La
Iglesia Santa e Inmortal prevalecerá
Tomado
de The American Society for the Defense of TRADITION, FAMILY and
PROPERTY
The
Church, Holy
and Immortal, Shall Prevail!
Published
in The Washington Times, April 11, 2002
“Thou
art Peter; and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the
gates of Hell shall not prevail against Her (Matt. 16:18).
To this first promise, Our Lord added a second: Heaven and
earth will pass away, but My words will not pass away (Matt.
24:35). Thus did Jesus Christ establish the One Holy Roman Catholic
and Apostolic Church, sealing Her immortality with His divine
guarantee.
The
violence of the storm currently assailing the Church would likely
bring down many a human institution, but not the institution supported
by Gods own promises. The Churchs enemies try with
all their might to defame and dishonor Her. They hurl mud and
muck, but they fail to sully Her.
They
declare that She cannot survive the scandals perpetrated within
and against Her, but their words ring with the uncertainty that
it will indeed be so. Confronted with the silent testimony of
history, they know by experience that the Church is both holy
and immortal. Nothing stains Her, not even infamy rising from
Her ranks, for She is the spotless Bride of Christ.
Even
at the height of His passionwhen the insults against His
Divine Person, the wounds inflicted on His Sacred Body, and His
public humiliation had reached their apexthe Word of God
Incarnate lost none of the grandeur in His moral profile.
The atrociously wounded face of Christ imprinted upon the Holy
Shroud, appears more majestic than any king.
We see this in the Holy Shroud of Turin. Here is a Man atrociously
wounded, one would almost say crushed, yet, no painting or sculpture
of a king presents more majesty, dignity, or honor than the figure
stamped on that burial cloth.
Betrayed
ignobly from within, attacked fiercely from without
So it is with the Catholic Church today. At the height of Her
passion, betrayed ignobly from within, attacked fiercely from
without, nothing can disturb Her serenity. When this frightful
storm finally abates, She will appear again radiant and victorious.
But
while the storm lasts, the suffering is intense, and our faith
is tested. For us Catholics this means the shocking realization
that a hostile element, a horrendous cancer, grows within the
Mystical Body of Christ. We shudder at the tragic and unnatural
peaceful coexistence between vice and that which is
virtuous and holy.
The
existence of homosexuality1 in the institution that is the very
soul of purity and chastity is deplorable beyond words. Equally
deplorable is the fact that this “peaceful coexistence”
has lasted for decades due to the unpardonable connivance of shepherds
who should have been ready to lay down their lives if necessary
to prevent this evil from gaining access to the fold.
The
Catechism of St. Pius X calls homosexuality a sin that
“cries out to Heaven for vengeance,”2 and the Catechism of the Catholic
Church promulgated by Pope John Paul II in 1992 says: “Basing
itself on Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as
acts of grave depravity, tradition has always declared that ‘homosexual
acts are intrinsically disordered.’”3 Homosexuality is a sin condemned in
the Old Testament4 and by both Saint Peter and Saint Paul
in the New5, by Fathers and Doctors of the Church,
and by the Popes for 2,000 years. Saint Peter Damian, Doctor of
the Church, says it “should not be considered an ordinary
vice, for it surpasses all of them in enormity.”6
We
speak of homosexuality, for this indeed is the problem. We all
know the truth: the vast majority of the exposed scandals are
cases of pedophiliac homosexuality, and thus a particularly heinous
spillover of the more widespread problem of homosexuality. Large
sectors of the media, however, choose to gloss over the homosexuality
and highlight the pedophilia.7
This
same media has no qualms about unleashing a ferocious uproar against
the Church, Her doctrine and morals. Adding insult to injury,
it gives the impression that the criminal behavior of some is
the general rule. This is a supreme injustice to all the priests
and religious who are faithful to their vows. Moreover, it suggests
that the scandals exist because of clerical celibacy. Callously
oblivious to the faith and feeling of one billion Catholics, it
makes scant attempt to show the other side of the coin, namely
the sublimity of the Catholic priesthood as reflected in its saints
down through the ages.
A
mysterious process of “self-destruction”
Let
us put aside, however, this external assault on the Church and
focus on the more important problem within.
The
first step in solving any problem consists in its thorough and
accurate analysis. Then we can see its detrimental consequences
and especially its root cause.
The
problem would not exist but for the most culpable negligence of
numerous shepherds and, in some cases, the most condemnable complicity
of others. There is much for the clergy to address within its
ranks, vigorously and urgently. Oh, how many tears will turn to
joy when the faithful see bishops like our glorious Saint John
Neumann, Philadelphia’s fourth (1852-1860), fearlessly taking
on those who would harm Christ’s “little flock.”
It behooves us all to beseech God earnestly to send saints and
heroes to teach, govern, and sanctify His flock.
Is
the clergy alone responsible, though? Is there not the possibility
that we—the Catholic laity—stand to be blamed as well,
if in varying degrees? Surely, we trusted in the watchfulness
of our shepherds. Surely, we feel that our trust was betrayed.
Nevertheless, Our Lord had more than just the shepherds in mind
when He said, “Watch and pray, that you enter not into temptation”
(Matt. 26:41); He addressed us as well.
Did
we “watch and pray?” Unfortunately not. In the Garden
of Olives, we would have been among those who slept. If our analysis
is to be honest we must acknowledge this.
Decades
ago, Pope Paul VI warned that “the smoke of Satan”
had entered the Church.8 He also said that She was undergoing
a mysterious process of “self-destruction.”9 Did we take this warning to heart? Did
we investigate this mysterious process? Its methods? How it affected
both clergy and faithful?
We
let this “smoke of Satan” fill every nook and cranny
in the Church. Like a stupefying gas it relaxed and anesthetized
us. It diminished our fighting spirit. Indiff-erence became generalized,
and the process of “self-destruction” was left free
to do its nefarious work. Today we see the consequences.
This
“smoke of Satan” also spread intellectual and moral
“relativism” throughout the Church.10 This relativism spared nothing: the
sublime vocation and sacred persons of priest and bishop; the
respectful and prayerful atmosphere within churches; the rules
of beauty in Church art and architecture; the reverence due to
consecrated religious life; the rules of modesty in dress, not
only in public but even in our churches; and so much more. All
that elevated the souls of the faithful, all that filled them
with admiration and veneration for the supernatural, was targeted.
Inevitably
this relativism slowly weakened in consciences the notions of
good and evil, sin and grace, vice and virtue. The Church’s
clear teaching on every aspect of sexual behavior was gradually
blurred. Virtue was replaced with a pathetic feel-good spirituality,
so that eventually we fell to where we are today, proof positive
of the existence of a process dubbed “satanic” by
a Pope in our own lifetime.
Some
critics, moved more by emotions and force of habit than clear
thinking, will deny this process of “self-destruction.”
Unfortunately, the media brings us daily a most palpable sign
of its continuation: Seeing the Church so hard pressed by the
scandals, Her enemies both within and without are quick to clamor
for additional “reform.” In open challenge to Her
Supreme Magisterium, they demand that the Church abolish clerical
celibacy and accept the ordination of women, divorce, contraception,
abortion, and, oddly enough, even homosexuality. This is exactly
what the Church should not do! This would be the next step toward
the abyss of total relativism.
Retracing
our steps
There
is only one way to extricate ourselves from the problem we are
in—now that our eyes are open. We must retrace our steps.
We must return from whence we came. Only in the fullness of Church
teaching will we find the solution to the present crisis. The
Church has dealt with many problems during 2,000 years. She is
no less able to deal with them today.
The
first and obvious step then is to pray.
The
second is to watch, as Our Lord commanded. We must
hone our ability to watch, to pay attention to lurking danger.
Thus, when danger appears—particularly when in sheep’s
clothing—we must know how to resist it; we must know how
to assess things in the light of Catholic principles. This presupposes
a clear understanding of the perennial truths of the Faith and
the unchanging principles of morality, for which we must study.
This “back to the basics” study of Church teaching
will rekindle in our hearts a burning love for all the principles
long eroded by relativism.
A
call for heroism
The
third step is a proper understanding of sanctity—the
heroic struggle for virtue. True and heroic virtue is
not anemic or self-centered. It is full of fruits in the apostolate
with others. It rejects the comfort zone and the dictates of human
respect—the fear of creating complications for ourselves.
When faced with opposition, be it from within or without, it does
not cringe and boldly proclaims the faith and sound doctrine.
The truth is not something to be ashamed of. Our Lord wants us
to influence society, as yeast ferments the dough. He expects
us to be courageous in the face of public ridicule, like Veronica.
He invites us to heroism: “Everyone therefore
that shall confess Me before men, I will also confess him before
My Father Who is in Heaven” (Matt. 10:32)
For
this journey back to the paternal home to be successful it must
become a true spiritual crusade, with all the dedication, self-sacrifice
and zeal shown by the heroes of old. These answered Blessed Urban
II’s call to arms at Clermont-Ferrand, when he launched
the First Crusade, with reverberating cries of “God wills
it! God wills it!”
If
this crusading spirit burns within our breasts, our ecclesiastical
leaders will have no doubt that they can rely on our enthusiastic
support, provided they courageously assail this largely unchallenged
process of “self-destruction” with the indispensable
vigor of shepherds defending their flock from ravenous wolves.
Beyond
any doubt, the Church shall prevail
If
both clergy and faithful carry out their respective duties, with
the unfailing help of the Blessed Virgin Mary, of Saint Joseph,
Her most chaste spouse and Protector of the Universal Church,
of all the angels and saints, we will be rewarded by seeing the
Church win one more battle. The present crisis is but one more
episode—even if one of the worst—in Her glorious history
of struggles.
We
are reminded of this by the Catholic intellectual Prof. Plinio
Corrêa de Oliveira, who wrote in his seminal work, Revolution
and Counter-Revolution: “Amid the storms through which
She passes today, the Church could proudly and tranquilly say:
‘I have seen other winds, I have beheld other storms.’11 The Church has fought in other lands,
against adversaries from among other peoples, and She will undoubtedly
continue to face problems and enemies quite different from those
of today until the end of time.”12