, "entristecio" in Spanish or grieved in English because he realizes that having denied the Lord three times before the Crucifixion, the best he now can do is "philia", not "agape", and the Man whom he looks up to the most and worships, the Man who rose from the dead knows this and makes him acknolwledge it three times. And then that Man accepts the best that Peter can do.

All this is readliy apparent in the Greek, Latin and Spanish, but NOT in the English. So that is why these linguisitic machinations are so important. These are the nuances to which we must pay attention, not the nuances on social justice, tolerance for wicked behavior and other such nonsense. The picture below should help explain in tabular form what this blog entry explains in words. Simply left click your mouse cursor on the photo to expand it for better viewing. The words highlighted in green correspond to "agape" and those highlighted in yellow correspond to "phileo"

Friday, August 20, 2010

Background on Cardinal Ouellet

Folks,

Some people may object to Cardinal Ouellet referenced in the last post entitled Bold Words at Last because in 2007 he had supposedly issued an apology to homosexuals, women, Jews and others. That very brief statement fails to convey exactly what Cardinal Ouellet actually said. From Canada's Catholic Register, the entire text in English is repoduced below. NO WHERE does the Cardinal do ANY of the following:
  • Endorse women in the priesthood
  • Legitimatize homosexual activity
  • Equivocate Judaism with Catholicism 
What the Cardinal DOES DO is readily apparent in the highlighted text.

Cardinal Ouellet's issues Mea Culpa to Quebec

Following my intervention at the Bouchard-Taylor commission, your comments have been many and varied. I have read all of them with great care, whether they came in the mail or through the media. I thank you for the messages of support, I also thank you for the criticism which has made me reflect and prompted this open letter, which seeks to deepen reflection, dispel misunderstandings and promote dialogue in a spirit of peace and reconciliation.

In response to my analysis of the Quebecois malaise I have heard “finally, it’s about time!” as well as “what a step backward!” Let’s be clear. I am not asking for Quebec society to go back to 1950. From a sociological and cultural point of view, pluralism and secularism have made their home in Quebec and we must be proud of the gains made in the areas of the economy, health, culture, social services, education, politics and dynamism of Quebec society. Quebec has an enviable living standard, a culture of liberty and tolerance, an openess to immigration and a load of talent in arts and culture. But a fact remains: its search for spirituality is languishing. Perhaps was it impeded by the excessive authority of the Church? Or perhaps has it not received the education necessary to its needs? The spiritual void which I have mentioned is the fruit of the spirit of the world which, by wanting to eliminate God, suggests, in a thousand ways, that we become our own God.

Reluctance to procreate, to spawn life, compromises Quebec’s future, and its youth seeks role-models which are cruelly lacking. We need a serious dialogue on values and our Christian stance to once again give faith and hope to Quebec’s soul.

The Catholic Church has no lack of exemplary figures who have marked our society’s history. Secular people, men and women, religious people, left behind memorable traces, a precious heritage in the fields of health, education and evangelism. Pope John Paul II canonized and beatified 14 of these figures during his pontificate. But, unfortunately, they are too little known.

Much more attention is given to the church’s negative side than to its contribution to active Quebec history and culture. A just and enlightened exam of our past would help, I think, recognize our limits but also nourrish Quebecers’ pride and confidence in their future.

Inspired by the gesture of John Paul II in March of 2000, of which I have born witness, I am inviting Catholics to perform an act of repentance and reconciliation. Quebec society drags a wounded history whose bad memories block access to the sources of its soul and religious identity. The time has come to take stock and make a new start. Errors were committed which have tarnished the image of the church and for which we must humbly ask for forgiveness. I am inviting pastors and the faithful to help me seek the manner with which to recognize our mistakes and deficiencies, so as to help our society reconcile with its Christian past.

As Archbishop of Quebec and Primate of Canada, I recognize that the narrow attitudes of certain Catholics, prior to 1960, favoured anti-Semitism, racism, indifference toward First Nations and discrimination against women and homosexuals. The behaviour of Catholics and certain episcopal authorities with regards to the right to vote, access to work and promotion of women, hasn’t always been up to par with society’s needs or conformed to the social doctrine of the church.

I also recognize that abuses of power and cover-ups have, for many, tarnished the image of the clergy and its moral authority: mothers have been rebuffed by priests without concern for their family obligations; youngsters were subject to sexual aggression by priests and religious figures, causing great injury and traumatism which have broken their lives! These scandals have shaken popular confidence toward religious authorities and we understand this [and are sorry for all this sin]!

The period of Lent in 2008, in preparation for the international eucharistic congress in Quebec City, will give us the opportunity to make a public display of repentance, basing ourselves on God’s gift to the world of life through the Eucharist. Other initiatives will follow to facilitate dialogue and heal memory.

May this search for peace and reconciliation, made in all sincerity, help Quebec more serenely remember its Christian and missionary identity, which has given it an enviable place on the international scene.

As pastor of a mainly Catholic people, you will understand that the handing down of our cultural and religious heritage is close to my heart. That is why I reiterate my support to parents who have the right to receive a religious instruction at school true to their convictions. I therefore join them in asking the State to respect the Quebec tradition of handing down religious teachings at school, not necessarily BY the school, and allow churches and recognised religious groups to teach confessional courses, conceived and paid for by them. And in the name of everyone’s religious liberty, state ethics and religious culture courses should be optional.

We are proud to be Quebecers and we do not want to lose our means to pass down the deep values of our religious heritage. Our Judaeo-christian tradition has made of us a solidary-minded and charitable people, we know how to help each other and are able to forgive with the help of God. In order to once again fully believe in ourselves and become confident in our future, let us find roads to reconciliation and offer our compatriots a real dialogue on spiritual and religious values which have shaped Quebec identity. In a way, isn’t it about, today as it was yesterday, simply living the gospel?