IHS
Seventh Sunday after
Pentecost—11 July AD 2021
Ave Maria!
1
“What fruit had
you then from those things of which you are now ashamed?”
One of the
great victories of the devil is to make Christians think that when they
avoid sin, they are giving up something very desirable. He knows that
he can weaken our resolve to do good if we perceive sinful things as
though they were very useful and beneficial to us. He knows that we are
much less likely to keep the Commandments if we think that they are
working against us, rather than for us.
Now in reality,
clear human reason will tell us that God's Commandments are the natural
laws of any properly ordered society. The last seven of the
Commandments regulate our relationships with one another. No community
or state can function if people habitually live otherwise—if they go
around breaking the Commandments; lying to one another, killing one
another, stealing, or committing adultery with each others' spouses.
Such a society would simply deteriorate into chaos.
Likewise, no
society can ignore the first three of the Commandments either. For the
society which refuses to acknowledge God, and to give Him the respect
which is His due, has cut itself off from the source of its own
authority. It will not go on for very long before it degenerates into
the same fate as the one which violates the last seven.
But again, the
devil has a powerful weapon at his disposal, if he can make us think we
are giving up more than we are getting when we observe any or all of
God's Commandments. So, he carries on a campaign of propaganda and
deception in our minds. Often, to do this, he has made use of our
popular literature and legends—and particularly the media of
entertainment. We need to learn to be on our guard, if we are not to
fall into his trap.
Simply stated,
we must not glory in our sin.
It is wrong to
make liars and thieves into heroes—whether we call them pirates, or
highwaymen, or cowboys, or bankers, or brokers. If they are, in
actuality, liars and thieves, we should not try to clothe them with an
air of romantic respectability.
Likewise it is
wrong to create a romantic fiction around those who abuse the privilege
of marriage in adultery and fornication. They are
not
demonstrating the “healthy passion of youth;” they are
not
doing something which is romantic or “filled with love.” They are
simply being selfish.
In the same
way, we must not lionize the gang leader, the mobster, or the mercenary
soldier of fortune. Violence has its place only in defense of justice.
Those who would maim or kill for baser reasons should not be perceived
as swashbuckling heroes.
And certainly,
we must never make heroes out of those who would challenge God
Himself—abolishing the Church and the holy works of religion, in the
name of some distorted “enlightenment.”
As St. Paul
tells us today, we are no longer slaves of sin. And, he uses the word
"slave" quite purposefully. We must no longer allow sin to control us,
or even to tempt us, making us its slave, while we enjoy the fiction
that it is something beneficial to us.
Our Lord tells
us something about who our heroes should be in today's Gospel: “By
their fruits you will know them.” They must not be liars, thieves,
adulterers, murderers, or blasphemers. On the contrary, they should be
people known for the good things they have done in their lives.
We should find
our heros among the saints.
* Among
the virgins and martyrs, and Apostles, and confessors of the early
Church.
* Among
men like Sts. Francis and Dominic, adopting holy poverty to preach the
word of God to the masses.
* In
stories like that of St. Francis Xavier, bringing Christianity to India
and Japan. Or Damien of Molocai, bringing comfort to the Lepers.
* In the
stories of the priests and nuns who brought the Faith from Europe to the
people of the Americas—at the cost of great hardship, and even death.
* Or in
our own century, among saints like Padre Pio, Maximillian Koelbe, or
Mother Teresa of Calcutta.
* There
are plenty of others.
The point is
that we must accustom ourselves to glorying in good people and good
things, rather than making artificial heroes out of unsavory characters.
“Every tree
that does not bear good fruit is cut down, and thrown into the fire.”
We tend to
model our lives after the lives of our heroes—so it is imperative that
we chose the right heroes.
As our Lord
tells us, “by their fruits you will know them.”
1. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5f/Kolm%C3%A5rden_Wolf.jpg/440px-Kolm%C3%A5rden_Wolf.jpg