Volume 3, Chapter
LXII
14
February 1982
My dear brethren,
According
to an ancient and salutary tradition in the Church, on the occasion
of the beginning of Lent, I address these words to you in order
to encourage you to enter into this penitential season wholeheartedly,
with the dispositions willed by the Church and to accomplish the
purpose for which the Church prescribes it.
If I look
in books from the early part of this century, I find that they
indicate three purposes for which the Church has prescribed this
penitential time:
-
first,
in order to curb the concupiscence of the flesh;
-
then,
to facilitate the elevation of our souls toward divine realities;
-
finally,
to make satisfaction for our sins.
Our Lord
gave us the example during His life, here on earth: pray and do
penance. However, Our Lord, being free from concupiscence and
sin, did penance and made satisfaction for our sins, thus showing
us that our penance may be beneficial not only for ourselves but
also for others.
Pray and
do penance. Do penance in order to pray better, in order to draw
closer to Almighty God. This is what all the saints have done,
and this is that of which all the messages of the Blessed Virgin
remind us.
Would we
dare to say that this necessity is less important in our day and
age than in former times? On the contrary, we can and we must
affirm that today, more than ever before, prayer and penance are
necessary because everything possible has been done to diminish
and denigrate these two fundamental elements of Christian life.
Never before
has the world sought to satisfy - without any limit, the disordered
instincts of the flesh, even to the point of the murder of millions
of innocent, unborn children. One would come to believe that society
has no other reason for existence except to give the greatest
material standard of living to all men in order that they should
not be deprived of material goods.
Thus we can
see that such a society would be opposed to what the Church prescribes.
In these times, when even Churchmen align themselves with the
spirit of this world, we witness the disappearance of prayer and
penance-particularly in their character of reparation for sins
and obtaining pardon for faults. Few there are today who love
to recite Psalm 50, the Miserere, and who say with the
psalmist, Peccatum meum contra me est semper-"My sin
is always before me." How can a Christian remove the thought
of sin if the image of the crucifix is always before his eyes?
At the Council
the bishops requested such a diminution of fast and abstinence
that the prescriptions have practically disappeared. We must recognize
the fact that this disappearance is a consequence of the ecumenical
and Protestant spirit which denies the necessity of our participation
for the application of the merits of Our Lord to each one of us
for the remission of our sins and the restoration of our divine
affiliation [i.e., our character as adoptive sons of God].
In the past
the commandments of the Church provided for:
-
an obligatory fast on all days of Lent with the exception of
Sundays, for the three ember days and for many vigils;
-
abstinence was for all Fridays of the year, the Saturdays of
Lent and, in numerous dioceses, all the Saturdays of the year.
What remains
of these prescriptions-the fast for Ash Wednesday and Good Friday
and abstinence for Ash Wednesday and the Fridays of Lent.
One
wonders at the motives for such a drastic diminution. Who are
obliged to observe the fast? -adults from age 21 to 60. And who
are obliged to observe abstinence? -all the faithful from the
age of 7 years.
What
does fasting mean? To fast means to take only one (full) meal
a day to which one may add two collations (or small meals), one
in the morning, one in the evening which, when combined, do not
equal a full meal.
What is meant
by abstinence? By abstinence is meant that one abstains from meat.
The faithful
who have a true spirit of faith and who profoundly understand
the motives of the church which have been mentioned above, will
wholeheartedly accomplish not only the light prescriptions of
today but, entering into the spirit of Our Lord and of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, will endeavor to make reparation for the sins which
they have committed and for the sins of their family, their neighbors,
friends and fellow citizens.
It is for
this reason that they will add to the actual prescriptions. These
additional penances might be to fast for all Fridays of Lent,
abstinence from all alcoholic beverages, abstinence from television,
or other similar sacrifices. They will make an effort to pray
more, to assist more frequently at the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass,
to recite the Rosary, and not to miss evening prayers with the
family. They will detach themselves from their superfluous material
goods in order to aid the seminaries, help establish schools,
help their priests adequately furnish the chapels and to help
establish novitiates for nuns and brothers.
The prescriptions
of the Church do not concern fast and abstinence alone but the
obligation of the Paschal Communion (Easter Duty) as well. Here
is what the Vicar of the Diocese of Sion, in Switzerland, recommended
to the faithful of that diocese on 20 February 1919:
-
During Lent, the pastors will have the Stations of the Cross
twice a week; one day for the children of the schools and another
day for the other parishioners. After the Stations of the Cross,
they will recite the Litany of the Sacred Heat
-
During Passion Week, which is to say, the week before Palm Sunday,
there will be a Triduum in all parish churches, Instruction,
Litany of the Sacred Heart in the Presence of the Blessed Sacrament,
Benediction. In these instructions the pastors will simply and
clearly remind their parishioners of the principal conditions
to receive the Sacrament of Penance worthily.
-
The time during which one may fulfill the Easter Duty has been
set for all parishes from Passion Sunday to the first Sunday
after Easter.
Why should
these directives no longer be useful today? Let us profit from
this salutary time during the course of which Our Lord is accustomed
to dispense grace abundantly. Let us not imitate the foolish virgins
who having no oil in their lamps found the door of the bridegroom's
house closed and this terrible response: Nescio vos-"I
know you not." Blessed are they who have the spirit of
poverty for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. The spirit of poverty
means the spirit of detachment from things of this world.
Blessed are
they who weep for they shall be consoled. Let us think of Jesus
in the Garden of Olives who wept for our sins. It is henceforth
for us to weep for our sins and for those of our brethren.
Blessed are
they who hunger and thirst for holiness for they shall be satisfied.
Holiness-sanctity is attained by means of the Cross, penance and
sacrifice. If we truly seek perfection then we must follow the
Way of the Cross.
May we, during
this Lenten Season, hear the call of Jesus and Mary and engage
ourselves to follow them in this crusade of prayer and penance.
May our prayers,
our supplications, and our sacrifices obtain from heaven the grace
that those in places of responsibility in the Church return to
her true and holy traditions, which is the only solution to revive
and reflourish the institutions of the Church again.
Let us love
to recite the conclusion of the Te Deum: In te Doming, speravi;
non confundar in aeternum-"In Thee, O Lord, I have hoped.
I will not be confounded in eternity."
+
Marcel Lefebvre
Sexagesima
Sunday-14 February 1982
Rickenbach,
Switzerland
Courtesy of the Angelus
Press, Regina Coeli House
2918 Tracy Avenue, Kansas City, MO 64109
|