Spring, AD 320: Constantine, Emperor of Rome, convenes an ecumenical Council at Nicaea. The mission of this first ecumenical council is to heal the greatest wound in the Body of Christ: the question of Jesus. Then as now, the true nature of Jesus Christ and His relation to the Father and Holy Spirit remained a subject of intense, often acrimonious, debate. The two main positions were irreconcilable: Arius, a theologian from from Egypt, argued that Jesus was a created being, not equal to the Father and the Holy Spirit. Against this "Arian" theology stood the party of orthodoxy, which held the traditional position that Jesus is the Second Person of the Trinity, being "of one substance" with the Father and the Holy Ghost, as the one and only God.
Among the most beloved of the orthodox bishops was Nicholas of Myra -- a man who had become known as "the Wonderworker". So close was Nicholas to God that the Almighty had worked many miracles through him. He was also well-known as a generous giver of gifts and a benefactor of the poor. But the most important thing about Bishop Nicholas of Myra was that he loved Jesus Christ and His mother Mary with all his being.
And now, as the Council ground on, Nicholas was forced to sit and listen politely as Arius made his play. Over and over again, Arius insisted that the same Jesus whom Nicholas adored with all his heart was a mere creature -- the greatest of all creatures, to be sure, but a creature just the same. And Jesus' mother, asserted Arius, was no immaculate and blessed virgin, but just another carnal woman who bore Jesus -- a man only, not the Son of God -- through natural means.
On and on went Arius. Nicholas' anger grew and grew -- until finally he could hear no more.
And what did Nicholas of Myra, the kindly giver of gifts, do then?
Did he rise and politely but firmly refute Arius' specious reasoning? No, he did not. He knew it would be futile to try.
Did he reach out charitably to his errant brother, gently guiding him back to the truth with sweet words of love? no, he did not. He knew that sweetness and light have nothing to do with true charity.
Did he offer Arius a compromise, accepting that there is truth in all points of view? No, he did not. He did not believe that there was any truth except the Truth handed down from Christ by the apostles.
So what did he do? This is what he did: Nicholas, the wonderworker, the great and holy Bishop of Myra, stood up from his chair, strode across the council chamber, and confronted Arius. Then, in front of the astonished eyes of three hundred bishops, Nicholas of Myra drew back his fist and knocked the arch-heretic Arius to the floor with a single mighty blow.
The other bishops were scandalized, but Nicholas was unrepentant. How dare this upstart from Aftica impugn the divine majesty of Christ with his filthy heresy? Nevertheless, even as Arius was being pulled from the floor, Nicholas was being condemned for his deed. Never mind Arius' insults to the name of Jesus and His mother Mary -- Nicholas obviously had no right to resort to violence in the name of God! As punishment, the Council brought Nicholas up on charges and hauled him before the great Emperor for judgment. Constantine judged him guilty, but left sentencing up to the Council. They stripped Nicholas of his authority as bishop, taking from him his badges of office: his stole-like pallium and his hand-copied Gospel. Then, the great wonderworker of Myra was stripped, chained, and was thrown into a dungeon like any common criminal, while Arius walked free. All opinions were united: Nicholas had gotten what hes deserved.
But God 's opinion is the only one that counts.
One night, while Nicholas sat praying in his cell, another miracle occurred. Christ and His mother suddenly appeared in front of Nicholas' awestruck eyes. "Why are you in jail?" they asked him.
The astonished former bishop could only answer truthfully: "Because of my love for you"
A book appeared in Jesus' hand: Nicholas' Book of the Gospels -- the same book the Council had taken from him, the same book that was safely stored elsewhere. to Nicholas. From Mary's hands came his pallium. As he accepted these gifts, Nicholas chains fell from him. His ecclesiastical robes somehow appeared upon his body. Then he was alone again in his cell. He spent the rest of the night praising God for this astonishing miracle.
The next morning, the guards found Nicholas dressed in robe and pallium, reading the Gospel -- every inch a bishop once more. This was reported at once to the Emperor. Constantine, who had benefited from a miracle himself some years before, knew at once that Nicholas had been vindicated, and sent word to the Council to restore Nicholas to his former dignity.
Stacked against a miracle, Arius' clever heresy was revealed as the fraud it was. The Council of Nicaea agreed with Nicholas' views, deciding the question against Arius. The end result was a statement of belief binding upon the whole Church, a statement affirming the traditional teaching that Jesus Christ was and is of one substance with the Father. This great statement of belief, known today as the Nicene Creed, is to this day held and repeated daily by Christians all over the world.
The heresy of Arius did not end with Nicholas' fist to the face. It continued, and eventually grew until most of the Church was deceived by it. Many great saints suffered and died to defeat the Arian Heresy, but in the end -- like all lies -- it was cast aside by those who love the truth. Arius himself died a horrible death some years later, lying in his own blood and filth behind the Forum of Constantine after his bowels and other internal organs suddenly and mysteriously exploded out of his own anus.
And as for Nicholas? He lived on, still beloved, still renowned as a wonderworker. He died in his hometown of Myra at the age of 73. So great was Nicholas' reputation for miracles, generosity and kindness that he came to be regarded as the patron saint of children, coopers, sailors, fishermen, merchants, broadcasters, the falsely accused, repentant thieves, pharmacists, archers, and pawnbrokers. And of course he is remembered by billions -- Christians and non-Christians alike -- as the model and prototype of the beloved folk figure of "Saint Nick", the gift-giving, child-loving Santa Claus.
But the real lesson of Saint Nicholas is not his generosity, not his kindness, not his miracle-workings. The real lesson Nicholas of Myra teaches us is that heresy must always be opposed forcefully. Our Lord showed us by example that the best way to deal with those who turn God's house into a den of thieves is a whip of small cords. Nicholas' example likewise shows us that the best response to those who teach error as truth is -- sometimes -- a righteous fist to the face.
Happy Saint Nicholas' Day!
Friday, December 6, 2013
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
2. Christ vs. the Vicar of Christ I
And [Christ] said to them: Go ye into the whole world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved: but he that believeth not shall be condemned.
--Mark 16:15-16 DRV
_________________
“Proselytism is solemn nonsense, it makes no sense. We need to get to know each other, listen to each other and improve our knowledge of the world around us. Sometimes after a meeting I want to arrange another one because new ideas are born and I discover new needs. This is important: to get to know people, listen, expand the circle of ideas. The world is crisscrossed by roads that come closer together and move apart, but the important thing is that they lead towards the Good.”
– Pope Francis, in an interview with avowed atheist Eugenio Scalfari, La Repubblica, Oct. 1, 2013
____________
[ B-chan places muzzle of shotgun in mouth ]
Friday, September 20, 2013
1. Contra Mundum
We cannot insist only on issues related to abortion, gay marriage and the use of contraceptive methods. This is not possible. I have not spoken much about these things, and I was reprimanded for that. But when we speak about these issues, we have to talk about them in a context. The teaching of the church, for that matter, is clear and I am a son of the church, but it is not necessary to talk about these issues all the time. — His Holiness Francis I, “A Big Heart Open to God” (interview with Fr. Antonio Spadaro, S.J.), Civiltà Cattolica, 30 Sept 2013
I have always been
a loyal supporter of the pope. Over the past thirteen years of my Catholic
journey, I have looked at our pontiffs with respect, admiration, and even love.
I have defended them fervently in arguments and backed them faithfully in
unpopular stands.
But with our good Pope Francis’ recent pronouncements on the affability of the Almighty towards atheists, sodomites, abortionists, and those whose faith lies with persons other than Jesus Christ, I have lost all hope that the current bearer of the Fisherman’s Ring is going to champion the orthodox and Catholic faith I love. The more he speaks, the more I cringe, and the easier the work of those who hate the Papacy becomes.
And my Protestant,
Evangelical, and Orthodox friends are right on the job. The instant the pope’s
latest words hit the newswires, the pope-haters I know got straight to work.
“Behold your ‘first
among equals!’” intone the Orthodox from behind their beards. “He openly denies
what the Church has always taught. We have a word for that sort of person in
Greek: hairetikos!”
“Antichrist,
antichrist, antichrist!” screech the Evangelicals from the 72,000 seat JesusDome
with retractable roof. “I told you I told you I told you! Whore of Babylon!”
“Martin Luther was
right,” say the Protestants from the pulpits of their empty churches. “At least
about Rome.”
Yes, Francis the
Talking Pope has really done wonders for the credibility of our Church in the
eyes of nonbelievers and of our separated brethren. He talks off the top of his head, you and I get to do the let’s-explain-what-he-really-meant dance. Thanks,
your Holiness.
One of my friends
summed it all up in one question. Paraphrasing: “With all that has been said and done by this
pope and others like him, “ he asked, “how can you still cling to the Church?”
Well, friend, here
is my reply.
I cling to the
Church because I have no choice. Unlike Team Jesus over in the
J-Dome, and unlike the nice lady priestess facing the empty pews over at First
Methbyterian, we Catholics must have
the Body and Blood of Jesus to survive, we must have a single, authoritative,
apostolic voice to speak the words handed down from Christ to us, and we must
all be united in one holy Church.
The Catholic Church
has the Sacraments. The Catholic Church has the apostolic succession. Yes, the
Orthodox have them, too, but the Orthodox are not a Church, not an entity universal in character, but rather a loose
and often contentious band of
separate national churches — a sort of Warsaw Pact, only with Jesus in the big
chair instead of Leonid Brezhnev. Our
bearded brothers of the East are holy and apostolic, but they are not one, and
they lack the Rock, the Bishop of Rome, the one man appointed by Christ Himself
to lead, guide, and unify the Church. And until they acknowledge that there is
a Rock to which we must look for guidance, Eastern Orthodoxy is not an option
for me.
And so I am stuck
with the Catholic Church. Leaving it is not an option open to me. I could no more walk away from the Body and
Blood of Christ than I could walk away from gravity. I could no more abandon
the Sovereign Pontiff than a baseball player could tell his manager to go to
hell. I am married to the Bride of Christ, for better or for worse.
And that means I am
stuck with our horrible, horrible pope.
Friends, it’s not
as if we don’t deserve him. I am certainly a bad excuse for a Catholic. No, Ann
Barnhardt said it best: Francis is a
punishment. The Church has strayed, and now God is going to allow the
Church to suffer. Thanks to Pope Evita and his yerba mate-fuelled theology,
millions of confused Catholics will conclude that there’s no such thing as
Right and Wrong. Thanks to Feel-good Francis the First, millions of conservative
Catholics will lose faith in the Church, conclude that God has abandoned us, and
wander away into the wilderness. Thanks to this pope, the Bark of Peter is now the
Latin Love Boat, where baby killers, boy-lovers, and Buddhists can all get to
Heaven as long as they’re, you know, nice.
And, over time, the
real Church will be winnowed away to a tiny remnant.
As it has been
before.
Bad popes are
nothing new, gang. God often gives bad men great power. Saint Peter was chosen
by the Lord Himself, and the first thing our first pope did was deny Christ
three times. (He got better at being pope later.) Then of course there were all
those morally bankrupt medieval popes we’ve all heard so much about. And even some
of the good popes we’ve enjoyed over the last hundred years haven’t been — if
you’ll pardon the expression — simon pure.
Over two thousand
years we’ve had murderers, molesters, morons (and, lately, I suspect, Muslims) sitting
on the Throne of Peter. Yet despite their many wicked deeds and erroneous
opinions, not one of these evil men ever
dogmatically taught error as truth.
That is why I continue to hold fast to
the Catholic Church: because Jesus
Christ promised that the gates of Hell
would not prevail against it. Now, in saying this, the Lord was either lying,
He was mistaken, or He was telling the truth. If he was lying or mistaken, He
was not God, and nothing matters. Let’s all get drunk, get naked, and get down,
for tomorrow w die.
But if He was telling the truth..!
I believe he was telling the truth. I believe the
teaching magisterium of the Church, subsisting in the pope and in the bishops
in union with him, is maintained infallible by the Holy Spirit. But please note
that an infallible magisterium does not imply an infallible man. Being pope does not make a man
impeccable (incapable of sin). Nor does the Triple Tiara prevent the Vicar of
Christ from being a bad theologian. And wearing the Big Shoes sure as sin doesn’t
stop a guy from leading his fellow Catholics down the road to heresy. People
love heresy. Whether Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical, or Orthodox, Do-It-Yourself
Christianity is always the most popular brand. There have been many occasions
during which heretics both papal and otherwise have led many, even most—of the
Catholic Church into error, leaving only a few hated losers to tread the lonely
path of orthodoxy. Hell, during the worst of the Arian heresy the true Church
was pretty much down to Saint Athanasius and his followers. For several decades,
he stood alone against heretical popes, heretical emperors, and the majority of
the Church, which had fallen into Arianism. They called him Athanasius
contra mundum -- “Athanasius Against The World”.
But it was never
Athanasius against the world. He did not fight alone. He had the Holy Spirit on
his side. And in the end, thanks to the Holy Spirit, Athanasius won. One man --
and the Holy Spirit -- was more than a match for the Church, the pope, and the
Empire!
We traditional
Catholics now face the situation that Athanasius faced. The pope, while not
dogmatically teaching error, is opining falsehoods that will lead many souls to
Hell. The majority of the Church agrees with him. And soon the secular,
revolutionary Empire will use the new, sin-friendly Church to bludgeon those
few of us who dare cling to the true Catholic Faith.
Well, here I am—the
last of the bitter clingers. I’m ready for the bludgeon. And while it may be
true that God will put no longer His nail-scarred Hand over the mouth of his
Vicar on Earth, I have to believe the Holy Spirit will prevent our pope from
teaching error as truth in a dogmatic way,
And that is why I
cling to the Church: because I trust the Holy Spirit, as Athanasius did. I
stand with Athanasius, and against the Emperor, the pope, the fallen majority of
the Church, and the world.
Bring on the pain.
O Holy father Athanasius,
like a pillar of orthodoxy
you refuted the heretical nonsense of Arius
by insisting that the Father and the Son are equal in essence.
O venerable father, beg Christ our God to save our souls.
like a pillar of orthodoxy
you refuted the heretical nonsense of Arius
by insisting that the Father and the Son are equal in essence.
O venerable father, beg Christ our God to save our souls.
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