Sunday, July 22, 2018
Instruction on the Ninth Sunday After Pentecost
Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine's
The Church's Year
The Church's Year
Implore God for help and protection against all temptations both visible and invisible, and say with the priest at the Introit:
INTROIT Behold,
God is my helper, and the Lord is the protector of my soul: turn back
the evils upon my enemies, and cut
them off in thy truth, O Lord, my protector. (Ps. LIII.) Save me, O God, by thy name, and deliver me in thy strength. Glory be to the Father and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.
them off in thy truth, O Lord, my protector. (Ps. LIII.) Save me, O God, by thy name, and deliver me in thy strength. Glory be to the Father and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.
COLLECT Let
the ears of Thy mercy, O Lord, be open to the prayers of Thy
suppliants: and that Thou mayest grant them their desires, make them to
ask such things as please Thee. Through
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee, in
the Unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end, Amen.
EPISTLE (I
Cor. X. 6-13.) Brethren, Let us not covet evil things, as they also
coveted. Neither become ye idolaters, as some of them: as it is written:
The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play. Neither let
us commit fornication, as some of them committed fornication, and there
fell in one day three and twenty thousand. Neither let us tempt Christ,
as some of them tempted, and perished by the serpents. Neither do you
murmur, as some of them murmured, and were destroyed by the destroyer.
Now all these things happened to them in figure, and they are written
for our correction, upon whom the ends of the world are come. Wherefore
he that thinketh himself to stand, let him take heed lest he fall. Let
no temptation take hold on you, but such as is human: and God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are
able but will make also with temptation issue that you may be able to
bear it.
Can we sin by thought and desire?
Yes,
if we desire evil and forbidden things, or voluntarily think of them
with pleasure, for God prohibits not only evil deeds, but evil thoughts
and desires inregard to our neighbor's wife or goods. (Exod. XX. 17.)
Christ says, (Matt. V. 28.) that he who looks upon a woman with evil
desire, has already committed adultery. But wicked thoughts and
imagination are sinful only when a person consents to, or entertains
them deliberately. They become, however, an occasion of gaining merit,
if we earnestly strive against them. For this reason God sometimes
permits even the just to be tempted by them.
What is meant by tempting God?
Demanding
presumptuously a mark or sign of divine omnipotence, goodness or
justice. This sin is committed when without cause we desire that
articles of faith should be demonstrated and confirmed by a new miracle;
when we throw ourselves needlessly into danger of body or soul
expecting God to deliver us; when in dangerous illness the ordinary and,
natural remedies are rejected, and God's immediate assistance expected.
Is it a great sin to murmur against God?
That
it is such may be learned from the punishment which God inflicted on
the murmuring Israelites; for besides Kore, Dathan, and Abiron whom the
earth devoured, many thousands of them were consumed by fire; and yet
these had not murmured against God directly, but only against Moses and
Aaron whom God had placed over them as their leaders. From this it is
seen that God looks upon murmuring against spiritual and civil
authority, instituted by Him, as murmuring against Himself. Hence Moses
said to the Israelites: Your. murmuring is not against us, but against
the Lord. (Exod. XVI. 8.)
ASPIRATION Purify
my heart, I beseech. Thee; O Lord, from all evil thoughts and desires.
Let it never enter my mind to tempt Thee, or to be dissatisfied with Thy
fatherly dispensations. Suffer me not to be tempted beyond my strength,
but grant me so much fortitude, that I may overcome all temptations,
and even derive benefit from them for my soul's salvation.
GOSPEL (Luke
XIX. 41-47.) At that time, when Jesus drew near Jerusalem, seeing the
city, he wept over it, saying: If thou also hadst known, and that in
this thy day, the things that are to thy peace: but now they are hidden
from thy eyes. For the days shall come upon thee, and thy enemies shall
cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and straiten thee on
every side, and beat thee flat to the ground, and thy children who are
in thee: and they shall not leave in thee a stone upon a stone, because
thou hast not known the time of thy visitation. And entering into the
temple, he began to cast out them that sold therein, and them that
bought, saying to them: It is written, My house is the house of, prayer,
but you have made it a den of thieves. And he was teaching daily in the
temple.
Why did our Saviour weep over the city of Jerusalem?
Because
of the ingratitude and obduracy of its inhabitants who would not
receive Him as their Redeemer, and who through impenitence were
hastening to destruction.
When was the time of visitation?
The
period in which God sent them one prophet after another who urged them
to penance, and whom they persecuted, stoned, and killed. (Matt. XXIII.
34.) It was especially the time of Christ's ministry, when He so often
announced His salutary doctrine in the temple of Jersualem, confirmed it
by miracles, proving Himself to be the Messiah, the Saviour of the
world, but was despised and rejected by this hardened and impenitent
city.
Who are prefigured by this hardened and impenitent city?
The
hard-hearted, unrepenting sinners who will not recognize the time of
God's visitation, in which He urges them by the mouth of His preachers,
confessors, and superiors, and by inward inspiration to reform their
lives and seek the salvation of their soul, but who give no ear to these
admonitions, and defer conversion to the end of their lives. Their end
will be like to that of this impious city; then the enemy, that is, the
evil spirit, will surround their soul, tempt, terrify, and drag it into
the abyss of ruin. Oh, how foolish it is to squander so lightly, the
time of grace, the days of salvation! Oh, how would the damned do
penance, could they but return to earth! Oh, how industriously would
they employ the time to save their soul! Use, then, my dear Christian,
the time of grace which God designs for you, and which, when it is run
out or carelessly thrown away, will not be lengthened for a moment.
Will God conceal from the wicked that which serves for their salvation?
No;
but while they are running after the pleasures of this life, as St.
Gregory says, they see not the misfortunes treading in their footsteps,
and as consideration of the future makes them uncomfortable in the midst
of their worldly pleasures, they remove the terrible thought far from
them, and thus run with eyes blindfolded in the midst of their pleasure
into eternal flames. Not God, but they themselves hide the knowledge of
all that is for their peace, and thus they perish.
ASPIRATION.
I beseech Thee, O Lord, who didst weep over the city of Jerusalem,
because it knew not the time of its visitation, to enlighten my heart,
that I may know and profit by the season of grace.
THE DESTRUCTION OF THE CITY AND TEMPLE OF JERUSALEM
Has our divine Savior's prophecy concerning, the city of Jerusalem been fulfilled?
Yes,
and in the most terrible manner. The Jews, oppressed by the Romans
their cruel masters, revolted, killed many of their enemies, and drove
them out of Jerusalem. Knowing well that this would not be permitted to
pass unavenged, the Jews armed themselves for a desperate resistance.
The Emperor Nero sent a powerful army under the command of Vespasian
against the city of Jerusalem, which first captured the smaller
fortresses of Judea, and then laid siege to the city. The want and
misery of the inhabitants had already reached the highest pitch; for
within the city ambitious men had caused conflicts; factions had been
formed, daily fighting each other, and reddening the streets with blood,
while the angry Romans stormed outside. Then a short time of respite
was granted to the unfortunate Jews. The Emperor Nero was murdered at
Rome in the year of our Lord 68; his successor Galba soon died, and the
soldiers placed their beloved commander Vespasian upon the imperial
throne. He then left Jerusalem with his army, but in the year he sent
his son Titus with a new army to Judea, with orders to capture the city
at any price, and to punish its inhabitants.
It
was the time of Easter, and a multitude of Jews had assembled from all
provinces of the land, when Titus appeared with his army before the
gates of Jerusalem, and surrounded the city. The supply of food was soon
exhausted, famine and pestilence came upon the city and raged terribly.
The leader of the savage revolutionists, John of Gischala, caused the
houses to be searched, and the remaining food to be torn from the
starving, or to be forced from them by terrible tortures: To save
themselves from this outrageous tyrant, the Jews took the leader of a
band of robbers, named Simon, with his whole gang into the city. John
and Simon with their followers now sought to annihilate each other. John
took possession of the temple. Simon besieged him; blood was streaming
in the temple and in the streets. Only when the battle-din of the Romans
was heard from without, did the hostile factions unite, go to meet the
enemy, and resist his attack. As the famine increased, many Jews
secretly left the city to seek for herbs. But Titus captured them with
his cavalry, and crucified those who were armed. Nearly five hundred
men, and sometimes more, were every day crucified in sight of the city,
so that there could not be found enough of crosses and places of
execution; but even this terrible sight did not move the Jews to
submission. Incited by their leaders to frenzy, they obstinately
resisted, and Titus finding it impossible to take the city by storm,
concluded to surround it by walls in order to starve the inhabitants. In
three days his soldiers built a wall of about ten miles in
circumference, and thus the Saviour's prediction was fulfilled: Thy
enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and
straiten thee on every side.
The
famine in this unfortunate city now reached its most terrific height;
the wretched inhabitants searched the very gutters for food, and ate the
most disgusting things. A woman, ravenous from hunger, strangled her
own child, roasted it, and ate half of it; the leaders smelling the
horrible meal, forced a way into the house, and by terrible threats
compelled the woman to show them what she had eaten; she handed them the
remaining part of the roasted child, saying.: "Eat it, it is my child; I
presume you are not more dainty than a woman, or more tender than a
mother." Stricken with horror they rushed from the house. Death now
carried away thousands daily, the streets and the houses were full of
corpses: From the fourteenth of April when the siege commenced. to the
first of July, there were counted one hundred and fifty-eight thousand
dead bodies; six hundred thousand others were thrown over the walls into
the trenches to save the city from infection. All who could flee, fled;
some reached the camp of the Romans in safety; Titus spared the
helpless, but all who fell into his hands armed, were crucified. Flight
offered no better security. The Roman soldiers had learned that many
Jews had swallowed, gold to secure it from the avarice of the robbers,
and therefore the stomachs of many were cut open. Two thousand such
corpses were found one morning in the camp of the Romans. The attempts
of Titus to prevent this cruelty were unavailing. Finally, when misery
had reached its height, Titus succeeded in carrying the fort, Antonia,
and with his army forced a passage as far as the temple which had been
held by John of Gischala with his famous band. Desirous of saving the
temple, Titus offered the revolutionists free passage from it, but his
proposition was rejected, and the most violent contest then raged; the
Romans trying to enter the temple, and being continually repulsed, at
last, one of the soldiers seized a firebrand, and threw it into one of
the rooms attached to the temple. The flames in an instant caught the
whole of the inner temple, and totally consumed it, so that this
prediction of our Lord was also fulfilled. The Romans butchered all the
inhabitants whom they met, and Titus having razed the ruins of the
temple and city, ploughed it over, to indicate that this city was never
to be rebuilt. During the siege one million one hundred thousand Jews
lost their lives; ninety-seven thousand were sold as slaves, and the
rest of the people dispersed over the whole earth.
Thus
God punished the impenitent city and nation, over whose wretchedness
the Saviour wept so bitterly, and thus was fulfilled the prediction made
by Him long before.
What do we learn from this?
That
as this prediction so also all other threats and promises of the
Saviour will be fulfilled. The destruction of the city and temple of
Jerusalem, the dispersion of the Jews, are historical facts which cannot
be denied, and testify through all centuries to the truth of our Lord's
word: Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass
away. (Matt. XXIV. 35.)
USEFUL LESSONS CONCERNING DEATH-BED REPENTANCE
Can a sinner rely upon his being converted at the end of his life?
By
no means, for this would be a sin against the mercy of God which is
much the same as the sin against the Holy Ghost. "God," says St.
Augustine, "generally so punishes such negligent sinners, that in the
end they forget themselves, as in health they forgot Him." He says: They
have turned their back to me, and not their face: and in the time of
their affliction they will say: Arise, and deliver us! Where are the
gods whom thou hast made thee? Let them arise and deliver thee in the
time of thy affliction. (Jer. II. 27-28.) And although we have a
consoling example in the case of the penitent thief, yet this, as St.
Augustine says, is only one, that the sinner may not despair: and it is
only one, so that the sinner may have no excuse for his temerity in
putting off his repentance unto the end.
What may we hope of those who are converted at the close of life?
Everything
that is good if they be truly converted, but this is a very rare thing,
as St. Augustine says: "It cannot be asserted with any security, that
he who repents at the end has forgiveness;" and St. Jerome writes:
"Scarcely one out of thousands whose life was impious, will truly repent
at death and obtain forgiveness of sin;" and St. Vincent Ferrer says,
"For a man who has lived an impious life to die a good death is a
greater miracle than the raising of the dead to life." We need not be
surprised at this, for repentance at the end of life is extorted by the
fear of death and the coming judgment. St. Augustine says, that it is
not he who abandons sin, but sin abandons him, for he would not cease to
offend God, if life were granted him. What can we expect from such a
conversion?
When should we repent?
While
we are in health, in possession of our senses and strength, for
according to the words of St. Augustine, the repentance of the sick is a
sickly repentance. As experience proves, man while ill is so tormented
and bewildered by the pains of sickness and the fear of death, by
remorse of conscience, and the temptations of the devil as well as by
anxiety for those whom he leaves, that he can scarcely collect his
thoughts, much less fit himself for true repentance. Since it is so hard
for many to do penance while they are in health, and have nothing to
prevent them from elevating their mind to God, how much more difficult
will it be for them, when the body is weakened and tortured by the pains
of sickness. It has been made known by many persons when convalescent,
that they retained not the slightest recollection of anything which
occurred during their illness, and although they confessed and received
the last Sacraments, they did not remember it. If then you have
committed a grievous sin, do not delay to be reconciled as soon as
possible by contrition and a sacramental confession. Do not put off
repentance from day to day, for thereby conversion becomes more
difficult, so much so that without extraordinary grace from God, you
cannot repent God does not give His grace to the presumptuous scoffer.
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