1.
Baptism and Original Sin
Q: At the Baptism of my 3rd cousin in a thoroughly modernist
Catholic parish, the priest never once referred to Original Sin
or sin at all. We were told we were "welcoming a new member
of the Body of Christ" and "initiating the baby into the
faith." I am not sure what "faith" this priest meant.
So please answer the following: What happened to Original Sin and
the concept of fallen man in need of a Savior? Has Baptism been
demoted from Sacrament to an Initiation Rite (Sent by B.C.)
A:
Your question is a relevant one and goes to the very heart of what
we believe about this fundamental matter of our faith. The priest
was not wrong in saying that Baptism is an initiation into the Body
of Christ, understood as the Catholic Church. The Catechism
of the Catholic Church points out (nn. 1210-1211) that Baptism
is the first of the three Sacraments of Initiation, Eucharist and
Confirmation being the other two. However, if I read the feeling
behind your question correctly, he regretfully left out the central
reason why Christ instituted the Sacrament of Baptism which
is to wipe away Original Sin! This was a culpable omission on his
part; fortunately his omission does not affect the validity of the
sacrament.
To
omit mentioning sin at a Baptism is like having a statue of a Risen
Christ in a church and pretending that He didn’t die. The
purpose of His dying was to blot out our sins, and to focus only
on the happy moment of the Resurrection is to give an incomplete
picture of the matter and could leave the participants with a very
skewed notion of why we dare get baptized as children rather than
adults. Infant baptism, after all, separates us from the other Christian
denominations that only baptize adults. Catholics and Orthodox think
this doctrine through to its logical conclusion; namely, that we
should want to free ourselves from Original Sin at the earliest
stage of life so that sanctifying grace may open a path to holiness.
The
secondary purpose of the Sacrament of Baptism is to infuse into
the baptized person the theological gifts of Faith, Hope and Charity
and the supreme Gift of the Holy Spirit of which the baptized person
receives a full measure in the Sacrament of Confirmation.
I
will pray that the priest in question returns to the sane practice
of catechizing the faithful about Original Sin at the teachable
moment of a holy Baptism so that they understand why we even have
the Mystical Body of Christ.
2.
Why we confess our sins to a priest
Q: One of the questions I'm confronted with most often
is, "Why on earth do you need a priest to confess your sins.
I just go straight to my Father and tell him myself that I'm sorry."
(Sent by D.K. from FL)
A:
A good question and one that undoubtedly confronts many Catholics.
We Catholics confess our sins to a priest and not just to God in
private as a means of spiritual accountability to an established
religious authority that acts in the Name of God and as a means
to cultivate a concrete sense of our own sinfulness. Confessing
to God directly in private can be just an exercise in self-deception
or at least a pious exercise that makes us feel good. It may be
good to ask the person who advocates that practice two questions,
“Well then how do you know you are not just confessing to
yourself and how do know you are forgiven?” Catholics have
answers to these questions as will be outlined below.
Since
many of the people who challenge our practice of private confession
to a priest are fundamentalists, it is important that we root our
answers in Scripture so here are a few biblical reasons to accompany
the common sense ones above.
Biblical
reason #1: Even before Jesus instituted the Sacrament of Penance
people were already confessing their sins to John the Baptist when
they got baptized in the Jordan (cf. Mt 3:6). John
was the son of the priest Zechariah and was therefore a priest by
heredity. The Jews thus already knew a form of personal confession
of sins in Jesus’ time—in John at least they were confessing
their sins to a priest. It was only the Protestant rebellion that
told us that individual confession to a man was wrong.
Biblical
reason #2: Jesus Himself told the apostles to forgive sins. Check
out John 20:22-23 where the post-Resurrection Jesus says,
“Receive the gift of the Holy Spirit; whose sins you forgive
are forgiven them. Whose sins you retain are retained.”
Now if Jesus did not want consecrated men to make a judgment on
other men’s sins (forgive or retain), why would He have given
them the power to do it? On top of that, these men and their successors
have to actually hear the sins of men in auricular confession in
order to decide whether to forgive or retain them. Priests do not
forgive generalized sin. They forgive actual sins that
men have confessed to them.
There
is also a great passage at the end of the story about the paralytic
who Jesus forgave of his sins before He cured him. The disciples
rejoiced that “God gave such authority to men”
(Mt 9:1-8). This is not a reference to Jesus. It is plural
and so is a reference to the ones to whom He entrusted the same
power to forgive sins.
Biblical
reason #3: The Apostle James says, “Declare your sins to one
another…” (Ja 5:16) which may be seen as a
recognition that this practice is of a very early origin in the
New Testament itself. This may be interpreted in a communal or personal
sense.
Finally,
the Church determines that there are seven sacraments, and Penance
being one of them is a defined Doctrine of the Faith, not a matter
of person preference.
3.
Annulment and Communion
Q: On 10/8/06 our new priest gave a sermon on the Church's
teachings on divorced and remarried people being unable to receive
Holy Communion (no annulment). Six women with their children walked
out! When he said "You can not be Catholic and Pro-choice"
on 10/1/06, many people stiffened up and one woman after Mass said
she was "Catholic and Pro-choice." This newly ordained
priest is by far the exception and I wonder how long he will be
vocal on these issues. (From B. B. in FL)
A:
I congratulate your fine priest on his moral courage in preaching
the fullness of the Catholic Faith. Undoubtedly he will be martyred!
People’s
perceptions about the Church’s teaching on the inviolability
of the marriage bond and its relationship to civil divorce are often
skewed. Unfortunately there are many divorced Catholics with previous
sacramental marriages who remarry thinking that they are free to
receive Communion as Catholics in good standing. This is not true.
Divorced Catholics who remarry are prohibited from receiving Communion—or
any sacraments for that matter—as a recognition that their
remarriage has put them in a state of adultery which must cease
if they are to worthily receive Communion again.
In
its teaching on the sanctity of marriage, the Church does nothing
more than faithfully communicate what Christ taught in Matthew 19:
6, “let no man separate what God has joined.” The Catholic
Church takes a bad rap for defending the indissolubility (i.e.,
un-breakability) of the marriage bond, but she cannot do otherwise.
It is Christ’s will that we defend marriage as a permanent
bond lasting “for better or for worse…until death do
us part.”
This
also means that civil divorce does not dissolve the spiritual bond
that “God has joined.” There is nothing that
can dissolve it if it actually exists, and it is important to understand
that the issuance of an annulment decree by the Church is not the
dissolution of a marriage bond properly formed. An annulment (properly
called a “decree of nullity”) is only a recognition
that the bond was never there in the first place. Only with a judgment
from the Church on the non-existence of the previous bond may a
divorced person remarry in the Church and with the full blessing
of the Sacrament of Matrimony.
While
divorced Catholics who remarry may not receive any of the Sacraments
until and if they are free to do so, they are not, however, barred
from attending Mass and participating in the devotional life of
the Church. Indeed they are encouraged to do so, as long as scandal
does not result, in order to receive grace from the many streams
of the Church’s river of life.
Concerning
the “Catholic and Pro-Choice” matter, the priest was
absolutely correct: the two are totally incompatible. Pro-choice
means killing babies no matter what way you look at it, and the
two terms are contradictory. A person who persists in claiming that
he or she is “pro-choice” needs a good short-course
in Catholic morality and must reform this pharisaical attitude in
order to remain both in the grace of God and in the Church. The
Church asks for basic honesty about our beliefs. You simply can’t
be both “Catholic and Pro-Choice.” This is the burden
of “choice.”
4.
Communion in the hand
Q: Our pastor gives my husband and I one host split in
half in our hands (half for each of us) with a special prayer. I
use my hand to give communion to homebound persons who receive in
the hand or on the tongue according to their preference. Lately,
I've been coming across articles that say that communion in the
hand is disrespectful. One such is quoted here: "The Holy Eucharist
is trampled underfoot. My children take the Holy Eucharist in their
hands, my Son Jesus, sacrileges upon sacrileges!!" and "They
receive Jesus in their hands—what sorrow for my Son and for
me." (From a publication of MLOR Corporation 2002, a testimony
of Blessed Mother's appearances to Rosa Quattrini, 1969.) The other
article was a Franciscan blog for Secular Franciscans. I haven't
heard or read anything from the Hierarchy on this matter. Can you
enlighten me? What is the directive from the Vatican? (Sent by B.J.M.)
A:
I note that the publication you cite quotes a testimony from 1969
which was the same year that the Vatican authorized in a limited
fashion the reception of Holy Communion in the hand. This permission
was granted explicitly to the United States at the request of our
Bishops’ conference in 1977. We must be very clear that if
the Church allows a practice which does not contradict or violate
the moral law then we on our own authority cannot disallow it or
call it a sacrilege.
Having
said that, we also have to recognize that Communion in the hand
was one of the devastating waves of liturgical liberlism that flowed
over the Church in that era and continues into the present with,
I believe, harmful effects for people’s sense of reverence
and spirituality. Abandoning the worthy practice of receiving Communion
on the tongue accompanied the rejection of Latin as the main liturgical
language, kneeling at altar rails, age-old devotions and other pious
practices that helped the faithful maintain their sense of the holy.
I
am not sure why your priest splits the Host to put in your and your
husband’s hands with a “special prayer,” but I
sense it is this same trivialization of the sacred: the action has
no intrinsic meaning in itself and could very easily take your focus
off the Divine God and onto yourselves. I think the action is redundant
and distracting especially with the addition of that unnecessary
prayer—the Eucharist is a prayer!
I
knew a nun that ridiculed people who, according to her, said they
would not receive Communion in the hand because the hands commit
sin. I never knew anyone who said that, but that was her idea. She
then thought she was clever by pointing out that we also sin with
our tongues. The practice of receiving Communion on the tongue is
not a question of correct spiritual hygiene or some kind of scrupulous
perfectionism as the nun thought. It is rather a pious devotion
that inculcates respect for Whom we are receiving in a way that
cannot be approximated by receiving Him in the hands. We do many
familiar things with our hands, but being fed by another is
a rare and mystical moment. We are not in control of that moment,
God is. We are submissive to the one feeding us and have the understanding
that we are being given something, not taking it.
It
tests a priest’s patience during the distribution of Holy
Communion that people attempt to grab the Host out of his hand or
do not even have the decency to remove sweater sleeves, keys, purses
and various other things that cover their palms so that their hands
can’t actually receive Him. It just means that the people
are not clued into what they are doing or Whom they are receiving.
And sometimes they treat the Eucharistic Lord like a piece of popcorn
that they toss in their mouth so disgracefully. The faithful were
poorly instructed about receiving Communion in the hand when the
practice arose in the seventies and in most cases were never instructed
again let alone corrected in their sloppy habits.
I
don’t even have the time or charity to go into the question
of how people dress when they come up to receive Communion!
Since
the Vatican allows the practice of receiving Holy Communion in the
hand it is not something that an individual priest can actually
forbid. It is permitted but not mandated, so I always recommend
that, given the choice we choose the more respectful option. When
the faithful receive Christ on their tongues they are receiving
the greatest possible gift from the Church that wants to form in
them the habit of profound worship of the most profound Love that
exists.
Genuflection
in Church
Q: I notice
that the reverence of genuflection is not being emphasized in the
Catholic Church. Why is that? (Sent by J.V.)
A:
I thank you for bringing up the subject. Genuflection is a unique
gesture, not an everyday or commonplace habit. In times past people
used to genuflect or kneel in front of kings out of submission to
their authority. In our Faith we express this respect for authority
in certain ways such as a priest kneeling before a bishop to make
his vow of obedience at ordination. This is a sign of submission
to his legitimate God-given authority, but it is not an act of adoration
of a man. That would be idolatry.
We
do however genuflect and kneel before God as an act of adoration.
When we enter a Catholic church we know, in most cases, that the
Blessed Sacrament is reserved in the tabernacle, and our genuflection
is one way that we adore God when we come into His Presence reserved
sacramentally in the church.
The
fact that people do not do that means either that they do not believe
that God is present there or they do not care. I suspect that in
most cases the problem is the latter, but there are polls that indicate
an alarming percentage of Catholics that think the Eucharist is
only a symbol of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ. They are spiritual
Protestants in such a case and should be called to accountability
for this fundamental matter of our Catholic Faith.
With
regard to the latter element—they do not care—I fault
the priests who do not preach the True Presence of Christ in the
Eucharist. It indicates sometimes that the priests themselves have
lost the True Faith because they are supposed to preach the fullness
of the truth from the pulpit. It may also be indicative of slothfulness
on the part of the clergy too. They do not have the zeal necessary
to instruct the people in the fundamentals of the Faith.
One
final matter may come into play here. Many modern churches are constructed
in a fan shape or in such a way that the tabernacle is taken out
of its center position and shoved into a side chapel. Believe me,
after having traveled two-thirds of a million miles around the globe,
I have seen it all. It is easy to lose the habit of genuflecting
upon entering a pew when the liturgical environment makes you feel
like you are attending a concert or a happy prayer service. This
loss of focus almost never happens when the churches are traditional
and the Blessed Sacrament receives its place of honor in the Center
of the sanctuary. Whenever we take the Lord out of the Center, all
falls apart.
|