Rev. Fr.
Leonard Goffine's The Church's
Year
Twentieth
Sunday After Pentecost
The Introit of the Mass is an
humble prayer, by which we acknowledge that we are punished for our
disobedience:
INTROIT All that thou hast done to us, O.
Lord, thou hast done in true, judgment: because we have sinned
against thee, and have not obeyed thy commandments: but give glory
to thy name, and deal with us according to the multitude of thy
mercy. (Dan. III. 28.) Blessed are the undefiled in the way: who
walk in the law of the Lord. (Fs. CXVIII.). Glory etc.
COLLECT Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord,
in Thy mercy to Thy faithful pardon and peace; that they may both be
cleansed from all their offences, and serve Thee with a quiet mind.
Thro'.
EPISTLE (Ephes. V. 15-21.) Brethren,
See how you walk circumspectly, not as unwise, but as wise redeeming
the time, because the days are evil. Wherefore, become not unwise,
but understanding what is the will of God. And be not drunk with
wine, wherein is luxury: but be ye filled with the Holy Spirit,
speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns, and spiritual canticles,
singing and making melody in your hearts to the Lord: giving thanks
always for all things, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to God
and the Father; being subject one to another in the fear of
Christ.
How
may we redeem time?
By employing every moment to
gain eternal goods, even should we lose temporal advantages thereby;
by letting no opportunity pass without endeavoring to do good, to
labor and, suffer for love of God, to improve our lives, and
increase in, virtue.
Do you wish to know, says the
pious Cornelius á Lapide, how precious time is: Ask the damned, for
these know it from experience. Come, rich man, from the abyss of
hell, tell us what you would give for one year, one day, one hour of
time! I would, he says, give a whole world, all pleasures, all
treasures, and bear all torments. O, if only one moment were granted
me to have contrition for my sins, to obtain forgiveness of my
crimes, I would purchase this moment with every labor, with any
penance, with all punishments, torments and tortures which men ever
suffered in purgatory or in hell, even if they lasted hundreds, yes,
thousands of millions of years! O precious moment upon which all
eternity depends! O, how many moments did you, my dear Christian,
neglect, in which you could have served God, could have done good
for love of Him, and gained eternal happiness by them, and you have
lost these precious moments. Remember, with one moment of time, if
you employ it well, you can purchase eternal happiness, but with all
eternity you cannot purchase one moment of time!
ASPIRATION Most bountiful God and Lord!
I am heartily sorry, that I have so carelessly employed the time
which Thou bast given me for my salvation. In order to supply what I
have neglected, as far as I am able, I offer to Thee all that I have
done or suffered from the first use of my reason, as if I had really
to do and suffer it still; and I offer it in union with all the
works and sufferings of our Saviour, and beg fervently, that Thou
wilt supply, through His infinite merits, my defects, and be pleased
with all my actions and sufferings.
Be not
drunk with wine, wherein is luxury!
[On the vice of
drunkenness see the third
Sunday after Pentecost Here we will speak only of those who make
others drunk by encouragement.] The Persian King Assuerus
expressly forbade that any one should be urged to drink at his great
banquet. (Esth. I. 8.) This heathen who knew from the light of
reason, that it is immoral to lead others to intemperance, will one
day rise in judgment against those Christians who, enlightened by
the light of faith, would not recognize and avoid this vice.
Therefore the Prophet Isaias (V. 22.) pronounces woe to those who
are mighty in drinking and know how to intoxicate others; and St.
Augustine admonishes us, by no means to consider those as friends,
who by their fellowship in drinking would make us enemies of
God.
GOSPEL (John
IV. 46-53.) At that time, There was a certain ruler whose son was
sick at Capharnaum. He having heard that Jesus was come from Judea
into Galilee, went to him, and prayed him to come down, and heal his
son; for he was at the point of death. Jesus therefore said to him:
Unless you see signs and wonders, you believe not. The ruler with to
him: Lord, come down before my son die. Jesus saith to him: Go thy
way, thy son liveth. The man believed the word which Jesus said to
him, and went his way. And as he was going down, his servants met
him, and they brought word, saying that his son lived. He asked
therefore of them the hour wherein he grew better. And they said to
him: Yesterday at the seventh hour the fever left him. The father
therefore, knew that it was at the same hour that Jesus said to him:
Thy son liveth: and himself believed. and his whole
house.
INSTRUCTIONS
I.God permitted the son of
the ruler to become sick that he might ask Christ for the health
of his son, and thus obtain true faith and eternal happiness. In
like manner, God generally seeks to lead sinners to Himself,
inasmuch as He brings manifold evils and misfortunes either upon
the sinner himself or on his children, property, etc. Hence David
said: It is good for me that thou hast humbled me, that I may
learn thy justifications, (Ps. CXVIII. 71.) and therefore he also
asked God to fill the faces of sinners with shame, that they
should seek His name. (Ps. LXXXII. 17.) This happened to those of
whom David says: Their infirmities were multiplied: afterwards
they hastened in returning to God. (Ps. XV. 4.) O would we only do
the same! When God sends us failure of crops, inundations,
hail-storms, dearth, war, etc., He wishes nothing else than that
we abandon sin and return to Him. But what do we? Instead of
hastening to God, we take refuge in superstition, or we murmur
against Him, find fault with or even blaspheme His sacred
regulations; instead of removing our sins by sincere penance, we
continually commit new ones, by murmuring and impatience, by
hatred and enmity, by rash judgments, as if the injustice and
malice of others were the cause of our misfortune. What will
become of us if neither the benefits nor the punishments of God
make us better?
II. Christ said to this
ruler: Unless you see signs and wonders, you believe not. This was
a reprimand for his imperfect faith; for if he. had truly believed
Christ to be the Son of God, he would not have asked Him to come
to his house, but, like the centurion, would have believed Him
able, though absent, to heal His son. (Matt. VIII.) Many
Christians deserve the same rebuke from Christ, because they lose
nearly all faith and confidence in God, when He does not
immediately help them in their troubles, as they wish. He proves
to us how displeasing such a want of confidence is to Him by
withdrawing His assistance and protection from the fickle and
distrustful. (Ecclus. II. 15.)
II. How much may not
the example of the father of a family accomplish! This ruler had
no sooner received the faith, than his whole household was
converted and believed in Christ. Fathers and mothers by their
good example, by their piety, frequent reception of the
Sacraments, by their meekness, temperance, modesty and other
virtues, may accomplish incalculable good among their children and
domestics.
CONSOLATION IN SICKNESS
There was a certain ruler
whose son was sick. (John IV. 16.)
As a consolation in sickness,
you should consider that God sends you this affliction for the
welfare of' your soul, that you may know your sins; or if you be
innocent, to practice patience, humility, charity, etc., and
increase your merits. Therefore a holy father said to one of his
companions, who complained, because he was sick: "My son! if you are
gold, then you will be proved by sickness, but if you are mixed with
dross, then you will be purified." "Many are vicious in health,"
says St. Augustine, "who would be virtuous in sickness;" and St.
Bernard says: "It is better to arrive at salvation through sickness,
than to have health and be damned."
It is also a powerful means
of consolation in sickness, to represent to ourselves the suffering
Redeemer, who had no soundness from the top of His head to the sole
of His foot, and contemplating whom St. Bonaventure used to cry out:
"O Lord, I do not wish to live without sickness, since I see Thee
wounded so much."
When sick, we should
carefully examine, whether we possess any ill-gotten goods, or have
any other secret sin on our conscience; and if we are conscious of
any, we should quickly free ourselves from it by a contrite, sincere
confession, and by restoring the things belonging to others. Sins
are very often the cause of disease, and God does not bless the
medicine unless the sickness effects its object, that is, the
sinners amendment. Still less can we expect help, but rather
temporal and eternal misfortune, if we have recourse to
superstition, and spells, as the King Ochozias experienced, who was
punished with death, because in sickness he had recourse to the idol
Beelzebub. (IV Kings I.)
PRAYER O Jesus, Thou true physician of
souls, who dost wound and heal us, yea, dost even permit sorrows and
adversities to visit us that our souls may have health, grant us the
grace to use every bodily pain according to Thy merciful designs for
the promotion of our salvation.
INSTRUCTION ON CARE OF THE SICK
Come down before my son
die. (John IV. 49.)
All who have the charge of
sick persons, should be like this father, that is, they should first
of all endeavor to call upon Jesus to come in the most holy
Sacrament, before the sick person is unable to receive Him. The
devil seeks to hinder nothing more than this. He excites the
imagination of the sick person, making him believe that he can live
longer, that he will certainly get well again, in order to ruin him
easier afterwards, because he defers his conversion. Those
contribute to this end who through fear of frightening the sick
person or of annoying him, fail to call the priest at the right
time. This is cruel love, which deprives the sick person of the
salvation of his soul and eternal happiness, and brings with it a
terrible responsibility. Where there is question of eternity, no
carefulness can be too great. We should, therefore, choose the
safest side, because the suffering may easily increase and finally
make the sick person unable to attend to the affairs of his soul. We
should, therefore, not conceal from him the danger in which he is,
and if he has still the use of his reason, should call in the priest
that he may receive the Last Sacraments. He will not die sooner on
that account, but rather derive the greatest benefit therefrom,
since his conscience will be cleansed from sin, which may be the
cause of his sickness, and perhaps, he may regain his health, or at
least be strengthened by the newly received grace of God, to bear
his pains with greater patience and to die far easier, securer, and
more consoled. We should also endeavor to encourage the sick person
to resignation, and a childlike confidence in God, should pray with
him to strengthen him against desponding thoughts, and the
temptations of the devil; we should present him a crucifix to kiss;
repeat the holy names of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, and other
consolatory ejaculations, such as are found in prayer-books; should
sign him with the sign of the cross; sprinkle him with holy water,
and above all pray for a happy death. We should not weep and lament,
by which death is only made harder for him, nor should we hold
useless, idle and worldly conversations with him which will prevent
him from thinking of God arid the salvation of his soul, and from
preparing himself for the last dangerous struggle. Finally, we
should by no means suffer in his presence persons who have given him
occasions of committing sin, because they would be obstacles to his
sincere conversion.
There is truly no greater
work of charity than to assist our neighbor to a happy
death. |