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Showing posts with label SS Cyril and Methodius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SS Cyril and Methodius. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

In Brief


Two interesting articles on the HHS mandate which offer an alternative analysis of the situation.  Paul Rahne sees the situation as the outcome of a long history of compromise on the part of the Catholic Church in the USA. 

Taylor Marshall thinks we are approaching the issue from the wrong angle - we should not be using the religious liberty card at all, but a more fundamental argument.

And here's George Weigel's latest article on the issue.

Another thought-provoking article from Ross Douthat.  He describes the "compromise" "suggested" (imposed) by Obama, in interesting terms.  As I would interpret it, Obama is saying: "Let's just pretend I am respecting your consciences, and you pretend you are not paying for contraceptives and abortaficients."  That sums it up.   Douthat also asks an interesting question, do the Catholic bishops have a strategy for a long war?  Given that Obama will probably get in for a second term, and he will be very keen to push ahead and finish what he started before he's forced to leave office, there may be a battle royal ahead.  Time for the bishops, faithful and other people, religious and non-religious, to get together and devise an effective means of resistance.  Perhaps it is time for interested parties to call a council of war.  At the heart of the plan of resistance must be prayer and sacrifice because there is a force at work in this administration and it is not human, and human effort will not be enough to defeat it.  

And a wonderful, though heart-breaking, pro-life story which reminds us that even in the most awful of situations, we must choose life. 

Today is St Valentine's Day - the secular world is running around with flowers, chocolates and cards to fill the coffers of various businesses in the stump between Christmas and Easter.  In Dublin, though, the faithful will gather in the Carmelite Church in Whitefriar Street to venerate the relics of the martyr which are enshrined there. 


However, liturgically, today is the feast of SS Cyril and Methodius, the brothers who evangelised the Slavs, and gave the world the Cyrillic alphabet.  We devoted one of our programmes in the latest series of Forgotten Heritage to them.  In Europe today is their feast day, as they are co-patrons of Europe.  May they watch over us in these times.

Monday, February 14, 2011

The Little Green Monster Appears



Today in Europe we celebrate the feast of two of our patrons, SS Cyril and Methodius, the holy brothers who brought the Gospel to the Slavic peoples, so our readings are proper.  However, I will  dedicate this post to the first reading of the day outside Europe which continues the cycle from the Book of Genesis.  In that wonderful appropriateness which you find with the liturgy the feast in Europe and the reading from Genesis fit together perfectly.  In the feast we celebrate the loving union and ministry of two brothers dedicated to preaching the Gospel, in the reading from Genesis we see another pair of brothers, the strained nature of their relationship, and the introduction of murder into the world.

The story of Cain and Abel is well known and so is the jealousy which creates a barrier between the two brothers.  That jealousy is nurtured in the heart of one of them who has strayed from God, and the fruit of this jealousy is the brutal murder of an innocent man.   When we read the story we see that, for some reason, God does not accept Cain's sacrifice, while he accepts Abel's. We are not told why Cain's was not accepted, but in his reaction we see a side of him which leads us to guess why.  He is a man of the land, and so close to nature you would imagine his heart would have been open to the beauty of creation as are so many who work with the soil.  However, it seems the inherited weakness from his parents has led him to see drudgery in the earth.  Wondering why God did not accept his offering I turned to Scott Hahn and Curtis Mitch: in their commentary they point out that there is no mention of "first-fruits" in Cain's offering, while Abel, we are told explicitly, sacrificed the firstlings: the author is making a point here.  God doe snot accept Cain's offering because he keeps the first fruits, he seems to keep the best for himself and gives God what was left over.  Abel, however, thinks first of God and makes the better offering.

Cain was a cursed man long before he killed his brother: he had forgotten God who was only an afterthought, he put himself first, and so it was easy for him to be offended, and when offended he lashed out and destroyed that which revealed his sin: his holy brother.  Then, as did his parents before him, he tries to hide his crime from God. 

That passage is a good commentary on modern human life.  So many of us put God last and ourselves first and when we judge that God is not as receptive to what we want, we lash out and try to murder that which reveals our unreasonableness.  Often, as a priest, I see people living immoral lives who, when corrected, strike out at God, the Church and its ministers.  I have listened to people who complain about God not hearing their prayers and yet when you dig deeper discover that they rarely acknowledge him, they only what him when they need something: they come first, God second.  This is original sin running rampant in our humanity and we are all guilty of it from time to time.  As a priest I must struggle with that temptation every day and remind myself of those words uttered by Archbishop Fulton Sheen: "A priest is not his own" - living that is hard.

Yet, today's feast provides the antidote: two brothers who lived in unity, not only with each other, but with God, and put him first in their lives; and the fruit of that selfless dedication to the Lord is the lively faith of generations of men and women, saints and martyrs, cultures and wisdom, peace and love. 

Abel did not die in vain - this first martyr shed his blood in testament to the call to give ourselves completely to God.  His sacrifice - that of the firstlings and his own death, foreshadows Christ's own sacrifice, of our Saviour's act of complete surrender to the Father.  As you continue to read Genesis we see that Cain goes on to produce a line of people who alienate themselves from God and who bring the world God created to the brink of destruction.   In the midst of that the blood of the murdered one calls out for renewal and redemption: that call is answered by the Blood of Jesus Christ.