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On This Holy Feast Day of the Immaculate Conception

Our country has gone through many bad things these many years and it seems to be continuing in that pathway.  Here is an excerpt from an old Imprimatured book to lend us some thoughtful comfort.

820 Mary, Patroness of the United States.

XXIX.– THE SELECTION OF MARY CONCEIVED WITHOUT SIN AS PATRONESS OF THE UNITED STATES.

The student of ecclesiastical history need not be told through what stages the pious belief of the faithful in and the devotion of religious Orders to the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin passed, from the beginning of the Christian era to the day when, amid the acclamations of more then two hundred millions of Catholics, the saintly Pius IX. defined it as an article of faith. Nor can the attentive reader of American history fail to see the finger of God manifested in the way in which Mary Immaculate claimed America, and America Mary Immaculate, from the earliest period of the authentic history of the New World. It is not necessary to speak of these : They are too well known to American Catholics. The following, however, may be given as an example. When Alexander O’Reilly came to Louisiana in 1769, as the Spanish governor of that province, he gave the form of oath which was to be taken by all the officials, containing, among other things, the following : “I ____, appointed ____, swear before God, on the holy Cross and the Evangelists, to maintain and defend the mystery of the Immaculate Conception of our Lady the Virgin Mary.” 1 It may be interesting to pass in review the action of the American prelates in authoritatively promoting devotion to the Immaculate Conception, until the time when they obtained their petition from the Holy Father, that our Blessed Lady under the title of the Immaculate Conception should be the patroness of the United States, and later, that her feast should be a holyday of obligation. It is worthy of note that the Blessed Virgin under this beautiful title was not chosen merely as Patroness of the Church in the United States, but as Patroness of the United States. Neither in the decree of the Fathers of Baltimore, as will be seen later on, nor in the document from Rome confirming their action, is the phrase “of the Church” found ; Mary is everywhere called Patroness “of the United States.” It cannot, of course, be doubted that the Mother of God takes a livelier interest in her devoted children then in others ; but the mantle of her protection covers all who dwell in the Great Republic.

No sooner had the illustrious John Carroll been consecrated bishop of the Church in the United States —which took place on the 15th of august, 1790– then the special devotion to Mary which had characterized the Church here received new life and vigor. It was decreed in the fifth session of the first Synod, held in Baltimore in November, 1791, that the Litany of the Blessed Virgin, the principal patron of the vast diocese of Baltimore, should be sung or recited before Mass on Sundays and holydays. The bishop declared in another decree that from the beginning of his episcopate he was most anxious to select the holy Mother of God as the principle patron of the diocese, that, through her intercession, the faith and piety of the people committed to him might flourish and be more and more increased; And he further decreed that the feast of the Assumption should be the principle feast of the diocese, urging upon both clergy and people to celebrate it with the greatest solemnity. 2

But it was not until the sixth Provincial Council, held in May, 1846, that the devotion to the Immaculate Conception was solemnly discussed by the American prelates. In the third congregation, held May, 13th, – an auspicious date,– the first decree of the council was promulgated in these memorable words, which show clearly that, although this was the first solemn pronouncement, the devotion had long been flourishing. The decree reads as follows : “Fathers, with ardent desire, and with unanimous applause and consent, have chosen the Blessed Virgin conceived without original sin as the Patroness of the United States ; without, however, imposing the obligation of hearing Mass and resting from servile works on the feast itself of the Conception of the Blessed Mary ; and therefore the Sovereign Pontiff shall be humbly petitioned that the solemnization of the feast may be transferred to

the following Sunday.– unless the feast falls on a Sunday,– on which day the Masses, both private and solemn, of the feast shall be celebrated, and the Vespers of the same feast shall be recited.”
The decree was not, however, approved and confirmed by the Holy See until February 7, 1847. In his letter to the Archbishop of Baltimore, July 3rd of that year, Cardinal Fransoni, Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the faith, announced the decision, and enclosed the decree, remarking that the Holy Father had most willingly confirmed the choice of the council.

In the fourth private congregation of the same Council, held May 15th, it was decreed that the Holy See should be petitioned for the privilege of adding, throughout the United States, the word, “Immaculate” before “Conception,” in the Office of the Conception of the Blessed Virgin and in the prayers and Preface of the Mass of the same feast, and the invocation “Queen conceived without original sin, pray for us,” to the Litany of Our Lady. The Pope granted these petitions in perpetuity, September 13, 1846. 3

A remarkable circumstance connected with the selection of Mary conceived without sin as our patroness is given by the late celebrated Indian missionary Father De Smet, S.J., in a letter to the editor of the Precis Historiques, Brussels, dated New York, May 16, 1857, on the life and labors of Rev. Theodore de Theux. Says Father De Smet : “In 1844 the Bishop of Cincinnati found himself frequently menaced, as well as the Catholics of his diocese, by tumultuous mobs, composed of the enemies of our holy faith. He asked counsel of Father de Theux. After some moments of reflection the father answered that he should obtain peace and security in those difficult times if he would have recourse to the Sovereign Pontiff, and would encourage the other bishops of the United States to follow his example, so as to obtain the favor of adding, in the Preface of the mass, to the word ‘Conception’ the prefix ‘Immaculate.’ The worthy bishop received the advice with respect, and the request was soon after made at Rome and crowned with success.” 4 The acts of the Council do not state by whom the question was introduced ; but this being the first provincial council after the Bishop of Cincinnati had spoken of it to Father de Theux, it may safely be presumed that it was brought up at instance of the ordinary of that see.
While the Holy Father was still in exile at Gaeta, he commenced the preliminaries for the definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. He established a special Congregation to take the matter into consideration, and addressed a circular letter to all the bishops of the Christian world asking them to lend their aid and co-operation, to ascertain the devotion of their clergy and people to this mystery, etc. In reply, the Fathers of the Seventh Provincial Council of Baltimore, which was held in May, 1849, declared, in their first decree, that the clergy and faithful of the United States were animated with a most ardent devotion to the Immaculate Conception ; and, in the second decree, expressed, with but one dissenting voice, the joy they would feel at its definition as an article of faith, if the Holy Father should deem such definition opportune. 5
The church in this country having been divided, in 1850, into several ecclesiastical provinces, matters relating to discipline among Catholics in general were, thenceforth, to be discussed in Plenary Councils, or assemblies of all the prelates. The first of these was held in May, 1852, when it was decided that a Plenary Council should be held every ten years. No action remained to be taken by the Fathers of the First Plenary Council, from the fact that the Blessed Virgin had already been chosen the Patroness of our country, and the prelates had already expressed their opinion regarding the definition as an article of faith ; all that was left was to await the actual definition by the Vicar of Christ. But with the decree of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith approving the decrees of the Council, the members of that body expressed a wish that the bishops of the Church here would labor to have the feast of the Immaculate Conception added to the other days of the obligation in the United States. 6

The civil war, which was unhappily waging in 1862, prevented the assembling of the Second Plenary Council at the proper time, and it was not until October, 1866, that it was deemed expedient for the Fathers to meet. In the tenth private congregation of this Council, which was held on October 19th, the question of raising the feast of the Immaculate Conception to the dignity of a holyday of

obligation throughout the Union was discussed by the prelates, and decreed, five only voting in the negative. The Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, whose province it is to examine and pass upon the decrees of the Councils held in missionary countries like ours, examined the question in their general assemblies on the 17th, 23rd, and 27th days of September, 1867, and issued their decree. Finally, the decree was approved January 24, 1868, by His Holiness, Pius IX., who had labored so strenuously and so successfully during his long pontificate in promoting the honor of the Immaculate Mother of God. The Catholics of our day should deem it a special privilege to have been permitted to live at a time when their Mother in heaven received so precious a jewel in her glorious crown.

1 shea, “Life and Times of Archbishop Carroll,” p.348. 2 “Concillia Baltimorensia,” 1829-1852, pp.19-21.
3 “Concillia Baltimorensia,” pp.240-257.
4 “Western Missions and Missionaries.” p. 480.

5 “Concillia baltimorensia.” pp. 274-278.
6 Concilium Plenarium.” etc., vol.1. p. 56, note.

Citation:
The Sacramentals of the Holy Catholic Church By Rev. A. A. Lambing, LL.D.,
Benziger Brothers
Imprimatur 1808

 

 

A prayer to Mary, and an triple invocation:

A prayer to Mary, and an triple invocation:

O dearest Lady, Sweet Mother mine, watch the hour when my departing soul
shall lose its hold on all earthly things, and stand unveiled in the
presence of its Creator. Show thyself as my tender Mother then, and offer
to the Eternal Father the precious Blood of thy Son Jesus for my poor soul,
that it may, thus purified, be pleasing in His sight. Plead for thy poor
child at the moment of his (or her) departure from this world, and say to
the Heavenly Father: Receive him (or her) this day into Thy Kingdom! Amen.

Jesus, Mary and Joseph, I give you my heart and my soul.
Jesus, Mary and Joseph, assist me in my last agony.
Jesus, Mary and Joseph, may I breathe forth my soul in peace with you.

Imprimatur: +John Farley, Archbishop of New York, Sept 19, 1908.

Novena to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

+ NOVENA to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, begins from June 2, 2015 +

General Intentions.

As an act of reparation for impiety, neglect, the profanation of the sacraments, and the abuse of God’s grace, let us pray for the Sovereign Pontiff and the Catholic Church; for the propagation of the devotion to the Sacred Heart, in order to beg for a more perfect knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ; for the increase of faith, hope, and charity, to obtain the grace of a happy death.


Each person should specify some particular intention.

PRAYERS OF THE NOVENA

In union with the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

Profound adorations of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Ardent love of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Fervent zeal of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Reparations of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Thanksgivings of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Sure confidence of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Ardent prayers of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Eloquent silence of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Humility of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Obedience of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Meekness and peace of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Ineffable sweetness of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Universal charity of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Profound recollection of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.
Tender solicitude of the heart of Jesus, for the conversion of sinners, I unite myself to thee.
Intimate union of the heart of Jesus, with the heavenly Father, I unite myself to thee.
Intentions, desires, and wishes of the heart of Jesus, I unite myself to thee.

May the heart of Jesus be everywhere loved.

This novena must be commenced so as to end on the eve of the first Friday of the month. Make a spiritual communion if unable to make a sacramental communion, adding thereunto an act of reparation and intimate union of the heart of Jesus with the heavenly Father.

Source: The Manual of the Scared Heart, Edition 1866

 

THE SPIRITUAL COMMUNION


By a rescript of November 24. 1922 the Sacred Congregation of Indulgences approved the following formula for a spiritual communion:

“O Jesus I turn toward the holy tabernacle where You live hidden for love of me. I love you, O my God. I cannot receive you in Holy Communion. Come nevertheless and visit me with Your grace. Come spiritually into my heart. Purify it. Sanctify it. Render it like unto Your own. Amen.

Lord, I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.”

An indulgence of 500 days, if thrice repeated. (129 The Raccolta 1944).

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Spiritual Progress Draws Detractors

People who change their way of life and begin to think about making spiritual
progress also begin to suffer from the tongues of detractors.   Whoever has not
yet suffered this trial has not yet made progress, and whoever is not ready to
suffer it does not even endeavor to progress.
–St. Augustine — Commentary on Psalm 119, 3

Prayer.
Come to my aid, O God, the one eternal, true reality!  In you there is no strife,
no disorder, no change, no need, and no death; only supreme clarity, supreme
permanence, supreme fullness, and supreme life.
–St. Augustine–Soliloquies 1, 1

May 26th – St. Phillip Neri, Priest, Mystic

Phillip Neri (1515-1595) was born in Florence of a noble but impoverished
family. He studied theology and philosophy and dedicated himself to apostolic
works from his youth. Eventually he set aside his studies and founded a society
to care for the sick and poor pilgrims in Rome.

He was ordained a priest in 1551, and founded the Congregation of the Oratory,
the Oratorians, a group of priests dedicated to preaching and teaching. He was a
great mystic, who received the gifts of prophecy and discernment of spirits. He
could read the souls of penitents, and heard confessions by the hour. He was
canonized some 25 years after his death along with St. Ignatius of Loyola, St.
Teresa of Avila and St. Francis Xavier.

The religious crisis that took so many provinces from the Catholic Church deeply
afflicted St. Phillip Neri. He suffered cruelly to see so many people being
drowned in the waves of heresy. He attentively followed the maneuvers of
Protestantism and planned a counter-attack against a Lutheran work of
propaganda, the “Magdeburg Centuries” This vast compilation was written to
persuade readers that the Catholic Church had abandoned her early beliefs and
practices. The multi-volume collection was filled with historical falsifications
to “prove” its goal.

To counter this fabrication St. Phillip wanted a complete work of erudition to
be written on the History of the Church from the time of Our Lord Jesus Christ
up to his own time. He ordered the work to be done by Cesar Baronius, an
Oratorian who would succeed him as Superior of the Oratory in 1593 and made a
Cardinal in 1596.

Baronius alleged that he was unworthy and lacked the competence for such a great
work; but St. Phillip was inflexible and ordered him under religious obedience
to undertake the project. He spent close to 30 years to write it (1588-1607),
covering the time up to the 12th century. This collection was called
“Ecclesiastical Annals”. It was completed after his death.

The heresy felt the blow. The errors of the anti-Catholic “Magdeburg Centuries”
became evident as the work of Baronius eclipsed it. The “Ecclesiastical Annals”
contributed powerfully to stem the growing tide of Protestantism in Europe.  From
Baronius’ work the Catholic Church emerged as she had always been, as the pillar
of truth.

Comments of the late Prof. Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira: (died 1995)

St. Phillip Neri was a man with a universal Catholic sense. He was not just
interested in realizing a personal work, which certainly was important — the
foundation of the Congregation of the Oratory — but he had a general concern
for the Catholic Church as a whole. He was personally offended by Protestants
attacking the Church through a work that was meant to be monumental – the
“Magdeburg Centuries.” Actually it was a monumental lie. The Protestants, as
heretics who hated the Church, fabricated another history of the Church full of
untruths and slanders, with the specific purpose of denigrating the good name of
the Catholic Church and separating her from the faithful.

These Protestants were from the same family of souls as the Pharisees, who
produced false witnesses to condemn the Lamb of God. Analogously, in the
beginning of the Church, groups of Jews moved by hatred against her spread many
apocrypha documents — false gospels or epistles attributed to the Apostles —
in order to confuse Catholics and induce them toward heresies. Until today, from
time to time, the discussion of the apocrypha documents resurfaces trying to
sabotage the Gospels.

Also after Protestantism, and in its wake, some authors of the Encyclopedia
spread countless lies regarding the past of the Church. This in many ways was
continued by Michelet in the 19th century. Today, these revolutionary authors
lost credibility and their lies are universally recognized in scholarly milieus,
even though they still influence badly those who do not have access to good
historical sources. So, it was and still is a rule of the enemies to falsify
history in order to slander Holy Mother Church.

When St. Phillip Neri saw the evil results that the “Centuries of Magdeburg” was
having by favoring the spread of Protestantism, he decided to counter-attack. He
chose the only way possible which was to make a gigantic work of erudition. A
work using the best documents dating from the very beginning of the Church up to
his own time, that would present the incontestable reality of the facts. To do
this work he chose one of his most capable disciples, Baronius. After some
hesitations Baronius dedicated some 30 years of his life to this job and the
result was the “Ecclesiastical Annals”, one of the most serious works of all
times. The work of Baronius stands forever as a point of reference for any
serious historical study. His work pulverized the supposed “scientific” work of
the Protestants who were left completely discredited.

The root of this work was St. Phillip Neri’s amplitude of vision, his love of
the Church, and his counter-revolutionary zeal.

An analogous work was made by Fr. Cornelius a Lapide from the Society of Jesus.
He received an order to study all the interpretations of the Sacred Scriptures
that existed, analyze them, refute the wrong ones, explain the good ones and
give the best sources for each of them. Again, it was a counter-revolutionary
work to destroy the pseudo-scientific Protestant interpretations which were
polluting the atmosphere of piety and studies in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Fr. Cornelius a Lapide wrote his monumental “Commentaries to the Sacred
Scriptures” encompassing all its books from Genesis to the Apocalypse. To this
date it is one of the most — if not the most — complete ensemble of Exegesis
that the Catholic Church has. It is an everlasting source of erudition and piety
for historians, preachers, and faithful in general.

Let us ask the great counter-revolutionary St. Phillip Neri to give us
conditions to imitate him, hurting the Revolution at its head so that it can be
completely destroyed and the Reign of Mary be established over its ruins.

From a roman catholic list

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This web site may contain copyrighted material the use of which may not always have been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of political, human, religious, and social issues. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. For more information go to http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

 

A Blessed and Holy Easter to all on this- Low Sunday

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A Word About Scandal

Archbishop Fulton Sheen
January 27, 1935

Thus far we have spoken of the Church as an ideal. The Risen Christ at the Right Hand of the Father is the head; we the baptized members are the body; and the Holy Spirit of Truth, the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity, is the soul.

But in fact does the Church always reveal that ideal? The world has asked these questions a thousand times: How dare you say that the successor of Peter is the vicar of Christ? Do not the sinful lives of men who have sat in the chair of Peter prove that they are not infallible? How can anyone be infallible who is a sinner? Do you mean to say that a wicked man like Alexander VI, who was a sinner, could be the infallible vicar of Jesus Christ?

Furthermore, is it not almost blasphemy to say that you Catholics, many of whom have been guilty of grave scandals, murders, political intrigues, dishonesty, and shameful sin, constitute the Body of Christ, and then against bad Catholics; or first Would you dare assert that they were part of the Body of the All-Holy Christ? How could He Who is pure have a Body which is soiled?

Despite these seemingly strong objections we still believe that the Holy Father is the vicar of Christ, and the Church is the Body of Christ. I will consider first the objections against the Vicars of Christ, and then against bad Catholics, or first against the Head of the Church and then against its Body.

The root of error on this subject is that the enemies of the Papacy fail to make a distinction between infallibility and impeccability. Infallibility means freedom from error, impeccability means freedom from sin. Hence this question arises: When Our Lord conferred primacy on Peter and his successors did he make them infallible or impeccable? The Gospels themselves make the distinction. Peter made the confession of Our Lord’s Divinity, whereupon Our Lord made him the Rock of His Church with the guarantee that the gates of error would never prevail against it.

Immediately after this promise of freedom from error and guarantee of faith, Our Blessed Lord tells His Apostles that He must “go to Jerusalem, and suffer many things from the ancients and scribes and chief priests, and be put to death”.

Poor, weak, human Peter, who was evidently puffed with pride because he had been made the Rock of the Church, was yet to learn the limitations of his gift. Like a boy given authority and anxious to exercise it, Peter now takes Our Lord aside, in the language of the Gospel “to rebuke him”, saying: “Lord, be it far from thee, this shall not be unto thee”.

Whereupon Our Lord, whose back was to Peter, turned around and said to Peter: “Go behind me, Satan, thou art a scandal unto me: because thou savourest not the things that are of God, but the things that are of men”.

A moment before Peter was called the Rock; now he is called Satan. Oh think not that the Divine Mind had so quickly changed. Our Lord did not take back the gift of primacy, for He re-emphasized it again after His Resurrection. He was just driving home to Peter the distinction between the office and its man, between infallibility and impeccability, between freedom from error aNd freedom from sin. In so many words Our Lord was telling him: “As Peter, the Rock upon which I build My Church, whenever you speak with the assistance of Heaven you shall be preserved from error, but as Simon, son of John, as a man, you are so weak, so human, so apt to be sinful, that you may become even like unto Satan. In your office you are infallible; as a man, you are peccable”. Most of us, too, who examine our relations with our fellow men are conscious of this distinction Our Lord made at Caesarea-Phillipi. If an officer of the law holds up his hand and orders you to stop in traffic, you do so. And why? Because he is the representative of law and order. And you would do so even though you knew that as a private citizen the traffic officer was known to beat his wife. In other words you make a distinction between the office and the man. God thus permitted the fall of Peter immediately after the gift of primacy to remind him and all his successors that what he received as Peter was not his as Simon; that infallibility would belong necessarily to his office, but virtue would have to be acquired by his own merit; infallibility would come from God, saintliness would have to come from himself.

Admitting then the weakness of the man, because he is himself, and the power of the office, because that is Christ’s, does history justify the emphasis the enemies of the Church have placed upon her failing Peters? To read some histories one would think the Papacy was nothing but a scarlet river of blood. Scandals have the unfortunate quality of absorbing attention. A murderer receives more space in our newspapers than a sacrificing mother. Saints never make the headlines. It is generally safe to say that those who know everything about the two or three bad successors of Peter know nothing at all about the other two hundred and fifty good ones. How true it is that “the. evil men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones”. The wickedness of one man in authority is allowed to obscure a million Saints.

But why not put all things in due proportion? How many who dwell on the Papacy for thirty years during the Renaissance ever dwell on the history of the Papacy for the other hundreds and hundreds of years? How many of those who exploit the bad two or three, ever admit that of the first thirty-three successors of Peter, thirty were Martyrs for their faith and the other three exiled for it? How many of those who dwell on the bad example of two or three will know or ever admit that of the two hundred and fifty-three successors of St. Peter eighty-three have been canonized for their heroic virtue, and that over fifty were chosen over the protest of their own unworthiness for such a high office? Anyone who attacks such a long line of Martyrs, Saints, and scholars must be mighty certain of his own sinlessness to lay his hand on the two or three who revealed the human side of their office. If they who attack are holy, pure, and undefiled – and I wonder how many are – let them pick up their stones. For it is the privilege only of those without sin to cast the first stone. But if they are not above reproach, then let them leave their judgment to God.

Now let us consider the objection against the scandals of the members of His Mystical Body. As Christ never promised that His Visible Head would always be a Saint, neither did He promise that the members of His Mystical Body would all be Saints. Sacred Scripture nowhere guarantees that those who, called to intimate union with God, would all be Saints. There were eight in the ark and one was a reprobate; there were twelve tribes and – one was rejected for the final sealing; there were twelve Apostles and one of them was a devil; there were seventy-two disciples and some walked no more with Christ; there were seven deacons and one of them was a heretic. The Kingdom of God on earth, Our Blessed Lord assured us, would be made up of foolish virgins as well as wise virgins, of cockle as well as wheat, of bad fish as well as good, and the final rejection of the bad would not take place until the end of time.

In ideal then the Church would always be the “immaculate spouse” of Christ, but that ideal would never be fully realized here below. The world is full of half-completed Gothic cathedrals, of half-written epics, and of unfinished symphonies, and in the Church Our Lord Himself told us: “Scandals must come.” It is rather natural, too, for them to come when one remembers that the graces of God are communicated through “frail vessels”, where mediocrity is the nemesis, genius the rarity, and Saints the exception.

Quite apart from the Divine warrant that such failings are to be expected, does it not seem to be implied in the very nature of the Mystical Body: In the Incarnation Our Lord assumed a physical body, a human nature, like unto ours ill all things save sin. The remarkable thing about the assumption of that physical body from the womb of the Blessed Mother was that He, though God, did not dispense that body from the physical imperfections of all human bodies. He was subject to fatigue and thirst when He rested at Jacob’s well; He was subject to grief when He wept at the grave of Lazarus; He was subject to a bloody sweat when He bowed down to the Father’s will in Gethsemane’s garden; and He was subject to pain, anguish, pierced hands and feet, torn body, and bruised brow in what He called the “scandal” of His life – the Crucifixion.

Is it not natural then to expect that in assuming a mystical body, which we are, that He would permit this body to be subject to mystical and moral weakness; such as loss of faith, sin, scandals, heresies, schisms, and sacrileges? And why, when these things do happen, should we deny that the Mystical Body is Divine in its inmost nature, anymore than we should deny He was Divine because of the weakness of His Own physical body. The Crucifixion did not obscure His divinity; then why should scandals do so when we find them, as He foretold, in His Mystical Body? But the scandals or sins of a few members do not affect the intrinsic sanctity of the Church. Because one’s hands are dirty, the whole body is not polluted. The scandals, sins, and imperfections of the members of the Church no more destroy its substantial holiness than the Crucifixion destroyed the substantial wholeness of Christ’s physical body.

Hence it is no great objection against the Mystical Body to urge that some Catholics are bad. The Church no more expected to have perfect Catholics than Our Lord expected to have perfect Apostles. Catholics may be bad, but that does not prove Catholicism is wicked, any more than a few bigots prove America is bigoted. If the Catholics are bad, it is not because they are Catholics; it is because they are not. Faith increases their responsibility, but it does not force obedience; it increases blame, but it does not prevent sin.

Why is it that the world is always so scandalized at a scandal in the Church? Why does it always blame a bad Catholic more than it blames a bad Mohammedan, if it is not because it expects so much more of the Catholic? Any fallen-away Catholic whose name is quoted as a by-word of sin, and who is supposed to be an argument against the Church, is really a strong Catholic credential. The seriousness of any fall depends on the height from which one has fallen, and since one can fall from no greater height than union with Christ in His Mystical Body, the fall is accordingly greater. Nowhere does evil become so visible as when contrasted with the ideal. The very horror the world expresses at the fall of a Catholic is the measure of the high virtue it expects of him.

Looking at the Church now from another point of view, would not those who object to her because her members are not all holy, be just as scandalized if she were all they wanted her to be? Suppose every Vicar of Christ was a Saint; suppose every member of His Mystical Body was another St. John the Baptist or another St. Theresa. Would not her very perfection accuse and condemn those who were outside? Too high an ideal often repels rather than attracts. She would be so saintly that she would no longer allure ordinary mortals. She might even appear to struggling souls as a terrible Puritan, easily scandalized at our failings, who might shrink from having her garments touched by sinners like ourselves. Where then would faith be for those who doubted? Where would hope be for those who were unholy? Where would charity be for those who were in sin? No, a perfect Church would be a stumbling block. Then, instead of men being scandalized at her, she would be scandalized at men – which would be far worse.

Our Lord did not make His earthly life one prolonged transfiguration. In those few, brief moments He did reveal the glory which was really His, but at all other times He appealed through the humanity which was like unto ours. His fatigue at Jacob’s well, His tears over Jerusalem, His agony in the garden, His sufferings on the Cross – all the “weakness” of His human nature – have won more souls to Him than the blazing garments and the Heavenly Voice of Thabor.

In like manner, if the life of the Church had been one triumphant, blazing transfiguration on a mountain top, apart from the woes and ills of man, she would never have been the Comforter of the Afflicted and the Refuge of Sinners. She has been called, like her Divine Head, to be a redemptress, lifting men from the shadows of sin to the tabernacles of grace where Saints are made. She is not a far-off, abstract ideal, but a Mother; and though she has been stained with dust in her long journey through the centuries, though some of her children have left her and saddened her soul, yet there is joy in her heart because of the children she has nourished; there is gladness in her eyes because of the faith she has preserved; there is understanding in her soul for she has known the frailty of our flesh, and how to nourish us back to life. And in these qualities one divines the reason why Our Blessed Lord chose, not a sinless man like John, but a weak, frail, fallen man like Peter as His first vicar, in order that, through his weakness, he and the Church of which he is the head might sympathize with the weakness of his brethren, be their Apostle of Mercy and, in the truest sense of the term, the Vicar of the Saviour and Redeemer of the world who came not to save the just, but the sinner.