Rev. Fr.
Leonard Goffine's The Church's
Year
Nineteenth
Sunday After Pentecost
INTROIT I am the salvation of the people,
saith the Lord: in whatever tribulation they shall cry to me,
I will hear them: and I will be their Lord for ever. Attend, O my
people, to my law: incline your ears to the words of my mouth. (Ps.
LXXVII.) Glory etc.
COLLECT Almighty and merciful God,
graciously keep us from all things that are hurtful; that we, being
set free both in mind and body, may with ready minds accomplish
whatever is Thine. Thro'.
EPISTLE (Ephes. IV. 23-28.) Brethren,
Be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new man,
who according to God is created in justice and holiness of truth.
Wherefore, putting, away lying, speak ye the truth every man with
his neighbor, for we are members one of another. Be angry, and sin
not. Let not the sun go clown upon your anger. Give not place to the
devil. He that stole, let him now steal no more; but rather let him
labor, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he
may have something to give to him that suffereth need.
EXPLANATION St. Paul admonishes
the Ephesians to lay aside the- old man, like a worn out garment,
and put on the new man, that is, to renew their internal and
external life. This renewal according to his teaching takes place,
when we by a true repentance put away our vices, shun all lies,
anger, injustice, &c., and adorn our soul with virtues, and
zealously seek after Christian justice and perfection. We have,
perhaps, already sought to change our manner of living, for which a
jubilee or some other particular solemnity of the Church gave us
occasion, and at that time, perhaps, purified our soul by a general
confession, making the firm resolution to live for God, and work out
our salvation, we appeared converted, and to have become other men:
but how long did this conversion last? Ah, how soon did we fall back
into the old, sinful ways. And why? Because we lived in too great,
deceitful security. We thought everything accomplished by the
general confession; we were satisfied, and omitted to employ the
means of remaining in the state of grace. We did not thank God for
the grace of conversion; we did not ask Him for the grace of
perseverance; we frequented evil company, and did not avoid
dangerous occasions; we indulged in idleness and pleasures as
before. How can it appear strange, if such a conversion is
fruitless? Ah, we should remain in wholesome fear even after the
remission of our sins. (Ecclus. V. 5.) Even if we could say that we
have done everything, nevertheless we cannot be certain, whether we
be worthy of hatred or love. (Ecclus. IX. 1.) We should, therefore,
work out our salvation according to the advice of St. Paul (Philipp.
II. 12.) in fear and trembling, and thus not fall into the old life
of sin, losing the hope of a new conversion.
GOSPEL
(Matt. XXII. 1-14.) At that time, Jesus spoke to the chief
priests and the Pharisees in parables, saying: The kingdom of heaven
is likened to a king, who made a marriage for his son. And he sent
his servants, to call them that were invited to the marriage, and
they would not come. Again he sent other servants, saying: Tell them
that were invited, Behold I have prepared my dinner; my beeves and
fatlings are killed, and all things are ready: come ye to the
marriage. But they neglected: and went their, ways, one to his farm,
and another to his merchandise: and the rest laid hands on his
servants, and having treated them contumeliously, put them to death.
But when the king had heard, of it; he was angry: and sending his
armies, he destroyed those murderers, and burnt their city. Then he
saith to his servants: The marriage indeed is ready; but they, that
were invited were not worthy. Go ye therefore into the
highways, and as many as you shall find, call to the marriage. And
his servants going forth into the ways, gathered together, all that
they found, both bad and good; and the marriage was filled with
guests. And the king went in to fee the guests; and he saw there a
man who had not on a wedding garment: and he saith to him: Friend,
how camest thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment? But he
was silent. Then the king said to the waiters: Bind his hands and
feet, and cast him into the exterior darkness: there shall be
weeping and gnashing of teeth. For many are called, but few are
chosen.
REMARK Thir parable agrees in many respects
with that for the second Sunday after Pentecost, and has the
same meaning. See, therefore, the explanation of that gospel, as
also of the feast of SR Catherine, to which Maybe added the
following:
EXPLANATION In this parable
the king is our Heavenly Father who has espoused His only-begotten
Son to the Church, and on this occasion prepares the most sumptuous
marriage-feast by giving the evangelical doctrine, the holy
Sacraments, and the heavenly joys. The servants sent to invite the
guests are the prophets, apostles and disciples of Christ. Those
invited are the Jews who despised the honor and grace of the divine
King, destined for them, abused and killed His servants, and were,
therefore, cast aside and with their city Jerusalem, destroyed by
the armies of their enemies, as a just punishment; in their stead
the heathens and all those nations were called, who were on the
broad road to destruction, and who now occupy the places of the
unfortunate Jews at the marriage feast of the Church, and shall also
occupy them in heaven. In the Jews to whom Christ addressed this
parable, is verified that many of them, nay, all are called, but few
chosen, because they would not heed the invitation.
APPLICATION We have the honor not
only to be invited to this marriage-feast, but are in reality guests
at it, because we are members of the Church of Christ by faith. "But
the Christian," says St. Gregory, "who is a member of the Church by
faith, but has not charity, is like to a man who comes to the
marriage-feast without the wedding garment." With this garment which
is charity, Christ was vested, when He came to celebrate the
nuptials with His spouse, the Church, and by the bond of charity the
Son of God also unites Himself with His elect. He clearly lets us
know that charity is the wedding garment which should vest us.
Those, therefore, who believe and are in the communion of the
Church, but who do not preserve the grace of charity, are indeed in
the wedding-chamber, but they are not adorned with the wedding
garment. They are dead members of the Church, and shall not be
admitted without this garment into the celestial marriage-feast in
the triumphant Church, but rather be cast like that unfortunate
guest into exterior darkness. This guest was silent, when asked by
the king, why he had not .the wedding garment. By this we see,
that no one can excuse himself to God for not having charity,
because every one can have it, if he asks it from God, and, as St.
Augustine says, our heart is the workshop of charity, and every one
who has a heart can practice it.
PRAYER I thank Thee, O Jesus, that Thou
didst call me to the marriage-feast in Thy Church; give me the
wedding garment of charity that I may be present at the celestial
marriage-feat, and not be cast into exterior darkness.
INSTRUCTION CONCERNING HELL
Cast him into the exterior
darkness. (Matt, XXII. 13.)
What
is hell?
Hell is that place where the
damned must suffer eternal punishment.
Is
there a hell?
Yes; reason, holy Scripture
and the Church teach us that there is a hell. Reason tells us that
there is a just God who will punish sin. It is evident that all sins
are not punished in this world; there must, therefore, be a place,
where every mortal sin, not atoned for by sorrow and penance, will
be punished, and this place is - hell. All nations from the
beginning of the world, even those who had not the light of
revelation, believed this.
But clearer still is the
existence of hell shown by holy Scripture: The pious Job, (X. 22.)
speaks of a region of misery and darkness, where the shadows of
death and no order, but where eternal terror dwells. The Prophet
Isaias (XXX. 33.) says that hell is deep and wide, and that the fire
burning in it, is like a stream of sulphur, ignited by the breath of
the Lord. Our Saviour expressly says that those who have done evil,
shall go to everlasting torment, (Matt. XXV. 46.) that they
shall be tortured by everlasting fire. (Matt. XXV. 41.) He makes
mention of hell, and says that an inextinguishable fire burns there,
and a worm which never dies, plagues the wicked. (Mark IX. 42. 43;
Matt. X. 28.) All the Fathers of the Church teach and testify to the
same doctrine. St. Augustine, among many others, says: "The infinite
wisdom of God tells us that there is a hell, and the illimitable
power of God it is that punishes the damned in a wonderful, but
real manner."
Wherein do the pains of hell
consist?
Sacred Scripture and the
Church teach concerning the pains, of the reprobate in hell, that
the damned burn there in an inextinguishable fire. (Mark IX. 45.)
The holy doctors of the Church say, that this fire is never
extinguished, and its smoke ascends or rises from century to
century, “I see this fire," says St. Gregory, "as if it were gifted
with reason; it make a distinction between the guilty, and tortures
the damned according to the nature of their sins." This fire burns,
but never consumes its victims; it communicates, as Cassiodorus
says, immortality to the reprobate and lets them suffer pain, which
preserves them, like salt which penetrates the flesh and keeps it
from corruption, as Jesus says: Every one shall be salted with fire.
(Mark IX. q.8.) This fire does not shine, it leaves the reprobate in
darkness, (Matt. VIII. 12.) and with this fire a never dying worm
continually torments the damned. This worm is not only a bad
conscience, say the holy Fathers, but particularly the
privation of the Beatific Vision. Eternally will the thought torment
the damned: I have lost God, the only true and highest Good, I have
lost Him through my fault, I have lost Him for a brief pleasure, I
have lost Him forever. In hell eternity devours all time; and if
after millions and millions of years a damned soul wailingly asks
his companion in misery: What time is it? he receives the answer:
Eternity.
Who would not fear hell, and
avoid sin which incurs eternal punishment, when he reflects upon
this! Arid yet there are many, , upon whom the truth of the
existence of a hell makes no impression, who even deny that there is
such a place, and who say: God is love, He can have no pleasure in
the torments of His creatures, He cannot eternally punish a sin
which was committed in so short a time as is the life of man." But
those who speak thus, forget that God is just, that His love and
mercy are indeed always ready to forgive the contrite and penitent,
but that His justice must also be satisfied, when the sinner
continually rejects the merciful love of God; they forget, that
every grievous sin which man commits voluntarily and knowingly is an
infinite, eternal insult, offered to God, which can only be atoned
for by an eternal punishment. For the perverted and malicious will
of a man, who dies in mortal sin, remains perverted and malicious
forever, therefore he must also be punished eternally.
O my dear Christian, do not
listen to such deceivers; for just on account of their sinful life,
they fear hell and therefore they endeavor to free themselves from
this fear by denying the existence of hell; but they cannot succeed;
for Jesus, the Truth, has told us that there is a hell, and His word
remains for all eternity. Endeavor rather by a pious life to escape
hell, descend there in spirit frequently according to the advice of
a saint, contemplate the torments of the damned, and let this
reflection urge you to imitate Christ, who has promised the joys of
heaven to all His faithful followers.
CONSOLING DOCTRINE ON THE JOYS OF
HEAVEN
The kingdom of heaven is
likened to a king, who made a marriage for his son. (Matt. XXII.
2.)
Heaven is compared by Christ
to a marriage-feast because we will there enjoy all imaginable
pleasures in the most perfect union with God. In what these joys
consist, fit. Paul could not describe, although he was wrapt into
the third heaven and tasted these pleasures; he only said: Eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of
man, what things God hath prepared for them that love him. (I Cor.
II. 9.) Holy Writ, indeed, gives us many descriptions of the
celestial joys, by comparing heaven to a paradise of bliss,
sometimes to a precious pearl, or a treasure which neither rust nor
moth consumes, nor thieves steal; again it represents heaven under
the picture of a kingdom, a throne, a crown, whereby we are raised
to the highest honor; at another time to the picture of a city which
is built of gold, precious stones and pearls, lighted by the
splendor of God, filled with magnificence and glory, and where the
inhabitants enjoy undisturbed peace and security. These are only
images or similitudes, which are taken from the most beautiful, most
precious, and magnificent things of the earth, to teach us that
heaven is as beautiful and pleasant a place, as we can wish and represent to
ourselves, and that all possible beauty, agreeableness and joy may
be found there in the highest and most perfect manner, free from
evil, anxiety, disgust and fear of losing them.. In heaven we will
possess God Himself, the source of all joy and bliss, and will enjoy
His own happiness for all eternity. More is riot needed to give us
the highest conception of heaven.
Who would not willingly
despise the vain, short and imperfect pleasures of this earth,
whilst contemplating this indescribable bliss? Who would not
willingly bear all the misfortunes. and misery of this world, when
considering that the more .miserable we have been in this life the
happier will we be hereafter. What would it avail us to have enjoyed
all the pleasures of this world, if deprived of the pleasures of heaven, in,
eternity!
ASPIRATION How lovely are Thy
tabernacles, O Lord, of hosts! my soul longeth and fainteth for the
courts of the Lord. My heart and my flesh have rejoiced in the
living God. (Ps. LXXXIII. 2-3.) How do I loathe the world, when I
contemplate heaven.
(St. Ignatius
Loyola.) |