Showing posts with label Turmoil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turmoil. Show all posts

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Reap What You Have Sown




Those of us who grew up in the Irish Catholic City of Boston have a treasure chest that is filled with precious gifts.

The city and the communities within them were built on the foundation of faith.

Within walking distance from our Churches was a bakery, a fish market and a religious store. There was a store called Kennedy's that sold freshly churned butter, natural dairy products and many of the products that were staples in the homes of Irish immigrants.

We were all part of a larger family.

Summer evenings, we sat out on the porches of our triple deckers with our families to talk about our day. We would chatter amongst ourselves and our neighbors. As darkness settled in and the stars became visible, we tried to figure out the constellations. We sat in awe under the canopy.

There were many characters in the city. Some amused us. Others brought their wisdom and faith to the table and set us all on fire.

We heard about our day of reckoning, Christ, the antichrist and the battle that wages for souls at a very young age. Every Sunday, priests taught us how to recognize our own sins so we could keep watch on our souls. The members of the community were living in, or striving to live in, a state of grace. The pews were packed. There were long lines in the confessional. The priest was not our friend, he was a physician.

Sanctifying grace built a community that loved, laughed and served. We served God above all things. The primary focus of our own lives was our individual relationship with God. Then, we served each other.

Grace is an energy. It lives. It's a life force that we are each free to approach and embrace or reject.

The more people in a community draw from sanctifying Grace, the more the community is blessed with the fruit of the sevenfold gifts of the Holy Spirit, individually and collectively. Wisdom, understanding,right judgment, courage, knowledge, reverence and fear of God.

There are those who teach the freedom to choose is a private and individual matter. This is technically true - the theology of free will. But my sin affects you and your sin affects me.
When enough people in a community or country withdraw from sanctifying Grace and lose the sevenfold gifts, everyone in the community is deprived of that positive life force and energy.

The Chancery has changed the royal priesthood into fundraisers and money managers. To fund-raise, they shut off the valves to the teachings that make us all aware of our own sin. People are to be entertained and have their self-esteem fed so they will pay for the show. The primary focus of pleasing God has turned into a pursuit of pleasure. With pleasing God out of the picture, pleasure is what feels good to the flesh and ego.

This transition was invisible.

Wisdom, understanding,right judgment, courage, knowledge, reverence and fear of God are replaced with the pursuit of pleasure. Cardinal O'Malley is training the fundraisers and money changers and ushering in the replacement for sanctifying Grace: Feeling good about oneself through doing things for the poor so that when you go home to sexually exploit another soul or kill them you can enjoy it knowing these things are not impediments to salvation.

Sin has encamped. Like sanctifying Grace, it also has an energy of its own. The entire world is now reaping what has been sown.

There are many stories in Scripture that teach the effect on a city of bishops and priests ushering in this type of encampment.

One in particular, the people in the city who crawled out of the sin and back to God and sanctifying Grace can see what is happening. They see the destruction coming down the pike. They try to warn the people they love. They pray. They appeal to God to save the city for the sake of the 50 righteous people living in it. When 10 righteous people in the city can't even be found, God invites the few in a state of grace to hightail it out of town before the destruction.

Scripture gives us context when this theme has repeated itself throughout history.


Mark Mallett has an excellent reflection on the The Seven Seals and the turmoil and revolutions we are now seeing all over the world.

What I like about Mark's reflections is that he mostly uses Scripture and the writings of the Saints to give context to his writing.

Catholics pay very little attention to hoopla about Armageddon. Everything we need and want to know about how it all comes down, and what we do about it, was proclaimed by Christ 2000 years ago.

Stay close to the Sacrament of Penance and the Eucharist, the Angels and Saints.
Do penance and acts of reparation.
Make good use of your sacramentals, holy water, salt.
Appeal to God for mercy.
Pray.
Fast.

The day of reckoning will come like a thief in the night. For most of us, through natural or accidental death, but there is also a day when Christ will come down from the Heavens to gather what has been sifted. The devil is going to be there too. There's an accounting for our lives. Then we're all going someplace.

Be ready for it.

The harvest is the end of the age,
and the harvesters are angels.
Just as weeds are collected and burned up with fire,
so will it be at the end of the age.
(Matt 13:39-40)