Rev. Fr.
Leonard Goffine's The Church's
Year
INSTRUCTION ON THE SIXTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER
PENTECOST
At the Introit of the Mass
implore with great confidence the mercy of God in the words of Ps.
LXXXV.:
INTROIT Have mercy on me, O Lord, for I have
cried to thee all the day; for thou, O Lord, art sweet and mild, and
plenteous in mercy to all that call upon thee.
Bow down thy ear to me, O
Lord, and hear me, for I am needy and poor. Glory be to the Father,
etc.
COLLECT Let Thy grace, we beseech Thee,
O Lord, ever precede and follow us, and make us continually intent
upon good works. Through etc.
EPISTLE (Ephes. III. 13-21) Brethren, I
pray you not to faint at my tribulations for you, which are your
glory. For this cause I bow my knees. to the Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ, of whom all paternity in heaven and earth is named,
that he would grant you, according to the riches of his glory, to be
strengthened by his Spirit with might unto the inward man, that
Christ may dwell by faith in your hearts: that being rooted and
founded in charity, you may be able to comprehend with all the
saints what is the breadth, and length, and height, and depth:, to
know also the charity of Christ, which surpasseth all knowledge,
that you may be filled unto all the fulness of God. Now to him who
is able to do all things more abundantly than we desire or
understand, according to the power that worketh in us: to him be
glory in the Church and in Christ Jesus, unto all generations, world
without end. Amen.
EXPLANATION In the epistle of the
following Sunday St. Paul tells us, that he was at the time of
writing this letter in prison at Rome, whither he was brought' upon
the false accusations of the Jews. From prison he wrote to the
Ephesians, whom he had converted to Christianity, and who zealously
obeyed his counsels, in order to confirm them in their zeal and to
console them in their grief on account of his sufferings which he
bore for Christ's sake. These sufferings which I bear, he writes,
redound to your honor, since I, your spiritual father, am considered
by God worthy to suffer like His Son; yes, I thank the Father of our
Lord Jesus for it, and beg Him on my knees, that He vouchsafe to
strengthen you with His Holy Spirit, so that you overcome, your evil
inclinations and passions, cleanse your hearts more and more, and
sanctify your souls, that if you live thus according to your faith,
you may be made the habitations of Christ. He begs God also to. give
them a well-grounded charity, which not only loves God on account of
the reward, but also on account of our sufferings, thus to become
like to Christ, the Crucified. By this constant love for Jesus, even
in adversities, we only comprehend with the saints the greatness of
the love of Jesus, the Crucified; its breadth, since all the members
of His body, all the powers of His soul were tormented with all
sorts of tortures, on account of the sins of all men; the length,
since He had all these sufferings for thirty-three years before His
eyes, and bore them in His soul; the depth, since these tortures
surpassed in intensity all which men ever suffered or will suffer;
the height, since Christ on the cross saw, with the most perfect
knowledge, the malice of each single sin, and the terrible insult
offered to the sublime Majesty of God, and He bore the punishment
for them in Himself and did penance for them. Other holy Fathers say
that by these words the w hole mystery of our, redemption is to be
understood, and, indeed, the breadth thereof is, that it is for all
men; the length, that it lasts for all centuries and reaches into
eternity; the height, that its contemplation takes us away from
earth and raises us to heaven; the depth, that it even penetrates.
the kingdom of the dead. By contemplating these mysteries we learn
to know the infinite love of God, to love Him more and more, and
thus make ourselves partakers of His graces. - Obey the teaching of
this holy apostle, contemplate the suffering Saviour and His love,
endeavor to become like to Him by suffering, and when you see how
the Church, her ministers, ,the bishops and priests, are persecuted
and in tribulation, be not disheartened, but consider that the
discipleship of Jesus consists particularly in suffering, that
therefore, the Church and her ministers -must suffer, since their
Head, Jesus, has suffered. The holy Church has borne the crown of
thorns of Jesus for eighteen hundred years and drank from His
chalice; but like Jesus, her Head, she will triumph over all her
enemies, and whilst these are hastening to destruction, she will
continually live victorious until the end of time and will triumph
eternally in heaven.
GOSPEL (Luke
XIV. 1-11.) At that time, When Jesus went into the house of one of
the chiefs of the Pharisees on the Sabbath-day to eat bread, they
watched him. And behold there was a certain man before him that had
the dropsy. And Jesus answering, spoke to the lawyers and Pharisees,
saying: Is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath-day? But they held their
peace: but he taking him, healed him, and sent him away. And
answering them, he said: Which of you shall have an ass or an ox
fall into, a pit, and, will not immediately draw him out on, the
Sabbath-day? And they could not answer him to these things. And he
spoke a parable also to them that were invited, marking how they
chose the first seats at the table, saying to them When thou art
invited to a wedding, sit not down in the first place, lest perhaps
one more honorable than thou be invited by him; and he that invited
thee and him come and say to thee: Give this man place: and then
thou begin with shame to take the lowest place: But when thou art
invited, go, sit down in the lowest place: that when he who invited
thee cometh he may say to thee: Friend, go up higher. Then shalt
thou have glory before them that sit at the table with thee; because
every one that exalteth himself shall be humbled, and he that
humbleth himself shall be
exalted.
Why did Jesus eat with the Pharisees?
To take occasion, as St.
Cyril says, to instruct them that it is allowed to heal the sick on
the Sabbath, and to show how those who give invitations to a supper,
and those who are invited, should conduct themselves. The Pharisees'
invitation to Jesus was not actuated by kindness, but by the desire
to find something in His actions which they might criticise; Jesus;
however, approaches them with meekness and endeavors to inspire them
with a better intention. Beware of the spirit of criticisms and like
Jesus make use of every occasion to do good, even to your
enemies.
Who may be
understood by the dropsical man?
The debauchees and misers;
for the more a dropsical person drinks the more his thirst
increases, so the debauchee never succeeds in satisfying his
shameful lusts; the same is the case with the miser. And just as the
dropsical are hard to cure, so the debauchee and miser are difficult
to convert.
Why is
covetousness classed among the seven deadly sins?
Because it is the root of
many evils, (I Tim. VI. 10.) for it leads to usury, theft, ,to the
employment of false weights and measures, to the suppression of
justice in courts, to perjury, to the oppression of widows and
orphans, nay, even to the denial of faith, as was the case with
Judas. Therefore the apostle says: They that will become rich, fall
into temptation, and into the snare of the devil, and into many
unprofitable and hurtful desires, which drown men into destruction
and perdition; and admonishes us: to fly these things: and pursue
justice, godliness, faith, charity, patience, mildness. (I Tim. VI.
9, 11 .)
A powerful remedy against
avarice is to consider that we are not owners of what .we possess,
and can take nothing with us in death, but must render a strict
account of the use we made of our riches. (I Tim. VI. 7.)
INSTRUCTION ON KEEPING SUNDAY
HOLY
Is it lawful to
heal on the Sabbath-day? (Luke XIV. 3.)
Why did Christ put this
question?
Because the Jews,
particularly the Pharisees, were so very superstitious in keeping
the Sabbath, they would not recognize Jesus as the Messiah, while He
healed on the Sabbath, which was really a good work. But, if the
Jews were so conscientious, through superstition and hypocrisy, and
considered the performing of an external good work on this day as a
sin, some Christians, on the contrary, blinded by avarice and
worldly pleasure, place themselves heedlessly, nay, insolently above
the commandment to observe the Sabbath, and do not consider those
things as wrong which are sometimes very grievous sins.
Consider, my dear Christian,
you serve your body the whole week, you use all your powers for
temporal business, to support yourself and your family, and God
blesses you, if you work with a good intention. Now God chose one
day in the week, Sunday, and in the year several other holidays,
which you should devote to His service and the salvation of your
soul; is it not, therefore, the greatest ingratitude to steal these
days from God and your soul, and employ them to gain a transient
good, or to indulge in vain, sinful pleasures? At certain times man
gives rest to irrational animals, and you give the powers of your
body and soul none of the rest they would and should find in quiet
devotion, in prayer and meditation, in attending divine service, in
receiving the holy Sacraments, &c. If you inquire whence come
these shameful violations of Sundays and holidays, you will find
that there is no other reason than love of gain and avarice, sinful
love of pleasure, and often complete want of faith and confidence in
God's providence. We wish to become rich by all means, and we do not
reflect that. this will not happen without the blessing of God, and
that wealth is a net, in which thousands entangle themselves to
their eternal, perdition. We wish to live merrily and enjoy
ourselves, but we do not consider that our life is only a time of
penance, to attain that eternally blissful rest, of which Sunday is
an emblem. We spend Sundays and holydays in idleness, vain
conversations, buying and selling, servile work, or in still worse
things, without experiencing the slightest scruple. But God will
cover the violators of His sacred days with confusion and shame,
(Malach. II. 3.) and permit many temporal evils to come upon them,
as proved by daily experience. The blessing of God can never rest
upon those who never care for it, but rather make themselves
unworthy to receive it, by violating days consecrated to God. Let
this be a warning to you.
PRAYER O good Saviour! how manifest are
meekness, and wisdom in all Thy words and actions! O, grant, that we
may regulate all our actions in such a manner, that they may be
acceptable to Thee and tend to the edification of our neighbor. Give
us the grace to employ all the days, consecrated to Thee, for Thy
honor and our salvation, that we may never raise ourselves above
others, but follow Thee in all humility. |