Rev. Fr.
Leonard Goffine's The Church's Year
FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
[For the Introit of this day see the Introit in the Mass
of the third
Sunday after Epiphany]
On this Sunday
mention is made of the practice of Christian virtues, and of God's
sufferance of the wicked upon earth, that by them the just may be
exercised in patience.
COLLECT Keep, we beseech Thee, O
Lord, Thy household by Thy continual mercy; that as it leans only
upon the hope of Thy heavenly grace, so it may ever be defended by
Thy protection. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, etc.
EPISTLE (Col. III. 12-17.) Brethren,
put ye on, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, the bowels of
mercy, benignity, humility, modesty, patience; bearing with one
another, and forgiving one another, if any have a complaint against
another; even as the Lord hath forgiven you, so you also. But above
all these things, have charity, which is the bond of perfection: and
let the peace of Christ rejoice in your hearts, wherein also you are
called in one body; and be ye thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell
in you abundantly, in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one
another, in psalms, hymns, and spiritual canticles, singing in grace
in your hearts to God. All whatsoever you do in word or in work, all
things, do ye in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks to
God and the Father through Jesus Christ our Lord. Why does St. Paul
call charity the bond of perfection?
Because charity
comprises in itself and links all the virtues in which perfection
consists. For whoever truly loves God and his neighbor, is also
good, merciful, humble, modest, patiently bears the weakness of his
neighbor, willingly forgives offences, in a word, practices all
virtues for the sake of charity. When does the peace
of God rejoice in our hearts?
When we have
learned to conquer our evil inclinations, passions, and desires, and
have placed order and quiet in our hearts instead. This peace then,
like a queen, keeps all the wishes of the soul in harmony, and
causes us to enjoy constant peace with our neighbor, and thus serve
Christ in concord, as the members of one body serve the head. The
best means of preserving this peace are earnest attention to the
word of God, mutual imparting of pious exhortations and admonitions,
and by singing hymns, psalms, and spiritual
canticles. Why should we do all in the name of Jesus?
Because only then
can our works have real worth in the sight of God, and be pleasing
to Him, when they are performed for love of Jesus, in His honor, in
accordance with His spirit and will. Therefore the apostle
admonishes us to do all things, eat, drink, sleep, work &c. in
the name of Jesus, and so honor God, the Heavenly Father, and show
our gratitude to Him. Oh, how grieved will they be on their
death-bed who have neglected to offer God their daily work by a good
intention, then they will see, when too late, how deficient they are
in meritorious deeds. On the contrary they will rejoice whose
consciences testify, that in all their actions they had in view only
the will and the honor of God! Would that this might be taken to
heart especially by those who have to earn their bread with
difficulty and in distress, that they might always unite their
hardships and trials with the sufferings and merits of Jesus,
offering them to the Heavenly Father, and thus imitating Christ who
had no other motive than the will and the glory of His Heavenly
Father.
ASPIRATION O God of love, of patience, and of mercy, turn our hearts to
the sincere love of our neighbor, and grant, that whatever we do in
thoughts, words and actions, we may do in the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ, and through Him render thanks to Thee.
ON CHURCH SINGING
"Admonish one another in psalms, hymns, and spiritual
canticles, singing in grade in your hearts to God." (Col. III.
16.)
The custom of
singing in the Church-choir* has its foundation as far back as the
Old Testament, when by the arrangement of David, Solomon, and
Ezechias, the psalms and other sacred canticles were sung by the
priests and Levites. This custom the Catholic Church has retained,
according to the precepts of the apostles, (I. Cor. XIV. 26; Eph. V.
19.) and the example of Jesus who, after they had eaten the Pasch,
intoned a hymn of praise with His apostles, Matt XXVI. 30) that
Christians on earth, like the angels and saints in heaven, (Apoc. V.
8. 9., XIV. 3.) who unceasingly sing His praises, might at certain
hours of the day, at least, give praise and thanks to God. In the
earliest ages of the Church, the Christians sang hymns of praise and
thanksgiving during the holy Sacrifice and other devotional
services, often continuing them throughout the whole night; in which
case the choir-singers probably were bound to keep the singing in
proper order and agreement. In the course of time this custom of all
the faithful present singing together ceased in many churches, and
became confined to the choir, which was accompanied later by
instruments in accordance with the words of David who calls to the
praise of the Lord with trumpets, with timbrels, with pleasant
psaltery and harps. (Ps, CL. 3, 4., LXXX. 3. 4.) In many churches,
where the faithful still sing in concert, if done with pure hearts
and true devotion, it is as St. Basil says, “a heavenly occupation,
a spiritual burnt offering; it enlightens the spirit, raises it
towards heaven, leads man to communion with God, makes the soul
rejoice, ends idle talk, puts away laughter, reminds us of the
judgment, reconciles enemies. Where the singing of songs resounds'
from the contrite heart there God with the angels is
present."
*The choir is
usually a gallery in the Church in which the singers are stationed;
the place where the clergy sing or recite their office, is also
called the choir.
GOSPEL (Matt. XIII. 24-30,) At that time, Jesus spoke this parable
to the multitudes: The kingdom of heaven is likened to a man that
sowed good seed in his field. But while men were asleep, his enemy
came, and oversowed cockle among the wheat, and went his way. And
when the blade was sprung up, and had brought forth fruit, then
appeared also the cockle. And the servants of the good man of the
house coming, said to him: Sir, didst thou not sow good seed in thy
field? whence, then, hath it cockle? And he said to them: An enemy
bath done this. And the servants said to him: Wilt thou that we go
and gather it up? And he said: No, lest perhaps, gathering up the
cockle, you root up the wheat also together with it. Suffer both to
grow until the harvest; and in the time of the harvest I will say to
the reapers: Gather up first the cockle, and bind it into bundles to
burn, but the wheat gather ye into my barn.
What is understood by the kingdom of heaven
?
The Church of God,
or the collection of all orthodox Christians on earth, destined for
heaven. What is meant by the good seed, and by the
cockle?
The good seed, as
Christ Himself says, (Matt. XIII. 38.) signifies the children of the
kingdom, that is, the true Christians, the living members of the
Church, who being converted by the word of God sown into their
hearts become children of God, and bring forth the fruit of good
works. The cockle means the children of iniquity, of the devil, that
is, those who do evil; also every wrong, false doctrine which leads
men to evil. Who sows the good seed, and by the cockle?
The good seed is
sown by Jesus, the Son of Man not only directly, but through His
apostles, and the priests, their successors; the evil seed is sown
by the devil, or by wicked men whom he uses as his
tools. Who are the men who were asleep?
Those superiors in
the Church; those bishops and pastors who take no care of their
flock, and do not warn them against seduction, when the devil comes
and by wicked men sows the cockle of erroneous doctrine and of
crime; and those men who are careless and neglect to hear the word
of God and the sacrifice of the Mass, who neglect to pray, and do
not receive the Sacraments. In the souls of such the devil sows the
seeds of bad thoughts, evil imaginations and desires, from which
spring, later, the cockle of pride, impurity, anger, envy, avarice,
etc.
Why does not God allow the cockle, that is, the
wicked people, to be rooted out and destroyed?
Because of His
patience and long suffering towards the sinner to whom He gives time
for repentance, and because of His love for the just from whom He
would not, by weeding out the unjust, take away the occasion of
practicing virtue and gathering up merits for themselves; for
because of the unjust, the just have numerous opportunities to
exercise patience, humility, etc. When is the time of
the harvest?
The day of the
last judgment when the reapers, that is, the angels, will go out and
separate the wicked from the just, and throw the wicked into the
fiery furnace; while the just will be taken into everlasting joy.
(Matt. XIII. 29.)
PRAYER O faithful Jesus, Thou great lover of our souls, who hast
sown the good seed of Thy Divine Word in our hearts, grant that it
may be productive, and bear in us fruit for eternal life; protect us
from our evil enemy, that he may not sow his erroneous and false
doctrine in our hearts, and corrupt the good; preserve us from the
sleep of sin, and sloth that we may remain always vigilant and armed
against the temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil,
overcome them manfully, and die a happy death. Amen.
ON INCLINATION TO EVIL
Whence then
hath it cockle? (Matt. XIII. 27.)
Whence comes the inclination to evil in
man?
It is the sad
consequence of original sin, that is, of that sin which our first
parents, by their disobedience, committed in paradise, and which we
as their descendants have inherited. This inclination to evil
remains even in those who have been baptized, although original sin
with its guilt and eternal punishment is taken away in baptism, but
it is no sin so long as man does not voluntarily yield. (Cat. Rom.
Part. II. 2. .43.) Why, the sin being removed, does the
inclination remain?
To humble us that
we may know our frailty and misery, and have recourse to God, our
best and most powerful Father, as did St. Paul, when he was much
annoyed by the devil of the flesh; (II. Cor. XII. 7. 8.) that the
glory of God and the power of Christ should be manifested in us,
which except for our weakness could not be; that we might have
occasion to fight and to conquer. A soldier cannot battle without
opposition, nor win victory and the crown without a contest. Nor can
we win the heavenly crown, if no occasion is given us, by
temptations, for fight and for victory. "That which tries the
combatant," says St. Bernard, "crowns the conqueror." Finally, the
inclination remains, that we may learn to endure, in all meekness,
the faults and infirmities of others and to watch ourselves, lest we
fall into the same temptations.
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