It is time to begin a new series on the
blog. On December 8 of this year, less than a month away now, the Church will
begin its Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy. There is a wonderful
document from Pope Francis that, if you have not already read it, I
strongly recommend you do so, soon.
It is a season of mercy in the Church, or
at least we can make it so if we want to. And it is none to early to start to
think about what exactly you and I can do to make it so. So often when we
Catholics are confronted with these various ‘years’, it is easy for us to put
them out of our mind or consign them to ‘something the Vatican is doing’ or
‘something the diocese is doing.’
Well, if it’s the Year of St. Paul or the
Year of Consecrated Life, I guess that’s OK – we can’t do everything, after
all. But it would be a true missed opportunity if that was our decision with
the Year of Mercy. The world stands in urgent need of the mercy of God, and for
all Christians and indeed all men and women of good will to show forth that
mercy, each according to his or her abilities and state of life.
Now, the year has not even started and I
am already a bit concerned that it is going off the rails, already losing the
prime focus. I am concerned that the whole question of mercy in the Church is
revolving almost exclusively around the questions of sex, love, marriage,
divorce, and the ever-popular one of ‘who gets to receive the Eucharist?’
This is terrible, if this becomes the
sole focus of the Year of Mercy. These are real questions that need real
answers, and there are indeed real people who are really hurting and really
need to be met by a compassionate, yet truth-telling, Church. Absolutely. But
if this becomes all the Year of Mercy is concerned with, we have missed a great
opportunity, a tragic failure to get the point.
For one thing, neither you nor I are part
of the Church’s magisterium. Decisions and pastoral programs are crafted in
Rome, in national bishops’ conferences, and in chancery offices. Almost
everyone reading my blog is not involved in any of that. To make the Year of
Mercy be all about things happening in Rome and in the bishops’ offices is to
make it not about you and me and what we are doing with ourselves. I am not
saying it’s intentional or thought-out, but it’s a wonderful way of letting
ourselves off the hook. ‘Well, the Church (meaning the Pope and the bishops, of
course!) needs to get its act together for gay people and divorced people and
so forth. Not my problem!’
But that is not what Mercy is about. Not
all of it, not by a long shot. And what the world is hungry for, desperate for,
crying out for, is an outpouring of God’s mercy through the merciful choices of
every human being, starting with you and me. And that’s what I want to talk
about for the next fourteen weeks on this blog.
Mercy, you see, is expressed in works,
works that can be done and in fact must be done by every baptized person,
according to their means and abilities and state of life. But there is no one
so poor, no one so incapable, that there is no work of mercy they can do. The
Church in its kindness and thoughtfulness has codified the works of mercy into
seven corporal works (concerned with
the good of the body) and seven spiritual
works (concerned with the good of the soul). And here they are:
The Corporal Works of Mercy
To feed the hungry;
To give drink to the thirsty;
To clothe the naked;
To harbour the harbourless;
To visit the sick;
To ransom the captive;
To bury the dead.
The Spiritual Works of Mercy
To instruct the ignorant;
To counsel the doubtful;
To admonish sinners;
To bear wrongs patiently;
To forgive offences willingly;
To comfort the afflicted;
To pray for the living and the dead.
These are the fourteen great ways that we
make the mercy of God a living reality in the lives of our brothers and
sisters, these the principal ways we are to approach the Year of Mercy and make
it our year, our plan of action for the year.
And so this blog for the next fourteen Wednesdays or so will discuss each work of mercy in turn, what it is and how we might think of living it out in our lives this year. The world needs it, now, and if you and I don’t do it, who exactly do we think will?
Looking forward to this series, Fr. Denis.
ReplyDeleteMy first two thoughts were "love, sweet love" and "a good kick in the pants." I have a lot to learn. That's why you're writing this and I'm not. :-)
Thank-you, Fr. Denis! A much needed reflection on how to incarnate mercy and not just talk about.
ReplyDeleteAmen! Amen! Amen! Thank you very much! May I copy and email your post to my friends?
ReplyDeleteOf course! Public domain! Good to hear from you.
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