mercoledì 29 ottobre 2025

Humanity bloomed in heaven

Solemnity of All Saints and Commemoration of the Faithful Departed (All Souls) - Year C - November 1 and November 2, 2025

 

 

Introduction

The month of November begins with the feast of All Saints that is immediately followed by the Commemoration of All Souls. It should not seem strange that these two celebrations come one after the other because they have one thing in common: they open us to the afterlife and strengthen our faith in the resurrection. If we did not believe in a life after death, it would be useless to celebrate the feast of the Saints, and going to the cemetery would be only a sentimentalism. Who would we go to visit and why would we light candles or bring flowers?

These two days invite us to meditate with seriousness and joy on the verse of the psalm that says: "Teach us to count our days and we will come to the wisdom of the heart" (Ps 89, 12). This biblical phrase does not stop with the observation of the Italian poet Giuseppe Ungaretti: "It looks like autumn leaves on trees” because in Spring the tree starts blooming again but with other leaves. The leaves have no second life; they fall off and rot. From the leaves that we are "life is not taken away but transformed" (Preface of All Souls Mass).

            The important thing is to believe with ever greater firmness in Jesus who said: “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever lives and believes in me, even if he dies, will live "(Jn 11:25). At this point a question may arise: “What do the saints and all souls do in heaven?” We can get the answer from today's first reading. The redeemed adore, throw their crowns before the throne, and cry out: "Praise, honor, blessing, action of grace ...". In them it is realized the true human vocation, which is to be "praise of the glory of God" (Eph 1:14). Their choir is led by Mary who continues her hymn of praise in heaven: "My soul magnifies the Lord". It is in this praise that the saints find their bliss and exultation: "My spirit rejoices in God". Man is what he loves and what he admires. By loving and praising God, we identify with God, and we participate in his glory and his own happiness.

In short, the purpose of today's solemnity and of the commemoration of all souls tomorrow is to make us contemplate the shining example of the saints and to remember the departed to awaken in us the great desire to be like those in heaven: happy to live close to God, in his light, and  in the great family of God's friends. Being holy means living in closeness with God and living in his family. This is the vocation of all of us, reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council and today solemnly re-proposed to our attention. 

 

 

 

1) Entrusted to Love. 

November 1st Liturgy celebrates the Solemnity of All Saints and on November 2nd, even if this year it falls on Sunday, the Church let us remember the Faithful Departed with a great prayer that embraces them all in our thoughts and in our memories. Our prayer must turn to the Lord so that He may welcome into his kingdom of eternal joy and peace those who have left this world and passed into eternity: our relatives, friends, acquaintances, and the dead of all times that we do not know but God knows. 

The prayer is for the holy souls in purgatory, especially the most abandoned whose name and the existence we do not know: the dead of all the wars and all the violence, the dead of the past and of today, the dead on the road, at sea, in hospitals, in homes, in small and large cities, the ones who died because of shipwreck or epidemics and, of course, those who recently have left our hearts deeply saddened. Let us commemorate all the departed, without excluding anyone. Let us raise for every one of them a prayer so that the Lord may grant them eternal rest and perfect peace. 

If it is natural that our memory will go to our deceased loved ones, whom we have entrusted to the love and eternity of the Lord. It is also "natural" that we receive from them the teaching that the eternal love of God preserves in his heart those He loves, after having welcomed them with his forgiveness. Our deceased loved ones remind us that it is not worthy to waste time and effort in ambitions and ephemeral things because everything passes and only love remains.

We must not forget that November 2 is not just a day which recalls to our attention the nature of transience and brevity of life that marks in a painful way our human story. It is a day for the celebration of our greatest hope if we really believe in the faith of the Risen One. Therefore, the day dedicated to all souls is not a celebration of mourning if we consider the omnipotence of God- Love, who does not leave the dead in their graves because He himself has destroyed death rising gloriously from the tomb. For the Christian, dying is not a simple passing of the soul from one state to another but the realization of the individual meeting with a loving God who saves bringing trust and hope in a life without end. As it is said in the preface of the All Souls ‘Mass "Life is not removed, but transformed" by forgiveness, as happened to Marmeladov, the drunkard described by Dostoyevsky in "Crime and Punishment". Marmeladov is a bad lot, a drunkard who does not like to work. His behavior has ruined his family, and his daughter Sonia was forced into prostitution. This man experiences inside him an acute sense of loss and guilt. He is a loser. One day, drunk in the tavern, he makes an incoherent speech and, speaking of the Last Judgment, ventures into a sort of vision that I summarize as follows: "God calls next to him first those who had lived blamelessly and holy. They are the people who deserve to live close to God, at least according to the human criterion. Then He calls those who have done little good, the drunkards and the junkies like him, those that we, the self-righteous, call “the bad guys”. Then He will call us, “Even you, come forward” He’ll say, “Come forward drunkards, come forward you weak, come forward children of shame”. And all of us will come forward shamefully and we will keep standing in front of Him. And He will say, “You are pigs, made ​​in the image of the Beast and with her mark, but come ye also!” And the wise and sensible people will say” O Lord, why do You welcome these persons?” And He will say” The reason why I welcome them is that none of them believed to be worthy to be welcomed”.

Is that possible, or is it just a waffling typical of the drunks? Not only it is possible, but truly it happens as it happened to the adulteress, to Mary Magdalene, to Zacchaeus and to Peter. All of them have delivered to Christ their pain considering themselves unworthy, and all have been forgiven. As proclaimed in Psalm 27 “The Lord "is my light and my salvation ... is the stronghold of my life ... Hear my voice, LORD, when I call; have mercy on me … your face, LORD, do I seek!... I believe I shall see the LORD’s goodness in the land of the living”.  Jesus lived an extreme agony, as we have seen sick people do, apparently without any hope on their deathbed. He died as a man, because of men, for men, with men and in front of men. This faith is joined to hope which, as Paul wrote to the Christians in Rome, “does not disappoint us, because God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that was given to us" (Rm 5, 5). 

 

 

2) The Faithful Departed and the Saints, people who live in the truth of Love. 

The proximity of dates between the feast of All Saints (November 1) and All Souls' Day (November 2) reminds us of the mysterious truth of eternal life and the bond of brotherhood between us and our loved ones who have passed to the other shore. 

It is not because of nostalgia that we go to the cemetery, but because we hope for a future of glory and joy. As we pray for the souls of our dead, they tend their hands from heaven and assure us a close and intense proximity so that we may walk steadily towards a life that has no end. 

            It is with hope that the Christian perceives and accepts the earthly end, death. His faith in the risen Jesus gives him the certainty that death is not an irreparable defeat, but the dramatic shift to the glorious condition with his Lord. "Whoever comes to me, I will never drive away." We are not strangers to God, but his children and heirs destined to share the resurrection of Jesus. 

A hymn of Lauds sings: "And we who kept watch at night, conscious of the faith in the world, looking forward to the return of Christ, now look toward the light." In the night of death in which all sink, we are given a light that illuminates the intangible depths of our heart, and in faith we can have a religious experience in which the final resurrection reverberates. Christ embraces every moment of our lives and makes us understand and live the fact that at any time there is a redundancy of eternity, and that every moment tied to him involves the eternal. 

To this embrace deliver themselves the consecrated Virgins in the world whose “duty is to show that the Incarnate Son of God is the eschatological goal towards which all things tend, the splendor before which every other light pales, and the infinite beauty which alone can fully satisfy the human heart.  "(S. John Paul II, Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita Consecrata, n. 16). 

The choice of virginal life is a reminder of the transience of earthly realities and the anticipation of future goods. It reminds all the faithful of the need to walk through the vicissitudes of the world always oriented towards the future city, and it contributes in an exemplary way to highlight the real nature of the true Church that has the characteristic of being both human and divine, visible but endowed with invisible realities, zealous in action and dedicated to contemplation, present in this world and yet pilgrim. 

To the spiritual and eschatological meaning of the virginal condition refers in a suggestive and deep way the ancient Roman prayer of consecration of the Roman Pontifical attributed to St. Leo the Great: "You ... have reserved for some of your faithful a special gift sprung from the source of your mercy. In the light of eternal wisdom, you made them understand that, while the value and honor of the wedding remained intact, sanctified at the beginning by your blessing and depending on your providential plan, must arise virgins who, while renouncing marriage, aspire to possess the intimate reality of the mystery. You call them to make, beyond the conjugal union, the nuptial bond with Christ of which marriage is the image and sign. (See no.38). 

From their virginal consecration flows the specific ecclesial grace which makes operative the original symbolism of this rite. In this way the prophetic and eschatological gift of virginity acquires the value of a ministry in the service of God's people and places the consecrated persons in the heart of the Church and of the world (see Conc. Vat. II of the Constitution. Dogmatic Constitution. On the Church, Lumen Gentium, nr. 42) This public and acknowledged covenant between Christ and the consecrated virgin proclaims to the world the primacy and the fruitfulness of the total and perpetual self-giving with full availability to the needs of charity toward God and neighbor. 

Following the example and the testimony of these Consecrated Virgins, who live their faith with joy and hard work and who every day live in love, for love, and to love, let us persevere in the path of holiness to which all are called. Let us ask the intercession and help of all the saints who were so fascinated by the beauty of God and by his perfect truth to allow himself to be transformed by it. For this beauty, truth, and love they were willing to give up everything, even themselves, and they lived in praise of God and in humble and disinterested service of the neighbor.

 

 

Patristic Reading

St Ambrose of Milan

(Lib. 2, 40.41.46.47.132.133; CSEL 73, 270-274, 323-324)

On the Belief in the Resurrection.

 

 

We see, then, that this death is a gain and life a penalty, so that Paul says: "To me to live is Christ and to die is gain." [1523] What is Christ but the death of the body, the breath of life? And so let us die

with Him, that we may live with Him. Let there then be in us as it were a daily practice and inclination to dying, that by this separation from bodily desires, of which we have spoken, our soul may learn to withdraw itself, and, as it were placed on high, when earthly lusts cannot approach and attach it to themselves, may take upon herself the likeness of death, that she incur not the penalty of death. For the law of the flesh wars against the law of the mind, and makes it over to the law of error, as the Apostle has made known to us, saying: "For I see a law of the flesh in my members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity in the law of sin." [1524] We are all attached, we all feel this; but we are not all delivered. And so a miserable man am I, unless I seek the remedy.

 

But what remedy? "Who shall deliver me out of the body of this death? Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord." [1525] We have a physician, let us use the remedy. Our remedy is the grace of Christ, and the body of death is our body. Let us therefore be as strangers to our body, lest we be strangers to Christ. Though we are in the body, let us not follow the things which are of the body, let us not reject the rightful claims of nature, but desire before all the gifts of grace: "For to be dissolved and to be with Christ is far better; yet to abide in the flesh is more needful for your sakes." [1526]

 

Why should more be said? By the death of One the world was redeemed. For Christ, had He willed, need not have died, but He neither thought that death should be shunned as though there were any cowardice in it, nor could He have saved us better than by dying. And so His death is the life of all. We are signed with the sign [1529] of His death, we show forth His death when we pray; when we offer the Sacrifice we declare His death, for His death is victory, His death is our mystery, His death is the yearly recurring solemnity of the world. What now should we say concerning His death, since we prove by this Divine Example that death alone found immortality, and that death itself redeemed itself. Death, then, is not to be mourned over, for it is the cause of salvation for all; death is not to be shunned, for the Son of God did not think it unworthy of Him, and did not shun it. The order of nature is not to be loosed, for what is common to all cannot admit of exception in individuals.

 

And, indeed, death was no part of man's nature, but became natural; for God did not institute death at first, but gave it as a remedy. Let us then take heed that it do not seem to be the opposite. For if death is a good, why is it written that "God made not death, [1530] but by the malice of men death entered into the world"? For of a truth death was no necessary part of the divine operation, since for those who were placed in paradise a continual succession of all good things streamed forth; but because of transgression the life of man, condemned to lengthened labour, began to be wretched with intolerable groaning; so that it was fitting that an end should be set to the evils, and that death should restore what life had lost. For immortality, unless grace breathed upon it, would be rather a burden than an advantage.

 

The soul has to depart from the surroundings of this life, and the pollutions of the earthly body, and to press on to those heavenly companies, though it is for the saints alone, to attain to them, and to sing praise to God (as in the prophet's words we hear of those who are harping [1656] and saying: "For great are Thy marvellous works, O Lord God Almighty, just and true are Thy ways, Thou King of the nations; who

shall not fear and magnify Thy Name, for Thou only art holy, for all nations shall come and worship before Thee"), [1657] and to see Thy marriage feast, O Lord Jesus, in which the Bride is led from earthly to heavenly things, while all rejoice in harmony, for "to Thee shall all flesh come," [1658] now no longer subject to transitory things, but joined to the Spirit, to see the chambers adorned with linen, roses, lilies, and garlands. Of whom else is the marriage so adorned? For it is adorned with the purple stripes of confessors, the blood of martyrs, the lilies of virgins, and the crowns of priests.

 

Holy David desired beyond all else for himself that he might behold and gaze upon this, for he says: "One thing have I asked of the Lord, that will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, and see the pleasure of the Lord.

 

L’humanité fleurit dans le ciel


Fête de la Toussaint et  Commémoration des Défunts – Année A – 1 e 2 novembre 2025

  

Introduction

Le mois de novembre commence par la fête de la Toussaint et il est immédiatement suivi par la commémoration des morts. Qu’il ne semble pas étrange que ces deux célébrations se succèdent immédiatement, car elles ont une chose en commun : elles nous ouvrent à l'au-delà et renforcent notre foi en la résurrection. Si nous ne croyions pas à une vie après la mort, il serait inutile de célébrer la fête des Saints et il serait une simple sentimentalité d'aller au cimetière. A qui rendrions-nous visite et pourquoi allumerions-nous des bougies ou apporterions-nous des fleurs ?

Ces deux jours nous invitent à méditer avec joie et sérieux sur le verset du psaume qui dit: «Apprends-nous à compter nos jours et nous arriverons à la sagesse du cœur» (Ps 89, 12). Cette phrase biblique ne s'arrête pas à l'observation poétique de Giuseppe Ungaretti: « Nous sommes comme des feuilles en automne sur les arbres ». Parce qu'au printemps, l'arbre recommence à fleurir, mais avec d'autres feuilles. Les feuilles n'ont pas une seconde vie, elles tombent et pourrissent. Aux feuilles que nous sommes, « la vie n'est pas enlevée mais transformée » (Préface de la messe des morts).

 L'important est de croire avec toujours plus de fermeté en Jésus qui a dit : « Je suis la résurrection et la vie. Quiconque vit et croit en moi, même s'il meurt, vivra » (Jn 11, 25). À ce stade, la question peut spontanément se poser : « Que font les saints et tous les morts au ciel ? » Nous pouvons obtenir la réponse de la première lecture d'aujourd'hui. Les sauvés adorent, jettent leurs couronnes devant le trône, crient : « Louange, honneur, bénédiction, action de grâce ... ». En eux se réalise la véritable vocation humaine qui est d’être «la louange de la gloire de Dieu » (Ep 1, 14). Leur chœur est dirigé par Marie qui continue son chant de louange au ciel : « Mon âme magnifie le Seigneur ». C'est dans cette louange que les saints trouvent leur béatitude et leur exultation : « Mon esprit se réjouit en Dieu ». L'homme est ce qu'il aime et ce qu'il admire. En aimant et en louant Dieu, nous nous identifions à Dieu, nous participons à sa gloire et à son propre bonheur.

Bref, le but de la solennité de ce jour et de la commémoration de tous les morts, demain, est de nous faire contempler l'exemple brillant des saints et de nous souvenir de nos morts pour éveiller en nous le grand désir d'être comme ceux qui sont au ciel : heureux de vivre proches de Dieu, à sa lumière, dans la grande famille des amis de Dieu, être saints signifie : vivre au plus près de Dieu, vivre dans sa famille. C'est la vocation de nous tous, réaffirmée avec vigueur par le Concile Vatican II, et aujourd'hui portée à notre attention de manière solennelle.

 

1)     Aie confiance en l’Amour

   Le samedi 1er novembre,  la liturgie de l’Eglise nous invite à faire mémoire des fidèles défunts dans une grande prière qui les rassemble tous dans nos pensées et dans nos souvenirs. Le , meme s’il est dimanche nous est donné de prier le Seigneur pour qu’Il accueille dans son royaume de joie et de paix éternelles ceux qui ont quitté ce monde et sont passés dans l’éternité. Nos morts : parents, amis, connaissances, et les défunts de tous les temps qui pour nous n’ont pas de nom mais que Dieu connaît bien.

   La prière pour les saintes âmes du purgatoire, particulièrement celles qui sont abandonnées et dont nous ne connaissons ni le nom ni l’existence. Les morts de toutes les guerres et de toutes les violences, les morts du passé, et ceux d’aujourd’hui : les morts de la route, les morts en mer, dans les hôpitaux, dans les maisons, dans les petites et les grandes villes, les morts naufragés et les victimes des épidémies, et, naturellement, ceux qui, ces derniers jours, ont laissé notre cœur profondément meurtri. Nous commémorons tous les morts, sans exclure personne, et nous élevons notre prière pour eux tous, afin que le Seigneur leur donne le repos éternel, la paix parfaite.

   S’il est naturel que nous nous souvenions plus particulièrement de nos chers défunts, et qu’au moment de la séparation nous ayons confié nos morts à l’amour et à l’éternité du Seigneur, il est tout aussi « naturel » de recevoir d’eux cet enseignement : que l’amour éternel de Dieu conserve dans son cœur ceux qu’Il aime après les avoir accueillis avec son pardon. Nos chers défunts nous rappellent qu’il ne faut pas perdre notre temps et notre peine dans la réalisation de nos ambitions et des choses éphémères, parce que tout passe, et seul l’amour demeure.

   Le 2 novembre, ne l’oublions pas, n’est pas uniquement le jour où s’imposent à notre attention la fugacité et la brièveté de la vie qui marque douloureusement notre histoire humaine. C’est un jour consacré à la célébration de notre plus grande espérance si nous croyons réellement dans la foi pascale du Ressuscité. Le jour dédié  à tous les défunts n’est donc pas une célébration de deuil. Si nous considérons la toute-puissance du Dieu-Amour qui ne laisse pas les morts dans leurs tombes parce qu’Il a lui-même fait mourir la mort en sortant ressuscité et glorieux du sépulcre, la mort chrétienne n’est pas un simple passage de l’âme d’un état dans un autre, mais elle réalise une rencontre individuelle avec Dieu-Amour qui sauve, apportant la confiance et l’espérance en la vie éternelle. Comme il est dit dans la préface de la messe des défunts : « La vie ne nous est pas enlevée, mais elle est transformée » par le pardon, comme c’est arrivé à Marmeladov, l’alcoolique que dépeint Dostoïevsky dans « Crime et Châtiment ». Marmeladov est un bon à rien, un alcoolique qui n’aime pas travailler. Son comportement a ruiné sa famille et sa fille, Sonia, a été obligée de se prostituer. Cet homme éprouve au plus profond de lui un sentiment aigu d’échec et de culpabilité. C’est un perdant. Un jour, dans un restaurant, ivre mort, il se lance dans un discours chaotique et, dans une sorte de vision, il parle du Jugement dernier qu’il résume ainsi : « Dieu appelle en  premier lieu auprès de lui ceux qui ont vécu une vie irréprochable, sainte. Ce sont des personnes qui méritent de vivre auprès de Dieu, du moins selon un critère humain. Ensuite, il convoque ceux qui n’ont pas fait beaucoup de bien, les ivrognes comme lui, les drogués, ceux que nous, les bien-pensants, nous osons appeler « les méchants ». Donc, c’est nous qu’il convoquera « vous aussi approchez », dira-t-il, « approchez vous les alcooliques, approchez, vous les faibles, approchez fils de la honte ! ». Et nous tous, nous approcherons, pleins de honte et nous nous tiendrons debout devant Lui. Et Lui dira : « vous êtes des porcs, faits à l’image de la Bête et marqués de son sceau, mais venez, vous aussi ! ».Et les sages et les personnes de bon sens diront : « Seigneur, pourquoi accueilles-tu ces hommes ? » Et il répondra : « pourquoi je les accueille, hommes bien-pensants, c’est parce qu’aucun d’eux n’a pensé être digne de cela».

   Tout cela est-il possible ou est-ce seulement une façon superficielle de parler, à tort et à travers, comme le font les ivrognes ? Non seulement c’est possible, et cela se produit réellement, comme c’est arrivé à la femme adultère et à Marie-Madeleine, à Zachée comme à Pierre : tous ont remis leur souffrance au Christ, se sentant indignes, et tous ont été pardonnés. Comme le dit le psaume 26, « Le Seigneur est ma lumière et mon salut… Il est le rempart de ma vie… Je crie vers lui : pitié, réponds-moi ! C’est ta face, Seigneur, que je cherche… J’en suis sûr, je verrai les bontés du Seigneur sur la terre des vivants ». Cela, parce que Jésus a vécu une agonie extrême, comme tant de malades que nous avons vus, en apparence sans aucun espoir, sur leur lit de mort. Parce qu’Il est mort comme l’homme, à cause de l’homme, pour l’homme, avec l’homme et devant l’homme. Cette foi s’unit à l’espérance qui, comme l’écrit Paul aux chrétiens de Rome, « ne trompe pas, car l’amour de Dieu a été répandu dans nos cœurs par l’Esprit Saint qui nous a été donné» (Rm 5,5).

 

  2) Les Défunts et les Saints, des personnes qui vivent dans la vérité de l’Amour

   La proximité des dates célébrant la fête des Saints (1er novembre) et la Commémoration des défunts (2 novembre) nous rappelle la mystérieuse vérité de la vie éternelle et le lien de fraternité qui nous unit à nos êtres chers qui sont passés sur l’autre rive.

   Ce n’est pas par nostalgie du passé que nous nous rendons au cimetière, mais parce que nous gardons l’espérance d’un avenir de gloire et de joie. Donc, quand nous prions pour les défunts, eux, du ciel, nous tendent la main et nous assurent de leur présence intense et quotidienne, parce que nous aussi, nous marchons avec constance vers la vie qui n’a pas de fin.

   C’est dans l’espérance que le chrétien perçoit et accueille sa fin sur terre, la mort. Sa foi en Jésus Christ ressuscité lui donne l’assurance que la mort n’est pas une défaite irréparable, mais le dramatique passage à la condition glorieuse avec son Seigneur. «Celui qui vient à moi, je ne le repousserai pas ». Nous ne sommes pas des étrangers pour Dieu, mais ses fils, ses héritiers, destinés à partager la résurrection de Jésus.

   Un hymne des Laudes chante : « nous qui veillons de nuit, attentifs à la foi du monde, dans l’attente du retour du Christ, nous regardons vers la lumière ». Dans la nuit de la mort où tous pénètrent, une lumière nous est donnée, qui illumine la profondeur sacrée de notre cœur et dans la foi nous pouvons faire une expérience religieuse où se reflète la résurrection finale. Le Christ embrasse chaque instant de notre vie et Il nous fait comprendre et vivre que chaque moment renferme une abondance d’éternité, que chaque instant lié à Lui implique l’éternité.

   A cette étreinte s’unissent les vierges consacrées dans le monde à qui est « confié le devoir de montrer que le Fils de Dieu fait homme est « l’objectif eschatologique vers quoi tend  toute chose», la splendeur face à laquelle tout autre lumière pâlit, l’infinie beauté qui, seule, peut satisfaire totalement le cœur de l’homme» (St Jean-Paul II, Exhortation apostolique Vita Consacrata n.16).

   Le choix de la vie virginale est un rappel du caractère éphémère des réalités terrestres et l’anticipation des biens à venir. Elle rappelle à tous les fidèles l’exigence de marcher au milieu des événements du monde, toujours orientés vers la cité future et elle contribue, de façon exemplaire, à mettre en lumière la nature authentique de la vraie Eglise dont la caractéristique est d’être à la fois humaine et divine, visible mais dotée de réalités invisibles, brûlante dans l’action et adonnée à la contemplation, présente dans le monde et cependant toujours en pèlerinage.

   A cette signification spirituelle et eschatologique de la condition virginale fait référence l’ancienne prière romaine de consécration du pontifical Romain attribuée à saint Léon le Grand : « Tu … as réservé à certaines de tes fidèles un don particulier prenant sa source à ta miséricorde. A la lumière de la sagesse éternelle tu leur as fait comprendre que, alors que demeuraient intacts la valeur et l’honneur des noces sanctifiées au début de ta bénédiction, selon ton dessein providentiel, il doit surgir des vierges qui, malgré leur renoncement au mariage, aspirent à posséder dans leur cœur la réalité de son mystère. Tu les appelles ainsi à réaliser, au-delà de l’union conjugale le lien sponsal avec le Christ dont les noces sont une image et un signe. (n.38).

   De la consécration des vierges jaillit la grâce ecclésiale spécifique qui rend opérant le symbolisme originel de ce rite. Ainsi, le don de la virginité prophétique et eschatologique acquiert la valeur d’un ministère au service du peuple de Dieu et intègre les personnes consacrées dans le cœur de l’Eglise et du monde. (Conc. Vat. II, Const. Dogm. Sur l’Eglise, Lumen Gentium, n 42). Cet acte public et reconnu de l’alliance entre le Christ et les vierges consacrées, proclame à la face du monde la primauté et la fécondité du don de soi total et perpétuel avec une entière disponibilité aux exigences de la charité envers Dieu et envers le prochain.

   Avec l’exemple et le témoignage de ces vierges consacrées qui vivent leur foi avec joie et zèle, qui chaque jour vivent dans l’amour, par l’amour, pour aimer, persévérons sur le chemin de la sainteté auquel nous sommes tous conviés. En cela, que tous les saints intercèdent pour nous et nous aident, eux qui sont tellement fascinés par la beauté de Dieu et par sa vérité parfaite qu’ils en sont transformés. Pour cette beauté, cette vérité et cet amour, ils furent prêts à renoncer à tout, jusqu’à eux-mêmes, et ils vécurent dans la louange à Dieu et dans le service humble et désintéressé du prochain. 

Lecture Patristique

Saint Ambroise de Milan

Foi dans la résurrection des morts


Du livre sur la mort de son frère Satyre

(Lib. 2, 40.41.46.47.132.133; CSEL 73, 270-274, 323-324)


 

Nous voyons que la mort est un avantage, et la vie un tourment, si bien que Paul a pu dire : Pour moi, vivre c'est le Christ, et mourir est un avantage. Qu'est-ce que le Christ ? Rien d'autre que la mort du corps, et l'esprit qui donne la vie. Aussi mourons avec lui pour vivre avec lui. Nous devons chaque jour nous habituer et nous affectionner à la mort afin que notre âme apprenne, par cette séparation, à se détacher des désirs matériels. Notre âme établie dans les hauteurs, où les sensualités terrestres ne peuvent accéder pour l'engluer, accueillera l'image de la mort pour ne pas encourir le châtiment de la mort. En effet la loi de la chair est en lutte contre la loi de l'âme et cherche à l'entraîner dans l'erreur. ~ Mais quel est le remède ? Qui me délivrera de ce corps de mort ? — La grâce de Dieu, par Jésus Christ, notre Seigneur.

Nous avons le médecin, adoptons le remède. Notre remède, c'est la grâce du Christ, et le corps de mort, c'est notre corps. Alors, soyons étrangers au corps pour ne pas être étrangers au Christ. Si nous sommes dans le corps, ne suivons pas ce qui vient du corps ; n'abandonnons pas les droits de la nature, mais préférons les dons de la grâce.

Qu'ajouter à cela ? Le monde a été racheté par la mort d'un seul. Car le Christ aurait pu ne pas mourir, s'il l'avait voulu. Mais il n'a pas jugé qu'il fallait fuir la mort comme inutile, car il ne pouvait mieux nous sauver que par sa mort. C'est pourquoi sa mort donne la vie à tous. Nous portons la marque de sa mort, nous annonçons sa mort par notre prière, nous proclamons sa mort par notre sacrifice. Sa mort est une victoire, sa mort est un mystère, le monde célèbre sa mort chaque année.

Que dire encore de cette mort, puisque l'exemple d'un Dieu nous prouve que la mort seule a recherché l'immortalité et que la mort s'est rachetée elle-même ? II ne faut pas s'attrister de la mort, puisqu'elle produit le salut de tous, il ne faut pas fuir la mort que le Fils de Dieu n'a pas dédaignée et n'a pas voulu fuir. ~

La mort n'était pas naturelle, mais elle l'est devenue ; car, au commencement, Dieu n'a pas créé la mort : il nous l'a donnée comme un remède. ~ L'homme, condamné pour sa désobéissance à un travail continuel et à une désolation insupportable, menait une vie devenue misérable. Il fallait mettre fin à ses malheurs, pour que la mort lui rende ce que sa vie avait perdu. L'immortalité serait un fardeau plutôt qu'un profit, sans le souffle de la grâce. ~

L'âme a donc le pouvoir de quitter le labyrinthe de cette vie et la fange de ce corps, et de tendre vers l'assemblée du ciel, bien qu'il soit réservé aux saints d'y parvenir ; elle peut chanter la louange de Dieu dont le texte prophétique nous apprend qu'elle est chantée par des musiciens : Grandes et merveilleuses sont tes œuvres. Seigneur, Dieu tout-puissant : justes et véritables sont tes chemins. Roi des nations. Qui ne te craindrait, Seigneur, et ne glorifierait ton nom ? Car toi seul es saint. Toutes les nations viendront se prosterner devant toi. Et l'âme peut voir tes noces, Jésus, où ton épouse est conduite de la terre jusqu'aux cieux, sous les acclamations joyeuses de tous — car vers toi vient toute chair — ton épouse qui n'est plus exposée aux dangers du monde, mais unie à ton Esprit. ~

C'est ce que le saint roi David a souhaité, plus que toute autre chose, pour lui-même, c'est ce qu'il a voulu voir et contempler : La seule chose que je demande au Seigneur, la seule que je cherche, c'est d'habiter la maison du Seigneur tous les jours de ma vie, et de découvrir la douceur du Seigneur.

 

L’umanità fiorita in cielo

Ognissanti e Commemorazione dei Defunti - Anno C –  1 e 2 novembre 2025

 

 

Premessa.

Il mese di novembre inizia con la festa di Tutti i Santi ed è subito seguito dalla commemorazione dei defunti. Non sembri strano il fatto che queste due celebrazioni sono l’una di seguito all’altra, perché esse hanno una cosa in comune: ci aprano all’aldilà e rafforzano la nostra fede nella risurrezione. Se non credessimo in una vita dopo la morte, sarebbe inutile celebrare la festa dei Santi e un semplice sentimentalismo andare al cimitero. Chi andremmo a visitare e perché accenderemmo delle candele o porteremmo dei fiori?. 

Questi due giorni ci invitano a meditare con gioia e serietà sul versetto del salmo che dice: “Insegnaci a contare i nostri giorni e giungeremo alla sapienza del cuore” (Sal 89, 12). Questa frase biblica non si ferma alla constatazione poetica di Giuseppe Ungaretti: “Si sta come d’autunno sugli alberi le foglie. Perché a primavere l’albero torna a fiorire, ma con altre foglie. Le foglie non hanno una seconda vita, cadono e marciscono. Alle foglie che siamo noi, “la vita non è tolta ma trasformata” (Prefazio della Messa per i Defunti).

 L’importante è credere con sempre maggiore fermezza in Gesù che ha detto: “Io sono la risurrezione e la vita. Chi vive e crede in me anche se muore, vivrà” (Gv 11,25). A questa punto può sorgere spontanea la domanda: “Che cosa fanno i santi e tutti i defunti in paradiso? Possiamo ricavare la risposta dalla prima lettua di oggi. I redenti adorano, gettano le loro corone davanti al trono, gridano: “Lode, onore, benedizione, azione di grazia…”. Si realizza in essi la vera vocazione umana che è di essere “lode della gloria di Dio” (Ef 1,14). Il loro coro è guidato da Maria che in cielo continua il suo cantico di lode: “L’anima mia magnifica il Signore”. È in questa lode che i santi trovano la loro beatitudine ed esultanza: “Il mio spirito esulta in Dio”. L’uomo è ciò che ama e ciò che ammira. Amando e lodando Dio ci si immedesima con Dio, si partecipa della sua gloria e della sua stessa felicità.

Insomma, lo scopo della solennità di oggi e della commemorazione di tutti i defunti, domani è di farci contemplare il luminoso esempio dei santi e di ricordare i nostri morti per risvegliare in noi il grande desiderio di essere come quanti sono in paradiso: felici di vivere vicini a Dio, nella sua luce, nella grande famiglia degli amici di Dio. Essere santo significa: vivere nella vicinanza con Dio, vivere nella sua famiglia. E questa è la vocazione di noi tutti, con vigore ribadita dal Concilio Vaticano II, ed oggi riproposta in modo solenne alla nostra attenzione. 

 

 

 

 

            1)Affidati all’Amore.

            Sabato 1° novembre, la Liturgia della Chiesa ci fa celebrare la Festa di Tutti i Santi e, anche se è domenica, ci è dato di ricordare tutti i fedeli defunti in una grande preghiera che li racchiude tutti nei nostri pensieri e nei nostri ricordi. Oggi la nostra preghiera deve rivolgersi al Signore perché accolga nel suo Regno di eterna gioia e pace quelli che hanno lasciato questo mondo e sono passati all’eternità. I nostri morti: parenti, amici, conoscenti, e i defunti di tutti i tempi che per noi non hanno nome ma che Dio conosce bene. 

            La preghiera per le anime sante del purgatorio, specialmente quelle più abbandonate e di cui non sappiamo neppure il nome e l'esistenza. I morti di tutte le guerre e di tutte le violenze, i morti del passato, come dell’oggi: i morti sulle strade, in mare, negli ospedali, nelle case, nelle piccole e grandi città, i morti naufraghi e a cause di epidemie, e, naturalmente quelli che negli ultimi giorni hanno lasciato profondamente addolorato il nostro cuore. Commemoriamo tutti i morti, senza esclusione di nessuno ed eleviamo per tutti loro la preghiera, perché il Signore doni loro il riposo eterno, la pace perfetta.

            E se è naturale che il nostro ricordo vada domani in particolare ai nostri cari defunti, che nel momento del distacco, noi abbiamo affidato i nostri morti all’amore e all'eternità del Signore, è pure “naturale” che riceviamo da loro l’insegnamento, che l’amore eterno di Dio conserva nel suo cuore chi ama, dopo averli accolti con il suo perdono. I nostri cari defunti ci ricordano che non è proprio il caso di sprecare tempo e fatica per ambizioni e cose effimere, perché tutto passa e solamente l’amore rimane.

            Non dobbiamo dimenticare che il 2 novembre non è solo un giorno, in cui si impone alla nostra attenzione il carattere di fugacità e di brevità della vita che segna in maniera dolorosa la nostra vicenda umana. Si tratta di un giorno destinato alla celebrazione della nostra più grande speranza se davvero crediamo nella fede pasquale del Risorto. La giornata dedicata a tutti i defunti dunque non è una celebrazione luttuosa. Se consideriamo l'onnipotenza del Dio Amore, che non lascia nelle tombe i morti, perché Lui stesso ha fatto morire la morte uscendo risorto e glorioso dal suo sepolcro. Il morire cristiano non è un semplice trapassare dell'anima da uno stato all'altro, ma realizza un incontro individuale con Dio amore che salva, apportando la fiducia e la speranza nella vita senza fine. Come dice il prefazio I della Messa dei Defunti: “La vita non ci è tolta, ma trasformata”, dal perdono, come è accaduto a Marmeladov, ubriacone descritto da Dostoevskij in “Delitto e Castigo”. Marmeladov è un poco di buono, un ubriacone che non ama lavorare. Il suo comportamento ha rovinato la sua famiglia e sua figlia, Sonia, è stata obbligata a prostituirsi. Quest’uomo vive dentro di sé un senso acuto di sconfitta e di colpa. E’ un perdente. Un giorno, nell’osteria, ubriaco fradicio, azzarda discorsi sconnessi e in una sorta di visione parla del Giudizio finale che sintetizzo così: “Dio chiama per primi, accanto a sé, coloro che hanno avuto vite irreprensibili, sante. Sono persone che meritano, almeno secondo un criterio umano, di vivere accanto a Dio. Poi convoca coloro che di bene ne hanno fatto poco, gli ubriaconi come lui e i drogati, coloro che noi, i benpensanti, osiamo definire “i cattivi”. “Allora convocherà noi. ‘Pure voi, fatevi avanti’, dirà, ‘fatevi avanti, ubriaconi, fatevi avanti voi deboli, fatevi avanti figli della vergogna!’. E noi tutti ci faremo avanti vergognosamente e ci terremo in piedi davanti a Lui. Ed Egli ci dirà: ‘Siete dei porci, fatti a immagine della Bestia e con il suo marchio; ma venite voi pure!’ E i saggi e le persone di buon senso diranno: ‘Signore, perché Tu accogli questi uomini?’ E Lui dirà: ‘ La ragione per la quale li accolgo, uomini benpensanti, è che nessuno di loro ha creduto di essere degno di questo’.”

            È possibile tutto ciò, oppure è soltanto un parlare a vanvera tipico degli ubriachi? Non solo è possibile, e accade veramente come è accaduto all’adultera e alla Maddalena, a Zaccheo come a Pietro: tutti hanno consegnato a Cristo il loro dolore, ritenendosi indegni, e tutti sono stati perdonati. Come recita il salmo 36, il Signore “è la mia luce e la mia salvezza... è difesa della mia vita... A lui grido: abbi pietà di me. Il tuo volto, Signore io cerco.... Sono certo di contemplare la bontà del Signore nella terra dei viventi”. Perché Gesù ha vissuto un’agonia estrema, come molti malati che abbiamo visto, apparentemente senza alcuna speranza, sul letto di morte. Perché Egli è morto come l’uomo, a causa dell’uomo, per l’uomo, con l’uomo e davanti all’uomo. Questa fede si unisce alla speranza, che -come scrive Paolo ai cristiani di Roma - “non delude, perché l’amore di Dio è stato riversato nei nostri cuori per mezzo dello Spirito Santo che ci è stato dato (Rm 5,5).

 

 

            2) I Defunti e i Santi, persone che vivono nella verità dell’Amore.

            La vicinanza di date fra la festa dei Santi (1° novembre) e la Commemorazione dei defunti (2 novembre) ci ricorda la verità misteriosa della vita eterna e il legame di fraternità tra noi e con i nostri cari, che sono passati all’altra riva.

            Non è per nostalgia verso il passato che ci si reca al cimitero, ma perché speriamo con speranza in un futuro di gloria e di gioia. Quindi, mentre preghiamo in suffragio dei nostri defunti, loro ci tendono dal cielo le loro mani e ci assicurano una vicinanza intensa e quotidiana, perché anche noi camminiamo con costanza verso la vita che non ha fine.

            E’ con speranza che il cristiano percepisce e accoglie la fine terrena, la morte. La sua fede in Gesù risorto gli dà la sicurezza che morire non è una sconfitta irreparabile, ma il drammatico passaggio alla condizione gloriosa con il suo Signore. “Chi viene a me, non lo respingerò”. Non siamo degli estranei per Dio, ma figli, eredi, destinati a condividere la risurrezione di Gesù. 

            Un inno delle Lodi fa cantare: “E noi che di notte vegliammo, attenti alla fede del mondo, protesi al ritorno di Cristo or verso la luce guardiamo”. Nella notte della morte in cui tutti affondano, ci è data una luce che illumina l’intangibile profondità del nostro cuore e nella fede possiamo fare un’esperienza religiosa nella quale si riverberi la risurrezione finale. Cristo abbraccia ogni istante della nostra vita e ci fa capire e vivere che in ogni momento c’è una ridondanza di eternità, ogni istante legato a Lui implica l’eterno.

            A questo abbraccio si consegnano le Vergine consacrate nel mondo, a cui  “è affidato il compito di additare ilFiglio di Dio fatto uomo come il traguardo escatologico a cui tutto tende, lo splendore di fronte al quale ogni altra luce impallidisce, l’infinita bellezza che, sola, può appagare totalmente il cuore dell’uomo” (S. Giovanni Paolo II, Esortazione Apostolica Post sinodale Vita Consecrata, n. 16).

            La scelta della vita verginale è un richiamo alla transitorietà delle realtà terrestri e anticipazione dei beni futuri. Essa ricorda a tutti i fedeli l’esigenza di camminare tra le vicende del mondo sempre orientati verso la città futura e contribuisce in modo esemplare a mettere in luce la genuina natura della vera Chiesa, che ha la caratteristica di essere nello stesso tempo umana e divina, visibile ma dotata di realtà invisibili, ardente nell'azione e dedita nella contemplazione, presente nel mondo e tuttavia pellegrina6.

            Al significato spirituale ed escatologico della condizione verginale si riferisce in maniera suggestiva e profonda l’antichissima preghiera romana di consacrazione del Pontificale Romano attribuita a san Leone Magno: “Tu…hai riservato ad alcune tue fedeli un dono particolare scaturito dalla fonte della tua misericordia. Alla luce dell’eterna sapienza hai fatto loro comprendere, che mentre rimaneva intatto il valore e l’onore delle nozze, santificate all’inizio dalla tua benedizione, secondo il tuo provvidenziale disegno, devono sorgere donne vergini che, pur rinunziando al matrimonio, aspirassero a possederne nell’intimo la realtà del mistero. Così le chiami a realizzare, al di là dell’unione coniugale, il vincolo sponsale con Cristo di cui le nozze sono immagine e segno. (n.38).

            Dalla consacrazione verginale scaturisce la grazia ecclesiale specifica che rende operante il simbolismo originario di questo rito. Così il dono della verginità profetica ed escatologica acquista il valore di un ministero al servizio del popolo di Dio e inserisce le persone consacrate nel cuore della Chiesa e del mondo (Conc. Vat. II, Cost. dogm. sulla Chiesa, Lumen Gentium, n. 42) Questo atto pubblico e riconosciuto dell'alleanza fra il Cristo e la vergine consacrata, proclama di fronte al mondo il primato e la fecondità della totale e perpetua donazione di sé con la pienadisponibilità alle esigenze della carità verso Dio e verso il prossimo.

            Sull’esempio e sulla testimonianza di queste Vergini Consacrate, che vivono la loro fede con gioia e fatica, che ogni giorno vivono nell’amore, per amore, per amare, perseveriamo nel cammino di santità a cui tutti siamo chiamati.  In ciò ci siano di intercessione e di aiuto tutti i santi, che sono coloro che sono così affascinati dalla bellezza di Dio e dalla sua perfetta verità da lasciarsene trasformare. Per questa bellezza e verità e amore loro furono disposti a rinunciare a tutto, anche a se stessi, e vissero nella lode a Dio e nel servizio umile e disinteressato del prossimo.

 

 

Lettura Patristica

Sant’Ambrogio di Milano

La fede nella Risurrezione dei morti


Dal libro «Sulla morte del fratello Satiro» 


(Lib. 2, 40.41.46.47.132.133; CSEL 73, 270-274, 323-324)



 

Moriamo insieme a Cristo, per vivere con lui

Dobbiamo riconoscere che anche la morte può essere un guadagno e la vita un castigo. Perciò anche san Paolo dice: «Per me il vivere è Cristo e il morire un guadagno» (Fil 1,21). E come ci si può trasformare completamente nel Cristo, che è spirito di vita, se non dopo la morte corporale?
Esercitiamoci, perciò, quotidianamente a morire e alimentiamo in noi una sincera disponibilità alla morte. Sarà per l'anima un utile allenamento alla liberazione dalle cupidigie sensuali, sarà un librarsi verso posizioni inaccessibili alle basse voglie animalesche, che tendono sempre a invischiare lo spirito. Così, accettando di esprimere già ora nella nostra vita il simbolo della morte, non subiremo poi la morte quale castigo. Infatti la legge della carne lotta contro la legge dello spirito e consegna l'anima stessa alla legge del peccato. Ma quale sarà il rimedio? Lo domandava già san Paolo, dandone anche la risposta: «Chi mi libererà da questo corpo votato alla morte?» (Rm 7,24). La grazia di Dio per mezzo di Gesù Cristo nostro Signore (cfr. Rm 7,25 ss.).
Abbiamo il medico, accettiamo la medicina. La nostra medicina è la grazia di Cristo, e il corpo mortale è il corpo nostro. Dunque andiamo esuli dal corpo per non andare esuli dal Cristo. Anche se siamo nel corpo cerchiamo di non seguire le voglie del corpo.
Non dobbiamo, è vero, rinnegare i legittimi diritti della natura, ma dobbiamo però dar sempre la preferenza ai doni della grazia.
Il mondo è stato redento con la morte di uno solo. Se Cristo non avesse voluto morire, poteva farlo. Invece egli non ritenne di dover fuggire la morte quasi fosse una debolezza, né ci avrebbe salvati meglio che con la morte. Pertanto la sua morte è la vita di tutti. Noi portiamo il sigillo della sua morte, quando preghiamo la annunziamo; offrendo il sacrificio la proclamiamo; la sua morte è vittoria, la sua morte è sacramento, la sua morte è l'annuale solennità del mondo.
E che cosa dire ancora della sua morte, mentre possiamo dimostrare con l'esempio divino che la morte sola ha conseguito l'immortalità e che la morte stessa si è redenta da sé? La morte allora, causa di salvezza universale, non è da piangere. La morte che il Figlio di Dio non disdegnò e non fuggì, non è da schivare.
A dire il vero, la morte non era insita nella natura, ma divenne connaturale solo dopo. Dio infatti non ha stabilito la morte da principio, ma la diede come rimedio. Fu per la condanna del primo peccato che cominciò la condizione miseranda del genere umano nella fatica continua, fra dolori e avversità. Ma si doveva porre fine a questi mali perché la morte restituisse quello che la vita aveva perduto, altrimenti, senza la grazia, l'immortalità sarebbe stata più di peso che di vantaggio.
L'anima nostra dovrà uscire dalle strettezze di questa vita, liberarsi delle pesantezze della materia e muovere verso le assemblee eterne.
Arrivarvi è proprio dei santi. Là canteremo a Dio quella lode che, come ci dice la lettura profetica, cantano i celesti sonatori d'arpa: «Grandi e mirabili sono le tue opere, o Signore Dio onnipotente; giuste e veraci le tue vie, o Re delle genti. Chi non temerà, o Signore, e non glorificherà il tuo nome? Poiché tu solo sei santo. Tutte le genti verranno e si prostreranno dinanzi a te» (Ap 15,3-4).
L'anima dovrà uscire anche per contemplare le tue nozze, o Gesù, nelle quali, al canto gioioso di tutti, la sposa è accompagnata dalla terra al cielo, non più soggetta al mondo, ma unita allo spirito: «A te viene ogni mortale» (Sal 64,3).
Davide santo sospirò, più di ogni altro, di contemplare e vedere questo giorno. Infatti disse: «Una cosa ho chiesto al Signore, questa sola io cerco: abitare nella casa del Signore tutti i giorni della mia vita, per gustare la dolcezza del Signore» (Sal 26,4).

 

 

 

 

 

giovedì 23 ottobre 2025

The prayer to reach God must be humble.

Roman Rite

XXX Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year C – October 26, 2025

Sir 35:15-17 20-22; Ps 34; 2Tim 4:608 16018; Lk 18:9-14

 

Ambrosian Rite

First Sunday after the dedication on Milan’s Dom

Act 13:1-5a; Ps 95; Rm 15:15-20; Mt 28:16-20

 

1) Two kinds of prayer. 


      Like the Pharisee and the tax collector in the parable presented in today's Gospel, we also go “to the temple to pray” (cf. Lk 18:9-14). We too might be tempted, like the Pharisee, to remind God of our merits. But, to ascend to Heaven, prayer must come from a humble, poor, and repentant heart. Therefore, let us go to Mass primarily to give thanks to God, not for our merits, but for the gifts God has given us and continually gives us. We recognize ourselves as small and in need of His merciful love that saves us. Hence, let us acknowledge that everything comes from Him and that only with His Grace what the Holy Spirit tells us will come to fruition. Only in this way we can truly “return home” enriched, made more just, and better able to walk in the ways of the Lord in everyday life. 


       Before explaining today’s Gospel, I think it is useful to briefly present its context. We are in the second part of Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem
 where Jesus continues to instruct his disciples about the spirit of the Son, which is a spirit of welcome and mercy. Saint Luke, in chapter 13, when the disciples ask, “Who will be saved?” tells that Jesus replies: “Strive to enter through the narrow door.” Salvation is a narrow door, so narrow that no righteous person can enter, but all sinners do, because salvation is the free love of God, and the  free love is received not by those who think of deserving it – the righteous – but by those who accept it as a gift and as grace, that is, the sinners. Then, in chapter 14, he resizes the so-called “righteous”. In this chapter of the Gospel of Luke, we read about a Pharisee who invites Jesus to lunch and in front of him there is a man with dropsy. The man with dropsy is the image of the Pharisee, that is, the righteous one, who uses God’s gifts to become increasingly filled with pride and death. And so the man with dropsy, for whom everything he eats instead of becoming energy and life becomes the beginning of death, is an image of the righteous person who uses his righteousness to condemn others.

 

        It is the one who thinks to be righteous that commits the true sin against God, considers God to be bad and terrible, and sells His love, expecting to be "paid" with a divine reward. God is not bad; He is full of mercy, and the parables of mercy (chapter 15) clearly express this truth. Chapter 16 is also about this. In the following chapters, we read about the second part of the journey, which begins with the healing of the 10 lepers who are sent to Jerusalem – something impossible – and are healed along the way. That is, we, listening to the Word of Jesus as we are – sinners, lepers, unable to go to Jerusalem – can be healed if we have faith in the Word. Therefore, if in daily life, at home and at work, we live according to the new principles taught by Christ and not with the leaven of hypocrisy, protagonism, or fear, we already live the Kingdom of God because we live with the spirit of the Son who knows how to be a brother to others. Indeed, the Kingdom of God is present where there are people who desire the Lord, love Him, and follow Him. When we love the Father and our brothers as He does, then we are in the Kingdom of God. And faith is this: desiring this communion in prayer with the Lord.

 

      In short, today's parable reminds us that there are two ways to seek communion with God. The parable of the publican and the Pharisee describes two types of prayer, just as there are two types of men who live within us. It is a very thought-provoking parable, which is somewhat a summary of all the parables we have seen about mercy, and it teaches us what our prayer must be to be genuine—that is, what our relationship with God and our relationship with our brothers and sisters should be. Prayer serves to establish a new relationship with God. If we have a new relationship with God as our Father, we have a new relationship with our brothers and sisters.

 

 

 

 2) Prayer must be humble. 

 

      Therefore, today Christ completes His teaching on prayer, emphasizing that prayer is true and effective when it is humble. However, let us not forget what last Sunday's Liturgy of the Word taught us, stating that for prayer to be genuine, it must be pure, trusting, vigilant, and constant.

 

      In the introduction to the commentary to the Our Father Saint Thomas of Aquinas writes: “Prayer must be humble because God “heeds the plea of the lowly not scorning their prayer” (Ps 102:18). Consider also the parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector (Lk 18:10-14) and the prayer of Judith “You are God of the lowly, helper of those of little account” (Jud9:11). This humility can be observed in the Our Father. In fact, there is true humility when one doesn’t count on his own but awaits everything from the divine power to whom like a beggar he turns to”.

 

       To pray we need the humility that makes the heart contrite and takes God closer, as in the Psalm:  “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted, saves those whose spirit is crushed. The Lord is the redeemer of the souls of his servants, and none are condemned who take refuge in him” (Ps 34: 18-23) The psalm can also help us to better understand the parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector ( Lk 18:9-11)  proposed this Sunday,  that speaks about  humble prayer. It is a humility expressed not only by the words spoken, but also by the behavior of the tax collector who recognizes his sins. When we pray it is not important what we say to the Lord, but also how we say it. The “how” we live our relationship with God is at stake.

      What must be improved or corrected in our prayer are not the words we use, but the way we live our relationship with God saying at the beginning of our meditation: “Lord before you speak to me, forgive me” (“Antequam discutias mecum, Domine, miserere Mei” Ambrosian antiphon).

       Let us now look at the main characters of the Gospel’s narration.

       The Pharisee is considered by standards the true observant one. He follows meticulously the practices of his religion and has a spirit of sacrifice. He is not satisfied with what the minimum requirements are but does more.  He doesn’t fast one day per week as prescribed by law, but he does it two times per week.

     However, Christ says that he is not justified and not saved. Why? He abides by law and cannot be judged as a hypocrite, but he makes the mistake of being too sure of his justice. He believes that he can claim credit by God, doesn’t wait for His mercy, and doesn’t expect salvation as a free and underserved gift but as a reward for having done his duty. He says, “Lord, I thank you” and makes a list of what he does as an observant person and shows to God his concept of justice.  In reality, he has lost the original and free dependence from God, who is a Father to us because he loves us, not because He must “pay us back” for what we have done. The Pharisee, besides having said “Thank you” at the beginning, doesn’t pray, doesn’t look up to God, doesn’t ask God for advice doesn’t expect anything from Him and doesn’t ask anything. He concentrates on himself and compares himself with the others judging them severely. In his behavior there is no prayer. He doesn’t ask for anything, and God doesn’t give anything to him.

    Let us now consider the second person in the parable, a tax collector who goes to the temple to pray and whose behavior is the opposite of the one of the Pharisee. He stops afar, beats his chest and says: “O God, be merciful to me a sinner”[1] (Lk 18:13). In recognizing himself as a sinner he speaks the truth: he works for the Romans, invaders and pagan, and demands exorbitant taxes. He certainly is a sinner but knows it, feels in need of a change and above all knows that he cannot demand anything from God. He doesn’t have anything to be proud of and nothing to pretend. He can only ask. He counts on God, not on himself. This man had his head bent, but his heart is outstretched toward the High by whom he awaits mercy.

     The conclusion is clear and simple: the only right way to put oneself in front of God in prayer and, before that, in life, is to feel always the need of His forgiveness and of His love. We must do good deeds, but we must not brag about it. And we must not compare ourselves with others.

 

      3) Forgiveness recreates

      The tax collector “went home justified”. He had been forgiven not because he was better or humbler than the Pharisee (we don’t earn God even with humility) but because he opens himself- like a door that opens to the sun- to a God bigger that his sin, to a God that is not earned but welcomed, to a forgiving God that regenerates and makes the tax collector’s heart innocent like the one of a child.

       As God has made “just” the sinful tax collector, so he is “good” to us penitent sinners and will make us “just,” readmitted to divine friendship, saints, pure and reinstated in the life of faith. 

       The Pharisee is condemned. Why? Because he said” I’m not like the rest of humanity, greedy, dishonest, adulterous” – and up to this point he didn’t offend anybody - but he added “or even like this tax collector” (Lk 18:11). Doing so he went against his neighbor, did wrong towards him and consequently towards God who had said: “For it is loyalty that I desire, not sacrifice and knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings”. (Hosea 6:6) He had confirmed it through His Son’s words “Go and learn the meaning of the words ”I desire mercy, not sacrifice”. (Mt 9:13) and had reasserted: “If you knew what this meant, “I desire mercy, not sacrifice"; you would not have condemned these innocent men”. (Mt 12:7). The sin of the Pharisee consists formally in the condemnation of the brother but above all in the cause of this condemnation “for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be exalted”. (Lk 18:14). It is the same sentence used for the conceited guests that wanted the best seats at the banquet (see Lk 14:11)

         Let us imitate Christ that didn’t exalt himself but “emptied” his Divinity into the most wretched humiliation, the one of the cross. For that God has exalted him above every other name (see Phil 2:6-11).

         The consecrated Virgins are called to live in a special way this humility of Christ in prayer and in life. These women have welcomed the invitation of the Savior “learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for yourselves”. (Mt 11:29). This humility makes them spiritually fruitful. “If you want to know the name of this virtue, that is how it is called by the philosophers, you should know that the humility upon which God put His eyes is the same virtue that the philosophers call atyphia or metriotes. We can define it with this sentence: humility is the condition of a man that doesn’t elevate himself but lowers him. The one that swells will fall, as the Apostle says, “into the devil’s behavior”, who began to swell with pride. The Apostle writes so that he may not become conceited and thus incur the devil’s punishment”. (1 Tim 3:6) “Because he hath regarded the humility of his handmaid”: God has looked at me, says Mary, because I’m humble and because I search the virtue of mildness and hiding” (see Origen, Homilies on Luke, VIII 5-6).  They live the spirit of Mary: “if according to the flesh, one was the mother of Christ, according to faith all the souls generate Christ: every one of them welcomes the Word of God” (Saint Ambrose of Milan, Exposition on the Gospel of Luke, 2:26-27). In the final prayer the Bishop says:” May Jesus our Lord, faithful spouse of the ones that are consecrated to Him, give you a happy and fruitful life” (see Rite of the Consecration of the Virgins). Doing so, he invites them and, through their example, us to act so that in our heart and in our life the Lord finds his home. We must not only carry him in our heart, but we must also “generate” Him and carry him in our time and in the entire world.

 

 

                                                                Spiritual Reading

                                                        Cardinal John Henry Newman

      Sermon 2. The Religion of the Pharisee, the Religion of Mankind

"O God, be merciful to me, a sinner." Luke xviii. 13.

{15} THESE words set before us what may be called the characteristic mark of the Christian Religion, as contrasted with the various forms of worship and schools of belief, which in early or in later times have spread over the earth. They are a confession of sin and a prayer for mercy. Not indeed that the notion of transgression and of forgiveness was introduced by Christianity, and is unknown beyond its pale; on the contrary, most observable it is, the symbols of guilt and pollution, and rites of deprecation and expiation, are more or less common to them all; but what is peculiar to our divine faith, as to Judaism before it, is this, that confession of sin enters into the idea of its highest saintliness, and that its pattern worshippers and the very heroes of its {16} history are only, and can only be, and cherish in their hearts the everlasting memory that they are, and carry with them into heaven the rapturous avowal of their being, redeemed, restored transgressors. Such an avowal is not simply wrung from the lips of the neophyte, or of the lapsed; it is not the cry of the common run of men alone, who are buffeting with the surge of temptation in the wide world; it is the hymn of saints, it is the triumphant ode sounding from the heavenly harps of the Blessed before the Throne, who sing to their Divine Redeemer, "Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God in Thy blood, out of every tribe, and tongue, and people, and nation."

And what is to the Saints above a theme of never-ending thankfulness, is, while they are yet on earth, the matter of their perpetual humiliation. Whatever be their advance in the spiritual life, they never rise from their knees, they never cease to beat their breasts, as if sin could possibly be strange to them while they were in the flesh. Even our Lord Himself, the very Son of God in human nature, and infinitely separate from sin,—even His Immaculate Mother, encompassed by His grace from the first beginnings of her existence, and without any part of the original stain,—even they, as descended from Adam, were subjected at least to death, the direct, emphatic punishment of sin. And much more, even the most favoured of that glorious company, whom He has washed clean in His Blood; they never forget what they were by birth; they confess, one and all, that they are children of Adam, and of the same nature as their brethren, and compassed with infirmities {17} while in the flesh, whatever may be the grace given them and their own improvement of it. Others may look up to them, but they ever look up to God; others may speak of their merits, but they only speak of their defects. The young and unspotted, the aged and most mature, he who has sinned least, he who has repented most, the fresh innocent brow, and the hoary head, they unite in this one litany, "O God, be merciful to me, a sinner." So it was with St. Aloysius; so, on the other hand, was it with St. Ignatius; so was it with St. Rose, the youngest of the saints, who, as a child, submitted her tender frame to the most amazing penances; so was it with St. Philip Neri, one of the most aged, who, when some one praised him, cried out, "Begone! I am a devil, and not a saint;" and when going to communicate, would protest before his Lord, that he "was good for nothing, but to do evil." Such utter self-prostration, I say, is the very badge and token of the servant of Christ;—and this indeed is conveyed in His own words, when He says, "I am not come to call the just, but sinners;" and it is solemnly recognized and inculcated by Him, in the words which follow the text, "Every one that exalteth himself, shall be humbled, and he that humbleth himself, shall be exalted."

This, you see, my Brethren, is very different from that merely general acknowledgment of human guilt, and of the need of expiation, contained in those old and popular religions, which have before now occupied, or still occupy, the world. In them, guilt is an attribute of individuals, or of particular places, or of particular acts of nations, of bodies politic or their rulers, for whom, {18} in consequence, purification is necessary. Or it is the purification of the worshipper, not so much personal as ritual, before he makes his offering, and an act of introduction to his religious service. All such practices indeed are remnants of true religion, and tokens and witnesses of it, useful both in themselves and in their import; but they do not rise to the explicitness and the fulness of the Christian doctrine. "There is not any man just." "All have sinned, and do need the glory of God." "Not by the works of justice, which we have done, but according to His mercy." The disciples of other worships and other philosophies thought and think, that the many indeed are bad, but the few are good. As their thoughts passed on from the ignorant and erring multitude to the select specimens of mankind, they left the notion of guilt behind, and they pictured for themselves an idea of truth and wisdom, perfect, indefectible, and self-sufficient. It was a sort of virtue without imperfection, which took pleasure in contemplating itself, which needed nothing, and which was, from its own internal excellence, sure of a reward. Their descriptions, their stories of good and religious men, are often beautiful, and admit of an instructive interpretation; but in themselves they have this great blot, that they make no mention of sin, and that they speak as if shame and humiliation were no properties of the virtuous. I will remind you, my Brethren, of a very beautiful story, which you have read in a writer of antiquity; and the more beautiful it is, the more it is fitted for my present purpose, for the defect in it will come out the more strongly by the very contrast, viz., {19} the defect that, though in some sense it teaches piety, humility it does not teach. I say, when the Psalmist would describe the happy man, he says, "Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered; blessed is the man to whom the Lord hath not imputed sin." Such is the blessedness of the Gospel; but what is the blessedness of the religions of the world? A celebrated Greek sage once paid a visit to a prosperous king of Lydia, who, after showing him all his greatness and his glory, asked him whom he considered to have the happiest lot, of all men whom he had known. On this, the philosopher, passing by the monarch himself, named a countryman of his own, as fulfilling his typical idea of human perfection. The most blessed of men, he said, was Tellus of Athens, for he lived in a flourishing city, and was prospered in his children, and in their families; and then at length when war ensued with a border state, he took his place in the battle, repelled the enemy, and died gloriously, being buried at the public expense where he fell, and receiving public honours. When the king asked who came next to him in Solon's judgment, the sage went on to name two brothers, conquerors at the games, who, when the oxen were not forthcoming, drew their mother, who was priestess, to the temple, to the great admiration of the assembled multitude; and who, on her praying for them the best of possible rewards, after sacrificing and feasting, lay down to sleep in the temple, and never rose again. No one can deny the beauty of these pictures; but it is for that reason I select them; they are the pictures of men who were not supposed to have any grave account to settle {20} with heaven, who had easy duties, as they thought, and who fulfilled them.

Now perhaps you will ask me, my Brethren, whether this heathen idea of religion be not really higher than that which I have called pre-eminently Christian; for surely to obey in simple tranquillity and unsolicitous confidence, is the noblest conceivable state of the creature, and the most acceptable worship he can pay to the Creator. Doubtless it is the noblest and most acceptable worship; such has ever been the worship of the angels; such is the worship now of the spirits of the just made perfect; such will be the worship of the whole company of the glorified after the general resurrection. But we are engaged in considering the actual state of man, as found in this world; and I say, considering what he is, any standard of duty, which does not convict him of real and multiplied sins, and of incapacity to please God of his own strength, is untrue; and any rule of life, which leaves him contented with himself, without fear, without anxiety, without humiliation, is deceptive; it is the blind leading the blind: yet such, in one shape or other, is the religion of the whole earth, beyond the pale of the Church.

The natural conscience of man, if cultivated from within, if enlightened by those external aids which in varying degrees are given him in every place and time, would teach him much of his duty to God and man, and would lead him on, by the guidance both of Providence and grace, into the fulness of religious knowledge; but, generally speaking, he is contented that it should tell him very little, and he makes no efforts to gain any {21} juster views than he has at first, of his relations to the world around him and to his Creator. Thus he apprehends part, and part only, of the moral law; has scarcely any idea at all of sanctity; and, instead of tracing actions to their source, which is the motive, and judging them thereby, he measures them for the most part by their effects and their outward aspect. Such is the way with the multitude of men everywhere and at all times; they do not see the Image of Almighty God before them, and ask themselves what He wishes: if once they did this, they would begin to see how much He requires, and they would earnestly come to Him, both to be pardoned for what they do wrong, and for the power to do better. And, for the same reason that they do not please Him, they succeed in pleasing themselves. For that contracted, defective range of duties, which falls so short of God's law, is just what they can fulfil; or rather they choose it, and keep to it, because they can fulfil it. Hence, they become both self-satisfied and self-sufficient;—they think they know just what they ought to do, and that they do it all; and in consequence they are very well content with themselves, and rate their merit very high, and have no fear at all of any future scrutiny into their conduct, which may befall them, though their religion mainly lies in certain outward observances, and not a great number even of them.

So it was with the Pharisee in this day's gospel. He looked upon himself with great complacency, for the very reason that the standard was so low, and the range so narrow, which he assigned to his duties towards God and man. He used, or misused, the traditions in which he {22} had been brought up, to the purpose of persuading himself that perfection lay in merely answering the demands of society. He professed, indeed, to pay thanks to God, but he hardly apprehended the existence of any direct duties on his part towards his Maker. He thought he did all that God required, if he satisfied public opinion. To be religious, in the Pharisee's sense, was to keep the peace towards others, to take his share in the burdens of the poor, to abstain from gross vice, and to set a good example. His alms and fastings were not done in penance, but because the world asked for them; penance would have implied the consciousness of sin; whereas it was only Publicans, and such as they, who had anything to be forgiven. And these indeed were the outcasts of society, and despicable; but no account lay against men of well-regulated minds such as his: men who were well-behaved, decorous, consistent, and respectable. He thanked God he was a Pharisee, and not a penitent.

Such was the Jew in our Lord's day; and such the heathen was, and had been. Alas! I do not mean to affirm that it was common for the poor heathen to observe even any religious rule at all; but I am speaking of the few and of the better sort: and these, I say, commonly took up with a religion like the Pharisee's, more beautiful perhaps and more poetical, but not at all deeper or truer than his. They did not indeed fast, or give alms, or observe the ordinances of Judaism; they threw over their meagre observances a philosophical garb, and embellished them with the refinements of a cultivated intellect; still their notion of moral and religious {23} duty was as shallow as that of the Pharisee, and the sense of sin, the habit of self-abasement, and the desire of contrition, just as absent from their minds as from his. They framed a code of morals which they could without trouble obey; and then they were content with it and with themselves. Virtue, according to Xenophon, one of the best principled and most religious of their writers, and one who had seen a great deal of the world, and had the opportunity of bringing together in one the highest thoughts of many schools and countries,—virtue, according to him, consists mainly in command of the appetites and passions, and in serving others in order that they may serve us. He says, in the well known Fable, called the choice of Hercules, that Vice has no real enjoyment even of those pleasures which it aims at; that it eats before it is hungry, and drinks before it is thirsty, and slumbers before it is wearied. It never hears, he says, that sweetest of voices, its own praise; it never sees that greatest luxury among sights, its own good deeds. It enfeebles the bodily frame of the young, and the intellect of the old. Virtue, on the other hand, rewards young men with the praise of their elders, and it rewards the aged with the reverence of youth; it supplies them pleasant memories and present peace; it secures the favour of heaven, the love of friends, a country's thanks, and, when death comes, an everlasting renown. In all such descriptions, virtue is something external; it is not concerned with motives or intentions; it is occupied in deeds which bear upon society, and which gain the praise of men; it has little to do with conscience and the Lord of conscience; and {24} knows nothing of shame, humiliation, and penance. It is in substance the Pharisee's religion, though it be more graceful and more interesting.

Now this age is as removed in distance, as in character, from that of the Greek philosopher; yet who will say that the religion which it acts upon is very different from the religion of the heathen? Of course I understand well, that it might know, and that it will say, a great many things foreign and contrary to heathenism. I am well aware that the theology of this age is very different from what it was two thousand years ago. I know men profess a great deal, and boast that they are Christians, and speak of Christianity as being a religion of the heart; but, when we put aside words and professions, and try to discover what their religion is, we shall find, I fear, that the great mass of men in fact get rid of all religion that is inward; that they lay no stress on acts of faith, hope, and charity, on simplicity of intention, purity of motive, or mortification of the thoughts; that they confine themselves to two or three virtues, superficially practised; that they know not the words contrition, penance, and pardon; and that they think and argue that, after all, if a man does his duty in the world, according to his vocation, he cannot fail to go to heaven, however little he may do besides, nay, however much, in other matters, he may do that is undeniably unlawful. Thus a soldier's duty is loyalty, obedience, and valour, and he may let other matters take their chance; a trader's duty is honesty; an artisan's duty is industry and contentment; of a gentleman are required veracity, courteousness, {25} and self-respect; of a public man, high-principled ambition; of a woman, the domestic virtues; of a minister of religion, decorum, benevolence, and some activity. Now, all these are instances of mere Pharisaical excellence; because there is no apprehension of Almighty God, no insight into His claims on us, no sense of the creature's shortcomings, no self-condemnation, confession, and deprecation, nothing of those deep and sacred feelings which ever characterize the religion of a Christian, and more and more, not less and less, as he mounts up from mere ordinary obedience to the perfection of a saint.

And such, I say, is the religion of the natural man in every age and place;—often very beautiful on the surface, but worthless in God's sight; good, as far as it goes, but worthless and hopeless, because it does not go further, because it is based on self-sufficiency, and results in self-satisfaction. I grant, it may be beautiful to look at, as in the instance of the young ruler whom our Lord looked at and loved, yet sent away sad; it may have all the delicacy, the amiableness, the tenderness, the religious sentiment, the kindness, which is actually seen in many a father of a family, many a mother, many a daughter, in the length and breadth of these kingdoms, in a refined and polished age like this; but still it is rejected by the heart-searching God, because all such persons walk by their own light, not by the True Light of men, because self is their supreme teacher, and because they pace round and round in the small circle of their own thoughts and of their own judgments, careless to know what God says to them, and fearless of being condemned by Him, {26} if only they stand approved in their own sight. And thus they incur the force of those terrible words, spoken not to a Jewish Ruler, nor to a heathen philosopher, but to a fallen Christian community, to the Christian Pharisees of Laodicea,—"Because thou sayest I am rich, and made wealthy, and have need of nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked; I counsel thee to buy of Me gold fire-tried, that thou mayest be made rich, and be clothed in white garments, that thy shame may not appear, and anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see. Such as I love, I rebuke and chastise; be zealous, therefore, and do penance."

Yes, my Brethren, it is the ignorance of our understanding, it is our spiritual blindness, it is our banishment from the presence of Him who is the source and the standard of all Truth, which is the cause of this meagre, heartless religion of which men are commonly so proud. Had we any proper insight into things as they are, had we any real apprehension of God as He is, of ourselves as we are, we should never dare to serve Him without fear, or to rejoice unto Him without trembling. And it is the removal of this veil which is spread between our eyes and heaven, it is the pouring in upon the soul of the illuminating grace of the New Covenant, which makes the religion of the Christian so different from that of the various human rites and philosophies, which are spread over the earth. The Catholic saints alone confess sin, because the Catholic saints alone see God. That awful Creator Spirit, of whom the Epistle of this day speaks so much, He it is who brings into {27} religion the true devotion, the true worship, and changes the self-satisfied Pharisee into the broken-hearted, self-abased Publican. It is the sight of God, revealed to the eye of faith, that makes us hideous to ourselves, from the contrast which we find ourselves to present to that great God at whom we look. It is the vision of Him in His infinite gloriousness, the All-holy, the All-beautiful, the All-perfect, which makes us sink into the earth with self-contempt and self-abhorrence. We are contented with ourselves till we contemplate Him. Why is it, I say, that the moral code of the world is so precise and well-defined? Why is the worship of reason so calm? Why was the religion of classic heathenism so joyous? Why is the framework of civilized society all so graceful and so correct? Why, on the other hand, is there so much of emotion, so much of conflicting and alternating feeling, so much that is high, so much that is abased, in the devotion of Christianity? It is because the Christian, and the Christian alone, has a revelation of God; it is because he has upon his mind, in his heart, on his conscience, the idea of one who is Self-dependent, who is from Everlasting, who is Incommunicable. He knows that One alone is holy, and that His own creatures are so frail in comparison of Him, that they would dwindle and melt away in His presence, did He not uphold them by His power. He knows that there is One whose greatness and whose blessedness are not affected, the centre of whose stability is not moved, by the presence or the absence of the whole creation with its innumerable beings and portions; whom nothing can touch, nothing can increase or diminish; who was as mighty before He {28} made the worlds as since, and as serene and blissful since He made them as before. He knows that there is just One Being, in whose hand lies his own happiness, his own sanctity, his own life, and hope, and salvation. He knows that there is One to whom he owes every thing, and against whom he can have no plea or remedy. All things are nothing before Him; the highest beings do but worship Him the more; the holiest beings are such, only because they have a greater portion of Him.

Ah! what has he to pride in now, when he looks back upon himself? Where has fled all that comeliness which heretofore he thought embellished him? What is he but some vile reptile, which ought to shrink aside out of the light of day? This was the feeling of St. Peter, when he first gained a glimpse of the greatness of his Master, and cried out, almost beside himself, "Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord!" It was the feeling of holy Job, though he had served God for so many years, and had been so perfected in virtue, when the Almighty answered him from the whirlwind: "With the hearing of the ear I have heard Thee," he said; "but now my eye seeth Thee; therefore I reprove myself, and do penance in dust and ashes." So was it with Isaias, when he saw the vision of the Seraphim, and said, "Woe is me ... I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people that hath unclean lips, and I have seen with my eyes the King, the Lord of Hosts." So was it with Daniel, when, even at the sight of an Angel, sent from God, "there remained no strength in him, but the appearance of his countenance was changed in him, and {29} he fainted away, and retained no strength." This then, my Brethren, is the reason why every son of man, whatever be his degree of holiness, whether a returning prodigal or a matured saint, says with the Publican, "O God, be merciful to me;" it is because created natures, high and low, are all on a level in the sight and in comparison of the Creator, and so all of them have one speech, and one only, whether it be the thief on the cross, Magdalen at the feast, or St. Paul before his martyrdom:—not that one of them may not have, what another has not, but that one and all have nothing but what comes from Him, and are as nothing before Him, who is all in all.

For us, my dear Brethren, whose duties lie in this seat of learning and science, may we never be carried away by any undue fondness for any human branch of study, so as to be forgetful that our true wisdom, and nobility, and strength, consist in the knowledge of Almighty God. Nature and man are our studies, but God is higher than all. It is easy to lose Him in His works. It is easy to become over-attached to our own pursuit, to substitute it for religion, and to make it the fuel of pride. Our secular attainments will avail us nothing, if they be not subordinate to religion. The knowledge of the sun, moon, and stars, of the earth and its three kingdoms, of the classics, or of history, will never bring us to heaven. We may "thank God," that we are not as the illiterate and the dull; and those whom we despise, if they do but know how to ask mercy of Him, know what is very much more to the purpose of getting {30} to heaven, than all our letters and all our science. Let this be the spirit in which we end our session. Let us thank Him for all that He has done for us, for what He is doing by us; but let nothing that we know or that we can do, keep us from a personal, individual adoption of the great Apostle's words, "Christ Jesus came into this world to save sinners, of whom I am the chief." Topics - World, Worldliness

(10th Sunday after Pentecost, 1856. Preached in the University Church, Dublin.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



[1] The Greek text says: “O God, be good to me a sinner”. This sentence is also in Psalms (50: 78:9). These are words that come from a contrite and humbled heart. The tax collector doesn’t know what to say more because in front of the holy Presence the words are missing. He knows that words would do nothing. He commits himself humbly to his God with anxious trust knowing that He reads men’s hearts, understands everything and, if he wants, forgives everything and reconciles all.