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Is the Church Just Our "Dotty Maiden Aunt"
Topic: Sermons on Conscience
Scripture:
Mark 8:11-8:13
Sermon Series: Verbum Domini
Denomination: Catholic
Date Added: February 2012
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Monday of 6th Week in Course
Verbum Domini
Is the Church Just Our Dotty Maiden Aunt?
“Before I was afflicted I went astray; but now I keep thy word.” There’s a memorable scene in A Christmas Story, in which Ralphie, who longs for a BB gun for Christmas, opens a parcel from his dotty maiden aunt. The aunt makes clothing for Christmas presents, and is under the delusion that Ralphie is a girl, and remains about three years old. When the lad comes downstairs in the garb, we see that it is a pink rabbit sleeper with floppy ears. The dad says he looks like a demented Easter bunny. The critical line is from mom–“you’ll only wear it when she visits.”
I have said on many occasions that there is no such thing as peaceful coexistence with the Culture of Death, whether the secular media, Planned Parenthood, the “Right-to-Die” movement or certain U.S. administrations. They have one goal–the same one famously set in blood by Voltaire and the French Revolutionaries. The cry is ecrazes l’infame: “crush the infamous thing.” He meant, and they mean, us, the Catholic Church. Voltaire was not the originator of the idea. Pharisees of every generation approach Jesus with some conundrum, trying to test Him, either in person or in the persons of the bishops of the Church. We sigh deeply in our spirits, now as He did then, because all we want to do is bring the world the good news of Christ’s love and Christ’s way. But they cannot abide that mission of Christ and the Church. It erodes their power and stands in the way of their perverse lifestyles. If they can’t destroy us, then they want to rob us of our moral authority, or force us to do what we know is contrary to God’s will.
Catholics recently stood in uncommon unity against the administration’s mandate that we must pay for and provide contraceptive, abortifacient and sterilization coverage to employees of Catholic schools and ministries. Faced with this revolt by a voting bloc, energized by the pastors God has given us, the administration appears to have caved. I trust that our pastors will not be so naive. I taught risk management at UTSA for half a decade. There’s no such thing as making an insurance company pay for anything. Even if the President’s decision survives judicial scrutiny, and I don’t think it will, the fact remains that it is policyowners who pay for everything in their premiums. As one commentator said, just because we are not dropping incense into the fire before Caesar’s shrine, we are still guilty if somebody else drops it in without our objection.
The Holy Father tells us about our response to the word of God: “‘The obedience of faith’ (Rom 16:26; cf. Rom 1:5; 2 Cor 10:5-6) must be our response to God who reveals. By faith one freely commits oneself entirely to God, making ‘the full submission of intellect and will to God who reveals’ and willingly assenting to the revelation given by God”[76] In these words the Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum gave precise expression to the stance which we must have with regard to God. The proper human response to the God who speaks is faith. It is the preaching of the divine word, in fact, which gives rise to faith, whereby we give our heartfelt assent
Verbum Domini
Is the Church Just Our Dotty Maiden Aunt?
“Before I was afflicted I went astray; but now I keep thy word.” There’s a memorable scene in A Christmas Story, in which Ralphie, who longs for a BB gun for Christmas, opens a parcel from his dotty maiden aunt. The aunt makes clothing for Christmas presents, and is under the delusion that Ralphie is a girl, and remains about three years old. When the lad comes downstairs in the garb, we see that it is a pink rabbit sleeper with floppy ears. The dad says he looks like a demented Easter bunny. The critical line is from mom–“you’ll only wear it when she visits.”
I have said on many occasions that there is no such thing as peaceful coexistence with the Culture of Death, whether the secular media, Planned Parenthood, the “Right-to-Die” movement or certain U.S. administrations. They have one goal–the same one famously set in blood by Voltaire and the French Revolutionaries. The cry is ecrazes l’infame: “crush the infamous thing.” He meant, and they mean, us, the Catholic Church. Voltaire was not the originator of the idea. Pharisees of every generation approach Jesus with some conundrum, trying to test Him, either in person or in the persons of the bishops of the Church. We sigh deeply in our spirits, now as He did then, because all we want to do is bring the world the good news of Christ’s love and Christ’s way. But they cannot abide that mission of Christ and the Church. It erodes their power and stands in the way of their perverse lifestyles. If they can’t destroy us, then they want to rob us of our moral authority, or force us to do what we know is contrary to God’s will.
Catholics recently stood in uncommon unity against the administration’s mandate that we must pay for and provide contraceptive, abortifacient and sterilization coverage to employees of Catholic schools and ministries. Faced with this revolt by a voting bloc, energized by the pastors God has given us, the administration appears to have caved. I trust that our pastors will not be so naive. I taught risk management at UTSA for half a decade. There’s no such thing as making an insurance company pay for anything. Even if the President’s decision survives judicial scrutiny, and I don’t think it will, the fact remains that it is policyowners who pay for everything in their premiums. As one commentator said, just because we are not dropping incense into the fire before Caesar’s shrine, we are still guilty if somebody else drops it in without our objection.
The Holy Father tells us about our response to the word of God: “‘The obedience of faith’ (Rom 16:26; cf. Rom 1:5; 2 Cor 10:5-6) must be our response to God who reveals. By faith one freely commits oneself entirely to God, making ‘the full submission of intellect and will to God who reveals’ and willingly assenting to the revelation given by God”[76] In these words the Dogmatic Constitution Dei Verbum gave precise expression to the stance which we must have with regard to God. The proper human response to the God who speaks is faith. It is the preaching of the divine word, in fact, which gives rise to faith, whereby we give our heartfelt assent
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