March 14, 2017
Tuesday, Lent Week Two
The Responsorial (Psalm 50) promises: “To the upright I will show
the saving power of God.” Isaiah encourages us to add: “And also to those not upright.”
Isaiah
1: 10-20 offers forgiveness and purification to the “princes of Sodom.”
When we read in Genesis 19 the sin
that brought destruction on Sodom, we wonder that Isaiah can promise what he
does. In the eyes of Lot, in whose culture protecting guests was sacrosanct, to
have allowed the rape that the men of Sodom intended would have been worse than
turning his own daughters over to them for child abuse! (19:8). But even to
these rapists God says, “Though your sins be like scarlet, they may become
white as snow…. If you are willing and obey, you shall eat the good things of
the land.” Let’s be honest. Would we say
that to a child abuser?
To priests guilty of that sin, the Church offers forgiveness; but
with no possibility of ever being admitted to full priestly ministry again.
That is because we learned — late, after
1980 —
that no matter how much therapy is given, recidivism can never be
discounted. This alerted us to another aspect of sin: one obvious but
overlooked.
Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, after nine years on the Australian
child-abuse commission, gives this overlooked aspect of sin as a possible
reason why so many bishops re-assigned offenders after they repented. We were
so focused on seeing sin, including child abuse, as a “direct offense against
God,” that the bishops treated it as any other sexual sin: Confession and
absolution marks “end of story.” But sin always also does damage to people. If we forget this, we might act as if forgiveness
precludes forestalling. With our eyes only on repentance we can be blind to
risk. The truth is, to forgive fully does not entail the folly of gambling on
reform. If we do, it is the psychological and spiritual wellbeing of children
that we wager. No matter what the odds, that is too much to gamble. (Robinson, op. cit. p. 203).
In Matthew 23: 1-12 Jesus
tells us why we include the Liturgy of
the Word in every Mass. It is to make sure we have direct exposure to the
word of God.
We can never rely entirely on the second-hand exposure we get
through teachers, priests and bishops. In his time Jesus said, “The scribes and
Pharisees have succeeded Moses as teachers.” That is a possibility in every
time. We need to obey every legitimate authority, but as disciples, not
dumbbells. We should view all opinions and optional customs in the light of the
word of God.
Jesus mentions some: blind applications of the law that lay “heavy
burdens’ on people; ways of dressing that suggest some are more religious than
others; preferential treatment and signs of special respect in gatherings;
honorific titles. He alone is the teacher; the rest of us, clergy and laity
alike, are all fellow-students verifying by his words what anyone claims to
have heard. No one is “higher” than another. Those who want status should seek
it through serving others. That is the word of God.
Initiative:
Assume that there are errors in “ordinary” teaching and practice. Try to fix
them.
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