Catholic is Not Christian? Part II

There was a very good comment on the previous post that I felt deserved its own treatment rather than the necessarily abbreviated comment/reply format. It doesn’t specifically address the point of the article, but rather points to a common objection to all such stories of faith interrupted and revived.

For those who didn’t read it, here it is:

…mulling over your post from today. To me it seems, as people age, regardless of the path the middle of their lives took, many do reflect on lessons learned and experiences from their early life, thus why so many, as you stated return to the faith of their youth, that they may have wandered from or questioned as young adults. I can understand that orbicular path some follow, but doesn’t that also hold true for those who were taught less positive lessons in youth? For some wouldn’t it be just as natural to revert to negatives as it is to someone else’s positives? Learned lessons in life are learned lessons in life. Fortunate are the ones who received early nurturing and positive lessons that left them feeling safe and secure Someone who didn’t, even after many decades of trying to convince themselves otherwise, may find in the end, they weren’t successful after all.

There is a good deal of truth in this comment but there is one thing I, and others like me, had going for us. The most powerful influence was not our parents, or our education, or our experiences, but the supernatural grace of Baptism. In the sacrament of Baptism, God confers on us His adoption, making us sons and daughters, and therefore heirs with Christ. This powerful grace works in our life at all times, regardless of the path we take, always calling us and leading us back to our Father’s house.

It is true that some who are baptized leave the Father never to return. It is an awful tragedy, but one that God must risk because He has given us a free will. To force us into a relationship would break the bond of love which means that God would have to renounce Himself. That is an impossibility. Therefore, it is ultimately up to us to stay in loving relationship with Him, or to reject our patrimony altogether.

The commenter asks, “For some wouldn’t it be just as natural to revert to negatives as it is to someone else’s positives? Learned lessons in life are learned lessons in life.”

Yes, I suppose that’s true as far as it goes. But I believe that there isn’t a single, solitary soul on this planet, now, or in the past, or that will ever live, who does so outside the providence of their Creator. The God who sees a little sparrow fall, will not avert his gaze, or fail to notice the sufferings and strivings of the least of his creatures, let alone a single human soul, baptized or not.

To the commenter I say, God is bigger than our failures, our hurts, our suffering, and our pusillanimous view of ourselves. There is nothing and no one He cannot and will not redeem.

 

Catholic is Not Christian?

I was cleaning my cat’s litter box this morning and it occurred to me that I hadn’t cleaned the blog’s spam trap recently. Just like my cat’s litter box, without regular cleaning, it gets pretty nasty and smelly in there. So equipped with surgical mask and asbestos gloves, I opened the lid and starting scooping. There were the usual incendiary comments begging for a click:

To the site admins reanidg [sic] this comment, Yeah figures, my comment must be approved by the site admins before it will appear publicly, sounds like the work of a good communist, controlling the media so any bad comments do not get past the censors to make an opinion heard.

Like any good communist censor, I ash-canned those. The rest of what I found was the usual spambot generated stuff—sometimes the spambots offer a more cogent remark than anything in the actual post, but never mind—today I found this little item from “Maria”:

Catholic is not Christian. Catholicism leads to eternal tornmet [sic] in hell, because catholicism teaches works for salvation, and that is a false gospel of works (Galatians 1:6-9) that is against JESUS’S free gift of salvation! And catholicism will not give anyone a PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP with Jesus!

And it goes on. Now regardless of whether “Maria” is a spambot or not, I still thought this was worth addressing, because this is something I hear all the time. In fact, I used to say the same thing myself…

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Benedict XVI

benedictxviLike many around the world, I was shocked this morning to hear the news of Benedict’s abdication, but as I thought about it, I was only confirmed in my view of him as a holy, honorable, compassionate shepherd.

After having repeatedly examined my conscience before God, I have come to the certainty that my strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry.

I am well aware that this ministry, due to its essential spiritual nature, must be carried out not only with words and deeds, but no less with prayer and suffering.

However, in today’s world, subject to so many rapid changes and shaken by questions of deep relevance for the life of faith, in order to govern the bark of Saint Peter and proclaim the Gospel, both strength of mind and body are necessary, strength which in the last few months, has deteriorated in me to the extent that I have had to recognise my incapacity to adequately fulfill the ministry entrusted to me.

There will be the inevitable comparisons to his predecessor John Paul II who remained in the Chair of Peter until his last breath. There is no point in comparing the two men, for they are but men. John Paul II wished to unite his own personal suffering to that of Christ’s in a very public, and for his flock, edifying way. Benedict, no doubt aware of the great challenges to the Christian Church in our post-modern age, sees the need for stronger shoulders to carry the weight.

On his coat of arms is a bear with a pack on his back. This refers to the legend of St. Corbinian, the first bishop of Freising, who on his way to Rome was attacked by a bear which killed his horse. St. Corbinian scolded the bear, tamed, it and put his belongings on the bear’s back to carry in the horse’s stead. Benedict sees himself as a bear tamed by God and pressed into His service. The bear is old and tired, unable to carry the very heavy burden, and wise enough to lay it down gently rather than drop and break it.

God bless you Holy Father! Thank your for your long and faithful service to the Church. May your retirement in seclusion and prayer bring you to a peaceful end, and a joyous meeting with your Merciful Lord!

Flowers and Other Living Things

I never used to like gardening. The extent of my forays into the yard consisted of mowing the lawn and raking leaves. A friend of mine who is an avid gardener and the possessor of a large, wooded plot of land in constant need of tending, got me to reevaluate my whole attitude toward plants. Now I love fussing around in the garden. Planting flowers, pruning bushes, hedges, and trees provides a great sense of satisfaction. Plus it gives me a good excuse to smoke a cigar.

Nothing is quite so lovely as sitting in the shade, listening to the trickle of water in the pond, the merry music of the birds, the sighing of the leaves as the breeze wanders through the trees—hey, that rhymes!—and contemplating how much God must love His creation. They say gardening is good for the soul, and I agree.

You know what though? The most important thing I’ve learned from gardening is that living things always respond best to gentleness and patience. Just look at this little calendula. When I got hold of it, it was in a tiny pot, overwatered, and dying. I stuck it in my favorite nursery pot, let it dry its feet, fed it, and waited to see what would happen. Just a couple weeks ago, I checked on it and here’s what I saw…

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So, What?

In a recent article for Salon Magazine, Mary Elizabeth Williams writes,

Of all the diabolically clever moves the anti-choice lobby has ever pulled, surely one of the greatest has been its consistent co-opting of the word “life.” Life! Who wants to argue with that? Who wants be on the side of … not-life? That’s why the language of those who support abortion has for so long been carefully couched in other terms. While opponents of abortion eagerly describe themselves as “pro-life,” the rest of us have had to scramble around with not nearly as big-ticket words like “choice” and “reproductive freedom.” The “life” conversation is often too thorny to even broach. Yet I know that throughout my own pregnancies, I never wavered for a moment in the belief that I was carrying a human life inside of me. I believe that’s what a fetus is: a human life. And that doesn’t make me one iota less solidly pro-choice.

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We Have Met the Enemy…

…and it’s NOT us!

Mother and Child by Pino Daeni
Mother and Child
by Pino Daeni

In a recent interview, Sir David Attenborough told the Radio Times,

We are a plague on the Earth. It’s coming home to roost over the next 50 years or so. It’s not just climate change; it’s sheer space, places to grow food for this enormous horde. Either we limit our population growth or the natural world will do it for us, and the natural world is doing it for us right now.

Whoa! Hold on there Sir David! A plague? Really?

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Leave No One Behind! Kill the Wounded!

Allow me a very self-indulgent post today. Yes, I know, they’re all self-indulgent. That’s why you write a blog in the first place, Silly!

When I was young…Oh, a few of you are still here…anyway, when I was young, I had a football coach who took the following view of injuries:

If it’s more than a foot away from your heart, you’re okay. Get back in there!

He was a big, gruff, ex-professional football player whose career spanned the years when face-masks were still a novelty, and long before the current obsessive concern with player safety (there’s a post for another day). Of course, he was exaggerating a bit, nevertheless, he was unsympathetic to players who faced injuries less than heroically.

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Andrew Maxwell, Hero

andymaxwellBear with me for a minute as I do a little inside-sports riff here. Stick with it though, because this post is not about football.

My beloved Spartans finished a disappointing season last week with a come from behind win over the TCU Hornfrogs in the, ahem, Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. After the game, in which starting quarterback and team co-captain, Andrew Maxwell was benched, I got a less than complimentary text about him from a perennial MSU-basher who shall remain nameless.

I didn’t respond to it at the time because the truth was that Andy didn’t have a good game. In fact, he had precious few good moments all season. He’s a junior so he’ll be back next season, but by no means is he guaranteed to be the starting quarterback again. After the game, he was asked how he felt about the benching:

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