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The Lord
of Contemporary History
by Msgr. Eugene Kevane
The following is a talk given at
the CUF Catechetical Conference on “Parents as Teachers
of the Faith” in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky, in 1975. It
appeared in condensed form in the September/October 2008 issue
of Lay Witness.
When I was invited to this catechetical conference on “Parents
as Teachers of the Faith”—something so positive,
so wholesome, so promising of good for little children—I
wondered, as I am sure you are wondering, why I was asked
to talk on this particular verse from the Gospel: “When
the Son of man comes, will he find faith on earth?”
(Lk. 18:8)
New Light on the Apostolate of the Laity
Then it began to dawn on me. Perhaps we are being asked to
throw a new light, from a different direction, upon the theme
and the work of this conference, and indeed upon the emphasis
on the apostolate of the laity, which has come from the Second
Vatican Council.
Let us, then, look at this mysterious verse more closely.
The context in chapters 17 and 18 of St. Luke’s Gospel
is the coming of the Lord Jesus at the end of the world to
judge the living and the dead. The Pharisees had approached,
asking Him when this is to be. The Lord declined to answer
this question. Then He gave His own disciples the parable
of the unscrupulous judge and the importunate widow. “Since
she keeps pestering me,” the judge said to himself,
“I will let her have her way.”
And the Lord said, “You notice what the unjust judge
has to say? Now will not God see justice done to his chosen
who cry to him day and night even when he delays to help them?
I promise you, he will see justice done to them, and done
speedily. But when the Son of man comes, will he find any
faith on earth?”
As good exegetes and commentators point out, the original
Greek is remarkable in that it has the definite article with
the word “faith” (the faith). The careful
exegetes, therefore, including the Protestant ones, explain
that the Lord is making reference to the true faith, the orthodox
faith, the faith which distinguishes His own Church and which
He sent this same Church to teach to all nations. This, then,
is the Lord’s question: When He comes to judge the living
and the dead, will He find His own true faith on this earth,
which He committed to His Apostles and sent them to teach?
Obviously, we have before us one of the most enigmatic and
mysterious verses in the entire Bible. The answer His question
expects seems, on the one hand, to be negative. “No,
He will not find His truth Faith still left on earth.”
But on the other hand, this same Lord Jesus promised that
the gates of hell will not prevail, that the Holy Spirit will
abide in the Church, the pillar and ground of truth, and that
He Himself will be present with His Apostles, with His indefectibly
apostolic Church, assisting the successor of the Apostles
in the profession of its Apostolic Faith until the end of
the world.
What Does This Mysterious Verse Mean?
What, then, does this verse mean in itself and in the context
of this Catechetical Conference?
In seeking the answer, we shall have three personalities
in mind: two as negative backdrops, the other as our positive
support. The first of these is the influential German philosopher
of a century ago, Friedrich Nietzsche, who wrote a significant
book on the meaning and direction of modern philosophy entitled
The Antichrist.
The second personality is the unfortunate Fr. George Tyrell,
whom Pope St. Pius X was forced to excommunicate earlier in
our century. In his book Christianity at the Crossroads,
he reveals in his characteristic way, one which has followers
among us today, his failure to take seriously this verse from
the lips of the Lord Jesus. “The difficulty for us,”
he writes, “lies in the fact that . . . this apocalyptic
imagery has been given a literal fact-value which our minds
have slowly become incapable of accepting . . . For Jesus,
what we call His apocalyptic ‘imagery’ was no
mere imagery but literal fact . . . But for us it can be so
no longer. We can no longer believe in the little local heaven
above the flat earth, from which Jesus is to appear in the
clouds; nor in all the details of the vision governed by this
conception.” (94–95). We mention Fr. Tyrrell’s
rejection of the Second Coming and his profession of unbelief
in the divinity of Jesus Christ simply as a backdrop. Perhaps
we will be forgiven for adding that we have no intention of
attempting to please his followers among us today, who are
attempting to continue his work inside the Church.
The third personality, the one whom we shall follow as our
positive guide, is Cardinal John Henry Newman in his sixty
lucid pages on this verse in his book Discussion and Arguments
on Various Subjects.
The Teaching of Jesus on the End of Human History
We Catholic Christians are followers of Jesus Christ. We
are His disciples as He had disciples in His public life.
We are members of His Church by virtue of professing the apostolic
faith which admitted us to Baptism. Let us turn to Jesus,
the Lord of history, guided by Cardinal Newman, for light
on this enigmatic verse which we are considering. For Jesus
lived with us and spoke to His disciples at a particular moment
of time. While He was speaking, since He is the Eternal Son
of God the Father Almighty, the Creator of heaven and earth,
His divinity and therefore His knowledge embraced the totality
of creation and saw every detail of its development in time.
Nothing of the panorama of human history was hidden from His
view as He spoke. He saw the end. He saw the events that lead
up to the end of human history, events which evoke the end
from the depths of history. All of this was present to His
consciousness. He speaks from what He sees. And this is what
Holy Mother Church has preserved from Apostolic times in these
precious records of His teaching which have come across the
centuries to our hands as the Holy Gospels.
13th Chapter of Mark Throws Decisive Light
It is out of their Catholic faith in Jesus as the Lord of
history that His disciples come to Him, as St. Mark tells
us in chapter 13 of his Gospel. They come to Him as one who
sees and knows more than a mere man of His place and time.
They have come to recognize Him as the Creator of this cosmos,
who is therefore the Lord of its process of becoming, and
who sees this entire process as present—simply because
He is true God as well as true man. Let us turn to this 13th
Chapter of St. Mark, then, with its seven chief points of
teaching, together with Cardinal Newman’s summary of
the Fathers of the Church in their commentaries.
First: “As he came out of the temple, one of his disciples
said to him, ‘Look, Teacher, what wonderful stones and
what wonderful buildings!” And Jesus said to him, ‘Do
you see these great buildings? There will not be left here
one stone upon another, that will not be thrown down.’
. . . and as he sat on the Mount of Olives opposite the temple,
Peter and James and John and Andrew asked him privately, ‘Tell
us, when will this be, and what will be the sign when these
things are to be accomplished?’”
Secondly: Jesus distinguishes between the time when the end
will be, and the signs of its coming. He urges His followers
to be cautious regarding the signs: to sift them, to be circumspect
about them, exercising good judgment. “Take heed that
no one leads you astray,” He said. “Many will
come in my name saying, ‘I am he!’ and they will
lead many astray.” Peter’s question came from
the Jewish mentality of his day, for which the destruction
of the Jewish temple of the old Law was linked with the end
of the world. We know that the Lord Jesus also had in mind
a new and different Temple which He intended to build on this
earth, the New Jerusalem, the Holy Roman Catholic and Apostolic
Church. It was to grow as a mustard seed until it became the
great world-embracing temple of God during the times of the
new Law.
Thirdly: Jesus describes the beginning of the troubles for
His four questioners. There will be wars, rumors of wars,
earthquakes in various places and famines. “This,”
He says, “is but the beginning of the birth-pangs.”
Fourthly: The Lord Jesus describes a coming persecution of
the faith, amid universal chaos and division and schism. There
will be a fierce hatred for those who take their stand with
Him. Implicit and between the lines, we can sense a coming
temptation to give up Jesus Christ, His Catholic faith and
His holy religion, a pressure to give way to apostasy.
Fifthly: The Lord Jesus tells Peter and the others about
the climax of the persecution, explaining what He means by
drawing upon the Prophet Daniel concerning the abomination
of desolation that sits in the Holy Place. “When you
see the desolating sacrilege set up where it ought not to
be (let the reader understand) . . . ”
Newman on the Antichrist
“The last persecution,” writes Cardinal Newman,
“will be more awful than any of the earlier ones . .
. in its being attended . . . by an open and blasphemous establishment
of infidelity or some such enormity, in the holiest recesses
of the Church.” “The sign of the Second Advent,”
Newman continues, “is said to be a certain frightful
Apostasy, and the manifestation of the Man of Sin, the Son
of Perdition—that is, as he is commonly called, Antichrist.”
“And I grant that as Rome, according to the Prophet
Daniel’s vision, succeeded Greece, so Antichrist succeeds
Rome, and the Second Coming succeeds the Antichrist.”
“The Man of Sin,” Newman continues, “is
born of an Apostasy, or at least comes into power through
an Apostasy, or is preceded by an Apostasy, or would not be
except for an Apostasy.”
The spirit of Antichrist, at work since apostolic times,
is not the same as the concrete historical figure who is to
come. The spirit animates his forerunners; Antichrist himself
fulfills them and brings their work and their influence to
historic culmination and climax. “It seems clear,”
Cardinal Newman writes, “that St. Paul and St. John
speak of the same enemy of the Church . . . And they both
describe the enemy as characterized by the same especial sin,
open infidelity . . . He will oppose all existing religion,
true or false, ‘all that is called God or worshipped.
. . . ’ Not in God’s Name, not with any pretense
of a mission from Him, but in his own name, by a blasphemous
assumption of divine power, thus will Antichrist come.”
Distinguishing between the signs and the time, as the Lord
Jesus Himself does, Cardinal Newman mentions the heresies
which have ravaged the Church in the past, perceived by Christian
observers as “the forerunners of Antichrist.”
“These instances give us warning,” he concludes.
“Is the enemy of Christ and His Church to arise out
of a certain special falling away from God? And is there no
reason to fear that some such Apostasy is gradually preparing,
gathering, hastening on this very day?”
Sixthly: Then the Lord Jesus, in verses 24–27 of this
chapter 13 of St. Mark’s Gospel, gives the essence of
His teaching to His followers. It is one of confidence, perseverance,
and humble good cheer. Be of good heart! The more these signs
seem to become visible, the more His true followers will respond
to His own admonition: “When you see these things begin
to take place, look up and raise your heads, because your
redemption is drawing near.” (Lk. 21:28).
Seventh: In conclusion, the Lord returns to the distinct
question of the time when, which is different from
the question of the signs. He bids us to watch the signs.
“From the fig tree learn its lesson: as soon as its
branch becomes tender and puts forth its leaves, you know
that summer is near. So also, when you see these things taking
place, you know that he is near . . . ”
And He forbids us to seek to know the day or the hour. “But
of that day or hour,” the Lord Jesus concludes, “no
one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but
only the Father.”
Those Who Persevere Will Be Saved
It is quite apparent that the Lord is speaking of a future
contingency, of an event contingent upon the way we creatures
use our gift of free will. One cannot but think of our own
case at the present moment. In some places, here and there,
there is an abomination of desolation which has penetrated
where it ought not, within the very teaching programs of the
Catholic Church, to propagate something alien and unsound
to the children. This is the general backdrop of this Catechetical
Conference, as we know, although we have not been stressing
it these days. Who shall say whether it will take deeper root
and spread more and more widely, until it becomes what the
Lord was seeing and what His words describe in Mark chapter
13? But perhaps it will not gain the upper hand. Beginning
with the Holy Father himself in Rome, assisted valiantly by
many, many bishops, pastors, and major superiors of religious
teaching communities, there is an intense effort on the part
of the Church right now to contain this phenomenon and to
take proper pastoral care of the oncoming generation. Who
is to say what will be the outcome? What the future will be?
In last analysis, it depends on each of us, on our use of
our freedom toward the Word of God. “But of that day
or that hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven,
nor the Son, but only the Father.”
Then the Lord Jesus gives His conclusion, so logical, so
encouraging. “Take heed,” He says. “Watch
and pray; for you do not know when the time will come . .
. watch therefore . . ., lest he come suddenly and find you
asleep. And what I say to you I say to all: Watch.”
And thus this tremendously compressed, divinely luminous chapter
13 of St. Mark’s Gospel comes to its end.
Application to the Catechetical Situation of Today
Knowing that we cannot determine the day or the hour, and
not wishing to do so, what can we say about the signs? Are
we experiencing any of them? In particular, what about the
two chief signs of the Lord’s coming, the great apostasy
and the advent of His adversary who will arise out of the
apostasy on the scene of human history? In answer, let us
hear further the words of Cardinal Newman.
“Surely there is at this day a confederacy of evil,”
he writes in the same place, “marshalling its hosts
from all parts of the world, organizing itself, taking its
measures, enclosing the Church of Christ as in a net, and
preparing the way for a general apostasy from it. Whether
this very apostasy is to give birth to Antichrist, or whether
he is still to be delayed, as he has already been delayed
so long, we cannot know. But at any rate this apostasy, and
all its tokens and instruments, are of the Evil One, and savour
of death. Far be it from any of us to be of those simple ones
who are taken in that snare which is encircling around us!
Far be it from us to be seduced with the fair promises in
which Satan is sure to hide his poison!”
Whatever may be the case, certainly we are in a position
now to see better what the answer may be to the Lord’s
own question: “When the Son of man comes, will He find
faith on earth?” As Jesus makes clear, externally an
immense world-wide power will possess the structures of society,
persecuting the members of His Church. Furthermore, by virtue
of some penetration within the holy place itself, within the
very Church of God, the times toward the end will become frightfully
deceptive: so as to deceive, if it were possible, even the
elect. What then of the Lord’s promise that the gates
of hell will not prevail? That He will be with the successors
of His apostles, the bishops, as they teach the apostolic
faith until the end of time? What can it mean, but that the
true Faith will continue largely on the humble level of families
in their homes? In this largest perspective, perhaps we can
discern the deepest significance of the apostolate of the
laity, emphasized in a new way by a special document of Vatican
II. And in this same perspective, this catechetical conference
on parents as teachers of the Faith may well find its most
profound reason for being. Are we then asserting that the
time is now? The answer is that we are not. We are standing
with Cardinal Newman. It may be that we are in the final apostasy
and that therefore the mysterious figure of the Antichrist
is approaching. On the other hand, it may be that he is still
to be delayed, and that what we see and experience at the
moment will be included among the phenomena of the forerunners.
But in either case, the danger for the children is equally
real, and the Catholic people of God should gird themselves,
especially within their Catholic homes.
Mistake Leaving Expectation of the Second Coming
to the Sects
It is a mistake to leave the expectation of our Lord’s
coming to the sects. It is something simply Catholic, professed
by our Creed and renewed strikingly by the Second Vatican
Council, as anyone can verify by listening to the acclamations
of the liturgy.
This is the conclusion which Cardinal Newman himself draws.
“Such meditations as these,” he writes, “may
be turned to good account. It will act as a curb upon our
self-willed, selfish hearts, to believe that a persecution
is in store for the Church, whether or not it comes in our
days . . . Surely, with this prospect before us, we cannot
but feel what we Christians really are . . . pilgrims, watchers
waiting for the morning, waiting for the light, eagerly straining
our eyes for the first dawn of day—looking out for our
Lord’s coming, His glorious advent, when He will end
the reign of sin and wickedness, accomplish the number of
His elect, and perfect those who at present struggle with
infirmity, yet in their hearts love and obey Him.”
And we can join with this contemporary intellectual giant
of the Catholic Church the voice of St. Cyril of Alexandria
coming from the early Church. Consider the following from
his 15th Catechetical Instruction: “Prepare yourself,
therefore, O man! You hear the signs of Antichrist; nor remind
only yourself of them, but communicate them liberally to all
around you. If you have a child according to the flesh, delay
not to instruct him. It you are a teacher, prepare also your
spiritual children, lest they take the false for the true…God
forbid that it should be fulfilled in our day. However, let
us be prepared.”
What is To Be Done?
How shall we be prepared?
Associations of the laity, newly encouraged by the Second
Vatican Council as they are, can play a providential role
in this preparation. Under national leadership, transmitted
to local leaders, we can see parents taking spiritual care
of Catholic children by catechetical teaching in the homes.
We can see local units of the laity adjusting to new conditions
in the Church, conditions never before experienced by the
Catholic people, but to which the Lord Jesus has quite clearly
drawn our attention in advance. And based upon His teaching
and His example, we can become ever more conscious followers
of Jesus Christ, more attentive than ever to the following
of Him within our homes. We can develop a new post-conciliar
type of spirituality that is better adapted to the condition
which the Catholic Church is beginning to face, in some places
more, in some places less, and in some entire countries and
even continents, as yet hardly at all.
Between the Last Supper in the Upper Room and the arrival
of Judas, who was showing the hostile authorities where to
find Him, our Savior experienced the Agony in the Garden.
His natural human reaction was to shrink from the chalice
and to resist the situation, but in a supreme example left
for us, He prayed: “Father, if thou art willing, remove
this cup from me; nevertheless not my will, but thine, be
done” (Lk. 22:42). So, too, it happens sometimes in
the apostolate of the laity, and it may become more frequent.
The role of the laity is not directly the government of God’s
Church, and at times quiet suffering is asked of them by the
Lord Himself, in imitation of He who is the Lord of contemporary
history.
Not directly the government of the Church, we said.
Indirectly, the laity does indeed govern the Church,
precisely by its essential role in the formation of the Catholics
of the future. Most of us priests and religious are what we
are, think the way we think, do what we do, and permit what
we permit, because of the homes that formed us.
The Laity: In Charge of Catholic Homes
The primary apostolate of the laity is, therefore, the good
government of their Catholic homes. Teaching the faith is
part of this good government of the home. This conference
is really saying: Govern your homes!
What do we mean by this? In most places, the program of the
Church for pastoral care by means of the sacraments and holy
teaching goes forward substantially intact. If you live in
such a place, thank God, and cooperate as you always have
done with those who work for the welfare of your children.
At the same time, conditions might change for you, almost
overnight. Therefore, govern your homes! Be teachers of the
faith, in order to save the souls of the children God has
created through you, and whom He has placed in your hands.
And if, by chance, you live in a place where you are experiencing
a lack of authentic pastoral care of your children, then of
course you must become, in this new way which this conference
has discussed, teachers of the faith for your own children.
Can this be done? It can indeed. When parents come home at
night and walk up to the door of their house, they are about
to become the pope, the president, the governor, the pastor,
the school principal. When parents cross their threshold,
they become all of these authorities. With that good person
whom providence gave you to be your spouse, you are in charge
when you walk up to the front door of your house, enter it,
and lock it behind you.
Teaching in the home requires teaching aids, symbols that
create atmosphere and prompt questions. Talk the matter over
with your spouse, and carry the message to your local chapters.
What does your home offer the children as an occasion to ask
questions? You know how children love to ask questions. Give
them the symbols that are the occasions. Then you will have
your opportunity to explain the basic truths of our holy faith
when you answer them.
Symbols of the Faith
We should begin with the crucifix. It is the compendium of
our Trinitarian faith, with its good news of our redemption
wrought by our divine Savior, the Second divine Person, incarnate
and dwelling with us.
Then, fundamental to the teaching apostolate is the matter
of canonical marriage. Teaching in the home can only succeed
if it is sustained by the grace of the Sacrament of Holy Matrimony.
What a great apostolate opens before your lay association
today, to represent and promote the canonical character of
homes, assisting in various ways so that every Catholic home
is actually one of the seven sacraments of this same Lord
Jesus whom we Christians follow. And the symbol? It is that
certificate of Holy Matrimony, properly worded and properly
filled out, framed and hanging on the wall of the home. There
the children will see it every day of their young lives, and
at certain times they will ask their questions about it, enabling
you to explain fundamentals to them.
Catholic homes should have pictures and statues of Our Lord
Himself, of His Blessed Mother, and of the saints who have
a special significance in the particular home. All these things
become occasions for catechetical explanation as the children
are growing up.
In the early Church, there was a beautiful custom of using
the crux gemmata—the cross without the corpus,
studded with precious stones—as the sign and symbol
of the Risen Lord. . . . In the mind’s eye, one can
see in homes this sign of the home united with other Catholic
homes, for mutual support in the faith. What a great thing
this could come to be when you visit each other’s homes,
and especially when children, going to homes as they do, compare
notes and ask their questions.
Family Prayer Is Essential
It is self-evident that parents cannot be successful teachers
in their homes unless they have established the practice of
family prayer. We have had for some time in twentieth-century
America two great Catholic priests ministering to the coming
needs of the Catholic family. One is Fr. Patrick Peyton with
his Family Rosary Crusade; the other is Fr. Francis Larkin,
with his program for the Enthronement of the Sacred Heart
in the home. Under your leadership, their apostolates can
bear new widespread fruit, in an entirely new national manner.
In the profession of faith given to us by the Holy See in
these darkening times since the Second Vatican Council, called
the Credo
of the People of God, there is an article which reads
as follows: “The unique and indivisible existence of
the Lord glorious in heaven is not multiplied, but is rendered
present by the sacrament in the many places on earth where
Mass is celebrated. And this existence remains present, after
the sacrifice, in the Blessed Sacrament which is, in the tabernacle,
the living heart of each of our Churches” (no. 26).
What a great thing, and how catechetically powerful with growing
children, if parents would plan a visit to the Blessed Sacrament
some time or times each week, when all are going somewhere
in the family auto! There is a crying need to national and
local leadership in this matter.
Along these lines, then, with a conscious following of the
Lord Jesus in the homes, when parents program catechetical
teaching in their homes—in ways still to be modeled,
elaborated, and perfected—one can be assured that the
teaching will not be mere lifeless instruction. It will be
living and vital, strong with the power of God, able to save
the children, whom parents love so much, for time and for
eternity. It will be a teaching that saves them by making
them followers of Jesus Christ, secure against the deceptions
which will lead so many to follow the forerunners of him who
is to come in his own name. For this is the question and the
issue. With regard to it, let us see to it that neither we
nor the children are deceived.
A Catholic is a follower of Jesus Christ, and of no one else.
A Catholic stands secure in the fact that Jesus is the Lord
of history, and the Lord of this contemporary history that
lies immediately before us. He did indeed ask that enigmatic
question, “When the Son of man comes, will he find faith
on earth?” Thanks to homes that persevere in the faith
and teach it and hand it on, the answer will be “Yes,”
He will find faith on earth. For He who also said, “Suffer
the little children to come to me,” is the same who
said, “Behold, I am with you all days, even to the end
of the world.”
Msgr. Eugene Kevane (1913–96) was the founding
director of the Notre Dame (Pontifical) Institute for Advanced
Studies in Religious Education in Middleburg, Virginia, and
was dean of the School of Education of the Catholic University
of America. He is known by many to be the foremost catechist
of our time.
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