From Dust Unto
Dust, 2007
by
Thomas A. Droleskey
The great
season of preparation for Lent began on Septuagesima Sunday, which was
celebrated this year on February 4. As is the case with many of the
Uniat rites of the East, the traditional calendar of the Roman Rite
has a period of preparation prior to the beginning of Lent on Ash Wednesday.
Such a period of preparation has to be taken seriously. For above and
beyond all of the tragic but necessary polemics of this moment in Church
history, we have to remember that it will be impossible to build up
the Social Kingship of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in this passing
vale of tears if we do not attempt to build up His Kingship and Lordship
over us in every aspect of our daily lives.
It was the
traditional practice of the Church over the centuries to impose under
penalty of sin a number of penances. The Ember Days, replete with fasting
and abstinence from meat, were observed with a spirit of solemnity.
To wit, it is still the practice of the Catholic Church in the catacombs that every ferial day of Lent is a fast-day. Every ferial-day is a day of partial-abstinence from meat. The abandonment of such rigor in the counterfeit church of conciliarism, whose synthetic liturgy makes no reference to a God Who judges our souls and to the possibility of our going to Hell for all eternity, has been disastrous for the good of souls and for the making of a solemn,
penitential Lent in preparation for a joyous celebration of the fifty
days of Easter.
That is, human
beings are by their fallen natures sedentary and slothful. A life of
ready luxury and physical pampering appeals to our desire to create
a Paradise on earth. It is thus necessary for fallen man to be coerced
into renouncing luxury and an inordinate concern for bodily comfort
and pleasures by means of penances imposed by the power of the disciplinary
authority of the Church. Human nature being what it is, you see, it
is very necessary to mandate certain penances under penalty of sin as
the first step in the direction of creating motives of love to deepen
our desire to embrace our daily crosses and to be conscious at all times
of our need to do penance and to live penitentially in reparation for
our sins and for the sins of the whole world. The Catholic Church has always understood
that the exercise of her disciplinary powers was an important, indeed,
indispensable, means to help point earthbound souls in the direction
of the pursuit of eternal glories.
Consider the
words of Pope Leo XIII in Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus, November 1, 1900, containing a prophetic rebuke to
those who would consider the relaxation of penances to be in the interests
of the eternal salvation of souls:
It
must therefore be clearly admitted that, in the life of a Christian,
the intellect must be entirely subject to God's authority. And if, in
this submission of reason to authority, our self-love, which is so strong,
is restrained and made to suffer, this only proves the necessity to
a Christian of long-suffering not only in will but also in intellect.
We would remind those persons of this truth who desire a kind of Christianity
such as they themselves have devised, whose precepts should be very
mild, much more indulgent towards human nature, and requiring little
if any hardships to be borne. They do not properly under stand the meaning
of faith and Christian precepts. They do not see that the Cross meets
us everywhere, the model of our life, the eternal standard of all who
wish to follow Christ in reality and not merely in name.
The season
of Lent is supposed to unite us more fully to the Cross of the Divine
Redeemer by spending forty days in a figurative desert of prayer, penance,
self-denial, and alms-giving. None of us can possibly imagine what the
least one of our venial sins caused Our Lord to suffer in His Sacred
Humanity during His Passion and his fearful death on the wood of the
Holy Cross. No suffering we can endure, including that of the horrors
of the counterfeit church of conciliarism, is the equal of what one of those least venial
sins did to Our Lord. It is thus very important for us to use the special
season of penance that is Lent to become so detached from our sins and
sinful inclinations that even the thought of sinning will be
as repugnant to us as it was to the saints. Each of us has the obligation
to try to scale the heights of sanctity by cooperating with the graces
won for us by Our Lord on Calvary so as to have the highest place possible
in Heaven next to that of the Blessed Mother herself, to whose Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart we must be totally consecrated.
To this end,
therefore, it is a salutary thing to observe the traditional penitential
practices of the Catholic Church.
Such practices remind Catholics of the need to
withdraw from the activities of this passing world as much as our states
in life will permit. Indeed, Catholics used to understand that all unnecessary
and mirthful activities are inappropriate in Lent, actually serving
to detract from its penitential character and from the way in which
the Easter season of joy is to be distinguished from its forty days
of prayer and penance. In contemporary terms this means that as many
legitimate pleasures (the quality and quantity of food, the partaking
of moral means of entertainment, the watching and attending of sporting
activities, unnecessary shopping, idle conversations, among many others)
as possible should be avoided so as to discipline the soul and to demonstrate
to God our desire to seek Him above all things in this passing vale
of tears. Our voluntary renunciation of these legitimate pleasures and
activities during Lent will make them more pleasurable after Easter, to say nothing
of reminding us that we strive after Heavenly glories that far surpass
anything we might enjoy as members of the Church Militant. Indeed, one
thing that should go out of our lives in this Lent, if it hasn't already
been tossed out, is the television. Toss it out. For good. Don't ever
turn back. And this is from a child of the 1950s and 1960s television. The
saints did not need television. We don't need television. Indeed, it
is a hindrance to our sanctification and thus to our salvation.
The forty
days of Lent remind us also that life involves repetitious cycles. God
led the Hebrews in circles in the desert for forty years to test their
fidelity and gratitude to Him. In like manner, we, the people of the New
and Eternal Covenant, which has superseded the Mosaic Covenant, are
led in circles over and over again to test our fidelity and gratitude
for all that we have been given, starting with the gift of the true
Faith we received in the baptismal font. Like the Jews before us, we
can grow weary as we journey through the desert of life to the Promised
Land, although, unlike the Jews, we know that the Promised Land is Heaven,
which has been made possible for us by the immolation of the Second
Person of the Blessed Trinity made Man to the Father in Spirit and in
Truth made on the Tree of Life that is the Holy Cross. Thus, we need
to have periods of time in which our interior lives of prayer and penance
are fortified and renewed so that we can continue the desert journey
of life by being prepared at all times for the moment of our own Particular
Judgments.
Six weeks
is a long period, just about one-ninth of a year. It is not possible
on our own power to keep a good Lent for that period of time. So many
Lenten resolutions begin with such conviction on Ash Wednesday and dissipate
gradually over the course of the ensuing weeks. A really good Lent,
which is supposed to be intensified during Passion and Holy Weeks, is
only possible by the graces won for us on Calvary by Our Lord and that flow into our hearts and souls through the loving hands of Our Lady, the Mediatrix of All Graces and the Co-Redemptrix, who stood so valiantly
at the foot of the Cross as her Immaculate Heart was pierced with the
sword of sorrow that Simeon had prophesied at her Purification she would
feel.
A Catholic
devoted to the authentic liturgical tradition of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church knows full
well how to make a good Lent. Knowing is one thing, doing is another.
And, practically speaking, a Catholic who assists exclusively at the Immemorial Mass of Tradition (as it is offered by priests who make not even one concession to the legitimacy of the conciliar officials) on a daily basis may be unable to do so, which itself is
a penance that can be offered up to the Blessed Trinity through the Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of Mary. Those of us who are totally consecrated
to Our Lady's Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart, obviously, give her the
fruit of whatever merits we earn from our prayers and penances. Those
Catholics, though, who are blessed to have the Mass of tradition available
to them on a daily basis under the conditions described above should avail themselves of this great treasure
as the first and most important part of a well-lived Lent.
Secondly,
we are called to be more consistent in our spending time in prayer before
Our Eucharistic King. Spending time with Our Lord's Real Presence is
an important part of Lent. We should make the time necessary to keep
a prayerful vigil before Him, not knowing if this is the last Lent we
will ever be privileged to experience in this mortal life.
Thirdly, our
devotion to the Mother of God must be intensified during Lent. Many
Catholics pray all fifteen decades of Our Lady's Most Holy Rosary (it
is sometimes the case that I can't count beyond fifteen, thank you)
each day during Lent. Our Lady remained close to her Divine Son even
after He left her side to begin His Public Ministry. She is close to
us.
Our Lady gave
birth to Our Lord painlessly in Bethlehem, placing Him in the wood of
the manger. She gave birth to us in great pain and sorrow at the foot
of the Cross as adopted sons and daughters of God, watching our sins
place her Divine Son on the wood of the Holy Cross, which has become
for us the true manger from which we are fed His Body, Blood, Soul,
and Divinity in Holy Communion. We need Our Blessed Mother's help and
protection to make a good Lent. Our very visible wearing of the Miraculous
Medal reminds others of the fact that they, too, have a Mother who stands
ready to help them.
Consider these words, contained in Pope Leo XIII's Iucunda Semper Expectatione, September 8, 1894:
In the Garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus is in an agony; in the judgment-hall, where He is scourged, crowned with thorns, condemned to death, not there do we find Mary. But she knew beforehand all these agonies; she knew and saw them. When she professed herself the handmaid of the Lord for the mother's office, and when, at the foot of the altar, she offered up her whole self with her Child Jesus -- then and thereafter she took her part in the laborious expiation made by her Son for the sins of the world. It is certain, therefore, that she suffered in the very depths of her soul with His most bitter sufferings and with His torments. Moreover, it was before the eyes of Mary that was to be finished the Divine Sacrifice for which she had borne and brought up the Victim. As we contemplate Him in the last and most piteous of those Mysteries, there stood by the Cross of Jesus His Mother, who, in a miracle of charity, so that she might receive us as her sons, offered generously to Divine Justice her own Son, and died in her heart with Him, stabbed with the sword of sorrow.
Fourthly,
we should endeavor to make the Way of the Cross as frequently as we
can. So many people do so daily during Lent. There are wonderful meditations
to use without relying on recent innovations and improvisations. The
meditations of Saint Alphonsus Liguori are among the best. The late
John Henry Cardinal Newman wrote a very powerful set of meditations (Here are links to these meditations; one can ignore the invitation to read about the 1968 rules of indulgences: Cardinal Newman's long meditations; 2. Cardinal Newman's shorter meditations..) The discipline
of making the Stations, especially on a daily basis, will help to unite
us with the sense of fatigue and exhaustion we imposed upon Our Lord
during His Passion and Death by means of our sins.
Fifthly, there
is fasting. This was alluded to earlier in connection with the general
sense we must have of abstaining from food and from other legitimate
pleasures we enjoy so much. Self-denial and mortification are traditional
Catholic practices that simply can't be replaced merely by doing "something
positive," as so many conciliarist apologists urge upon Catholics who are still within their Modernist clutches.
What these apostates don't understand is that fasting is a positive decision
made on the part of a Catholic to discipline his soul and prove his
love for the Blessed Trinity. Indeed, the prayers of the Immemorial Mass of Tradition throughout the year--but especially during Lent--stress our
need for external acts of penance as a means of proving our love for
God and our detestation of sin. We should embrace such acts of penance
with a ready spirit.
There are
many other aspects to a good Lent, including almsgiving. However, I
want to spend a few moments discussing the importance of the Sacrament
of Penance.
Our Lord instituted
the Sacrament of Penance following His Resurrection. He gave the Apostles
the power to forgive and to retain sins. How Protestants get around
that passage in the Gospel of Saint John is truly mystifying. We know
that we have to confess the kind and the number of each mortal sin,
if any, God forbid, committed since our last confession. The normal
way for the forgiveness of all mortal sins committed after baptism is
auricular confession. We must go on our knees to an alter Christus
in the confessional, which can be viewed as the hospital of Divine Mercy.
Although a sinner himself, a priest has been given the power by virtue
of his ordination to be an administrator of the sacraments, including
the Sacrament of Penance. Acting in the person of Christ the High Priest,
a priest must ascertain the completeness and sincerity of a penitent's
confession, assuring himself that the sinner is committed at that moment
of the confession to amend his life and to sin no more and to avoid
the near occasions of sin. He says the words of absolution restoring a soul once more to a state of sanctifying
grace. Auricular confession demonstrates our humility by being willing
to prostrate ourselves to make a good confession before one who has
been appointed by Our Lord Himself to take good care of our souls unto
eternity. It is a great grace to be able to hear, as the nature of man
requires, that we are forgiven from one who has authority from on high
to forgive.
A wide array
of saints have ratified over the years the wisdom of Holy Mother Church's
desire that we go to confession regularly. Even a devotional confession,
wherein we confess venial sins, shows our desire to make a good examination
of conscience in order to receive the supernatural helps provided in
the Sacrament of Penance to soar to the heights of spiritual perfection.
Some saints went to confession every day of their lives, especially
as they became more conscious of the horror of venial sins in their
own lives, no less what they did, as I noted earlier, to Our Lord in
His Passion and Death. The devotional confessions we make in Lent are
particularly pleasing to Our Lord as they are demonstrative of our desire
to obey His law, observe the precepts of the Church, and strive to cooperate
more fully with the graces sent to us to sanctify every moment of our
lives, especially to embrace the sufferings that come our way.
It is important
to remember in this regard that the penance we are given by a priest
to perform as the condition of our absolution is only part of the life
of penance we are called to in this life, most particularly in Lent.
Most of the time the
penances we are asked to bear are nothing extraordinary. They might
involve getting up out of bed when we would prefer to go back to sleep.
They might be as simple as just fulfilling the tasks and duties of our
states-in-life. They could be as ordinary as seeing in a stubbed toe
an opportunity to thank Our Lady for the chance to once again be reminded
of all of the sufferings of her Divine Son. A good confession, therefore,
can cleanse us so much that we are more willing, as one of the prayers
in the Miraculous Medal Novena reminds us, to recover by penance what
we have lost by sin, thus enlightening our intellects and strengthening
our wills to be ready for more crosses and to bear a witness to Our
Lord that is more consistent in zeal for souls founded in truth and
authentic charity:
Immaculate Virgin Mary,
Mother of Our Lord Jesus and Our Mother,
penetrated with the most lively confidence in Thine all-powerful and ever-failing intercession, manifested so often through the Miraculous Medal,
we Thy loving and trustful children implore Tee to obtain for us the graces and favors we ask during this novena,
if they be beneficial to our immortal souls,
and the souls for whom we pray.
(Mention your petition)
You know, O Mary, how often our souls have been the sanctuaries of Thy Son who hates iniquity.
Obtain for us then a deep hatred of sin and that purity of heart which will attach us to God alone so that our every thought, word and deed may tend to His greater glory.
Obtain for us also a spirit of prayer and self-denial that we may recover by penance what we have lost by sin and at length attain to that blessed abode where Thou art the Queen of angels and of men.
Amen.
Indeed, charity
itself is such an essential part of Lent. We are sinners. We are the
beneficiaries of a mercy we do not merit, from Our Lord Himself, flowing
so freely from His Sacred Heart through His Wounded Side and into our souls through the hands of Our Lady. As beneficiaries
of this ineffable Divine Mercy, we have the obligation to bestow that mercy upon those
who transgress against us. Et dimitte nobis debita nostra sicut et
nos dimmitimus debitoribus nostris. ("And forgive us our trespasses
as we forgive those who trespass against us.) We must forgive those who
sin against us." This is an imperative. There is no exception. As a
priest noted in 1997, "God permits us to sin so that we can forgive
each other. Let me repeat myself: God permits us to sin so that we can
forgive each other."
Fallen human
nature inclines to nurture hurts, both real and imagined. We want others
to forgive us when we hurt them while at the same time we might tend
to be niggardly in the forgiveness we offer those who hurt us. However,
Our Lord is very clear: "My Father will treat you in exactly the same
way if you do not forgive your brother from your heart." This does not
mean that we have to restore a person to friendship or that we cannot
seek justice be administered to one responsible for a particularly heinous
act. This does mean, though, that we must forgive as we are forgiven,
making it a point to pray for a person who has hurt us. Our Lord really
did mean it when He taught us in the Sermon on the Mount to pray for
our enemies. Even though we can offer forgiveness to another, we might
never be fully reconciled to that person until the Last Day, if, that
is, each of us dies in a state of sanctifying grace. No disagreement
or quarrel in this life will matter to the elect who have forgiven as
they have been forgiven. Conversely, those who have persisted in mercilessness
and hardness of heart will be tortured by their unwillingness to forgive
for all eternity in Hell.
It was Saint
Stephen's prayers from eternity that converted Saul of Tarsus. A fundamental exercise of charity, which wills the good of others
(the ultimate expression of which is the conversion of all people to
the true Faith and the salvation of their souls), is to pray for those
who misunderstand us, reject us, refuse to communicate with us, or acknowledge
us, or who go out of their way to attack us. Once again, none of this
matters if we and they die in states of grace. This is especially true
for those of us who have been given the grace of embracing the fullness
of Catholic Tradition without compromise. We can never despise those
who call us names or believe that we have entered into schism. We must
always be charitable towards others, no matter our real disagreements
with them, and we must always pray for the needs of those who will not
understand our words and actions until the Last Day the General Judgment
of the Living and the Dead.
Consider the
words of Father Edward Leen, found in his masterful In the Likeness
of Christ:
"With the
exception of that comparatively small number of heroic men and women
who have, from the dawn of consciousness, pursued unfalteringly the
path of perfection, Christians as a rule belie the promises of their
baptism and continually present obstacles to the increase of divine
grace in their souls. Differing in many respects, we are alike in this,
that we are all sinners, and that we have not only once, but perhaps
several times in our lives disappointed God."
"In other
words, it is the law of things as they actually are that we must continually
suffer from others; it is the condition of our being that we shall be
the victims of others' abuse of their free wills; it belongs to our
position that our desires and inclinations should be continually thwarted
and that we should be at the mercy of circumstances. And it is our duty
to bear that without resentment and without rebellion. To rebel is to
assert practically that such things are not our due, that they do not
belong to our position. It is to refuse to recognize that we are fallen
members of a fallen race. The moment we feel resentment at anything
painful that happens to us through the activity of MEN OR THINGS, at
that moment we are resentful against God's Providence. We are in
this really protesting against His eternal determination to create free
beings; for these sufferings which we endure are a consequence of the
carrying into effect of that free determination. If we expect or look
for a mode of existence in which we shall not endure harshness, unkindness,
misunderstanding and injustice, we are actually rebelling against God's
Providence, we are claiming a position that does not belong to us
as creatures. This is to sin against humility. It is pride.
"It is true
that He cannot but look with hatred on sin, and that He cannot love
us in so far as we are sinners. But He can, and does loves us for any
little good that remains in us, and above all He loves us for what we
can possibly become if we respond to the pressing appeals of His grace.
He does not love sin, but He does love those who are sinners, and He
never shrinks from contact with us, or from our contact with Him, as
long as there remains the possibility of our rejecting that which is
displeasing in His sight. . . . And not the very gravest of our infidelities
inflict so cruel a wound on that Heart, as is that wound that is inflected
on It when we doubt of Its tenderness and mercy."
Our Lord is so merciful
to us erring sinners. He gives us just the number of years of life to
make it possible for us to "get it" insofar as the interior life of
the soul is concerned. No matter how well we might have lived the Lents
of the past, we are called to do better and better with each passing
year. Remembering that we are dust and to dust we shall go, therefore,
we pray to Our Lady to help us, whose bodies are destined temporarily
for the corruption of the grave until the General Resurrection of the
dead on the Last Day, to be serious about this particular Lent, aiming
for the glories of an unending Easter Sunday of glory in Paradise that
await us if we remain faithful to end.
Let us enter
into the desert as we try by God's graces and Our Lady's intercession
to "tame the beast" and emerge from our desert journey truly
united to Christ, despising the world and its allurements, seeking only
to gain possession of the Beatific Vision of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
for all eternity.