From Community in Mission
By Msgr Charles Pope
On January 2nd, we celebrated the feast of St. Basil and St. Gregory Nazianzen. They were bishops in Cappadocia (modern-day Turkey) during the stormy period of the Arian heresy, which denied the divinity of Christ. Despite the strong affirmation by the Council of Nicaea, the Arian heretics did not desist. Saints Basil and Gregory were strong forces for truth in the long battle to stamp out the heresy. When the emperor, Julian the Apostate, sought to compel bishops to admit Arian heretics to Holy Communion both these bishops refused to comply.
An interaction between St. Basil and the local prefect of the emperor shows forth an image of a strong bishopthat is rare today. Encountering St. Basil’s resistance, the prefect said,
The emperor backed down.
The lives of early bishops were filled with suffering, exile, and martyrdom.Thirty of the first thirty-three popes were martyred, two died in exile, and only one died in his own bed. It was a similar story with many ancient bishops, for example Athanasius, Chrysostom, Basil, and Gregory. It’s hard to imagine many among the current leaders of the Church enduring such suffering. Many bishops and higher clergy today live comfortable, protected lives. Even less elevated clergymen live fairly insular lives, shielded from the ordinary struggles of the laity. Many of us have healthcare, housing, laundry services, prepared meals, and staff to handle many day-to-day matters. God bless all of our staff and God’s good people, who care for us so well.
There comes a point, though, when we clergy become soft, no longer able to relate to even small sufferings,let alone larger ones that might come from preaching the Gospel in an uncompromising and clear way. Failing to accept this suffering in our own lives, we fear to preach it to others.
Unlike St. Basil, who had felt he had nothing to lose, we modern clergy often think we have too much to lose. Indeed, the whole Church (at least in the prosperous West) fears we have too much to lose.We fear the loss of popularity, political power, and access; we fear the impact on our careers; we fear the loss of buildings, institutions, and programs as well as the money and power needed to sustain them. We seem to fear just about everything except the loss of our faith, which we are too willing compromise, ignore, or water down in order to keep the lesser things.
Ultimately, however, this world and the devil will never be satisfiedwith compromises we make until every last bit of our integrity is gone. Whatever time we buy through compromise is temporary; it is a pyrrhic “victory.” Despite all our attempts to fit in with the modern world, we are still closing churches and schools; Catholic charities are losing contracts; our members are continuing to drift away. The world cannot save us; being popular or up to date does not inspire faith or attract converts. Owning nice buildings is worthless if they are empty.
We end with a paradox.Acting out of fear that we have too much to lose will mean that we lose everything. Freely accepting that we have nothing to lose will mean that we gain everything, for we gain Christ Jesus and all that He promises us here and in the life to come.
But seek ye first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things will be added unto you(Matt 6:33).
And anyone who does not take up his cross and follow Me is not worthy of Me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for My sake will find it(Matt 10:38-39).
May St. Basil, St. Gregory, and all the heroes and martyrs pray for us, clergy and laity alike!
Oh boy, is this true. It certainly appears that until we are out in fields hearing Mass again, the church is only going to continue to decline and decline. We have lost our way, and the people and the clergy who stand out in the field in the rain will be the remnant God can use. Beautiful cathedrals are nothing if they are filled with non-Catholics. Perhaps when we lose everything we will gain everything. Our priorities are a mess. We better put them straight.
ReplyDeleteSorry, Msgr. Pope is one of the bad guys. I am sad to see you post something by him. He crossed my path online, years ago. I know what I am talking about. I would ask you to remove this post. No one should give him, the time of day.
ReplyDeleteForgive him? Absolutely. But give him a platform? No. He has not repented, nor will he likely. I would never, again, confront him because his heart and his mind are closed to facing his personal errors and their damage to others.
I will say no more. Godspeed.
And if you're too cowardly to sign your name, why should I think your comment is anything more than sinful detraction and calumny?
DeleteYou've just lost a faithful reader, Jovan. Nevertheless, Godspeed on your journey. Most likely you have more courage than, I. But, a deceiver, I am not. Take care.
ReplyDeleteI am saddened you are leaving, but it doesn't change my position. An unsupported, ad hominem attack posted anonymously? What am I to think?
Delete