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3. And yet, how do we do that? How do we lay claim to a joy that
seems so often contradicted by the sorrows and confusions of daily
life? The answer is, we can't lay claim to this joy
not without a radical conversion of heart. This is only possible
through faith in Jesus Christ. But because of Christ's coming, it
is within our grasp. Therefore, what I want to suggest is that today,
right now, is exactly the "acceptable time" to receive the joy
of the Great Jubilee. The way is open, and the moment is at hand.
But the cost of passage is conversion, a change in the direction
of our lives at their root. We need to see with new eyes, illumined
by a new light. We need to turn away from our selfishness, our pride,
our distractions and false freedoms, and toward the real freedom,
the freedom only found in Jesus Christ. Advent 1998 brings us to
the threshold of a new millennium. The Holy Father describes it
as a "threshold of hope." The liturgical year we begin (1999)
designated by John Paul II as the year of reconciliation with
the Father, bearing fruit in the virtue of charity or love
is God's invitation to the conversion we need, and the final step
toward the Jubilee. So let us turn to what crossing that threshold
requires.
II. THE RECOVERY OF CONSCIENCE
"I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, 'Make straight
the way of the Lord' . . . " (Jn 1:23).
4. A central irony of our age, particularly in the developed countries,
and most especially in the United States as we close "the American
century," is this: Many of us have more power, luxuries, opportunities
and liberties than at any previous time in history. Yet we are not
happy, and we have no peace. The 20th century has seen more bloodshed
than all others combined. War continues. Crime continues. Oppression
of the poor continues. Suicide, divorce, abortion and family breakdown
rates have climbed steadily throughout the developed nations. And
even the very success of the U.S. economy has brought about a permanent
culture of apprehension a society where both parents frequently
must have jobs outside the home; a society of more work and more
pressure, often driven by the excessive consumption of goods, which
is fueled by the relentless marketing of products, which creates
more consumer debt, which generates the need for longer work hours,
in order to make more money. And so the cycle goes, cutting through
marriages and families like a hurricane.
5. In the midst of our prosperity, at the heart of modern society,
is a drift toward reducing the human person to a purely economic
animal; a coarsening of our attitudes toward the sanctity of human
life; and a growing sense of powerlessness fueled by the size and
seriousness of the problems we face. At the same time, science has
appeared to undermine the supernatural claims of religious faith,
while weakening our notions of truth and sin. This led Pope Pius
XII more than 40 years ago to describe the paramount sin of this
century as "the loss of the sense of sin." Thus, while we sense
that something is gravely wrong with modern life, we no longer seem
to possess the vocabulary to describe and correct it.
6. This results in two predictable temptations. The first is collective:
We seek structural solutions for structures of sin. Herein lie the
roots of the great totalitarian projects of our era: National Socialism,
Marxism-Leninism, and others. The second is individual: We
absolve ourselves from responsibility for problems which we feel
we cannot control, and withdraw into self-absorption. This individualism
is the engine of today's consumerist materialism, the "atheism with
a happy face" which dominates the developed world and buries moral
issues and yearnings under a landslide of goods and services. The
first temptation involves pride: the idea that we can, by our own
ingenuity, remedy the effects of sin. The second implies despair:
the abdication of work for the common good out of unwarranted fear,
futility and self-interest.
7. Both of these temptations have led, in our day, to the destruction
of human freedom and happiness. The first crushes the individual
in the name of the greater good, replacing community with the machinery
of social control. The second fragments community in the name of
individual sovereignty. It then isolates and reduces individuals
to the sum of their appetites, replacing true freedom with an idolatry
of distractions which masquerade as meaningful choices.
8. Against these temptations, the Church speaks the simple truth
of human dignity. God created us out of His infinite love, and endowed
men and women with the gift of free will. Man freely chose to abuse
that freedom and reject God's love through disobedience to God's
will in other words, through sin. In separating himself from
God, man darkened his reason, weakened his own will and his ability
to see the truth, and inherited "the wages of sin [which] is death"
(Rom 6:23). But again from His infinite love, God sent His only
son to redeem us and restore human dignity. It is now our free choice
to accept that redemption and its implications, or persist in sin.
Explicit in the drama of salvation is the fact that we are infinitely
valuable because of our creation by God; that we are genuinely free
to choose right or wrong; and that our choices matter. We
are responsible for ourselves, and for the world, as active moral
agents.
9. What's right and wrong with the world, therefore, is not something
remote from our daily lives. We are each in part accountable for
it. This is why John Paul II, in his 1984 apostolic exhortation
Reconciliation and Penance (Reconciliatio et Paenitentia),
writes that ". . . cases of social sin are the result of
the accumulation and concentration of many personal sins."
And he notes that ". . . there is no sin, not even the most intimate
and secret one, the most strictly individual one, that exclusively
concerns the person committing it. With greater or lesser violence,
with greater or lesser harm, every sin has repercussions on the
entire ecclesial body and the whole human family" (16).
10. This is why issues of personal conscience have much wider impact
than an individual's private spiritual health. Just as we can speak
confidently of a "communion of saints," so too there is a "communion
of sin, whereby a soul that lowers itself through sin drags
down with itself the Church and, in some way, the whole world" (RP,
16). Unfortunately, in our day, conscience is often distorted to
serve exactly the false freedom God designed it to discern and guard
against. Therefore, developing a rightly formed conscience
is vital not only for individuals seeking to do God's will, but
for the entire Church as we approach the Great Jubilee. Right conscience
is the cornerstone of reconciliation, for without it, we cannot
distinguish sin from virtue. And reconciliation with God
and within God's human family is the foundation of Jubilee.
11. What then is the human conscience? Vatican II's Pastoral
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et Spes)
defines it "as man's most secret core, and his sanctuary. There
he is alone with God, whose voice echoes in his depths. By conscience,
in a wonderful way, that law is made known which is fulfilled in
the love of God and one's neighbor" (16).
12. The Council Fathers add that, "Through loyalty to conscience,
Christians are joined to other men in the search for truth and for
the right solution to so many moral problems that arise both in
the life of individuals and from social relationships. Hence, the
more a correct conscience [emphasis added] prevails, the
more do persons and groups turn aside from blind choice and try
to be guided by the objective standards of moral conduct" (GS,
16). In its Declaration on Religious Liberty (Dignitatis Humanae),
the council goes on to observe that, "It is through his conscience
that man sees and recognizes the demands of the divine law. He is
bound to follow this conscience faithfully in all his activity,
so that he may come to God, who is his last end. Therefore he must
not be forced to act contrary to his conscience. Nor must he be
prevented from acting according to his conscience, especially in
religious matters" (3).
13. We are always obligated to follow our consciences. But, if
we're sincere in our Catholic faith, we must also acknowledge that
conscience does not "invent" truth. Rather, conscience must carefully
seek truth out and conform itself to truth once discovered, no matter
how inconvenient. Conscience is never merely a matter of personal
opinion or private preference. It is not a pious alibi for doing
what we want. It is not comfortable or "tame," any more than Isaiah
and John the Baptizer were tame for the rulers of ancient Israel.
"I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, 'Make straight
the way of the Lord' . . . " (Jn 1:23). As John spoke to Israel,
so a right conscience speaks to the individual heart. And always,
as the Council Fathers noted in their Declaration on Religious
Liberty, ". . . [I]n forming their consciences, the faithful
must pay careful attention to the sacred and certain teaching of
the Church. For the Catholic Church is, by the will of Christ, the
teacher of truth. It is her duty to proclaim and teach with authority
[emphasis added] the truth which is Christ and, at the same time,
to declare and confirm by her authority the principles of the moral
order which spring from human nature" (14).
14. Exercising right conscience, therefore, is never a matter
of balancing what the Church teaches against her theological critics
or popular opinion surveys, then doing what we find more attractive.
This is evasion. It is a subtle form of self-flattery and
we should remember that "If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves,
and the truth is not in us" (1 Jn 1:8). Guilt, after all, is a good
and healthy thing and a gift of God's mercy when it
corresponds to the facts of a sinful action. Right conscience implies
humility before the truth. It directs us toward God and reminds
us of our sins. And in doing so, it calls us to repentance.
III. THE URGENCY OF RECONCILIATION
"Come now, let us reason together, says the Lord: Though your
sins are like scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they
are red like crimson, they shall become like wool" (Is 1:18).
15. The first words of Jesus' public ministry provide the key to
His entire mission: "The time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God
is at hand: Repent, and believe in the Gospel" (Mk 1:15). Repent
and believe in the Gospel, the "good news" of salvation. Even
as right conscience makes us aware of the sins which separate us
from God, Jesus the Redeemer comes to restore our dignity; reconcile
us with His Father; and offer us the means repentance
to turn away from sin and accept the free gift of salvation. In
every sense, repentance is the gateway to joy, including the
joy of the Great Jubilee, just as, through his repentance, the
Prodigal Son was welcomed home to his father's love and forgiveness
in a feast of reconciliation (Lk 15:11-24).
16. Jesus reconciled humanity to the Father through His life, sacrificial
death on the cross, and resurrection. So too the Church, in "intimate
connection with Christ's mission, [has as her central task that
of] reconciling people: with God, with themselves, with neighbor,
with the whole of creation" (RP, 8). Moreover, to "evoke
conversion and penance in man's heart and to offer him the gift
of reconciliation is the specific mission of the Church as she continues
the work of her divine Founder" (RP, 23).
17. The Church carries out her mission of reconciliation in various
ways, but first among them in the life of the Catholic faithful
is the sacrament which Jesus instituted exactly for this purpose:
the Sacrament of Reconciliation, also known as Penance. Since the
Second Vatican Council, many Catholics have unfortunately neglected
the practice of personal confession to a priest. In doing so, they've
robbed themselves of a tremendous source of consolation. I strongly
encourage all Catholics of the archdiocese to return to personal
confession on a regular basis as a vital part of their preparation
for the Great Jubilee. I ask parents to draw their children into
this sacrament by word and example. I ask my brother priests, where
the demands of their ministry allow, to extend the hours of confession
in their parishes and to make available more communal celebrations
of the sacrament, with private confession included, as part of their
planning for the Jubilee. Finally, I ask parish and Catholic
school catechists to emphasize the Sacrament of Penance as an
experience of pardon and peace; cleansing and healing; honesty
and restoration; weakness and strength; guidance and correction;
judgment and penance; conversion and joy. In a very real sense,
Penance is the sacrament of conscience, because the sins
we confess are those disclosed by a careful examination of the secret
sanctuary of the heart.
18. The Sacrament of Penance can be intensely fruitful because
it is intensely intimate and private: The penitent admits his sins
with a contrite heart, confessing them to Christ in the person of
the priest, who is bound to absolute secrecy by the sacramental
seal. Yet it is also expansive in its scope. Not only is
the sinner reconciled to God; he is reconciled to the Church and
all her members. In this, we better understand the banquet given
by the father of the Prodigal Son: Not only do the father and son
rejoice, but all those invited to the banquet share their joy. Moreover,
Penance, the sacrament of mercy, enables us to become more
merciful ourselves, and disposes us to more deeply celebrate the
Eucharist as a foretaste of heaven.
19. The question sometimes arises: Why do we need to confess our
sins to a priest? Why not seek forgiveness in private prayer before
the Lord? The answer is that, while private contrition before God
is always a crucial first step, Jesus Himself established Penance
as the ordinary means of a sinner's forgiveness. As we've already
seen, the rupture caused by sin is not just vertical, between child
and Father, but also horizontal, among brothers and sisters.
All sin has a social dimension. In Penance, the priest not only
acts in persona Christi ("in the person of Christ"), forgiving
sins through the unique authority Jesus Himself invested in the
priesthood through His apostles (Jn 20:22; Mt 18:18), but he also
takes part in the reconciliation as a representative of the ecclesial
community. Finally, on a very satisfying human level, the things
we speak out loud to another person have a finality and personal
commitment which thoughts rarely do.
20. Another question involves the spirit best suited to receiving
this sacrament. Here we can return to the example of Advent. Properly
lived, Advent involves emptying ourselves precisely of our selves
removing our selves from the altars of our own hearts, the
better to prepare our hearts as mangers to receive the poverty of
Jesus. In like manner, Penance involves emptying ourselves of our
sins, which are an expression of our selfishness, in order to be
filled with new life in Christ. A good confession should therefore
be honest and thorough; it should follow some period of mature self-examination
where we ask God for an accurate knowledge of our sins; it should
seek God's grace in humility; it should be clear, concise and to
the point; it should trust in God's forgiveness; and it should bear
fruit in conversion and tangible acts of charity.
21. Regarding the examination of conscience, the Holy Father reminds
us that it "must never be one of anxious psychological introspection,
but a sincere and calm comparison with the moral law, with the evangelical
norms proposed by the Church, with Jesus Christ Himself who is our
teacher and model of life, and with the heavenly Father, who calls
us to goodness and life" (RP, 31:III). Penance will often
involve elements of spiritual direction and personal counseling,
but it is a substitute for neither. The Sacrament of Penance
exists as a tribunal of mercy and a place of spiritual healing;
its purpose is to restore the sinner to freedom from his or her
sins, and to set the sinner on a new path of conversion. In
that light, scrupulosity and a mechanical resort to the sacrament
are not signs of grace, but rather the opposite. They imply
a fear of a wrathful God, distrust of His forgiveness and even a
kind of narcissism. They are simply the negative image of the other
primary sin against the sacrament, which is laxity.
22. The healthy conscience neither withholds indictment where real
sin exists, nor indicts where there is no sin. What brings balance
to our lives in Christ, is love. The key to right conscience,
to repentance, to conversion and to reconciliation in fact,
the key to understanding and celebrating the Great Jubilee
is an overriding trust in God and His love for us, which
is greater than the greatest sin and stronger than death.
IV. LIVING THE GREAT JUBILEE
"Oh God, thou art my God, I seek thee, my soul thirsts for thee;
my flesh faints for thee, as in a dry and weary land where no water
is" (Ps 63:1).
23. Each of us is born with a yearning in our souls for "something
more." We have a natural longing for happiness, but we cannot be
happy alone. We were made for wholeness, for fraternity with one
another, and for communion with our Creator. This is what Augustine
means in his words from the Confessions: "Our hearts are
restless, [God,] until they rest in thee." This reminds us of the
second, and even more important, task of conscience. John the Baptizer
not only cried out against the iniquity of Israel; he also pointed
toward her Deliverer: "Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away
the sin of the world!" (Jn 1:29). In like manner, a right conscience
not only alerts us to what is wrong in our actions, but also urges
us toward the One who is beautiful, life-giving and true. Like Augustine,
our hearts are restless, and like the psalmist, our souls are thirsty,
for the abundant life which only reconciliation with God through
Jesus Christ can bring.
24. In his 1994 apostolic letter, As the Third Millennium Draws
Near (Tertio Millennio Adveniente), John Paul II defines "the
joy of every Jubilee" but especially the Great Jubilee of
the Year 2000 as "above all a joy based upon the forgiveness
of sins, the joy of conversion" (32). And elsewhere in the same
document, he notes that "preparing for the Year 2000 has become
. . . a key of my pontificate" (23).
25. The importance of the Great Jubilee is this: It is a countersign
to the sinfulness of our age. We live at a pivotal moment in history,
a time of unsurpassed achievement and unsurpassed inhumanity. We're
closing a century which has served as a great battleground between
the "culture of life" and the "culture of death." Around the world,
humanity struggles for freedom and dignity. At the same time, it
methodically creates the instruments of its own destruction. In
contrast to this culture of death, the Great Jubilee calls us to
turn again to God's Son; and it lifts up His cross so that
we might see and believe in our salvation "Behold the Lamb
of God who takes away the sin of the world!"
26. Our role in this drama is simple, but crucial. The future is
not determined; we co-author it with God. As John Paul II observes,
". . . sin, in the proper sense, is always a personal act,
since it is an act of freedom on the part of an individual person,
and not properly of a group or community" (RP, 16.). In a
similar way, the choice to be virtuous is also a personal act.
Each of us has free will. We are each a seed planted by the Sower
to bring forth justice and reconciliation, through the power of
the cross of Christ, by our personal actions and the witness of
our lives. We are each and especially together the
Gospel leaven which can begin to change the "culture of death" from
within.
27. In the light of the Great Jubilee, says the Holy Father, "the
whole of Christian history appears to us as a single river into
which many tributaries pour their waters. The Year 2000 invites
us to gather with renewed fidelity and ever deeper communion along
the banks of this great river: the river of Revelation, of Christianity
and the Church, a river which flows through human history starting
from the event which took place at Nazareth and then at Bethlehem
2,000 years ago. This is truly the 'river' with which its 'streams,'
in the expression of the Psalm, 'makes glad the city of God' (46:4)"
(TMA, 25).
28. I began these pastoral reflections by asking: How do we lay
claim to an "Advent joy" that seems so often contradicted by the
sorrows and confusions of daily life? We know the answer now: by
drinking from that river of mercy which is God's free gift
of love and forgiveness in Jesus Christ; and bringing that same
love, that same forgiveness, to others. In the desert of our
sometimes sinful hearts, in the desert of our often sinful world,
this river of God's mercy is the river which brings life.
+Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap. Cap.
Archbishop of Denver
December 2, 1998
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