Friday, September 7, 2018

Sermon for the 16th Sunday after Pentecost





By Father Scott Archer

“I beg you not to faint at my tribulations for you” (Ephesians 3:13).

In this Epistle, St. Paul prayed that the Ephesians would not be troubled but would take comfort in his afflictions. He was afraid that his persecution and possible martyrdom would result in their thinking he had failed. He told them that just because he had to undergo persecution it did not mean Christ had abandoned him. Christ had not abandoned Paul but was the comfort toward which Paul turned during his persecution.

I have been thinking about an effect the present crisis in the Church may have in the future. We know that secularists and the devil hate priests because we lead souls to Christ and provide what is needed for salvation, especially the Mass and absolution. When priests are led astray through sin or denial of the faith, this eliminates them from the equation; however, the world and the devil wish to eradicate the faithful ones. When there are no priests the faithful are easily led astray. St. John Vianney said, “After God, the priest is everything. Leave a parish twenty years without priests; they will worship beasts… When people wish to destroy religion, they begin by attacking the priest, because where there is no longer any priest there is no sacrifice, and where there is no longer any sacrifice there is no religion.”

In the Protestant Revolt of the sixteenth century, King Henry VIII declared himself the head of the Church in England. Most of the country accepted this without question because of the abuses in the Catholic Church, and the Renaissance papacy had taken its toll on the people’s trust in the pope. Reform was needed, but the circumstances were used to sever the Church in England from the Mystical Body of Christ. When clerics, like St. John Fisher, stood against the king, they were put to death, with many priests following him in martyrdom.

People see corruption and sin in the Church; however, many, instead of using it as an occasion to pray, sacrifice, and live their states in life even more fervently, give in to hatred of priests in general. Many, spurred on by bloggers and social media, declare that priests, bishops, and cardinals can no longer be trusted and, therefore, they must usurp the authority Christ gave to the clergy when He founded the Church. Many seem to feel helpless when confronted with such evil. But do not fall into despair! Pray for strength, and pray for those who are grasping at actions that seem reasonable on the surface but would, like in the time of King Henry, sever the Church from its Head.

The secularists would then be able to take advantage of this fervor among the laity as a middle step toward persecution and eliminating priests. We see lay groups cutting off money, individuals disrupting Mass to shout out in protest as they leave, writings promoting extreme actions – all this by those claiming to be faithful Catholics.

Persecutions do not transpire overnight, and the enemies of the Faith will gladly use the failings of priests or corruption in the Church to bring about the destruction of those who are faithful. Countless numbers will go along with the idea of lay control over bishops and priests, again, as they did when King Henry declared himself head of the Church in England.

In this respect, you must have no part in the hatred that leads to persecution. Your part is to remain faithful to Christ and the Church He founded, pray and sacrifice, and live your state in life more fervently. Paul, encouraging the faithful, pleaded, “I pray you not to faint at my tribulations for you, which is for your glory.” Similarly, I pray you not faint at the tribulations currently endured by the Church which God will ultimately use for His glory.