Rev.
Fr. Leonard Goffine's
The Church's Year
INSTRUCTION
ON THE FIFTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST
The Introit
of the Mass is a fervent prayer; which may be said in every necessity
and adversity:
INTROIT
Bow
down thine ear, O Lord; to me, and hear me: save thy servant, O
my God, that hopeth in thee: have mercy on me, O Lord, for I have
cried to thee all the day. Give joy to the soul of thy servant:
for to thee, O Lord, I have lifted up my soul. (Ps. IXXXV.) Glory
etc.
COLLECT
Let Thy continued pity, O Lord, cleanse and defend Thy Church: and
because without Thee it cannot abide in safety, govern it ever by
Thy gift. Thro'.
EPISTLE
(Gal. V. 25, 26.; vi. I-Io.) Brethren,
If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit. Let u5
not be made desirous of vain-glory, provoking one another, envying
one another. Brethren, and if a man be overtaken in any fault, you,
who are spiritual, instruct such a one in the spirit of meekness,
considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted. Bear ye one another's
burdens, and so you shall fulfil the law of Christ. For if any man
think himself to be something, whereas he is nothing, he deceiveth
himself. But let every one prove his own work, and so he shall have
glory in himself only, and not in another. For every one shall bear
his own burden. And let him that is instructed in the word, communicate
to him that instructeth him, in all good things. Be not deceived;
God is not mocked: for what things a man shall sow, those also shall
he reap. For he that soweth in his flesh, of the flesh also shall
reap corruption: but he that soweth in the spirit, of the spirit
shall reap life everlasting. And in doing good, let us not fail:
for in due time we shall reap, not failing. Therefore, whilst we
have time, let us work good to all men, but especially to those
who are of the household of the faith.
EXPLANATION
This epistle is taken, like that of the Sunday before last, from
the epistle of St. Paul to the Galatians, in which St. Paul shows
them the insufficiency of the Jewish law, and that they can only
be saved by a lively faith in Christ, but now he admonishes them
to the performance of good works. You now live, he tells them, in
the Spirit, that is, the Holy Ghost animates your heart by His grace,
enlightens, confirms, and inflames you, admonishes and teaches you,
impels your heart to do good; you must, therefore, also regulate
your external conduct accordingly, and in particular devote yourself
to the practice of humility and charity, as the foundations of a
truly spiritual life. Humility must teach and move you to think
little of yourself, to avoid vain glory, and not to confide in your
own strength. But charity should impel you to be meek and compassionate
to all, even sinners, to correct them charitably, and lead them
back to the path of virtue; since he who is harsh to the erring,
despises and treats them roughly, is often permitted by God to fall
into the same, nay, even into greater sins.
Particularly
you must show your charity one for another, that one bears the burdens
of the other: that you bear the faults and imperfections of others
just as patiently as you wish others to bear with your own imperfections;
thus you will fulfil the law of Christ, which commands us to love
our neighbor; you will prevent many sins which are occasioned by
considering yourself perfect, raising yourself above others, criticising
their failings, and causing disturbance. True glory consists in
knowing ourselves, our faults and evil inclinations, and in eradicating
them. Be grateful to those who instruct you in the word of God,
and give to them willingly of your earthly possessions. What you
sow, you shall reap; if you only follow the dictates of the flesh,
do not mortify yourself, do not correct your failings, and indulge
your sinful appetites, you will one day reap death, destruction
and damnation, whereas, on the contrary, if you follow the dictates
of the Holy Ghost, you will reap of the Spirit of life.
Let us obey
this doctrine, for it is of interest to us, and impress deeply on
our heart that without mortification of body and soul we cannot
be saved.
ASPIRATION.
O. St. Paul! beg of God the grace for me, that I may always walk
in humility, and the love of my neighbor, particularly in bearing
with his imperfections and failings, and thus fulfil the law of
Christ in this as in all things.
GOSPEL
(Luke VII. 11-16.) At
that time,
Jesus went into a city called Naim: and there went with him his
disciples, and a great multitude. And when he came nigh to the gate
of the city, behold a dead man was carried out, the only, son of
his mother, and she was a widow, and a great, multitude of the city
was with her. Whom when the Lord had seen, being moved with mercy
towards her, said to her: Weep not. And he came near, and touched
the bier. And they that carried it stood still. And he said: Young
man, I say to thee, Arise. And he that was dead sat up,. and began
to speak. And he delivered him to his mother. And there came a fear
on them all; and they glorified God, saying: A great prophet is
risen up amongst us, and God hath visited his people.
Why
did Christ show compassion to this widow?
To convince
us that God takes sorrowful and destitute widows under His protection;
and is to them a consoler and helper; and to teach us to do the
same. Woe, therefore, to those who oppress them and cause them to
weep. The tears and cries of widows will ascend to God, who will
terribly punish the injuries inflicted upon them. (Exod xxii. 22.
23.)
Christ had
still other reasons for compassion, for He saw in this deceased
youth the death of sinners, and in the afflicted mother the pain
which the Church experiences at the spiritual loss of so many of
her children. Should this not also awaken our sympathy since it
wad the principal cause which moved our Saviour to compassion. IŁ
we are faithful children of our mother, the Church, it is impossible
for us not to share her sorrow, and we would surely not be her children,
if we could contemplate without sorrow the multitude who daily die
the death of sin, and thus separated from the living body of Christ,
hasten to eternal destruction. O let us with the Church unceasingly,
ask Jesus, that He raise sinners from their spiritual death, enlighten
those in error so that all recognize the truth, find, and walk the
path Which leads to life !
Why
did Christ say to the widow: Weep not?
He wished to
moderate her excessive sorrow, and to teach us that we should not
mourn for the loss of our relatives, like the heathens who have
no hope of resurrection to eternal life. (Thess. iv. I a.) Resignation
to the will ofGod, with prayer and good works, will be of more use
to the dead than many tears.
What
else do we learn from this gospel?
That no one,
however young and healthy, will escape death, wherefore we should
always be prepared to die.
INSTRUCTION
CONCERNING DEATH
IF there were
locked up in prison several hundred persons,
on whom sentence of death had irrevocably been pronounced, yet who
knew not the day or hour of their execution; if one after the other,
and often he who least expected it, were taken out to be executed;
would not each one's heart tremble, whenever the prison door opened?
Now the irrevocable sentence of death is pronounced on us all; we
are all locked up in our bodies, as in a prison; (Ps. cxiv. 8.)
one after the other is called hence, yet we do not regard it. We
live as though we could live forever; we think only of the body,
but for the soul nothing is done, except that we load it with sins
and vices.
Is this rational?
The body will be food for worms, but the soul (without knowing when)
will travel into the house of eternity, to which place she must
bring treasures of good works, in order to live happy for ever.
Who would, therefore, be so foolish as to care only for the body
during life, and neglect the salvation of the soul?
O man, says
St. Francis of Sales, (Phil. part. i. chap. 13.) represent to yourself
in lively colors, that at your death the world will cease to exist
with respect to you. In that last hour the pleasures, the vanities,
the riches, the honors, the friendships, and all that was dear to
you, will disappear before your eyes as so many shadows. O fool
that I am! you will then say, for what trifles and fooleries have
I lost all! On the contrary, piety, good works, penance, etc., will
appear pleasant to you, and you will exclaim: O, why did I not travel
on this blessed roadl Then the sins which you now consider as mere
trifles, will seem to you like mountains, and all that you thought
you had accomplished as, great things, with regard to piety, will
seem to you very little.
What terrible
fear will then seize your soul, when she must travel alone into
the bottomless abyss of eternity which, as St. Bernard says, devours
all possible, imaginable ages, and of which St. Gregory says, that
we can easier say what it is not than what it is. What terrors will
befall her, when she must appear before the tribunal of that God
whom she never really loved and honored in her life-time and before
whom she must now give the strictest account, and hear an irrevocable
and just sentence!
Should not
these thoughts make an impression upon you? How can you escape this
terrible future? By living now, as you would wish to have lived
at the hour of death. Die daily with St. Paul by crucifying the
flesh and its lusts and by voluntarily withdrawing your heart from
the world, its pomps and vanities, before death will do this by
violence.
RESOLUTION
O world! because I cannot know the hour, in which I must leave you,
I will not be attached to you. O you dear friends and relatives,
you, too, I will in future love only with a holy inclination, directed
to God, which will not cease with death, but remain
forever. O Lord! help me, that I may die totally to myself and the
world, and live only for Thee, and partake of eternal happiness.
INSTRUCTION
ON THE CEREMONIES USED AT FUNERALS
Behold,
a dead man was carried out, the only son of his mother, and a great
multitude of the city was with her. (Luke vii. 12.)
OF these people
who accompanied the funeral of the youth, we should learn to pay
the last honors to the dead, and follow their bodies to the grave.
This is a meritorious work, one pleasing to God, if it be not performed
from vanity and self-interest, but for love of God and the deceased,
with the charitable intention of assisting him by prayers. Therefore
those do very wrong, who from worldly motives either omit this good
work entirely, or during the funeral procession indulge in idle
talk and deny the deceased even a short prayer.
Why
is a cross carried before the corpse?
By this is
indicated that the deceased during life professed Christ, died believing
in Him, and hoping for resurrection through Him.
Why
are lighted candles carried before the bier?
To represent
the desire of the Church that the deceased through the grace of
God may be received into eternal light.This custom is very ancient;
wax-candles and torches, together with prayer and great solemnity
were made use of at the burial of St. Cyprian who was beheaded for
Christ's sake, in the year 258 after Christ. (Ruinart.)
Why
are the coffin and the grave sprinkled with holy water?
In order, as
St. Thomas of Aquin (Lib. iii. art. 21.) remarks, to implore God,
on account of the prayers which the Church says when she blesses
the water, that the souls of the faithful may be cleansed from all
stains, and may receive consolation and refreshment in the tortures
which they may still have to suffer.
Why
are the body and the grave incensed?
By this the
Church indicates that the deceased by his Christian vocation was
a good odor of Christ, (ii Cor. ii. 14, 15.) and admonishes the
faithful that their prayers should ascend like incense to heaven
for the deceased.
Why
are Psalms and other sacred canticles sung?
This is done
to remind us of the teaching of St. Paul, (i Thess iv. 12.)
not to be excessively sorrowful for the loss of the deceased, like
the heathens who have no hope of eternal life. We also signify,
thereby, that we congratulate the dead for the peace which they
now enjoy. (Apoc. xiv. 13.) This custom, as St. Jerome shows,
(Ep. 53.) is derived from the apostles, who interred St.
Stephen, singing Psalms and hymns of praise.
Why
are the bells rung?
To invite the
faithful to the funeral and to pray for the dead who, during lifetime,
was called very often by the same bells, prayed with and for us
during religious worship, and who is not separated from us by death.
Why
art the bodies of the faithful buried with the head towards the
East, and those of the priests towards the West?
The faithful
are buried towards the East, whence the sun rises, to indicate,
that they are waiting for Christ who is called the Orient from on
High, (Luke i. 78.) and whose voice they will hear at the
end of the world, when He calls them to the resurrection; the priests
towards the West, as a sign that on the day of judgment they will
be placed opposite to the souls confided to them, to give an account
of their charge and to bear judgment for or against them.
Why
is a cross or monument erected aver the grave?
To show that
the deceased was a follower of Christ, the Crucified, to admonish
the passers-by to pray for him,
and to remind us of the solemn moment of death.
Why
is the body laid in consecrated ground?
This is done
through reverence for the bodies of the dead which are, by baptism,
temples of the Holy Ghost; to show that, even in death, they still
belong to the communion of that holy Church, in which they were
embodied during life by baptism, and to which they clung in faith
even until death; to inspire the surviving with a holy fear lest
they profane graves.
Why
is the solemn funeral service of the Church denied to heretics?
Because they
would not belong to the Church during life, and despised the holy
customs and prayers of the Church for the dead. How should the blessing
and prayer of the Church be useful in death to one who despised
them during life.
Why
does not the Church permit criminals and suicides to be buried on
consecrated ground?
In order to
express her horror for the crimes perpetrated by them, and to deter
the faithful from committing similar actions.
|