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Penance:
The Sacrament of Peace
September 16, 2007
Readings for the 24th
Sunday in Ordinary Time
| Reading
1: Ex. 32:7–11, 13–14 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 51:3–4, 12–13, 17, 19 |
| Reading
2: 1 Tim. 1:12–17 |
| Gospel:
Lk. 15:1–32 or 15:1–10 |
| Link
to Readings |
By
Most Reverend Victor Galeone
“Christ
Jesus came into the world to save sinners—of whom I
am the worst.” I once heard a preacher comment on this
verse from St. Paul’s letter to Timothy by objecting,
“No, Paul! With all due respect, I’m the worst.”
Then there
was the case of that distraught parishioner who came seeking
my help. Whenever she recalled her past sins, even though
they had all been forgiven, she became quite despondent. “Father,
it’s going to be so embarrassing at the Last Judgment
when my family and friends learn about my past sinful life!”
I spent some time with her, explaining that God loves us not
so much because we’ve been good, but because we need
Him.
It’s
true! God does love us when we’re good. What parent
isn’t proud of their children behaving themselves? But
God loves us even more when we need Him as a result of our
sins. That’s the lesson of today’s Gospel. The
shepherd leaves the ninety-nine good sheep in the corral,
while he goes off in search of the stray. And on finding it,
what does he do? Does he kick it along, shouting, “Who
do you think you are, making me waste all this time? I’ll
teach you a lesson!” No! He carries it home on his shoulders,
comforting it, “You poor thing, I was so worried about
you. We’re going to celebrate when we get back.”
A
Cure for Scrupulosity
To reinforce
this lesson, I would like to relate an incident from the life
a saintly Belgium priest who lived during the 1800s. His name
is Fr. Petit. The incident concerns one of his penitents,
who was extremely scrupulous. This penitent saw sin where
there was none and magnified slight faults into serious sins.
After Fr. Petit’s death, the penitent paid a glowing
tribute to his former confessor, explaining how he had cured
him of his scrupulosity.
One day,
after the penitent had repeated a sin already forgiven during
his late teens, Fr. Petit turned to him with a look of sadness
and said: “My son, you’re being so unfair to God.
You imagine him to be an angry judge, eager to damn you to
hell—when, in fact, God did what not even your own mother
would have done.” Puzzled, the penitent remarked, “Mon
père, I don’t understand.”
Fr. Petit
continued: “Pretend you were on death row, about to
mount the gallows in a few days for some heinous crime you
had committed, would your mother want you to die? No—she
still loves you! But regardless of her love for you, do you
think that she would approach the judge with this request:
‘Your Honor, please spare my son. His brother is willing
to take his place.’ Do you think she would do that?
Yet, that is precisely what God did. While we were still sinners,
he sent his one and only Son to die in our place. So be done
with your scrupulosity! You insult God by doubting his love
for you.”
Costly
Gift
I would
like to reinforce the analogy that Fr. Petit told his penitent
with what I once heard while listening to an evangelical preacher
as I was driving along the expressway. This minister was expounding
the passage from Romans 5:6–11. He was explaining that
human love at its best gives costly gifts to people worthy
of the gift. But regardless of how worthy someone might be,
people are rarely willing to die for that person. They sometimes
do, but never for someone who’s evil or malicious. For
example:
-
We
read of GIs falling on a live grenade to save their buddies;
but it’s unheard of for a GI to have done so to
save a terrorist.
-
A
fireman might risk his life to rescue his neighbor from
an arsonist’s fire; but there’s no account
of a fireman offering to go to prison for the arsonist.
-
A
parent may mortgage everything he owns to ransom his child;
but have you ever heard of a parent offering to post bond
for his child’s kidnapper?
Yet that
is precisely what makes God’s love so unique. As St.
Paul expressed it in Romans: “It’s not easy to
die even for a good person—though for someone really
worthy, a man might possibly die. But what proves that God
loves us is that Christ died for us while we were still sinners.”
(Rom. 5:7–8)
Love is
repaid with love. How can we repay the love that Jesus has
for us? By repenting of our sins. And the Lord has made that
so easy for us by giving us the Sacrament of Penance. A pity
that it’s not called the Sacrament of Peace! For that
is what it gives to the repentant sinner—great peace.
Sound psychology bears this out.
Show
Your Wound to the Doctor
Take,
for example, AA’s Twelve Step Program. The crux of the
entire program is Step Five. Unless it’s fulfilled,
sobriety is next to impossible. Step Five says: “Admitted
to God, to ourselves, and to one other human being the exact
nature of our wrongs.”
The manual
goes on to elaborate: “Why don’t we make our admissions
to God directly? Why do we need to bring anyone else into
this?” The response that follows confronts head-on our
habit of rationalizing: “Somehow, being alone with God
doesn’t seem as embarrassing as facing up to another
person. Until we actually sit down and talk aloud about what
we have so long hidden, our willingness to clean house is
still largely theoretical.”
St. Jerome
expressed the same idea centuries ago when he asked, “How
can a sick person expect to be healed if he is too ashamed
to show his wound to the doctor?”
Some years
back, a Jewish psychologist remarked, “Over the last
few decades, as the line of Catholics waiting at the confessional
has decreased, the number of my clients has exponentially
increased.”
When was
the last time we went to confession? Six months ago? Six years?
Not since our first Holy Communion? Don’t we realize
that God loves us—not so much because we’ve been
good, but because we need Him?
And finally,
don’t we want to experience the truth of Jesus’
words in today’s Gospel? “There is more rejoicing
in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine
righteous people who have no need of repentance.”
The
Most Reverend Victor Galeone is Bishop of the Diocese
of St. Augustine, Florida.
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