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Providence.
Prudence, or discernment, prudence, which is the first prerequisite for spiritual and moral growth, is the quality of understanding the nature of things, situations, events, and plans as a whole, and about its parts or aspects, and to act accordingly. Specifically, it consists of a trained, refined, and alert rational control of human activity on all levels of life – spiritual, moral, political, economic, scientific, etc. The sphere of action of this virtue is thus concrete life and its ever-new problems.
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What will come next? Does the Vatican have a prison? Can the Pope grant a pardon?
Which court will deal with the case of financial machinations next? Where would Cardinal Becciu go to sit if the verdict is confirmed?
“I want to shout to the world that I am innocent through the legal authorities and by all means,” Cardinal Angelo Becciu declared in mid-December after the first instance court in the Vatican sent him to prison for five and a half years.
In the Cinque Minuti show on Rai 1 television, the 75-year-old cardinal was asked by the moderator whether the Pope believes in his innocence: “I believe and I hope so. And in any case, I will work to do it,” added Becciu.
He appealed the verdict, and according to assumptions, the other eight co-defendants, who were found guilty by the Vatican City State Tribunal in a historic trial, mostly of economic crimes.
The court process is also groundbreaking in that for the first time the cardinal was convicted by lay judges. However, after the December judgment, several questions arose, which are also related to the specific system of the Vatican.
American Vaticanist John Allen Jr. after the verdict, summarized what the next procedure should look like.
The parties involved had only three days, including Sunday (which is a bit bizarre considering the Vatican) to file an appeal.
The appeal of Cardinal Becciu and the others will likely be heard by the Court of Appeal for the Vatican City State, which is made up of six judges – three clerics and three laymen. The chairman is the Spanish Archbishop Alejandro Arellano Cedillo, while the promoter of justice, i.e., the prosecutor, is the Italian lay lawyer Raffaele Coppola.
If the appeals court comes to different conclusions than the first-instance verdict, it is possible that the “supreme court” of the Vatican, known as the Court of Cassation of the Vatican City State, will also be asked for a decision.
It is currently headed by the American Cardinal Kevin Farrell and its members include Italian Cardinals Matteo Zuppi from Bologna, Paolo Lojudice from Siena, and Mauro Gambetti, Vicar General of the Vatican City State, along with two lay law
The Italian Vaticanist Andrea Gagliarducci points out that the second-degree proceedings in the Vatican are mainly of a documentary nature, the discussion itself is very small. “Since these are financial crimes, the last instance could be the European Court of Auditors in Luxembourg,” thinks the journalist ACI Stampa.
How does the Vatican want to enforce financial penalties? A rather interesting area concerns the intention of the Vatican Court, which as part of the judgment also ordered the confiscation of the assets of the defendants for about 180 million dollars and the payment of compensation for about 220 million dollars.
“If the Vatican wants to get its hands on some of this money, it will probably have to request that its verdicts be recognized by other states where these funds are deposited, such as Switzerland and the United Kingdom,” writes John Allen.
When it comes to applications to other courts, the Vatican tribunal’s record is varied.
In January 2022, a Swiss court rejected financier and defendant Raffaele Mincione’s appeal to unfreeze approximately $70 million worth of assets that had been frozen in 2021 at the request of the Vatican. At the same time, the court rejected Mincione’s claim that he did not receive a fair trial in the Vatican.
However, the Vatican was negative in the courts in Britain, reminds Allen.#In March 2021, a judge at Southwark Crown Court lifted the seizure of the assets of Italian financier and co-defendant Gianluigi Torzi, criticizing the Vatican’s submissions. In addition, proceedings are still ongoing in London on a claim for damage to reputation, filed by the aforementioned Raffaele Mincione against the Vatican Secretariat of State. In this case, a delicate issue arose – the British court granted Mincione’s request for access to confidential messages and e-mails between Cardinal Pietro Parolin and Venezuelan Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra, the two highest officials of the Secretariat of State.
By the way, the problem may not be only with the enforcement of the financial part of the punishment. As the AP noted, some of the defendants in the Vatican trial are located abroad, including one of the main characters of the trial, the financier Torzi. It is questionable how and whether other countries will extradite defendants to serve their possible sentences.
Will the cardinal sit behind bars? Even in the case of a valid conviction, Cardinal Becciu (and others) do not have to go to prison. From the recent past, we know of cases where the convicted did not finally start serving their sentence – thanks to the granted pardon.
In 2012, the former chamberlain of Benedict XVI was sentenced to 18 months in prison. Paolo Gabriele was the central figure in the Vatileaks I case. It was related to the publication of confidential documents that Gabriele brought out of the papal office. Benedict XVI, however, decided to pardon him.
The sentence of the same amount was also given to the Spanish priest Lucio Ángel Vallejo Baldo, who was convicted in 2016 in the Vatileaks II case. In this case, too, it was a question of bringing out confidential documents, which were subsequently published in their books by journalists Gianluigi Nuzzi and Emiliano Fittipaldi. Pope Francis, however, is just like Benedict XVI. decided to grant a pardon.
Two bestsellers show why Pope Francis’ financial reforms were so necessary.
Does the Vatican have its prison?
There is no classical prison in the Vatican. Based on the Lateran Agreements, which were concluded between Italy and the Holy See in 1929, persons convicted in the Vatican can be sent to serve their sentences in one of the Italian prisons.
However, the barracks of the Vatican gendarmerie have several rooms used as pre-trial detention cells – with reinforced steel bars and doors, according to Reuters.
In addition to the butler Gabriele, the former archbishop and apostolic nuncio in the Dominican Republic, Józef Wesołowski, who was accused of using child prostitution and possessing child pornography, also spent several months there. He died before the trial began in 2015.
Much more often than prominent guests, petty pickpockets or vandals detained on the territory of the Vatican find themselves in these cells. They are then handed over to the Italian police or directly expelled from the country.
Who are the Vatican judges and how much do they earn? Let’s stop at the judges, which is also specific in the case of the Vatican. On December 4, 2023, just before the conclusion of the historic process, Pope Francis issued a motu proprio concerning the labor law matters of judges and prosecutors in the Vatican City State.
The ACI stamp approximates that Vatican judges and promoters of justice (prosecutors) work at the tribunal only part-time, despite the Council of Europe’s requirement that at least one of the members of the tribunal and promoters work full-time, i.e. fully devote themselves to the Vatican system. However, there is a kind of hybrid situation in the Vatican tribunal, where promoters of justice also work as lawyers in Italy, with former prosecutors turned judges in the Vatican.
The new motu proprio also deals with salaries and pensions.
The president of the tribunal and the promoter of justice have a monthly salary of 3,649.50 euros. The deputy president of the tribunal is entitled to 3,138.57 euros per month, while ordinary judges and members of the office of the promoter of justice are entitled to 2,919.60 euros per month.
“In practice, it does not matter that judges may have other jobs, the Vatican always considers them full-time judges, and therefore they are always guaranteed severance pay and a pension,” states Vaticanist Gagliarducci, adding that judges’ pensions are calculated at 80 percent of their last salary and is paid if the person has worked for at least 15 years.
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Sent to be a saint Your mission?
Saint. A prophet. Vessel of the Spirit, the mouth of God, the hand of Christ. And every single day that you contradict that brings harm, pain, suffering,… death. To others. To you. And no, it’s not conceit! For this is God’s plan for every single person, this is what is normal! Don’t waste your time wondering what people somewhere far away should be doing. Do what you have to do yourself, here and now – and leave the rest to the Lord! Thou shalt be holy, here and now – and it is up to God to be glorified through you in the way He wills and fits into His Great Plan, in which you are but one particle, one moment of it. Here and now. Here is the place. Now is the time – to be holy. Here and now is where the struggle for holiness is waged, just here. Here is God, here is Home, here is that place. Be here, be perfect now, be holy right here and in this. Here, the whole and all of the world is present. Here is Reality, the Universe itself, Heaven, everything. Discover it, see it! Learn not to run away. Learn to live here – and you will find a wide, spacious house, a world! It is a world in a nutshell, all in a Cinderella nut! Evil cannot be overcome by evil, only by sound. Sin cannot be removed by sin, only by holiness. Being holy, here and now, is the most critical thing in the world. The only thing that matters. And God Himself is there, present and acting. Just be holy, rely on Him alone, and expect everything from Him alone! To act with all our heart, but to predict the result to be small or none, as it would be if it were only a matter of our slight deed, but great and glorious.
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A cheerful mind.
It is useless today to even refute the claim circulated. At the last century’s end, of a “joyful antiquity” and a sad Christianity. The early success of Christianity, the religion of the poor and uneducated, in the cultural world of the Roman Empire, can also be explained by the fact that it promised victory over everything against which man felt powerless: fate, death, pain.
The proclamation of the doctrine of Christ was given the name eu-Evangelion – the good, glad tidings. Christianity is a religion of grace. The Greek word chara means joy. We translate the angel’s greeting to Mary as “Hail Mary.” The Greek chair is literally “Rejoice!” (Old English liturgical texts have the expression “Rejoice!”)
Scripture encourages prayer with a sense of joy (cf. Ps 31:11; 9:5; 99:1; 104:3, etc.). We are often reminded of the words of St. Paul: “Not out of grief nor out of compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor 9:7). The culmination and goal of Christian perfection is love. Whoever loves, gives gladly, even with sacrifice, speaks gladly to the one he loves. He who prays and joyfully denies proves that he does his duty out of love. The work which we do joyfully goes, as it were of itself a hand. Aristotle writes: “Joy perfects the work, sorrow destroys it”. St. John Chrysostom explains in this sense the verse of the Psalm (118,32): ‘I will run in the way of thy commandments. Joy gives strength, and strength gives freshness. Everything goes much easier and faster. He who has a joyful attitude towards life, the little, and overcomes great ones with courage.
We are not worried about his future. On the contrary, if we see someone permanently sad, we rightly fear that he will not last on the path he has started, especially if there are major difficulties. The joyful performance of religious duties is an effective way of apostolate. It does not attract the company of sad people and discontented; on the contrary, all would like to go where they see, that there is happiness and joy. St. Leo exhorts the religious to their “modesty to be holy and not sad”. St. Francis wished to see a joyful countenance on his brothers, a desire to do more than they have been doing, and not weariness and weariness. That is how they are to go out into the streets. Christian morality teaches that a virtuous life is a life according to God and according to a happy and innocent nature, as it came from the hands of the Creator. Whoever strives for virtue and is in doing so joyless, denies the truth he wants to believe. At least, the impression he gives to others.
Hence Hermas (2d cent.) ranks sorrow among the evil desires which are to be banished from the heart. The only praiseworthy sorrow, as the Ascetics uniformly teach, is regret for sin. This, however, soon becomes the source of true joy. As his biography tells us, St. Francis of Assisi warned against sorrow. The sorrow of man is the joy of the devil. A sad man is easily led to despair or to seek illicit pleasures in the world. This is in agreement with what St. Gregory the Great wrote:
“The soul cannot be without pleasure, so it seeks pleasure in low things if it has none in things noble.”
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To grow in the likeness of God about men.
Through Baptism, we received participation in the life of God. But how does God live? What does his life consist of? Jesus Christ told us something about this when he revealed that God is one but triune. Jesus made visible the goodness and love of the heavenly Father. He lived to the extreme for the fulfillment of the will of his Father, even to the cross. He also spoke about the Spirit who comes from the Father, who receives everything from Christ and proclaims it to us. God’s Spirit guided Jesus in fulfilling his mission, and Jesus rejoiced in the Holy Spirit.
From these few indications, we can guess that the life of God is the life of individual persons, one for the other. Their relationship is so strong and deep that he is also a living person, the Holy Spirit. From this brief indication of what creates the life of God, we can guess that we, too, as baptized people, are called to cooperate in the growth and development of God’s life in us. This practically means that we develop our relationship with the triune God and our relationships with people and human persons.
We heard about these relationships with people and convenient situations in today’s reading from the Old Testament. These are challenging requests. They require overcoming our egoism, an effort to respect others and do good to them. God challenges us as a motive for such an effort: “Be holy, as I, your God, am holy!” Holiness is God’s perfection. Practically, it means a challenge to grow in likeness with God. We are to express this similarity in our relationships with people.
In the Gospel, Jesus gives us yet another motive for such an effort: The other person, a person in need and suffering in various ways, a person who requires our service and overcoming our egoism, is a person with whom Jesus Christ himself identifies: “What have you done – or they didn’t – to one of these least of mine, you did it to me – or you didn’t.” There can be no stronger motive for doing good to one’s neighbors, for showing love to people. And in his caring love for us, Jesus reveals that these deeds will judge us. Jesus will reward us for manifestations of serving love in our neighbors by accepting us to direct and full participation in the life of the triune God – or, God forbid, exclude us from this participation if we were oblivious to the misery and suffering with people and closed ourselves in our egoism. When we think a little about these words of the Gospel about the last judgment, we realize how little we cooperate with the development of God’s life in us and how, in our daily circumstances, we must increase our efforts for concrete and practical love towards our neighbors – following the example of Christ himself, who loved us to the extreme, to complete self-sacrifice. But this complete self-giving for our salvation out of love for the Father led Jesus, even as a man, to full participation in God’s life at the moment of his resurrection.
Practical instruction: Manifestations of serving, attentive love towards neighbors, motivated by the belief that I am serving Christ himself in them.
Prayer: Merciful God and our Savior, turn our hearts to you and teach our minds with the heavenly doctrine so that we may improve in the Christian life through fasting and repentance. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who is God, lives and reigns with you in unity with the Holy Spirit forever and ever.
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Feast of the Baptism of the Lord, Mark 1,1-7
Dear friends, brothers, and sisters! There are two mutually complementary concepts – opposites – “pair of siblings.” Some mysterious guides to the human being. One introduces us to being and accompanies us through it, and the other separates us from it. It is about the concept of life and the concept of death. Death has always been and will be the secret of every age. Science is speechless before it; it is unable to explain it. Philosophy turns into poetry, encountering it, and man’s archenemy. Theology has always stuck to general theses when trying to clarify them. Death, that bloodthirsty enemy, began its work at the cradle of the human race and continues through the centuries until the present. However, in the eyes of the original Creator’s plan, it was not a part of human life but became a direct consequence of committing original sin. For this reason, every human being entering existence in this world is marked by the so-called original sin. In the case of original sin, as Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI says. , we must understand that all of us – people of all times, carry in us a drop of the poison of thinking described or approached through the images of the book of Genesis. (Gn 3-4)
The consequence of sin is death. (Romans 6, 23). And so only “death” can reverse the effect of original sin. Lord Jesus told Nicodemus in a night conversation that “Unless one is born from above, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3). Such death of the “old man” and the simultaneous “birth from above” is represented by Holy Baptism, which, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church says, is the entrance to life in the Holy Spirit (vitae spiritualis iguana) and the gate that opens access to other sacraments. Thus, the consequence of sin is also the fantastic solidarity of God, who sends us Jesus Christ as a friend and savior. That is why original sin is also called felix culpa – happy guilt. “Oh, happy guilt, for which such a noble Redeemer came to us!” (we sing during the liturgy of the Easter Vigil).
Today, we continue with the epiphany, originating in the appearance of the Lord to the wise men from the East, representing the pagan nations of the world. The service presents us with its second aspect, namely, the baptism of Jesus in the Jordan River. The Jordan River is the largest of all Israeli rivers, measuring 251 kilometers, and its catchment area covers up to 18,300 km. It is formed by the confluence of three small rivers in the Chula Valley. During its course, it flows through Lake Tiberias until it finally flows into the Dead Sea, which is geographically the lowest place in terms of the Jordan region and the whole world.
Jesus descends into these ancient waters – to be baptized by John, although he did not have to because he was without sin; as St. Gregory of Nazianzus says in the texts of the sacred reading, he did it so that he could later come out of the Jordan and receive the “baptism of the cross” for which he came to this world. Exegetes say that the very act of Jesus’ baptism can be safely called a kind of ceremonial inauguration – the inauguration of the Messiah through the voice, the open sky, and the presence of the Holy Spirit.
Today, however, we also remember our baptism, even more so the sacrament of reconciliation, which, like holy baptism, washes away all committed sins, light and grave. The words captured by St. Mark the Evangelist, sounding like an echo from heaven, are also addressed to us: “You are my beloved Son, I am in love with you” (Mk 1, 11). Thus, we can legitimately say that our Lord constantly enters the deepest bowels of our interior and sanctifies it with grace. After all, we have acquired God’s sonship through baptism, which is enormous! To be God’s son and daughter is the highest rank and privilege we could ever receive! No title, rank, or any other earthly merit equaling or even surpassing this mysterious seal of God impressed by baptism on the soul of man.
The author of the letter to the Hebrews, citing Psalm 2:7, asks himself: “When did he say to any of the angels: ‘You are my Son, today I have begotten you’ and again: ‘I will be his father, and he will be my son’?” (Heb. 1,5) So these words, beloved brothers and sisters, are analogously intended for all of us who have the honor of being called God’s children!
Saint Paul, the apostle of the nations, declares this even more clearly when he writes: “All who the Spirit of God leads are sons of God. You have not received the spirit of slavery to be afraid again, but you have received the Spirit of adopted sonship in which we cry ‘ABBA FATHER’! The Spirit Himself and our spirit testifies that we are God’s children.” So we are rightly called God’s children because we are them too! It is always good to be reminded of this fact again and again.
Brothers and sisters, baptism is immersion in the death of Jesus. Breaking the bonds of sin, he frees man, changes the human paradigm, and revitalizes the soul marked by sin! Let us give thanks today, tomorrow, and throughout our lives for the gift of God’s sonship! Jesus’ baptism was a symbolic act of the beginning of his public activity! Even our baptism should be the beginning – not the end of the life of faith. So let us step on the path of life in the spirit of God’s beloved children, let us not be ashamed of the fact that God is our Father, and let us not forget our mother, the Church, whose mystical body we form and to whom Christ entrusted the depository with the treasure of faith and appointed her as its steward!
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Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord, Matthew 2,1-12
Jesus, as a rising star (cf. Num 24:17), comes to enlighten all nations and illuminate the nights of humanity. With the wise men who look to heaven, we too ask today: “Where is the newborn?” (Matthew 2:2). So which is where we can find and meet our Lord? From the experience of the sages, we understand that the first “place” where love allows itself to be found is in the turmoil of questions.
The fascinating adventure of these wise men from the East teaches us that faith is not born from our merits or theoretical considerations but is a gift from God. His grace helps us wake up from apathy and make room for the essential questions of life that take us out of the presumption that we are okay and open us to what is beyond us. In the sages at the beginning is this: the restlessness of the questioner. Driven by their longing for the infinite, they explore the sky. They are dazzled by the star’s brightness, representing the tension toward the transcendent that animates the journey of civilizations and the constant search of our hearts. That star leaves a question in their hearts: Where is the newborn?
Brothers and sisters, the journey of faith begins when, with God’s grace, we create space for the restlessness that keeps us awake; when we allow ourselves to be addressed, when we are not satisfied with our habits but resolutely face the challenges of each day; when we stop locking ourselves in a neutral space and decide to inhabit the uncomfortable spaces of life that makeup relationships with others, surprises, unforeseen events, projects that need to be carried out, dreams that need to be realized, fears that need to be faced, suffering that breaks into the body. In these moments, irrepressible questions arise in our hearts that open us to the search for God – where is happiness for me? Where is the whole life I long for? Where is the love that will not pass away, disappear, break, or face frailties, failures, and betrayals? What opportunities are hidden in my crises and sufferings?
It so happens that the air we breathe offers us “soul tranquilizers” every day, substitutes to calm our restlessness and banish these questions – from the products of consumption to the lures of pleasure, from grand debates to the idolatry of prosperity; everything seems to be telling us: don’t overthink, let it be, enjoy life! We often try to store our hearts in the vault of comfort, but if the wise did that, they would never meet the Lord. To calm your heart, to calm your soul, so that there is no more restlessness: that is the danger. But God dwells in our troubling questions; in them, we “look for him as the night looks for the dawn… He is in the silence that worries us before death and the end of all human greatness; it is in the need for justice and love that we carry within us; it is a holy mystery that meets the nostalgia for the Other, the nostalgia for perfect and complete justice, for reconciliation and peace” (CMMARTINI, Incontro al Signore Risorto. Il cuore dello spirito cristiano, Cinisello Balsamo 2012, 66). So this is the first place: a riot of questions. Don’t be afraid to enter this turmoil of questions: these paths lead us to Jesus.
The second place where we can meet the Lord is the risk of the road. Questions, even spiritual ones, can cause frustration and desolation if they do not lead us on the path or direct our inner movement toward God’s face and the beauty of his word. The journey of the Wise Men, “Their outward journey,” said Benedict XVI, “was an expression of their inner journey, the inner journey of their heart” (Homily for Epiphany, January 6, 2013). The sages do not stop to look at the sky and contemplate the light of the stars but embark on a risky journey that does not guarantee safety in advance with an accurate map in hand. They want to find out who the King of the Jews is, where he was born, and where they can find him. They ask Herod for it, who in turn calls the leaders of the people and the scribes who question the Scriptures. The sages are on their way. Most of the verbs describing their activity are verbs of motion.
It is the same with our faith: without a constant journey and constant dialogue with the Lord, without listening to the Word, and without perseverance, it cannot grow. It is not enough to think about God and pray to calm the conscience; we must become disciples of following Jesus and his gospel, talk to him about everything in prayer, and look for him in everyday situations and the faces of our brothers and sisters. From Abraham, who set out on a journey to an unknown land, to the wise men who set out to follow the star, faith is a journey, a journey, a story of departures and more departures. Let us always remember: faith is a journey, a journey, a story of departures and further departures. Let us remember that faith does not grow if it remains static; we cannot enclose it in some personal piety or within the church’s walls, but we must take it outside and live it on a constant journey to God and our brothers and sisters. Let’s ask ourselves today: am I walking towards the Lord of life so that he becomes the Lord of my life? Jesus, who are you to me? Where do you call me to go? What do you ask of my life? What decisions are you inviting me to make for others?
Finally, after the confusion of questions and the risk of the journey, the third place of encounter with the Lord is the wonder of adoration. At the end of the long journey and arduous search, the wise men entered the house, “they saw the child with Mary, his mother, and they fell to the ground and worshiped him” (v. 11). This is the crucial point: our restlessness, our questions, spiritual journeys and practices of faith are to be united in the adoration of the Lord. They find their source center there because everything is born from there. After all, the Lord arouses feelings, actions, and deeds in us. Everything is born there, and everything culminates there because the goal of everything is not to achieve a personal goal and gain glory but to meet God and be embraced by his love, which gives the basis of our hope, which frees us from evil, which opens us to love others, which makes us people capable of building a fairer and more fraternal world. It makes no sense to be passed orally active if we do not put Jesus in the center and do not worship him—the wonder of bowing. There, we learn to stand before God, not to beg him for something or to do something, but to remain silent and surrender to his love, to let ourselves be captured and reborn by his mercy.
We often pray, ask, and think, but we usually miss the prayer of adoration. We have lost the sense of adoration because we have lost the restlessness of questions and the courage to go forward at the risk of the journey. Today, the Lord invites us to do as the wise men did: let us fall on the ground before God and surrender to him in awe and adoration. Let us worship God and not our ego; let us worship God and not false idols, which seduce us with the allure of prestige and power; fascinated by false news, let us worship God that we do not bow down to things that pass away and to the alluring but empty logic of evil.
Brothers and sisters, let us open our hearts to restlessness, ask for the courage to advance on the path, and end in adoration! Fear not; it is the way of the sages; it is the way of all the saints in history: to accept the restlessness, to set out on the journey, and to bow down. Brothers and sisters, let us not let the restlessness of questions die out in us; let us not stop our journey by succumbing to apathy or complacency; and when meeting the Lord, let us surrender to the wonder of adoration. Then we discover that the light illuminates even the darkest nights: Jesus, the bright morning star, the sun of justice, the merciful brightness of God who loves every person and every nation on earth.
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Voluntarism, sentimentalism.
Voluntarism. The human will is a tremendous force. It can do a lot. Without it, we would not save ourselves. “He who created you without you…,” writes St. Augustine, “will not save you without you.”But even this power must not be overestimated as if it alone is sufficient for everything (so-called Pelagianism) or if Christian perfection should be judged only by performance, especially external performance. At the end of the last century, some said that the time had come to replace passive virtues with active ones. We should worry less about humility, contemplation, adoration, and denial but instead put all our strength into doing something properly for the Church, social justice, and the law. These counsels were often well-intentioned, and there was a piece of truth. However, their one-sidedness quickly leads to consequences contrary to Christ’s life and the teaching of the Gospel. Related to voluntarism is so-called moralism. He who loves God keeps the commandments (Jn 14:21). People with a valid will are better able to keep the laws of morality and the rules of the Church and are faithful in their duties. Can it be said that they are genuinely holier, better than others? We are sure that keeping God’s laws sanctifies a man. The life struggle of Christ against the Pharisees shows how easily
it is to go astray here, too, and how outward integrity can become a mask that covers the fundamental deficiencies of many actual values.
Sentimentalism. The presence of the Holy Spirit purifies all our faculties, hence our affections. The ear of the trained musician becomes sensitive to the harmony of tones and the flow of melody. Religious life awakens sense and feeling for what is, as St. Paul says above (Col 3:1), for the world of God, for holiness. There is an inner joy, a consolation, a peace that the world cannot give. In the words of the Apostle, such is the fruit of the Spirit (Gal 5:22).
Spiritual writers have always wondered whether such inner states are inevitable, whether they are infallible signs of grace and the presence of the Spirit. What if someone completely lacks and feels comfortless, full of contradictions, temptations, and disgust? The “consciousness of grace” question is being addressed again in theology today, even though it is aware of the difficulties. Certainly, the long-convicted need to avoid errors, e.g., Messalianism (4th century), which claimed that we have grace only when we feel it. Temptation and restlessness are said to be symptoms of sin. Even in the early modern period, there are some profound statements from the Church. Feeling and believing in our justification to be saved is not enough. Again, it was emphasized (against Baius) that “the evil lust, though it has its origin in sin, leads to it, but is not itself a sin.” Spiritual writers to this day say of consolations and consolations that often alternate.
Thus, one cannot infallibly measure life by good and bad feelings in God’s grace. Nevertheless, the presence of the Holy Spirit usually gives a person peace and tranquility, an inner contentment. They have, therefore, also right those who testify that they have found happiness and joy, such as the world cannot give in the spiritual life. This, however, every Christian gratefully receives. But he will never substitute for it the search for sentimental “sweet.” devotions, artificially induced enthusiasm, or exaltation.
Exaggerated spiritualism. We believe that Jesus Christ is the true God. But He is a God who became incarnate, was born, lived as a man died, and sanctified human activity and values. Spiritual life is in the Holy Spirit. He, however, “spiritualizes” the whole human person. He is thus given a true sense of what exaggerated spiritualism despises: daily life, its concerns, interests, feelings, and relationships. In contrast, however, compared to God, the world is nothing, not even worthy of attention. The world in God and with God, however, is the beginning of the heavenly Jerusalem, towards which the development of history is directed. Exaggerated spiritualism manifests itself in many ways. Some overestimate miracles, expect extraordinary interventions of God’s power and do not make sufficient use of the means at hand to accomplish good. It is good to think of eternal bliss, but it must be remembered that it is the reward of love. Nothing is more holy to a Christian than prayer, but to it also belongs work, as symbolically the two sisters in the Gospel, Mary and Martha (Luke 10,
38 ). Save the soul, for the rest does not matter! Nevertheless, we cannot throw up our hands in condescension over the misery and needs of our neighbor, over social injustice, over oppression. So-called Quietism (from the Latin word quies – peace) longs for God’s grace to permeate man’s heart. It forgets, however, that God is action, so God’s life promotes activity. Spiritual experiences are not for that, to be drunk with them, as it were, and to fall into passivity, inactivity.
One-sided Christian sociologist. Love for God, however, is realized through the love of neighbor. The latter, then, is to meet the needs of modern life and be organized. Christians as a whole cannot be alienated from public life, neither from politics nor from culture. And yet, even in the heat of enthusiasm for a good cause, they must remember Christ’s words: My kingdom is not of this world (Jn 18,36). The Gospel is not just a social program.
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We have found the Messiah.
Andrew joyfully announces to his brother. In the Gospel, we hear how Andrew and John were interested in Jesus and how they came to know him. We who gather around the altar also want to know Jesus, for through him, we know the mysteries of life. Without Christ, we do not understand what life and death are. We are still determining who we are and what our destiny is. Someone has said that knowledge of God gives birth to pride, and knowledge of man gives birth to despair. The prideful are those who claim to know the ways of God and supposedly know what to expect from God. And those who know man’s misery and what he can do fall into despair. Jesus Christ came into the world to reveal God’s love and show us man’s greatness. For man’s salvation, God consented to the death of His Son. Happy are the first disciples who came to know Christ, but we see that the knowledge of Christ is not the goal but the starting point for them. They bring to Christ, other disciples, and then whole nations. Thus, our task is also to bring religiously indifferent people to Christ and open their eyes to heaven. It is a sad fact that the Messiah has already been born and is in our midst, and many have not yet come to know Him.
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