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Our
Sin and God's Mercy
March 30, 2008
Readings
for Divine Mercy
Sunday
| Reading
1: Acts 2:42–47 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 118:2–4, 13–15, 22–24 |
| Reading
2: 1 Pet. 1:3–9 |
| Gospel:
Jn. 20:19–31 |
| Link
to Readings |
By
Father Ray Ryland, Ph.D., J.D.
Pope John
Paul the Great gave us Divine Mercy Sunday.
Over a
period of thirty-five years, from the time when he was archbishop
of Krakow, John Paul actively forwarded the process of canonizing
Sister Faustina. On April 30, 2000, the first Sunday after
Easter, John Paul canonized Sister Faustina—now St.
Faustina. In his homily of canonization, John Paul joyfully
announced that the first Sunday after Easter “from now
on throughout the Church will be called ‘Divine
Mercy Sunday.’”
Throughout
Scripture and our liturgy we hear about divine mercy; so often,
in fact, that we may be tempted to take it for granted. That
would be a grievous error. Think with me for a few moments
about divine mercy.
Hundreds
of times and in many ways throughout Sacred Scripture, the
text exults in the mercy of God. We read, for example, that
the mercy of God is “great” (1 Kings 3:6); “plenteous”
(Ps. 8:5); “tender” (Lk. 1:78) “abundant”
(1 Pet. 1:3); it is “from everlasting to everlasting
upon them that fear him” (Ps. 103:17).
In the
legal form, mercy is the opposite of justice. Justice is what
a person deserves. Mercy is what a guilty person
needs.
In His
mercy, God reveals that love always trumps justice. Indeed,
in his encyclical Rich in Mercy (1980, section 7),
Pope John Paul II declared that mercy is “love’s
second name.”
So far
as our individual relationships with God are concerned, mercy
is God’s greatest attribute and perfection. Because
human history is a history of sin and death, God’s love
has to be revealed and made real in human lives primarily
as mercy.
I vividly
recall a time at prayer when I was pleading with God to cover
me with His mercy. Suddenly I imagined I could hear
God asking, perhaps a bit impatiently, “Well what do
you think I’m doing?”
Rich
in Mercy
In his
book The Devil’s Dictionary, a humorist of
last century defined mercy as “an attribute beloved
of detected offenders.” Though the man was speaking
cynically, he was also speaking the truth. All of us are offenders
against God, and all of us have been detected.
So the
“true and proper meaning of mercy,” Pope John
Paul told us, is God’s love drawing “good from
all the forms of evil existing the world and in man.”
We have to say, therefore, that mercy is (in John Paul’s
words), “the fundamental content of the messianic message
of Christ. . . .” It is, in fact, the basic power of
His mission on earth (Rich in Mercy, no. 6).
To bring
the meaning of mercy into ultimate focus, we must say that
Jesus Christ incarnates mercy; indeed, Jesus Christ is mercy
(Rich in Mercy, no. 2).
Our salvation
hinges on trusting in God’s mercy. But remember: Mercy
means pardon for guilt. Pardon for our guilt can
come, by God’s mercy, only if (a) we face and acknowledge
our guilt under God, and (b) we are truly sorry for having
offended God.
God will
not, God cannot, fill with His mercy the life of one who is
not truly penitent. Jesus made this clear with His parable
of the prayers of the Pharisee and the tax collector. Recall
that the Pharisee congratulated God and himself on his own
good character. In sharp contrast, the tax collector simply
groaned, “God, be merciful to me a sinner!” Jesus
said that only the tax collector was reconciled to God.
A
Lost Sense of Sin
When we
think about God’s mercy, therefore, we have to ask ourselves
about our own sense of sin. And that’s our second point.
Start
with the fact that our culture has lost any real sense of
sin. In all of human history, there apparently has never been
a society that so widely ignored—or even widely denied—the
reality of sin as has our culture.
We read
in the Old Testament that even pagan rulers like Nebuchadnezzar
or the king of Nineveh acknowledged their sins and repented
for them. In every primitive society of which we have any
information, one always finds a sense of sin, even though
pagan beliefs about their gods may be highly superstitious.
One commentator has pointed out that, until modern times,
“men have always recognized the reality of sin and freely
admitted that the dis-ease which they felt in their souls
was the result of . . . [sin] and could be treated—and
hopefully cured—[only] by acknowledgment of the true
cause.”
But not
today. Back in the 1940s, in a radio address to an American
catechetical conference, Pope Pius XII stated that “the
sin of the century is the loss of sin.” In the later
1950s, he declared that the most serious spiritual problem
of Catholics is the loss of a sense of sin. Pope John Paul
has also strongly emphasized the same fact.
That we
Catholics have largely lost a proper sense of sin is quite
clear, for two reasons: Only a very small percentage of otherwise
practicing Catholics regularly choose to receive the Sacrament
of Penance. Furthermore, many—should I say “most”?—Catholics
who do go to Confession seem to find it hard to be specific
in their confessions.
The fact
is, our consciences have become calloused. Our consciences
have been calloused by the moral and doctrinal confusion created
by dissenters, unfaithful Catholics who reject the Church’s
authority. Our consciences are continually being calloused
by the moral filth that flows from the media: from our TVs,
from our movies, from the books and magazines we read, from
the newspapers. In 1982 Pope John Paul warned us that “modern
man is threatened by an eclipse of conscience . . . a deformation
of conscience . . . a numbness or ‘deadening’
of conscience” (Reconciliation and Penance,
no. 18).
Not
Just for Mortal Sins
The common
Catholic rationalization for not going to Confession—if
people bother to rationalize—is usually, “well,
I don’t have any mortal sins to confess.”
Let me
remind you that the Sacrament of Penance was given by our
Lord Jesus Christ not only for mortal sins, but also for venial
sins. Let me remind you further of our Catechism’s
listing of the very harmful effects of venial sin.
Venial
sin weakens charity; it manifests a disordered affection
for created goods; it impedes the soul’s progress
in the exercise of the virtues and the practice of the moral
good; it merits temporal punishment. Deliberate and unrepented
venial sin disposes us little by little to commit mortal
sin. (no. 1863)
How dare
we take venial sins lightly?
Ponder
carefully what Pope John Paul the Great taught us in apostolic
exhortation entitled Reconciliation and Penance.
“As
a rupture with God, sin is an act of disobedience by a creature
who rejects, at least implicitly, the very one from whom he
came and who sustains him in life. It is therefore a suicidal
act” (emphasis added). And why is that? Because
by refusing “to submit to God, . . . [the sinner’s]
internal balance is also destroyed” and “contradictions
and conflicts arise” within himself.
In the
next section of the exhortation, the Holy Father becomes more
specific in his teaching. “. . . by virtue of human
solidarity which is as mysterious and intangible as it is
real and concrete, each individual’s sin in some way
affects others.” That is, “one can speak of a
communion of sin, whereby a soul that lowers itself through
sin drags down with itself the church and, in some way, the
whole world.”
This,
said the Holy Father, is the bedrock fact: “. . . there
is no sin, not even the most intimate and secret one, the
most strictly individual one, that exclusively concerns the
person committing it. With greater or lesser violence, with
greater or lesser harm, every sin has repercussions on
the entire ecclesial body and the whole human family”
(no. 16; emphasis added).
Loving
Jesus
So if
we want the mercy of God to flood our hearts—and who
of us does not?—we have to work at deepening our sense
of our own sin. And that’s my third point.
Consider
the lives of the saints, who made such frequent use of the
Sacrament of Penance. We regard their lives as exemplary.
We wonder, what did they have to confess? Yet the fact is,
they were all keenly conscious of a heavy weight of sin.
Why did
the saints have such deep consciousness of sin? It was a reflection
of their deep love for Jesus. The more intimately they knew
and loved Him, the more painfully conscious they were of the
ways in which they offended Him.
The point
for us is, the deeper our love for Jesus, the more we will
be aware of our sins and the greater will be our sorrow for
the suffering our sins have inflicted on Jesus. And turn the
proposition around. If we have slight sense of our own sinfulness,
what does this tell us about the quality of our relationship
with Jesus?
If we
truly yearn to grow in sanctity—and that’s our
whole reason for living—we need to go to Confession
frequently. When we go to Confession frequently, we can make
a more thorough confession, and thereby more deeply receive
the mercy of God.
And I
mean specific confession: none of this confession
by title: “I was uncharitable” or “I was
critical” or “I was unforgiving.” Be specific:
call a spade a spade, or even call it a dirty old shovel.
When you confess specific sins, you get them out in front
of you and see them in all their ugliness: and you say to
yourself, “And Jesus suffered agony for this!”
You and
I need to make frequent aspirations in the course of a day.
We need to call on the holy name of Jesus, or on the Blessed
Trinity. We need to recall ourselves into the presence of
the Blessed Trinity. We need to try consciously to carry out
our responsibilities in such a way as to give honor and glory
to God. We need to be nourished by regularly reading the Scriptures—especially
the Gospels—and by doing spiritual reading.
Until
we draw our last breath, we have to work at growing in our
love for our Lord Jesus, growing in our basic desire to please
Him in word and thought and deed.
**********
When a
sudden heart attack occurs, how thankful we are if someone
present has been trained to practice CPR. That means someone
who can keep blood carrying oxygen to the heart and brain
of a person until that person’s heart begins to beat
again.
Today’s
Gospel tells us about spiritual CPR which Our Lord
entrusted to His Church. He gave to His bishops and priests
the Sacrament of Penance, the authority to act in His name
and forgive sins. This sacrament is spiritually life-giving.
Jesus
gave us this sacrament not as a simple option, but as something
He wants us to use.
When
we ignore this sacrament, we ignore Jesus’ command given
for our spiritual welfare. And when we ignore His command,
we ignore Him.
God forbid
that any of us should ever do that!
Father
Ray Ryland is CUF's spiritual advisor.
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