Monday 22 April 2024

22 APRIL – MONDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK AFTER EASTER

Dom Prosper Gueranger:
Our Risen Jesus is not satisfied with establishing His Church and constituting the hierarchy which is to govern it in His Name to the end of time. He also confides to His disciples His divine word, that is, the truths He is come to reveal to mankind, and into which truths He has given them an insight during the three years preceding His Passion. The Word of God, which is also called Revelation, is, together with grace the most precious gift that Heaven could bestow on us. It is by the Word of God that we know the mysteries of His Divine Essence, the plan according to which He framed the Creation, the supernatural end He destined for such of His creatures as He endowed with understanding and free-will, the sublime work of redemption by the Incarnation of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity: in a word, the means by which we are to honour and serve Him, and attain the end for which we were made.
From the very commencement of the world God revealed His Word to man. Later on He spoke by the Prophets. But when the fullness of time came, He sent upon the earth His Only Begotten Son, that He might complete this first Revelation. We have seen how for three years Jesus has been teaching men, and how, in order that He might make them the more easily understand His words, He has stooped to their littleness. Though His teaching was of the sublimest possible character, yet did He make it so intelligible that no instruction could be compared to His in clearness. It was for this reason that He made use of simple parables by which He conveyed His divine truths to the mind of His hearers. His Apostles and disciples who were afterwards to preach His Gospel to the world received from Him frequent special instructions although, until the accomplishment of the mysteries of His Death and Resurrection, they were slow in understanding His teaching. Since His Resurrection, they are better able to appreciate His instructions, for not only are His words more telling now that He is in the glory of His triumph over death, but the minds of His hearers have become more enlightened by the extraordinary events that have occurred. If He could say to them at the Last Supper: “I will not now call you servants, but I have called you my friends: because all things whatever I have heard from my Father I have made known to you,” (John xv. 15) how must He not treat them now that He has repeated to them the whole of His teaching, given them the whole Word of God, and is on the eve of sending the Holy Spirit upon them in order to perfect their understanding and give them power to preach the Gospel to the entire world?
O holy Word of God! O holy Revelation! Through you are we admitted into divine mysteries which human reason could never reach. We love you and are resolved to be submissive to you. It is you that gives rise to the grand virtue without which it is impossible to please God, (Hebrews xxi. 6), the virtue which commences the work of mans salvation, and without which this work could neither be continued nor finished. This virtue is Faith. It makes our reason bow down to the Word of God. There comes from its divine obscurity a light far more glorious than are all the conclusions of reason, however great may be their evidence. This virtue is to be the bond of union in the new society which our Lord is now organising. To become a member of this society, man must begin by believing. That he may continue to be a member, he must never, not even for one moment, waver in his faith. We will soon be hearing our Lord saying these words: “He that believes and is baptised, will he saved. But he that believes not, will be condemned.” (Mark xvi. 16) The more clearly to express the necessity of faith, the members of the Church are to be called by the beautiful name of the Faithful: they who do not believe are to be called Infidels.
Faith, then, being the first link of the supernatural union between man and God, it follows, that this union ceases when faith is broken, that is, denied. And that he who after having once been thus united to God breaks the link by rejecting the word of God, and substituting error in its place, commits one of the greatest of crimes. Such a one will be called a Heretic, that is, one who separates himself, and the faithful will tremble at his apostasy. Even were his rebellion to the Revealed Word to fall upon only one article, still he commits enormous blasphemy, for he either separates himself from God as being a deceiver, or he implies that his own created, weak and limited reason is superior to eternal and infinite Truth. As time goes on, heresies will rise up, each attacking some dogma or other, so that scarcely one truth will be left unassailed: but all this will serve for little else than to bring out the Revelation purer and brighter than before. There will, however, come a time, and that time is our own, when heresy will not confine itself to some one particular article of faith, but will proclaim the total independence of reason, and declare Revelation to be a forgery. This impious system will give itself the high-sounding name of Rationalism, and these are to be its leading doctrines: Christs mission, a failure and His teaching false. His Church, an insult to mans dignity: the [twenty] centuries of Christian civilisation, a popular illusion! The followers of this school, the so-called Philosophers of modern times, would have subverted all society, had not God come to its assistance, and fulfilled the promise He made, of never allowing His Revealed Word to be taken away from mankind, nor the Church to whom He confided his Word, to be destroyed.
Others go not so far as this. They do not pretend to deny the benefits conferred on the world by the Christian Religion — the facts of history are too evident to be contested: still, as they will not submit their reason to the mysteries revealed by God, they have a way peculiar to themselves for eliminating the element of Faith from this world. As every revealed truth, and every miracle confirmatory of divine interposition, is disagreeable to them, they attribute to natural causes every fact which bears testimony to the Son of God being present among us. They do not insult religion, they simply pass it by. They hold that the Supernatural serves no purpose. People, they say, have taken appearances for realities. The laws of history and common sense count for nothing. Agreeably to their system, which they call Naturalism, they deny what they cannot explain. They maintain that the people of the past [twenty] centuries have been deceived, and that the Creator cannot suspend the laws of nature, just as the Rationalists teach that there is nothing above Reason.
Are Reason and Nature, then, to be obstacles to our Redeemers love for mankind? Thanks be to His infinite power, He would not have it so! As to Reason, He repairs and perfects her by Faith, and He suspends the laws of Nature that we may cheerfully believe the word whose truth is guaranteed by the testimony of miracles. Jesus is truly risen. Let Reason and Nature rejoice, for He has ennobled and sanctified them by the glad Mystery!