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Father L | Thy Sins are forgiven | Page 7

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Priesthood of the baptized

Friends in Christ, today’s first reading is from the 1st letter of St. Peter.
St. Peter says ‘let yourselves be built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood.’ Here, when he says ‘priesthood,’ he is speaking not to ordained priests, but to all Christians. Referring to this very passage, the Catechism says that Christians, by virtue of their baptism, share in the Common priesthood of all believers. (CCC 1268) This is also called the Royal priesthood, or the Priesthood of the baptized.
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The ordained priest, shares in the priesthood of Christ the Head of the Church. All the baptized share in the priesthood in the Body of Christ. As St Peter says, we are a kingdom of priests; we are called a ‘priestly people.
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So what is a priest? Quite simply, it is a person who offers sacrifice to God. Jesus is the great High Priest – he offered the greatest sacrifice to God, himself. But if we are a priestly people, what do we offer? We offer really two things: all that we do, and all that we are.
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When we had difficulties, my mother used to say: ‘Offer it up.’ ‘Offer your trouble for the poor souls, offer that pain to God.’ This is our priestly dignity. This is what St. Peter means when he says that we are to offer ‘spiritual sacrifices.’
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We offer up the difficulties we have, the patience that we must have, to endure certain situations; we offer our prayers to God, which call down his mercy on those for whom we pray. In this we are intercessors for others. We offer our sorrows but also our joys. When something goes well, people will say: ‘Praise God!’ Yes, praise God! We offer up our joys and successes and praise, we offer our very selves. So this is our priestly dignity, as members of the Body of Christ.
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But none of our efforts, or our work, or anything, is a worthy offering to God unless they are united to the Perfect Sacrifice: Jesus Christ. And this is done at Mass. The Catechism, speaking of the Mass, says that the ordained priest at the altar, acting in the Person of Christ, unites the votive offerings of the faithful to the sacrifice of Christ. (CCC 1566)
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At Mass, on that paten with the hosts, is not only bread which will become our Divine Lord, but quite literally we are on that paten as well with all of our acts of patience, sorrows, joys – our life. This is why the Church asks, that at least on Sunday, it is good if the faithful present the bread and wine: it is a sign of the presenting themselves too – as an offering.
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It is not only the Lord’s crucified body that we offer to God, it is his entire Mystical Body, the Church, which is offered up at each Mass. Because we are a kingdom of priests.

St. Bede the Venerable

Friends in Christ, today is the feast of St. Bede the Venerable. St. Bede was born in England in 672, and at age 7 his parents sent him to be educated at a Benedictine monastery. He never really left, and from early on, his love was for the Holy Scriptures; he was also an expert in Greek and Latin. His commentaries on Scripture are many, but he is also famous for ‘The Ecclesiastical History of the English People,’ a work that gained him the title “The Father of English History”. Little would be known of English history before 729 if it weren’t for Venerable Bede.
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Although he is a Saint, he is still often called ‘Venerable Bede.’ He obtained this title in the following way: when he was quite old, and his eyesight was poor, he was sometimes led by a brother so that he could preach in the villages. Once, as they were passing through a valley that was filled with large stones, this brother as a joke, told him there were many people there waiting to hear him preach – but they were only stones. Not able to see clearly, Bede preached the Word. Reminiscent of Jesus’ words, the stones themselves cried out, saying, ‘Amen, Venerable Bede.’ Having heard of this marvel, the people called him the Venerable Bede.
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As his death neared, he had not yet finished his translation of the Gospel of John. His assistant, a young brother told him: ‘There is still one sentence dear master which is not written down,’ and when the last passage had been supplied, and he was told that it was finished, Bede exclaimed, ‘you have well said, all is finished. He died as he was saying the Glory Be.
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His life shows that one need not be showy or loud to be great. Although he rarely left his monastery, he became known throughout England and far beyond – he has been called ‘the happiest of monks.’

Don’t count the cost

Friends in Christ, when Cortez and his men had reached Mexico, he urged his men to be brave and push into the country and fight, but they felt afraid and unsure and dreamed of returning to Spain. So Cortez burned all of their ships; he closed off the path to a return, so that they would put their heart into the job ahead.
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Our Lord today urges his followers to be prepared to give up everything in order to follow him. Often this passage is applied to the call to a priestly or a religious vocation, and rightly so: ‘He who gives up house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children for my sake will receive a hundred times more – and eternal life.’ St. Luke’s gospel adds ‘a wife’ as something else to give up. So it is true, that Our Lord calls some to this renunciation literally.
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But he is speaking here to all of his followers, all of us. People who become Catholic sometimes are given a lot of hassles by their family or friends, Our Lord is saying, push on, keep going! A young girl was in our RCIA class; her mother was against her becoming Catholic, but she continued and was baptized. We must sacrifice in order to follow Jesus.
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But Christ is speaking too, about daily life. In each of our lives there is some nemesis, some weakness or fault – if we identify our primary fault, we have identified our path to heaven – fighting that fault. Every day there are things in our life that we must renounce:  bad companions, bad places, bad thoughts, – there is something that each of us must continue to say ‘no’ to, in order to follow Christ. It might be gossip, it might be impure desires, it could be greed or endless television-watching…. It could be an adulterous relationship which must be permanently destroyed. It could simply be fear, which is keeping us from taking a step we know in our life what the Lord is asking us to do.
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When I was unsure of my own vocation, I heard a Religious Sister say, ‘ Don’t count the costs.’ In other words, don’t sit and weigh benefits to this vs that, but do what the Lord wants, whatever the cost. Well this is true in even our daily struggles; we must be like Cortez who burned the ships and destroyed the path of return; as St. Paul said: ‘Forgetting what lies behind, I strain forward to what is ahead, I press on towards the goal, life on high in Christ Jesus Our Lord.’

Ordinary Time

Friends in Christ, these weeks we have returned to what is called ‘Ordinary Time.’ This is from Latin which really means ‘Counted time.’ Vestments and the veils, are green.
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Green is for growth. Plants grow, trees grow – so do souls. This is time for us, having finished the seasons of Lent and Easter, having meditated on the marvels God has done for us – this is now a time to return to the day-by-day effort to become better Christians.
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St. Paul often compares the Christian life to that of an athlete, competing in the Olympics. My nephews and niece are also really into sports. They have had their intense trainings for games and meets this past year, and the glory of the tournaments and even trophies; but now summer comes, and for them it is a period of toning up and polishing their skills: Jogging and swimming to develop themselves, so that next year they might compete at a higher level. So too Ordinary Time in the spiritual life.
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Christmas was the birth of Christ, Lent was Christ’s life of suffering, Easter was Christ’s time on earth in his resurrected body, until his Ascension. But then comes the period of his Mystical Body, the Church; now the Spirit of Christ lives in us, and in this time after Pentecost, the Holy Spirit wants to work in us, to coach us; not building a pre-fab mansion in us in a week, but rather a gradual growth, like a plant, which becomes a tree. 
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Ordinary Time is the growth of the Church on earth and growth of holiness in us. The only way this can happen is by our daily prayers. We rise and offer our day to God. Lord: ‘I offer everything today to you, for your glory.’ We pray each time we eat, and we think about the Lord during the day. The Angelus at noon, try to say the Rosary. At night, we kneel and thank God, confess our faults; ‘Help me to give you more glory tomorrow Lord.’
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Today, Christ tells the young man to follow him, totally. That man could not do it. But the Lord’s invitation remains, for each of us. Ordinary time is a time to do just that: follow Christ, especially in the day to day details of ordinary life. But there is nothing ‘ordinary’ about Ordinary time. 

Protect your marriage

Friends in Christ, today Our Lord gives his clear teaching on the sanctity of Holy Matrimony. ‘He who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery’
Many in the world consider marriage to be a throw-away convenience. But Mother Church has always praised this vocation of marriage. In his book, Introduction to the Devout Life, St. Francis de Sales has advice about marriage: He calls marriage the ‘nursery of Christianity’ because it peoples the earth with faithful souls who will become the elect of heaven.
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Writing in the year 1609, he says that the protection of marriage is of the highest importance to society, because married life is the foundation & source of society itself. (These words are applicable today, 400 years since he wrote that.) He says that he wishes Jesus and Mary would be invited to every marriage as they were at the wedding at Cana, but too many times Adonis and Venus are invited! Too many marriages begin without God.
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If instead of worldly love, God would be the love that binds marriage, it would really be an indissoluble union. When two pieces of wood are joined together with glue, it is easier to break them, than to separate them. But Christ unites husband and wife not with glue, but with his own blood.
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Regarding husbands, he says they should follow the example of St. Louis, who was so austere with himself, denying himself all sorts of comforts, yet he was often accused of being too lavish with the love and affection he showed to his wife.
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St. Francis goes on to give advice to wives: The woman should guard her good reputation jealously, he says. Fear anything which might soil your reputation. Be suspicious of anyone who praises your beauty or charm, because those who praise what is not for sale, are usually tempted to steal it. If anyone criticizes your husband do not stand for it. St. Francis does not have a problem with women wearing earrings; after all, he says Isaac sent earrings to Rebecca. He thinks that earrings are a mystical sign of a husbands love. They signify that her ears are her husband’s possession, and that they are carefully guarded from anything except pure words; just as poison of the body enters through the mouth, poison to the soul enters through the ears.
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Man and woman today must protect their marriage from the secret traps of so many enemies. And if they do, Holy Matrimony is a beautiful vocation on earth.

The 7th Commandment

Friends in Christ, in the first reading from St. James, there is a warning to the greedy: ‘Come now you rich, you have stored up treasures, you withheld wages from the workers, but their cries have reached the Lord of Hosts.’
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We see here the evil of greed in the heart; the one who has this sin, so obsessed with posessions  his own wealth, refuses to pay his workers a fair wage. There is a direct connection between the 10th commandment and the 7th. ‘Thou shall not covet’ warns us, because if we covet, then we need to hear ‘Thou shall not steal.’
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There are many ways that we steal; sometimes outright: a child taking money from the mother’s purse, or a person shoplifting, switching tags on merchandise. Many today are not afraid of going against God, they think only of what they can get away with, and if that means stealing, they do it. They think God does not see.
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If a person cheats on his taxes, (Rom 13:7) or a student cheats on a test, he is guilty of theft – theft from the government and theft from his neighbor. To waste time on company hours is stealing from our employer, and it is also theft to refuse to pay back our debts. St. Paul says, ‘Do not be deceived: thieves will not inherit the kingdom of heaven.’ (1 Cor 6:10) And this is echoed by the psalmist today, who says that such people will not see the Light, and will end in the ‘nether world.’
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This sin CAN be forgiven by God – we must repent and confess our sin; but something more is then needed. We must make restitution – return what was taken. If a person stole something and is not able to return it to the owner, then he should give the money or its equivalent to charity. He may not keep it.  Also, if we find something that has been lost, (Lev 6:2) before we keep it, we must try to find the rightful owner. and of course we also may not buy goods that we suspect are stolen.
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In parts of Europe, whole families are thieves, and work together to pick pocket people on the trains and buses. Around here I know a father and daughter team who go around town robbing. A person who teaches a child to steal, according to Jesus, is in big trouble. Our Lord today warns against leading innocent people into sin; he says it would better for them if a huge stone were tied to their neck and they were thrown into the sea! It is a big sin to lead others into evil.
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When does theft become a mortal sin? In two cases: If the thing taken is of significant value, or, if when taking it, it causes sadness or hardship for the other person. Taking someone’s writing-pen normally would not be a mortal sin; but if it was the treasured pen of a grandfather, it could be a serious sin.
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Let us therefore fight against our greed and covetousness, and especially teach young people never to be cheaters or thieves.

Sin of omission

Friends in Christ, today in the Epistle of St. James we read: ‘for those who know the right thing to do, and do not do it – it is a sin.’
Here, the Holy Scriptures refer to what we call ‘sins of omission.’ In the Confiteor at Mass, we say: I confess to Almighty God, in my thoughts and in my words, in what I have done, and in what I have failed to do. ‘What I failed to do’ – these are the sins of omission.
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If a person feels that they are living a good life and can’t think of any sins they might have, this is the place to look: sins of omission. These are sins we commit, not by doing some sinful action, but by failing to act. All things being equal, a sin of omission is usually less serious than a sin of action. So when the cashier wrongly gives you a $5 discount, and you keep quiet, this is a sin. It is not as bad as intentionally stealing $5, but it is a sin.
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Parents commit serious sins of omission in not bringing their child to mass, or by not teaching them their religion. Lies can be told by what is NOT said. Aging parents can be neglected by what one fails to do, and we can sin by being silent when the True Faith must be defended or explained.
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Sometimes we feel prompted to do or say something, and we hesitate, we are afraid, and this leads to a restless conscience. If we pay attention to our conscience, we will start to notice the guilt from things we should have done. Our conscience will be peaceful however, if we always act so as to have no regrets over what we failed to do.
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There’s actually a poem called, THE SIN OF OMISSION (by Margaret Sangster)

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It isn’t the thing you do dear,
It’s the thing you leave undone
That gives you a bit of heartache
At the setting of the sun.    
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The tender word forgotten,
The letter you did not write,
The flowers you did not send, dear,
Are your haunting ghosts at night.
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The stone you might have lifted
Out of a brother’s way;
The bit of heartfelt counsel
You were too hurried to say;
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life is all to short, dear,
And sorrow all too great,
To suffer our slow compassion
That waits ‘till it’s too late.

Fight our Passions

Friends in Christ, a book that I like to read every few years is called ‘Spiritual Combat.’ If we ourselves are reflecting much on our lives, we know that we each have some sort of spiritual combat going on. Everyone has some ‘Achilles heel’ that presses us, or tempts us.
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Whether it is anger, or lust, or greed, or gossip, or – whatever – it is that ‘thing’ that, if we fail in it, we feel defeated or sad or disgusted with ourselves. Often our particular problem is a passion, and St. James refers to this today in his Epistle: ‘Where do the conflicts among you come from? Is it not from your passions that make war within your members?’
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Passions are different for each person, usually depending on one’s temperament. For the Choleric, anger is usually his challenge. For the Phlegmatic, sensuality, food, lust can be his challenge. Whatever the passion, we must fight, and this is the spiritual combat of our lives.
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St. James gives us a plan for this combat: When a passion arises, call on God in an act of humility, and then turn your attention to something else; in this way we defeat the devil’s temptations. ‘Submit yourselves to God,’ he says. ‘Resist the Devil, and he will flee from you. Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you.’
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Acknowledging our dependence on God’s help, admitting that we are sinners in need; this brings the Lord’s power to us, that we can conquer any enemy. ‘Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will exalt you.’ So, if resentment starts to build in our mind, or lust is making it’s way into our heart, pray, fix your mind on something else, get busy, and in this way you will defeat the devil. But it takes humility to admit that we need the Lord.
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Francisca del Valle says, (p. 69-72) in Satan’s battle against us, God often seems to remain silent; he allows the Enemy to attack, even prepares the way for it. As if hiding, God allows us to directly confront the Enemy, especially in our passions; but if we call out for assistance, we find God’s power secretly within, and then when Satan is crushed and defeated in humiliation, our victory is the more glorious. And that is how God wants it. He wants to give his glory to us. So let’s give God some victories this week.

Jealousy

Friends in Christ, C. S. Lewis, the great spiritual writer once said that evil does not only occur with famous criminals; it is also found in clean, carpeted, offices by quiet men in suits. Hell, he says, is probably more like our modern office complexes, where relationships are for personal gain, friendships are pretended alliances, and to be stabbed in the back, is commonplace.
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One of the least confessed, but yet most common sins, is jealousy, or envy. In the Epistle of St. James today, St. Paul says that jealousy and selfish ambition is from the devil, it is ‘demonic.’  
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The jealous person is sad over another person’s good. When someone else enjoys success, jealousy rears its ugly head. When a person is the jealous type, if they fail at something, they pout, and sulk, and are disgruntled that other succeed, like the Grinch who stole Christmas, who is angered every time someone else is happy.
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St. John Chysostom says, that as a moth gnaws at a garment, so does jealousy consume a man from the inside.’ There is an ancient Jewish story which tells how an angel visited a shopkeeper and offered him anything he wished, with one condition: whatever he would wish for, his main rival, the other shop owner, would get twice as much. What to do? In his envy, he finally came to a request: he asked to be blinded in one eye!
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Envy and jealousy detest that someone else should be blessed or succeed. It is not wrong to see a friend own a nice car or a nice dress, and wish to have the same, one day. Or to desire a promotion, or an honor, or a higher salary, for good reasons. But if we desire the downfall of another, or resent someone’s honors, or choose to get ahead by stepping on another – this is jealousy. Jealousy is rooted in pride, and comes to full flower in hatred.
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Today we see Our Lord curing this man who is oppressed by some kind of spirit or psychological malady; such afflictions are emblems for the poison of sin that wreaks havoc on us, and jealousy is one of those, for which we must pray the Lord to free us. We should heed the advice of St. James today: ‘Where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there is disorder and every foul practice. But the wisdom from above is peaceable, gentle, and full of mercy and good fruits.

How to Cultivate the Gifts of the Holy Spirit

Friends in Christ, tonight we conclude this 4 part series on the Gifts of the Holy Spirit.
This Paraclete, this Consoler, is very much on our minds as we prepare for Pentecost. We have spoken before about how the Gifts of the Holy Spirit work in us, as divine inspirations, movements in the soul, which in a moment give us an idea, or a strength, or the desire that we need, all at once.
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Maybe at times we’ve experienced these passing wisps of grace, an inspiration while on a visit to the Blessed Sacrament or on a retreat, a sudden courage to say or act – or an unexplained burst of fervor and love.
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Today we wish to speak of how to draw more of these Gifts down upon us – how to cultivate the Gifts of the Spirit in our life.[i]
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The Gifts are present in the soul whenever we are in the State of Grace. They exist there as supernatural faculties. It is incredible that there are some people who, during long periods of their life do not access them. In order that we might come to a full supernatural development, we need these Gifts to be actualized in our soul.
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St. Thomas says: ‘The moral virtues precede the Gifts of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, in order to acquire the docility which the Gifts confer, we must conquer our passions and vices and form habits of prudence, humility, obedience, meekness, chastity – we must be living the moral life. One cannot follow the inspirations of grace, if a person is troubled by anger, or lust, or stubbornness.
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Before being led by the motions of grace, one must be observing the commandments and have triumphed over pride. This is the teaching of St. Teresa and so many others as well. Cajetan says, a person must tame his passions, cultivate meekness, patience and humility in order to rise to the contemplative life.
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So in other words, accessing Gifts of the Spirit in our life, requires first, a good person, to build on. We must be a good – a virtuous person first, in order to bring alive in us the great Gifts of this Holy Spirit.

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[i]  see Tanquerey, pp. 612-614.