You Rt. fuitanj.5h«n TKc Catholic Hour YOU Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2016 https://archive.org/details/youOOshee YOU Eighteen addresses delivered in the nationwide Catholic Hour, produced by the National Council of Catholic Men, in cooperation with the National Broadcasting Company, from December 3, 1944 through April 1, 1945. BY RT. REV. MSGR. FULTON J. SHEEN of the Catholic University of America OUR SUNDAY LiDSARY HUNTINGTON, INDIANA Third Edition April 1, 1947 NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CATHOLIC MEN 1312 Massachusetts Avenue, N. W. Washington 5, D. C. Printed and diatribnted fey Onr Snndny Viaitor Pnntinffton, Indiana Nihii Obstat; REV. T. E DILLON Censor Librorum imDrimatur; 4- JOHN FRANCIS NOLL, Bishop of Fort Wayne TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Are You Happy? 7 What Is God Like? 12 What Are You Like? 17 How You Got That Way 21 Who Can Re-make You? 26 Is Religion Purely Individual? 31 How You Are Re-made 86 Faith 41 Hope 1 46 Charity 51 The Hell There Is 66 The Value Of Ignorance 61 The Secret of Sanctity 66 The Fellowship of Religion 72 Confidence In Victory !. 76 Religion Is A Quest 81 The Purpose Of Life 86 Easter 91 ARE YOU HAPPY? Address Delivered On December 3, 1944 Are you perfectly happy? Or are you still looking for happi- ness ? There can be no doubt that at one time or another in your life you attained that which you believed would make you happy. When you got what you wanted, were you happy? Do you remember when you were a child, how ardently you looked forward to Christmas? How happy you thought you would be, with your fill of cakes, your hands glutted with toys, and your eyes dancing with the lights on the tree! Christmas came, and after you bad eaten your fill, blown out the last Christmas light, and play- ed till your toys no longer amused, you climbed into your bed and said, in your own little heart of hearts, that somehow or other it did not quite come up to your expectations. And have you not lived that experience over a thousand times since? You looked forward to the joys of travel, but when your weary feet carried you home you ad- mitted that the two happiest days were the day you left home and the day you got back. Perhaps it was marriage you thought which would bring you perfect happiness. Even though it did bring a measure of hap- piness, you admit that you now take your companion’s love for granted. One is never thirsty at the border of the well. Perhaps it was wealth you wanted. You got it, and now you are afraid of losing it. “A golden bit does not make the better horse.” Maybe it was a desire to be well-known that you craved. You did become well- known only to find that reputa- tion is like a ball; as soon as it starts rolling, men begin to kick it around. The fact is: you want to be perfectly happy, but you are not. Your life has been a series of disappointments, shocks, and disillusionments. How have you reacted to your disappointments? Either you became cynical or else you became religious. If you be- came cynical, you blamed things, rather than yourself. If you were married you said: “If I had another husband, or another wife, I would be happy.” Or you said: “If I had another job . . . ”; or, “If I visited an- other night-club . . . ”; or, “If 8 YOU I were in another city, I would be happy.” In every instance, you made happiness extrinsic to yourself. No wonder you are never happy. You are chasing mirages until death overtakes you. But cynicism did not work, because in seeking pleasures you missed the joys of life. Pleasure is of the body; joy is of the mind and heart. Lobster Newburg gives pleasure to cer- tain people, but not even the most avid lobster fans would ever say that it made them joyful. You can quickly become tired of pleasures, but you never tire of joys. A pleasure can be increas- ed to a point where it ceases to be a pleasure; it may even begin to be a pain if carried beyond a certain point ; for example, tickling or drinking. But the joy of a good conscience, or the joy of a First Communion, or the discovery of a truth, never turns to pain. Furthermore, have you noticed that as your desire for pleasure increased, the satisfaction from the pleasure decreased? Do you think a philosophy of life is right that is based on the law of diminishing returns? You think you are having a good time ; but time really is the greatest obstacle in the world to happiness, not only because it makes you take pleasures suc- cessively, but also because you are never really happy until you are unconscious of the passing of time! The more you look at the clock, the less happy you are ! The more you enjoy yourself, the less conscious you are of the passing of time. You say, “Time passed like everything.” Maybe, therefore, your happiness has something to do with the eternal ! The other reaction to disap- pointment is much more rea- sonable. It begins by asking: “Why am I disappointed”; and then, “How can I avoid it?” Why are you disappointed? Be- cause of the tremendous dispro- portion between your desires and your realizations. Your soul has a certain infinity about it, be- cause it is spiritual. But your body, like the world about you, is material, limited, “cabined, cribbed, confined.” You can imagine a mountain of gold, but you will never see one. In like manner, you look forward to some earthly pleasure, or posi- tion, or state of life, and once you attain it you begin to feel the tremendous disproportion be- tween the ideal you imagined and the reality you possess. Dis- appointment follows. Every earthly ideal is lost by being ARE YOU HAPPY? 9 possessed. The more material your ideal, the greater the dis- appointment; the more spiritual it is, the less the disillusionment. Having discovered why you are disappointed, you take the next step of trying to avoid dis- appointments entirely. You ask yourself : “What do I desire above all things?” You want perfect life, and perfect truth, and perfect love. Nothing short of the Infinite satisfies you, and to ask you to be satisfied with less would be to destroy your nature. You want life, not for two more years, but always ; you want to know all truths, not the truths of economics alone, to the exclusion of history. You also want love without end. All the poetry of love is a cry, a moan, and a weeping. The more pure it is, the more it pleads; the miore it is lifted above the earth, the more it laments. With your feet on earth, you dream of heaven ; creature of time, you despise it; flower of a day, you seek to eternalize your- self. Why do you want Life, Truth, Love, unless you were made for them? How could you enjoy the fractions unless there were a whole? Whence come they? Where is the source of light in the city street at noon? Not under autos, buses, nor the feet of trampling throngs, be- cause their light is mingled with darkness. If you are to find the source of light you must go out to something that has no ad- mixture of darkness or shadow, namely, to pure light, which is the sun. In like manner, if 3^u are to find the source of Life, Truth, and Love, you must go out to a life that is not mingled with its shadow, death; to a Truth not mingled with its shadow, error; and to a Love not mingled with its shadow, hate. You go out to something that is Pure Life, Pure Truth, Pure Love, and that is the defi- nition of God. And the reason you have been disappointed is be- cause you have not yet found Him! It is God you are looking for. Your unhappiness is not due to your want of a fortune, or high position, or fame, or sufficient vitamins ; it is due not to a want of something outside you, but to a want of something in- side you. You cannot satisfy a soul with husks I If the sun could speak, it would say that it was happy when shining; if a pencil could speak it would say that it was happy when writing—^for these were the purposes for which they were made. You were made for perfect happiness. That 10 YOU is your purpose. No wonder everything short of God disap- points you. But have you noticed that when you realize you were made for Perfect Happiness, how much less disappointing the pleasures of earth become? You cease ex- pecting to get silk purses out of sows’ ears. Once you realize that God is your end, you are not disappointed, for you put no more hope in things than they can bear. You cease looking for first^ate joys where there are only tenth-rate pleasures. You begin to see that friend- ship, the joys of marriage, the thrill of possession, the sunset and the evening star, master- pieces of art and music, the gold and silver of earth, the industries and the comforts of life, are all gifts of God. He dropped them on the roadway of life, to re- mind you that if these are so beautiful, then what must be Beauty ! He intended them to be bridges to cross over to Him. After enjoying the good things of life you were to say: If the spark of human love is so bright then what must be the Flame ! Unfortunately, many become so enamored of the gifts the great Giver of Life has dropped on the roadway of life that they build their cities around the gift, and forget the Giver; and when the gifts, out of loyalty to their Maker, fail to give them perfect happiness, they rebel against God and become cynical and disillusioned. Change your entire point of view! Life is not a mockery. Disappointments are merely markers on the road of life, saying: “Perfect happiness is not here.” Though your pas- sions may have been satisfied, you were never satisfied, be- cause while your passions can find satisfaction in this world, you cannot. Start with your own insufficiency and begin a search for perfection. Begin with your own emptiness and seek Him who can fill it. Look at your heart! It tells the story of why you were made. It is not perfect in shape and contour, like a Valentine Heart. There seems to be a small piece missing out of the side of every human heart. That may be to symbolize a piece that was torn out of the Heart of Christ which embraced all humanity on the Cross. But I think the real meaning is that when God made your human heart. He found it so good and so lovable that He kept a small sample of it in heaven. He sent the rest of it into this world to enjoy His gifts. ARE YOU HAPPY? 11 and to use them as stepping stones back to Him, but to be ever mindful that you can never love anything in this world with your whole heart because you have not a whole heart with which to Love. In order to love anyone with your whole heart, in order to be really peaceful, in order to be really whole-heart- ed, you must go back again to God to recover the piece He has been keeping for you from all eternity ! WHAT IS GOD LIKE? Address Delivered On December 10, 1944 How do you think of God? Do you think of God as Some- one on a throne who sulks and pouts and becomes angry if you do not worship and glorify Him and who is happy and grateful to you when you go to Church and pray to Him? Or do you think of God as a benevolent grandfather v/ho is indifferent to what you do so 'mg as you enjoy yourselves? If you hold either of these two views of God, you cannot understand either why you should worship God, or how God can be good if He does not let you do as you please. Let us start with the first dif- ficulty: Why worship God? The word “worship” is a con- traction of “worth-ship.” It is a manifestation of the worth in which we hold another person. When you applaud an actor on the stage, or a returning hero, you are “worshipping” him. Every time a man takes off his hat to a lady, he is “worship- ping” her. Now to worship God means to acknowledge in some way His Worth, His Power, His Goodness, and His Truth. If you do not worship God, you worship something, and nine times out of ten it will be yourself. If there is no God then you are a god; and if you are a god and your own law and your own creator, then I am an atheist. The basic reason there is so little worship of God today is because man denies he is a creature. But we have not yet answered the question : “Why should you worship God?” You have a duty to worship God, not because He will be imperfect and unhappy if you do not, but because you will be imperfect and unhappy. If you are a father, do you not like to receive a tiny little gift, such as a penny chocolate cigar, from your boy? Why do you value it more than a box of Corona Coronas from your insurance agent? If you are a !mother, does not your heart find a greater joy in a hand- ful of yellow dandelions from your little daughter, than in a bouquet of roses from a dinner guest? Do these trivialities make you richer? Do you need them? Would you be imperfect WHAT IS GOD LIKE? 13 without them? They are ab- solutely of no utility to you! And yet you love them. And why? Because by these gifts your children are “worshipping” you; they are acknowledging your love, your goodness, and by doing so they are perfecting themselves, that is, developing along the lines of love rather than hate, thankfulness rather than ingratitude, and therefore becoming more perfect children and more happy children. As you do not need dande- lions and chocolate cigars, nei- ther does God need your worship. But if their giving is a sign of your worth in your children’s eyes, then is not prayer, adora- tion, and worship a sign of God’s worth in our eyes? And if you do not need your children’s wor- ship, why do you think God needs yours? But if the worship of your children is for their perfec- tion, not yours, then may not your worship of God be not for His perfection, but yours? Wor- ship is your opportunity to ex- press devotion, dependence, and love, and in doing that you make yourself happy. A lover does not give gifts to the beloved because she is poor; he gives gifts because she is already in his eyes possessed of all gifts. The more he loves, the poorer he thinks his gifts are. If he gave her a million, he would still think he had fallen short. If he gave everything, even that would not be enough. One of the reasons he takes price tags off his gifts is not because he is ashamed, but because he does not wish to establish a propor- tion between his gift and his love. His gifts do not make her more precious, but they make him less inadequate. By giving, he is no longer nothing. The gift is his perfection, not hers. Worship in like manner is our perfection, not God’s. God would still be perfectly happy if you never existed. God has no need of your love, for there is nothing in you, of and by yourself, which makes you lovable to God. Most of us are fortunate to have even a spark of affection from our fellow creatures. God does not love us for the same reason that we love others. We love others because of need and incompleteness. But God does not love us because He needs us. He loves us because He put some of His love in us. God does not love us because we are valuable; we are valuable because He loves us. God thirsts for your love, not 14 YOU because you are His waters of everlasting life, but because you are the thirst, He the waters. He needs you only because you need Him. Without Him you are imperfect; but without you, He is still Perfect. It is the echo that needs the Voice, and not the Voice that needs the echo. Now we come to that other misunderstanding concerning God which interprets His Good- ness as indifference to justice, and regards Him less as a lov- ing father than as a doting grandfather who likes to see His children amuse themselves even when they are breaking things, including His commandments. Too many assume that God is good only when He gives us what we want. We are like children who think our parents do not love us because they do not give us revolvers, or because they make us go to school. In order to understand goodness, we must make a distinction between get- ting what we want and getting what we need. Is God good only when He gives us what we want, or is He good when He gives us what we need even though we do not want it? When the prodigal son left the Father's house he said, “Give me.” He judged his father's goodness by the way the father satisfied his wants. But when he returned a much wiser young man, he merely asked for what he needed : a restoration of a father’s love; and hence he said: “Make me.” The thief on the left judged the goodness of Our Lord by His power to take him down from his cross; that is what he want- ed. The thief on the right judg- ed the goodness of Our Lord by His power to take him into Par- adise; that is what he needed. The Goodness of God means that God gives us what we need for our perfection, not what we want for our pleasure and some- times for. our destruction. As a sculptor, He sometimes applies the chisel to the marble of our imperfect selves and knocks off huge chunks of selfishness that His image may better stand re- vealed. Like a musician, when- ever He finds the strings too loose on the violin of our per- sonality, He tightens them even though it hurts, that we may better reveal our hidden harmon- ies. As the Supreme Lover of our soul He does care how we act and think and speak. What fa- ther does not want to be proud of his son? If the father speaks with authority now and then to WHAT IS OOD LIKE? 15 hi« son, it is not because he is a dictator, but because he wants him to be a worthy son. So long as there is love, there is neces- sarily a desire for the perfect- ing of the beloved. And that is precisely the way God’s goodness manifests itself to us. God really loves us, and because He loves us He is not disinterested. He no more wants you to be unhappy than your own parents want you to be un- happy. God made you not for His happiness, but for yours, and to ask God to be satisfied with most of us as we really are is to ask that God cease to love. Think of the thousands you have met whom you could never love. You may even wonder how their mothers could love them. But God loves them! He even loves them more than He loves us who look down on them with disdain and scorn. If you want to know about God, there is only one way to do it: get down on your knees. You can make His acquaintance by investigation, but you can win His love only by loving. Arguments will tell you God ex- ists, for God’s existence can be proved by reason; but only by surrender will you come to know Him intimately. That is one of the reasons why so many professors in sec- ular institutions have no relig- ion. They know about God, but they do not know God. And be- cause they do not love what they already know, because they do not act on their belief, even the little they have is taken away. They rattle the milk cans of theology but they never drink the milk. Atheism is born from the womb of a bad conscience. Disbelief comes from sin, not from reason. This is not a broadcast about God, it is a plea to love God. Worship Him because He is your perfection, more than knowledge is the perfection of the mind. Love Him because you cannot be happy without Love. Love Him quite apart from all you are, for you have the right to love Him in your heart, even though you do not always succeed in loving Him in your acts. Think a little less about whether you deserve to be loved by Him; He loves you even though you are not deserv- ing—it is His love alone that will make you deserving. It is love that confers value. “No- body loves me” is the equivalent of being valueless. Hence the more important the person who 16 YOU loves you, the more precious is your value. You are infinitely precious because you are loved by God. Most of you are un- happy because you never give God a chance to love you. You are in love only with yourself. In the magnificent lines of Thompson, God may well ask you : “ ‘ . . . Wherefore should any set thee love apart? Seeing none but I makes much of naught' (He said). ‘And human love needs human meriting: How has thou m.erited — Of all man’s clotted clay the din- giest clot? Alack, thou knowest not How little worthy of any love thou art! Whom wilt thou find to love ig- noble thee. Save Me, save only Me?’ ” Say to yourself over and over again regardless of what hap- pens : “God loves me I” And then add : “And I will try to love Him!” WHAT ARE YOU LIKE? Address Delivered On December 17, 1944 Thus far we have answered two questions : Why were you made, and what is God like? Now we ask: What are you like? Take your heart into your hand as a kind of crucible and distill out of it its inmost nature. What do you find it to be? Are you not really a bundle of con- tradictions? Is there not a dis- parity between what you ought to do, and what you actually do? Do you not sometimes feel like a radio tuned in to two distinct stations, heaven and hell, getting neither, but only static and con- fusion worse confounded. The old Latin poet Ovid probably ex- pressed your sentiments perfect- ly when he said: “I see and ap- prove the better things of life, the worse things of life I fol- low.” St. Paul too very likely expressed your inmost moods when he cried out: “For the good which I will, I do not; but the evil which I will not, that I do” (Romans 7:19). You feel dual, divided against yourself, be- cause you more often choose what you like, rather than what is best for you. And when you do, you always feel the worse for it. Somehow within you there is a “kink”; your human na- ture is disorganized. You feel frustrated; your realizations are anti-climaxes; they turn out to be the opposite of what you ex- pected. You are a problem to yourself, not because of your more obvious faults, but because the better part of you so often goes wrong. Your soul is the battlefield of a great civil war. The law of your members is fighting against the law of your mind. Your name is “legion”— you have no unifying purpose in life; there is only a succession of choices, but there is no one over-all goal to which everything is subordi- nated. You are split into many worlds: eyes, ears, heart, body, and soul. How explain this basic con- tradiction within you? There are four false explanations: psycho- logical, biological, intellectual, economic. The psychological ex- planation attributes this tension within you to something peculiar to you as an individual, your erotic impulses: As a child you were probably frightened by a mouse in a dark closet during 18 YOU a thunderstorm while reading a book on sex. This hardly fits the facts be- cause you are not the only one who is “that way”; everyone is. There is nothing queer about you. But there is something queer about human nature. Do you think that basically you are any different from anyone else in the world, or that you have a monopoly on temptations, or that you alone find it hard to be good, or that you alone suffer remorse when you do evil. It is human na- ture that is queer, not you. The second false explanation is biological: that is, the kink in your nature is due to a fall in evolution. No ! Evil is not due to the ani- mal in you. Your human nature is very different from the ani- mal’s. There is a great disconti- nuity between a beast and a hu- man. As Chesterton says: “You never have to dig very deep to find the record of a man drawing a picture of a monkey, but no one has yet dug deep enough to find the record of a monkey drawing the picture of a man.” An animal cannot sin, because it cannot rebel against its nature. He must Mlow it. But we can sin, because we merely ought to follow our nature. When you see a monkey acting crazily in a zoo, throwing banana peels at spectators, you never say: “Don’t be a nut.” But when you see a man acting unreasonably, you say: “Don’t be a monkey.” Man alone can be sub-human; he can sink to the level of a beast. The peculiar thing about a man is that though he may cease to act like a man, he never loses the imprint of human dignity. The divine image with which he was stamped is never destroyed; it is merely defaced. Such is the es- sence of man’s tragedy. We did not evolve from the beast; we devolved to the beast. We did not rise from the animal; we fall to the animal. That is why un- less the soul is saved, nothing is saved. Evil in us presupposes what it defaces. As we never, never can be godless without God, so we could never be in- human without being human. The third false explanation at- tributes the evil in you to want of education; you are perverse because you are ignorant. Once you are educated, you will be good. No! You do not have this in- ner contradiction because you lack knowledge, for the educated are not all saints and the igno- rant are not all devils. Enlight- enment does not necessarily make you better. Never before WHAT ARE YOU LIKE? 19 in the history of the world was there so much education, and never before was there so little coming to the knowledge of the truth. Much of modern educa- tion is merely a rationalization of evil. It makes clever devils instead of stupid devils. The world is not in a muddle because of stupidity of the intellect, but because of perversity of the will. We know enough: It is our choices that are wrong. Finally, the socialist explana- tion of this tension does not ex- plain the facts; namely, people are wicked because they are poor. Never before were living standards so high. All the poor are not wicked, and all the rich are not virtuous. If you had all the money in the world, you would still have that bias to- ward evil. If poverty were the cause of evil, why is it that ju- venile delinquency increases in periods of prosperity and why does religion prosper in the vow of poverty? If poverty were the cause of evil, then riches should be the source of virtue? If that is so, why are not the wealthy the paragons of virtue? The world has not just made a few mistakes in bookkeeping which any expert accountant or eco- nomic adviser can correct; rath- er, the world has swindled the treasury of faith and morality. It is not the world’s arithmetic that is incorrect ; it is our morals that are bad. Since this perversion of hu- man nature is universal, that is, since it affects human nature (not just your personality ex- clusively or mine) it must be due to something that happened to human nature itself at its very origin; secondly, since it is not animal in its origin, but has all the earmarks of being de- liberate and the result of a free choice, it must not be a part of God’s original work, but must have come into being through some subsequent fault; thirdly, since evil is not merely a by- product of bad environment but is endemic in the heart of man, it cannot be explained except on the basis of a universal fracture of some great moral law to which we are all bound. Some acts of disobedience can be remedied. If I throw a stone through a win- dow, I can put in a new one. But there are other kinds of disobedience that are irremedi- able, for example, drinking poison. Since evil is so universal in the world, it must be due to a disobedience of the second kind, which has affected us in our in- most nature. An unequivocal voice in your 20 YOU moral consciousness tells you that your acts of wrong-doing are abnormal facts in your na- ture. They ought not to be. There is something wrong in- side of us. God made us one way; in virtue of our freedom, we made ourselves another way. He wrote the drama ; we changed the plot. You are not an ani- mal that failed to evolve into a human ; you are a human who re- belled against the Divine. If we are a riddle to ourselves, the blame is not to be put on God, but on us. This being so, before you can be happy, you must throw over- board these three false notions which the nineteenth century put into your mind : The first is the idea that you are naturally good and progres- sive, and—thanks to evolution, science, and inevitable progress —you are destined to become bet- ter and better until you become a kind of god. Two world wars in twenty-one years and the pros- pect of a third world war very soon knocks that false optimism into a cocked hat. Discard also the idea that in order to come to God and re- ligion, you must be good. Finally, do not believe that religion consists only in moral platitudes and pious exhortations which cheer you up on the road- way of life regardless of the road you take. In their place, start rebuilding your life with these three truths which alone do justice to your human nature. Though you are not indefinite- ly progressive, neither are you a depraved criminal. You are not a saint, neither are you a devil. The tendency toward evil in you is not an irremediable flaw, but an accident that can be repaired. It is due to a bad choice and can be remedied by a right choice. To come to religion, you need not be good. Rather you come to God because you are not good. If you were perfectly good, you would not need God. As our Lord said: “They that are well have no need of a physician . . {Mark 2:17). You are right in not wanting a religion of moral platitudes. What you want is a religion of deliverance and redemption. Be- cause of sin you feel like a fish on top of the Empire State Build- ing; somehow or other you are outside of your environment. HOW YOU GOT THAT WAY Address Delivered On December 24, 1944 Anyone who gives freedom to another assumes great risks, whethe;r it be a parent to a child or a Creator to a creature. In a certain sense, even God took a great risk when He made man free, for the very freedom to be- come a child of God implied the possibility of becoming a rebel. Since God made us free to choose what is right, we are also free to choose the wrong. We too often interpret freedom as the right to break God’s com- mandments. When at the close of this war, you buy an auto- mobile, the manufacturer will give you a set of instructions. He will tell you the pressure to which you ought to inflate your tires, the kind of oil you ought to use in the crankcase, and the proper fuel to put in the gas tank. Really, he has nothing against you because he gives you these instructions, as God had nothing against you in giving you commandments. The manu- facturer wants to be helpful: he is anxious that you get the max- imum utility out of the car. And God is more anxious that you get the maximum happiness out of life. That is why He gives you commandments. But of course you are free. You can do as you please. You ought to use gasoline in the tank, but you can put in Chanel No. 5. Now there is no doubt that it is nicer for your nostrils if you fill the tank with perfume rather than with gasoline. But the car simply will not run on Smell No. 5. In like manner we were made to run on the fuel of God’s love and commandments, and we simply will not run on anything else. We just bog down. And that is what happened to human nature in the Fall. God did not give man the frightening responsibilities of freedom without at the same time offering him incentives to choose right rather than wrong. God would not force His hap- piness on anyone. In almost so many words, God said to Adam and Eve at the very beginning of history: As an inducement to choose what is best, I shall give you certain gifts. If you use your freedom in the direction of what is best for you, that is, for your perfection, I shall give you 22 YOU permanently the supernatural g’ift of sharing in my Divine Nature, that is, of being a child of God and an heir of heaven. To this I add permanently some lesser gifts: You will never die, your passions will never rebel against your reason, and your mind will be free from error. But to preserve these gifts for themselves and posterity, one condition was imposed on Adam and Eve by God, and it was very easy. They merely had to love God who is their perfection. We must not think that this condi- tion was equivalent to saying to a child: “If you eat a woolly worm, I will give 5^u a dollar,” because a woolly worm is not the perfection of a child. Rather, it was like saying to the child: “If you drink milk and oat food you will be healthy.” As oibeying the laws of health is the perfec- tion of the child, so too obey- ing the will of God is our perfec- tion. We said that the one condi- tion imposed was that they love God. But how could man prove his love of God? How do you know anyone loves you? Because he tells you ? Most certainly not ! Love is proved only one way : by an act of choice, by choosing the one we love to something or somebody else. Love is not love unless it is free; it is only be- cause of the possibility of saying “No” that there is so much charm in the “Yes.” Hence the choice presented to our first parents was between a fruit and a garden, the part and the whole. God said they could eat of all the fruits in the garden of Paradise, save the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Was there anything unreason- able about the trial? Is not life filled with abundant instances of receiving rewards on the condi- tion of love? Imagine a wealthy man going away for the summer and telling the chauffeur and his wife that they may live in his house, eat his food, drink his wine, use his cars, and ride his horses, but on one condition : That they must not eat the ar- tificial apple he has on the dining room table. The owner well knows the artificial apple will give them indigestion. He does not tell them that. They ought to trust him in the light of ail he has done for them. Now if the wife persuades her husband to eat the apple, she would not be a lady; and if he eats it, he would not be a gentleman. By doing the one thing forbidden they would lose all the good things provided and have indi- gestion besides—and they even HOW YOU GOT THAT WAY 23 lose the opportunity of passing these things on to their chih dren. To make light of the fruit in the story of the Fall is to miss the point that it was the test of love. Not to shake hands with a passerby on the street is of no importance, but not to shake hands as a sign of contempt is very serious. Eating of the for- bidden fruit was a sign of con- tempt; the symbol of rebellion. Like Pandora, man opened the forbidden box and lost all his treasures. But you ask: Well! Granted that Adam sinned! What have I to do with Adam? Why should I be punished because of him? When President Roosevelt de- clared war on December 8, 1941, you declared war without any explicit declaration on your part. What the Chief of the Nation did, we did. Now Adam is the head of the human race. What he did, we did. “Through one man, sin entered the world” (Romans 5:12). But you say: “It was very unjust of God to deprive me of friendship with Him, and these other gifts, simply because Adam sinned.” There would have been injustice if God deprived you of your due. But you are no more entitled to be a child of God than a razor has a right to bloom, or a rose has the right to bark, or a dog has the right to quote Dante. What Adam lost was gifts, not a right. On Christmas Day when you distribute gifts to your friends, would I have a right to say to you: “Why do you not give me a gift?” You would answer: “I am not doing you an injustice, because I owe you nothing. I am not even obliged to give these gifts to my friends. And if I had not given them gifts, I would not have deprived them of any- thing I owed them.” So neither did God owe us anything beyond our nature as a creature of His handiwork. But the loss of the supernat- ural gift of being a child of God weakened our will and darkened our intellect without corrupting our nature. The Fall disorgan- ized our normal human faculties, making us just as we are now, with a bias toward evil, with a will reluctant to do good, with a tendency to rationalize evil. But each of us is still human—not a depraved human, totally corrupt, as those who ridicule the doc- trine of the Fall say, but still a person capable of becoming what each once was. The disorder in us is like getting dirt in our eye : wc still have the eye as an organ 24 YOU of sight, but it sees through tears. It is right here that Chris- tianity begins. In aH other re- ligions you have to be good to come to God. In Christianity you do not. Because there is evil in the world, we need God. Christianity begins with the rec- ognition that there is something in your life aind in the world that ought not to be, that need not be, and that could be otherwise were it not for evil choices. If you are ever to be good, you must first believe you are bad. If you know that you could be beitter than you are; if you feel like the master painting of a great artist that has become somewhat defaced and stained; if you know that though you are too good for the rubbish heap, you are nevertheless too spoiled to hang in the Metro- politan Gallery ; if you know that you cannot restore yourself to your pristine beauty; if you know that no one could restore you better than the Divine Ar- tist who made you—then you have already taken the first step toward peace. The Divine Artist did come to restore the original and He came on Christmas Day. Such is the meaning of Christ- mas. The Son of God became man that man might become the adopted son of God. This is Christmas Eve. Kind of sad, isn’t it? Fathers! Are not your sons away because there is something wrong with the world? Then maybe God is out of His Heaven because there is something wrong with man. That star blazing in Bethlehem’s sky is the Heavenly Father’s service flag. His Son too has gone to war. Mothers I You shrink in terror and fear from what might hap- pen to your boy amidst whistling steel and whining shell. Then understand how another Mother drew a Babe to her breast in fear of the thundering hoofs and drawn swords of those who would take away His life before He had scarcely begun to live. Sons and daughters in the service! To conquer, you must first make a landing in enemy territory. That was Bethlehem —God’s beachhead in a land of sin. And how we must fight to keep it! Ye dead on the far-thrown bat- tlefields of the war! Ye died that others might live. You were the human expendables. This Babe is the Divine Expendable who came not to live but to die, that we might die to sin and live to love ! HOiW YOU GOT THAT WAY 25 But you ask: how find Christ- mas peace in a world at war? You cannot find peace on the outside but you can find peace on the inside, by letting God do to your soul what Mary let Him do to her body, namely, let Christ be formed in you. As she cooked the meals in her Nazarene home, as she nursed her aged cousin, as she drew water at the well, as she prepared the meals of the village carpenter, as she knitted the seamless garment, as she kneaded the dough and swept the floor, she was conscious that Christ was in her; that she was a living ciborium, a monstrance of the Divine Eucharist, a Gate of Heaven through which a Cre- ator would peer upon creation, a Tower of Ivory up whose chaste body He was to climb “to kiss upon her lips a mystic rose.” As He was physically formed in her, so He wills to be spiritual- ly formed in you. If you knew He was seeing through your eyes, you would see in every fel- lowman a child of God. If you knew that He worked through your hands, they would bless all the day through. If you knew He spoke through your lips, then your speech, like Peter’s, would betray that you had been with the Galilean. If you knew that He wants to use your mind, your will, your fingers, and your heart, how different you would be. If half the world did this there would be no war! Why not resolve this year to spend an hour a day in His pres- ence? Do not stay away because you are wicked. Remember that Babe did not come to earth be- cause you are good, but because you are not. He did not come be- cause there was Peace, but be- cause there was none. Children are so unsuspecting. Taking candy away from a baby is easy—^but not as easy as tak- ing happiness from that Child! Let not your unworthiness keep you back. Remember, love is blind, and no love is as blind as this Child’s; otherwise, how could He love you and me? He does love us and that is enough to make us very happy. That is what I mean when from a devoted heart I say, “Merry Christmas, Friends.” WHO CAN RE MAKE YOU? Address Delivered On December 31, 1944 A good way to start the new year is to ask how you can be dif- ferent than you are now. Re- member we said that we were like a clock whose mainspring was broken. We have the “works” but we do not “go.” In order to put the clock in order, two conditions must be ful- filled: 1) The mainspring must be supplied from the outside, and 2) it must be placed inside the clock. Man cannot redeem him- self any more than the clock can fix itself. If man is ever to be redeemed, redemption must: 1) Gome from without human nature, and 2) be done from within. Why must your salvation come from without ? For the same rea- son that you cannot lift yourself by your own bootstraps. Human nature has contracted a bigger debt than it can pay. In sinning against God we piled up an in- finite debt, and we have not enough balance of merits in our finite bank to meet the burden. Furthermore, while you can destroy life you cannot create it ; you can blind your vision but you cannot restore it; you can destroy your communion with God by sin but you cannot , revive it. Evil is tod deep- seated in the world to be righted by a little kindness or reason or tolerance. You might just as well tell a man suffering from gout that all he needed was to play six sets of tennis. Man has radically failed. He cannot save himself. But though salvation must come from without, it neverthe- -less must be done from within humanity. It would do no good to the clock to put the main- spring inside a radio. If salva- tion were not done inside hu- manity, it would have no relation to humanity. If I were arrested for speeding, you could not go into the courtroom and say : “Try me instead of Father Sheen.” The judge would say: “What have you to do with the case?” There is no substitution in the eyes of the law. Furthermore, any man who is conscious of his guilt does not want to be “let off.” In our relations with our fellowman we often say: “I want to make up for it.” There is no reason why, in our relation to God, we should act any different- ly. Hence human nature in some WHO CAN RE-MAKE YOU? 27 way must be involved in its own redemption. To re-create fallen man in justice and mercy, Redemption must come from without and be accomplished within. Put both conditions together and the Re- deemer was both God and man. If he were only man, He too would need Redemption; if He were only God He would have no relation to fallen man who need- ed redemption. But if He were both God and man, then, as man He could act in our name; then, as God His redemption would have an infinite value. This is what happened when God ap- peared in Bethlehem and took upon Himself our manhood as Jesus Christ. From that mo- ment on, every word, every sigh, every breath, every tear, every heartache, and every pain of His human nature was the breath, the tear, the heartache, and the pain of the Person of God and therefore had infinite value. If you want religion, keep in mind these three fundamental truths : First, Jesus Christ is not just a good man. A good man never lies, but if Christ is not what He claimed to be—the Son of God—then He is the greatest liar of all times. A good man never deceives, but if Christ can- not give what He promised—^that is, peace and pardon to our hungry tired souls—then He is the arch-deceiver of history. Either Christ is the Son of God or He is anti-Christ—^but He is not just a good man. Jesus Christ is both God and man. He was God before He was man. He is a God who became man, not a man who became God. He did not begin to be a Person at Beth- lehem. From all eternity He is the Person of God. “In the be- ginning was the Word and the Word was with God, and the Word was God . . . And the Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us” {John 1:14). Second, Christ is the new Adam. The human race has two heads: Adam and Christ. Be- neath all races, classes, and na- tions there are two humanities: the old, unregenerate humanity of Adam, comprised of all who are born of the flesh; and the new regenerated humanity of the new Adam, Christ, comprised of all who are born of the baptis- mal waters of the Holy Spirit. The old human nature des- cended from Adam, was infected by original sin. God would not take that upon Himself, because He would not put a patch of holiness on an old garment. The YOU problem was how to be a man like us, without being contami- nated as we were by sin! He could be a man like us, by being bom of woman. He could be a sinless man, or the new Adam, by being born of a Virgin. By dispensing with an act of gen- eration by which original sin was propagated. He escaped its in- fection. That is why He was born of a Virgin. The Virgin Birth broke the heritage of sin, as now for the first time since Adam there walked on earth a human nature as God meant it to be. Thus the three instru- ments which cooperated in the fall were reversed in redemption. For the disobedient Adam, there is the new obedient Adam, Christ. For the proud woman Eve, there is the humble Virgin Mary. And for the tree of Eden, there is the new tree of the Cross on Calvary. Third, Our Lord is not pri- marily a teacher of humanitarian ethics but essentially and pri- marily a Redeemer and a Savior. Everyone else came into this world to live ; He came into it to die. Death was a stumbling block to Socrates : to Christ it was the goal of His life, the very gold He was seeking. Death in a certain sense was inevitable to Him, for once Love and Inno- cence confront brute force and sin, a crucifixion follows. Suffer- ing is always the form that love takes in an evil situation. Every mother who had an erring son, and every wife who ever had a drunken husband, knows that. How else could Divine Love meet sin, except by a cross? Evil breaks some human hearts. Sin broke the heart of God. How did this Redemption take place? By the sinless Christ being made sin. As doctors who are free from disease will some- times permit themselves to be innoculated with a disease that they may find a cure, so He, though sinless, freely accepted the cumulative weight of human transgression that He might atone for the very punishment which our sins deserved. That is why His life is inseparable from the Cross. There are those who say the only reason Christ went to the Cross was to show us that He loved us, but not be- cause we needed His Redemp- tion. If you were sitting safely on a pier fishing and a good neighbor came up behind you, threw himself into the river, and as he went down for the third time said, “This shows how much I love you,” the whole ceremony would be ridiculous if it were not so tragic. But if you WHO CAN RE-MAKE YOU? 29 had actually fallen into the river, and the good neighbor lost his life saving you, then you could say of him truly: “Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay down his life for his friends” {John 15:13); It is through the Cross that Christ reconciles the world to God and restores to us those gifts which Adam lost in the fall. It is something like this. Imagine a golden chalice which has been consecrated for divine worship and used on the altar at Mass. Suppose this chalice is stolen, mingled with alloys, and beaten down to a cigarette case. Later on it is recovered. Before the gold of that chalice can be restored to the altar, it must first of all be subjected to purg- ing fires to burn away the dross. Finally it must be remoulded by repeated blows of a hammer, then only may it be readied for reconsecration and restored to its dignity and honor. Our human nature was like that battered and desecrated chalice, no longer serving the high purpose for which it was made. The chalice could not re- make itself. Neither could man redeem himself. So Christ took upon Himself our human nature and plunged it into the flaming furnace of Calvary’s fires that the dross of sin iriignt oe burned away. Then on Easter Sunday, by rising from the dead. He re- versed the Fall and appeared as the New Man, remoulded and glorified, fit for God’s service and restored to God’s friendship. But the Cross does not save us without our cooperation. Christ has achieved the re- creation of man in His own per- son. Christianity consists in letting God do to your human nature something like unto that which He did to the human na- ture taken from His Mother. He is the beginning of a new coin- age to take the place of the counterfeit. He is the original, the new die; millions and mil- lions of worthy coins can be stamped from that die. Whether we do it and thus become regen- erated depends on our will. Those of us who do it cease to be mere creatures; we begin to be, in the awful literalness of the phrase, an adopted son of God! I beg you then to clean from your mind the contemporary rubbish that you came from the beast. You did not come from the dogs, but you can go to the dogs. You are less a risen mon- key than you are a fallen angel. You were once not lower thar 30 YOU you are now, but you were once higher. You are more of a dis- inheriited king than you are an enthroned beast. 'The tragedy of life is not what people suffer, but how much they miss. They are liv- ing like animals when they ought to be living like children of God. If you are willing to commit your life to Christ, this practical problem arises : How do you enter into relation with Him? What has He, who lived almost twenty centuries ago, to do with you? And what have you to do with Him? You probably often have seen painted on the rocks on the highways, signs reading; “Jesus Saves.” Certainly He saves, but how? That question I shall answer in the next talk. IS RELIGION PURELY INDIVIDUAL? Address Delivered On January 7, 1945 Have you ever heard anyone say: “I do not want a Church standing between me and God”? This is like saying: ‘T do not want the United States Govern- ment standing between me and America.” To say I want no one between God and me is anti- Christian because it implies that your brother is a barrier to God's grace and not a means to it. Did not our Lord make love of God inseparable from love of neighbor? And did He not teach us to pray in the context of “Our Father,” not “My Father” ; “our daily bread” not “my daily bread”? And if God is a Fa- ther, then the others united to Him are brothers, and there- fore our religion must be social. You are not allowed an indi- vidual interpretation of the Constitution of the United States. A Supreme Court does that for you. Why, then, should you insist on an individual in- terpretation of religion and be- gin all religious discussions with: “7 feel this way about God.” “I feel.” Never were the sublime and beautiful real- ities put so much at the mercy of a stomach. Do you have your own individual astronomy and individual mathematics ? Why, then, do you want your own in- dividual religion? You cannot practice religion alone any more than you can love alone. What would happen to your patriotism if you said, “Patriotism is an individual af- fair”? If you were the only person in a town, could you be charitable? If, then, you can- not be kind alone, or sacrificing alone, or generous alone, how in the name of God do you expect to be religious alone? As gen- erosity implies a neighbor, as patriotism implies fellow citi- zens, so religion Implies fellow- men in relation to God. That brings us, then, to this impor- tant question we asked last week : How do you contact Christ the Redeemer? How do you come to know His Truth and His Will? Do you contact Him as an individual by reading about Him, by singing hymns to Him, or do you contact Him in fellow- ship and in community, the way that God Himself has ordained? The way to answer that ques- tion is to inquire how mankind contacted God before the com- 32 YOU ing of ChriSfC. was religion a purely individual affair or was it corporate? Did God deal with individuals directly, or indirect- ly, that is, through a race, a society, or a community? Search your Scriptures. And you will find that God always dealt with mankind through hu- man corporations or races or moral bodies, presided over by a divinely appointed head. The Book of Genesis reveals that the history of mankind would be a warfare not between individuals, but between two seeds, two races, two corporate wholes: the pow- er of darkness and the power of light. Each corporation had a head. The head of the evil corporation was Satan; the invisible head of the corporation of good was God —^but God always chose a visible head of that community to act in His name. First it was Noah through whom salvation would come to humanity. Very likely, at the time of the flood, every individual might have liked to have had his own personal row boat, but God saved them in an ark in His own way and under His own divinely appointed cap- tain. Later there came new heads of this new spiritual cor- poration, such as Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and others. Whenever God willed to give a new or special privilege to this community. He changed the name of its head. That He did in the case of Abraham, and in the case of Jacob. And so it came to pass that the most important word in the Old Testament was the word for this corporation, or body, or con- gregation, or society. And that word in Hebrew was kahal. Now about 200 years before Christ, the Jews translated their Scrip- tures into Greek. That was be- cause so many Jews were living away from Israel in a Grecian civilization. When the trans- lators came to the Jewish word kahal, they translated it by the Greek work, ecclesia — which means, “that which is called out,” signifying that its members had been called out by God from the secular nations. When finally God came to this earth in the person of Our Lord, it was only natural to expect that He would continue to deal with mankind in the same way that He had dealt with it before, namely, through a cor- poration presided over by a head whom He Himself would choose. And, as once before He had named Abraham, Moses, and David as its head, so now He would name someone else as its IS RELIGION PURELY INDIVII>UAL? 33 head. And because new powers and privileges were tp be given to the individual whom He would appoint as its visible head, as He changed Abram’s name to Abra- ham, Jacob’s name to Israel, so now He changed the name of the individual who is to be the new head of His ecclesia from Simon to Rock. In English, his name is Peter. Buit we lose the flavor of it in English because Peter and Rock are different words, but they are not differ- ent words in the language Our Lord spoke, nor are they differ- ent words, in the original Greek of the Gospel. And Our Lord said to this man : “Thy name is Simon: Henceforth thou shalt be called the Rock.” And on that day at Caeserea-Philippi, when the Rock confessed that Christ was the Son of the Living God, the Divine Master said to him: “Thou art the Rock and upon this Rock, I will build my ec- clesia, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” From now on God’s ecclesia would be built upon the Rock and it would be to the whole world God’s chosen community for the com- nunication of His Divine Life, as Israel before had been the com- munity for the giving of that promise. And through his new ecclesia or body Christ still teaches as He once taught through His own individual human nature. Therefore, the ecclesia must be infal- lible or free from error. It can- not be otherwise, for Christ is still teaching through His body: “He that heareth you,” He said, “heareth me.” Through this ecclesia or body, Christ still governs. Therefore disobedience to His ecclesia would be a disobedience to Him, just as an insult to your body is an insult to your person. Through this ecclesia He still forgives sins. Therefore the publicans and the woman taken in sin have no advantage over you and me who live in this very hour. And though this Truth and Power and Holiness are com- municated through poor weak human natures in His ecclesia, that Truth and Power and Holi- ness cannot be spoiled any more than sunshine is polluted when it shines through a dirty window. Human nature in the ecclesia is only the instrument of the for- giveness and the truth. It is not the cause. Are you surprised to hear that Christ acts through His Body or ecclesia today? Then recall the story of St. Paul who persecuted the ecclesia in the City of Dam- 34 YOU ascus. Remember the heavens were opened, the glorified Christ now at the right hand of the Father roused that persecutor with the question: “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me’' (Acts 22:7). Christ and the ecc^esm — are they the same'? Precisely. If someone steps on your foot, your head < complains. Well, Paul was striking the Body of Christ : therefore the invisible head complained from Heaven. And would it not be terrible if Christ could not prolong Him- self through space and time? If He could not, how would He dif- fer from Lincoln or Napoleon or Caesar? Do you think that God intended that the only ones who would know His Truth would be those who lived in His time? Was that Truth caught up by a Galilean breeze and wafted away, never to be known again? Shall we who live in the confusion of this twentieth century be with- out that Divine Light? Is for- giveness limited to Magdalens and to penitent thieves? Do you want His forgiveness now? I tell you that if Christianity is only the memory of someone who lived 1900 years ago, and who cannot communicate His Truth to you in this warring world of 1945, and who cannot absolve your sins this very night—if it can- not do these things, then Chris- tianity is not worth preserving. Let us do away with it. If Christ is not the Eternal Con- temporary, then He is not God. You did not wait until you were twenty-one and then read the Constitution and the Declara- tion of Independence and decide to become an American. You were born out of the womb of America. And as you were born out of the womb of political so- ciety , so as a Christian you were born out of the womb of Christ’s society. You lived by it, before you knew it. It creates you spir- itually by birth of the spirit, as your country created you by the birth of the flesh. The ecclesia is prior, both logically and chron- ologically, to its individual mem- bers. Though very few ever ad- vert to it, this ecclesia was spread throughout the entire Ro- man Empire before a single book of the New Testament was writ- ten. It was the Bible that grew out of the ecclesia, not the ec- clesia that grew out of the Bible. Oh, I wish that I could tell you some of the joy of knowing that Christ lives and teaches and pardons and sanctifies in His ecclesia today; that just as He once taught and governed and sanctified through a human na- IS RELIGION PURELY INDIVIDUAL? 35 ture taken from Mary, over- shadowed by the Holy Spirit, so now He teaches, governs, and sanctifies through human na- tures in His ecclesia, overshad- owed by the Pentecostal Spirit. When I kneel therefore before a priest in confession, I see Christ’s absolving hand and hear the Voice that bid the sinner go and sin no more. When I see the Host and the chalice lifted up in Mass, I believe that Christ’s commandment is fulfilled: “Do this for a commemoration of me” {Luke 22:19), and I see Calvary projected through space and time to the very altar at which I kneel. When I see the ecclesia persecuted and mocked, I see Christ once more pelted with mud and spurned and spat upon and ridiculed, as I remem- ber His words: “If the world hate you, know ye that it hath hated me before you” {John 15: 18). And as I hear that ec- clesia articulate for me in an uncharted world the teachings of Christ, I am consoled, for what I want is a truth that is right not when the world is right, but a truth that is right when the world is wrong. If ever you have an opportun- ity, when this war is over, to go to Rome, I want you to visit the tomb of that Rock, the fisher- man. And when you have said your prayers there, lift up your eyes to that great dome—^the greatest dome that was ever thrown against the vault of heaven’s blue—and you will see inscribed upon it, in letters of gold, these words: “Tu es Petrus et supra hanc petram, aedificabo ecclesiam meam” — “Thou art the Rock and upon this Rock I will build my ec- clesia.” Ecclesia!—the very word the inspired Old Testament used to describe Israel as God’s com- munity; the very word the Son of God Himself used at Caesarea- Philippi. And that ecclesia was built on Peter. Peter the Rock, who has lived through these 1900 years and in 252 distinct per- sonages, and the name of that Rock today is the gloriously reigning Holy Father, Pius XII, the greatest moral authority in the world. I’m sorry. I should have told you long before this the meaning of the Greek word ecclesia. It means “the Church.” HOW YOU ARE RE-MADE Address Delivered On January 14, 1945 Have you ever thought that possibly there might be a higher life than the natural life you live now? I do not mean in the next world, but in this. Did you ever wish that you could know truths beyond your reason, that you could have reserves of power for crises, temptations, and sor- row over and above those you now possess, and that your soul could enjoy peace even in a world at war ? You have no right to say there is no higher life than the physical life you now live, any more than the rose has a right to say there is no life above it. You must remember that above the natural life which you live as a creature . of God, there is such a thing as a supernatural life, which God gives to make you His adopted son. You have no strict right to this Divine Life. Just as it would be “su- per naturak’ or above the na- ture and powers of a rainbow to write poetry, or of a cow to quote Shakespeare, so in the strict sense it would be super- natural for you who are merely a creature of God’s handiwork to be made a partaker of the Divine Nature and an heir of the King- dom of God. Because that high- er life is a free gift of God, it is called grace. Now in His goodness God has freely willed to restore to you the gifts and privileges of that life which were lost to you by the Fall, and this He does through the merits of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. If you thought about religion at all, you probably asked: But how can I contact that Divine Life of Christ who died over 1900 years ago? The answer is: Christ would have to infuse His life into your soul. But how would it be done? Look at nature to see how a lower life is elevated to a high- er life. How, for example, do the moisture, the carbons, and the phosphates in the earth ever live in the plant? First, the plant life must descend to them, take them up into its roots and branches, while the chemicals themselves must abandon the crude lifeless state they have in nature. If the plant could speak, it would say to the chem- icals: “Unless you die to your- selves, you cannot live in my HOW YOU AJS.E RE-MADE 37 kingdom/' Actually, the sun- shine, chemicals, and moisture now begin to thrill with life and vitality in the plant. They have been, in the broad sense of the term, “super naturalized." If the animal could speak, it would say to the plants: “Un- less you die to your lower life of mere vegetation and submit yourselves momentarily to the jaws of death, you cannot live in my kingdom. But once you live in me, you will share a life that not merely vegetates, but feels and moves and tastes and sees." Man in bis turn, going down to that which is lower, says to the animals: “Unless you die to yourselves by submitting to sac- rificial death, you cannot live in my kingdom. But if you die to yourselves, you will share a life that is not merely sensible, but one that thinks and loves, has ideals, laughs and is artistic." This is precisely what Christ says to you: “Unless you die to yourself, you cannot live in My kingdom"—^but with this dif- ference: Since we are persons, which chemicals, plants and ani- mals are not, the sacrifice en- joined on us is not physical, but spiritual. We do not have our personality destroyed, as a plant’s nature is destroyed when taken into the beast. But oth- erwise the law holds good. The higher must come down to the lower; the Divine must descend into the human. Such was the Incarnation: God came down to man. But on the other hand, man must die to his sinful na- ture, his old Adam, his heritage of the Fall, and this he can do only by sacrifice, by taking up “his cross daily" and following Him. This is what Our Lord meant when He said : “Unless the grain of wheat falling into the ground die, itself remaineth alone. But if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit" {John 12:24). The law of transformation holds sway: chemicals are lifted into plants, plants into animals, ani- mals into man, and since man is free, he can will, through the Graciousness of God, to be lift- ed up into Christ, so that He can say: ‘L live, now not I; but Christ liveth in me" {Galatians 2:20). God came down to the level of man that He might in some way lift man to the level of God. Now let us consider the normal ways in which that Life is com- municated to us. Remember we said last week that the individ- ual derives His life from the ec- clesia or the Church; but the 38 YOU Church does not derive its life from the individual, as is the case with a club, a school, or a corporation. As no cell can live normally apart from your body, though your body can live with- out any individual cell, so you as a Christian cannot live a nor- mal spiritual life apart from Christ’s Body of the Church, but the Church can live without you. Hence it is from the Church or Christ’s Body that Christ’s life pours out into your soul. And in order that the outpouring from that great Reservoir of merits on Calvary should not be haphazard. Our Lord instituted seven channels or Sacraments to convey that Life into your souls. Knowing that you have a body as well as a soul. He chose not to communicate His Divine Life to you invisibly. But since men are physical as well as spiritual. He willed normally to give you His supernatural life or grace un- der the symbol of some material sign. Thus by seeing water you would know something was being washed away, and by seeing bread you would know something was being nourished. Further- more, by using these sensible signs for communicating His Spiritual Life, God restores the materials of a chaotic world back again into the divine order. How many Sacraments are there? There are seven and it is becoming that there should be seven for there are seven con- ditions jf life, physical and spir- itual. Five of these refer to the individual life of man, and two refer to his social life. 1) As you cannot live a natural life unless you are born, so neither can you live the Christ- life unless you are born to it. That is why the Sacrament of Baptism is necessary for salva- tion. 2) As your natural life must grow to maturity and assume responsibilities, so you cannot lead a perfect supernatural life unless you mature in the Spirit and grow into the full respon- sibilities of being a Christian soldier. This is the Sacrament of Confirmation. 3) As you cannot live a nat- ural life unless you nourish your- self, so you cannot lead a super- natural life unless you nourish the Divine Life which is already within you. This is the Holy Eucharist. 4) When you wound your nat- ural life you must be healed; when you wound your supernat- ural life by sin you must be ab- HOW YOU ARE RE-MADE 39 solved, and that is the Sacra- ment of Penance, or Confession. 5) If your natural life suifers from a disease, the traces of that disease must be banished. Since no disease ever leaves traces comparable to the disease of sin, it follovrs that before meet- ing your God the remains of sin must be blotted out. That is the Sacrament of Extreme Unc- tion. But you are not mere indi- viduals in religion. You are members of the Body of Christ, In order that this spiritual cor- poration may perfect itself, and grow, two more conditions must be fulfilled. 6) As the natural life is pre- served by propagation of the human species, so the supernat- ural life of the Kingdom of God is perfected by raising children of God. That is the Sacrament of Matrimony. 7) Finally, as your natural life must be lived under law and government, so your supernat- ural life must be lived under spiritual government, and this is the Sacrament of Holy Orders by which Christ’s priesthood is prolonged to apply the fruits of law and order to all the members of His Mystical Body. Christianity is not a system of ethics; it is a life. It is not good advice, it is Divine adop- tion. Being a Christian does not consist in being kind to the poor, generous to relief agencies, just to employees, gentle to crip- ples, though it includes all of these. It is first and foremost a love relationship, and as you can never become a member of a family by doing generous deeds but only by being bom into it out of love, so you can never become a Christian by doing good things but only by being born to it through Divine Love. Doing good things to a man does not make you his son, but being a son does make you do good things. Christianity begins with being, not with doing, with life and not with action. If you have the life of a plant, you will bloom like a plant; if you have the life of a monkey, you will act like a monkey; if you have the life of a man, you will do the things a man does; but if you have the Life of Christ in you, you will act like a Christian. You are like your parents because you partake of their nature; you are like God if you partake of His Nature. What a man does is the exteraalization of what he is. Let me show you the differ- ence : Most people have their 4t) YOU tions governed by their back- ground; for example, you think a certain way in order to defend your class or your wealt-h or your want of it; you do certain things because they are profit- able or pleasant to you ; you hate certain people because they are a reproach to your conscience or because they, challenge your ego- tism. Your psychonphysical make-up is the center of your life and therefore of your ac- tions. You are, in a word, self* determined. Now to be a Chris- tian means to discard self as the supreme determinant of actions; it means to put on the mind of Christ so as to be governed by Christ’s Truths, to surrender your will to His Will, and to do all things that are pleasing to Him, not to you. In other words, your life instead of being self- determined is Christ-determined. How often we hear non-Chris- tian men say: “Oh, you can do nothing with him. You can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.” But the Christian answers : *'You can! If God’s grace ever gets into that man’s soul, he will become a new creature.” You then who are Christians, who know that the Divine Life is in your soul, be conscious that your every word, thought, and deed is enacted before a Divine Audience. Let the Christ be the Unseen Guest at your every meal ; your Divine Host in every visit ; your Captain in every war ; your Fellow-Worker in every task; your Father in every home ; your Giver of Every Gift ; the Listener in your conversa- tion; your Companion in every walk; your Visitor at every knock; your Neighbor in every street ; your Owner of every treasure ; and your Lover in every love. Do not fear God with a servile fear, for perfect love casteth out such fear. Be bold enough then to believe that God is on your side, even when you forget to be on His. Live your life not by law, but by love. As St. Au- gustine put it: “Love God and then do whatever you please.” For if you love God, 3^u will never do anything to hurt Him or break off relationship with Him—^and then you will always be happy. FAITH Address Delivered On January 21, 1946 Have you ever noticed the tre- mendous disparity of points of view between those who possess Divine Faith and those who have it not? Have you ever observed when discussing important sub- jects, such as pain, sorrow, sin, death, marriage, children, educa- tion, that the point of view of faith is now poles apart from what is called the modem view? It was not so many years ago that those who rejected many Christian truths were considered off the reservation; for example, the divorced who remarried, the atheists, the enemies of the fam- ily, and so forth. But today it is those with faith who are con- sidered off the reservation. It is the others who are on it. Why this difference in point of view between those who have the faith, and those who have it not? It is due to the fact that a soul in the state of grace has its intellect illumined, which en- ables it to perceive new truths beyond reason. You have exactly the same eyes at night as you have in the day, but you cannot see at night, be- cause you lack the additional light of the sun. So too, let two minds with identically the same education and the same mental capacities look on a Host en- throned on an altar. The one sees bread, the other sees Christ —not, of course, with the eyes of the flesh, but with the eyes of faith. Let them both look on death: one sees the end of a biological entity, the other an immortal creature being judged by God on how it used its free- dom. The reason for the differ- ence is: One has a light which the other lacks, namely, the light of faith. What then is Faith? Faith is not believing that something will happen, nor is it the acceptance of what is contrary to reason, nor is it an intellectual recogni- tion which a man might give to something he does not under- stand or which his reason cannot prove, for example, relativity. Rather, Faith is the acceptance of a truth on the authority of God revealing. Assisted by the grace of God, we believe as true those things which He revealed, not because the truth of these things is clearly evident from 42 YOU reason alone, but because of the authority of God, who cannot de- ceive nor be deceived. You believe not because of the arguments; they were only a necessary preliminary. You be- lieve because God said it. The torch now burns by its own bril- liance. Would you like to know four things which faith will do for you? 1. It vnll perfect your reason. Faith is to your reason What a telescope is to your eye. It opens vaster fields of vision and new worlds, which before were hid- den and unknown. As reason is the perfection of the senses, so faith is the perfection of reason. (Incidentally, reason alone will not get us out of the mess we are in today, because reason un- aided cannot function well enough to handle the problems created by sin, by loss of faith, and by misuse of reason.) Faith is not a dam which pre- vents the flow of the river of thought; it is a levee which pre- vents unreason from overflowing the countryside of sanity. Faith will enlarge your knowledge, be- cause there are so many truths beyond the power of reason. You can tell something of the skill, the power, the technique of an artist by looking at his paint- ing, but you could never know his inmost thoughts unless he revealed them to you. In like manner, you can know something of the Power and Wisdom of God by looking at His universe, but you could never know His Thoughts unless He told you. And the telling of the inner life is Revelation, which we know by faith. Without faith many minds are like flattened Japanese lanterns, a riot of color without pattern or purpose, a conglom- eration of bits of information, but with no unifying philosophy of life. What a candle on the inside of the lantern will do to its pattern, that faith will do for your reason, that is, converge all your different pieces of knowl- edge into one absorbing philos- ophy of life which leads to God. That incidentally is why faith does not necessarily require an education. Faith is an education. God is our Teacher. That is why a little child in the first grade who knows God made him and that he is made for God is far wiser than a university pro- fessor who can explain an atom, but does not know why he is here or where he is going. Unless you know why you are FAITH 43 living, there is not much purpose in living. 2. Faith will perfect your free- dom. Our Divine Lord said : . the truth shall make you free” {John 8:32). If you know the truth about an airplane, you are free to fly it; if you know the truth about a triangle, that it has three sides, you are free to draw it. Try to be “broadmind- ed” and give a square five sides instead of four, as they did in the Dark Ages, and see where you end. Turning the words of Our Lord around, they mean that if you dq not know the truth you will be endaved. That is why, as the world denies Ab- solute Truth and Righteousness, it becomes enslaved. Socialism, for example, is nothing but the compulsory organlization of a chaos created by the repudiation of Truth and Morality. Never, therefore, believe that you lose your freedom by accepting the Faith. j A few years ago, I received a letter from a radio listener who said: “I imagine that you from your earliest youth were sur- rounded by priests and nuns who never permitted you to think for yourself. Why not throw off the yoke of Rome and begin to be free.” I answered him thus: “In the center of a sea was an island on which children played and danced and sang. Around that island were great high walls w*hich had stood for centuries. One day some strange men came to the island in individual row boats, and said to the children: ‘Who put up those walls? Can you not see that they are destroying your freedom? Tear them down!’ The children tore them down! Now if you go there, you will find all the children huddled together in the center of the island, afraid to play, afraid to sing, afraid to dance—afraid of falling into the sea.” Oh! how right was Our Lord. It is the truth that makes us free. 3. Faith assures equality to all men as children of God. Have you not noticed, if you have worked for or with a person of deep faith in Ohrdst, that you have always been treated with gentleness, equality, and charity? fou can not point to a single person who truly loves God who is mean to his fellowman. A man who does not believe in God will soon cease to believe in man. In vain will the world seek for equality until it has seen men through the eyes of faith. Faith YOU teaches that all men, however poor, or ignorant, or crippled, however maimed, ugly, or degraded they may be, all bear within themselves the image of God, and have been bought by the precious blood of Jesus Christ. As this truth is for- gotten, men are valued only be- cause of what they can do, not because of whlat they are. And since men cannot do things equal- ly well—^for example, play vio- lins, fly planes, teach phiiosophy, or stoke an engine—they are and must remain forever un- equal. From the Christian point of view, ail may not have the same right to do certain jobs, because they lack the capacity — for example, Toscanini has not a right to pitch for the New York Yankees—'but all men hav» the right to a decent, purposeful, and comfortable life in the struc- ture of the community for which God has fitted them, and first and foremost of all, because of what they are: persons made to the image and likeness of God. The false idea of the superi- ority of certain races and classes is due to the forgetfulness of the spiritual foundations of equal- ity. We of the Western world have been rightly proud of the fact that we have a civilization superior to others. But we have given the wrong reason for that superiority. We assume that we are superior because we are white. We are not. We are superior because we are Chris- tian. The moment we cease to be Christian we will revert to the barbarism from which we came. In like manner, if the black and brown and yellow races of the world become converted to Christ, they will produce a civi- lization and culture which will surpass ours if we forget Him who truly made us great. It is conceivable, if we could project ourselves a thousand years in the future, and then look back in retrospect over those thou- sand years, that we might see in China the record of a Christian civilization which would make us forget Notre Dame and Char- tres. 4. Finally, faith will give you peace of soul. In the multitu- dinous duties pf modern life you will do nothing which you cannot offer to God as i prayer; your sense of values will change; you will think less of what you cai. store away, and more about what you can take with you when you die; your rebellious moods will give way to resignation; your tendency to discouragement. FAITH 45 which is due to pride, -will be- come an additional reason for throwing yourself, like a wound- ed child, into the Father's lov- ing arms ; you will think of God's love as an unalterable dedica- tion to goodness, to which you submit even when it hurts. If you are sick you v/ill see Christ's pierced hand laid upon you, and offer your ^sickness for your own sins and the sins of the world. If your heart has been broken by infidelity, you will unite your loneliness with the Master who was deserted by His disciples who walked with Him no more. If you are the victim of an- other's sin, then like the young woman who wrote me, the trag- edy will be suffered through life for the redemption of the one who caused her ruin. If j^ur son is away in service, you will follow him, not by let- ter alone, but by prayer, as you both find a common center in God. If you lost your boy in war, then you who spared not a son to save a world from tyranny, will be solaced by the Heavenly Father who spared not Hiis Son to redeem a world from sin. What a joy it was to one moth- er last week, who, receiving the personal effects of her boy who was killed in battle, discovered that in his pocket was a copy of The Shield of Faith, which we gave away last year on the air ; and in that book there was un- derlined by the boy just one sentence which seemed so pro- phetic, “I am still in the eyes of God a person with an im- mortal destiny." Faith will not explain why these tragedies happen, for if it did where would be room for the merit of faith? But it does give you the insight and strength to bear them. Anything in life can be borne if there is some- one you love. The reason we are at war is because there are not enough people in love—with God. HOPE Address Delivered On January 28, 1945 It is not so much what hap- pens in your life that matters; it is rather how you react to it. You can always tell the character of a person by the size of the things that make him mad. A man can work joyfoilly at a pic- ture puzzle, so long as he believes the puzzle can be put together into a composite whole. But if the puzzle is a hoax, or if it was not made by a rational mind, then one would go mad trying to work it out. It is this absence of purpose in life, along with its consequent fear and frustration, which has some- times produced the neuroses and psychoses of the modern mind. How do you react to the vicis- situdes of life? Do you rebel be- cause God does not answer your prayers to become rich? Do you deny God because He called away your husband, your wife, your child? In the midst of a war do you summon God to judgment as the criminal who started it all and ask, “Why does He not stop it?” May I olfer you three consider- ations to help you build a firm hope in God? 1) Remember that everything that happens has been foreseen and known by God from all eter nity, and is either willed by Him, or at least permitted. God’s knowledge does not grow as ours does, from ignorance to wisdom. The Fall did not catch God napping. God is science, but He is not a scientist : God knows all, but He learns nothing from experience. He does not look on you from heaven as you look down on an ant-hill, seeing you going in and out of your house, walking to work, and then tell- ing an angel-secretary to note down the unkind word you said to the grocery-boy. Why is it we always think of God as watching the bad things we do and never the good deeds? God does not keep a record of your deeds. You do your own book- keeping. Your conscience takes your own dictation. God knows all things not by looking at you, but by looking into Himself as the Cause of all things. He never reads over your shoulder. An architect can tell you how many rooms will be in your house, and the exact size of each, before the HOPE 47 house is built, because he is the cause of the becoming of that house. God is the cause of the being of all things. He knows all before they happen. As a mo- tion picture reel contains the whole story before it is thrown upon the screen, so God knows all before it is acted on the stage of history. But do not think that because God knows all, therefore He has predetermined you to heaven or heH independently of your merits and irrespective of your free- dom. His knowledge that you shall act in a particular manner is not the immediate cause of your acting, any more than your knowledge that you are sitting down caused you to sit down or prevents you from getting up if you willed to do it. Our Blessed Mother could have refused the dignity of becoming the Mother of God, as Judas could have re- sisted the temptation to betray. The fact that God knew what each would do did not make them act the way they did. Because there is no future in God, fore-knowing is not fore- causing. You may know the stock market very well and, in virtue of your superior wisdom. foretell that such and such a stock will sell for 50 points in three months. In three months it does reach 50 points. Did you cause it to reach 50 points, or did you merely foreknow it? You may be in a tower where you can see a man advancing in the distance who has never been over that terrain before. You know that before he reaches the tower he must cross that ditch, wade that pond, tramp those bushes, and climb that hill. You foresee all the possibilities, but you do not cause him to cross those obstacles. The following story illustrates the fallacy of predestination without freedom. In the colonial days of our country there was a wife who believed in a peculiar kind of predestination, which left no room for human freedom. Her husband, who did not share her eccentricities, one day left for the market. He came back after a few minutes sa3dng he forgot his gun. She said: “You are either predestined to be shot by an Indian, or you are not pre- destined to be shot. If you are predestined to be shot, the gun will do you no good. If 5^u are not predestined to be shot, you will not need it. Therefore do not take your gun.” But h# 48 YOU answered: “Suppose I am pre- destined to be shc^ by an Indian on condition I do no-t have my gun?’' And that was sound religion. It allows for human freedom. We are our own crea- tors. To those who ask: “If God knew I would lose my soul, why did He make me?” the an- swer is : “God did not make you as a lost soul: You make your- self.” The universe is moral and therefore conditional : “Behold I stand at the door and knock.” God knocks! He breaks down no doors. The latch is on our side—not God’s. 2) God allows or permits evil but always for the reason of a greater good related to His love and the salvation of our souls. God does permit evil. Our Lord told Judas: “This is your hour” {Luke 22:53). Evil does have its hour. All that it can do within that hour is to put out the lights of the world. But God has His day. The evil of the world is inseparable from human freedom, and hence the cost of destroying the world’s evil or stopping this war would be the destruction of human freedom. Certainly none of us wants to pay that high a price, particularly since God would never permit evil unless He could draw some good from it. God can draw good out of evil because while the power of doing evil is ours, the effects of our evil deeds are outside of our con- trol and therefore in the hands of God. The brethren of Joseph were free to toss him into a well, but from that point on Joseph was in God’s hands. Rightly did he say to his brethren: “You thought evil against me : but God turned it into good ...” {Genesis 50:20). The evil which God permits must not be judged by its im- mediate effects, but rather by its ultimate effects. When you go to a theatre you do not walk out because you see a good man suf- fering in the first act. You give the dramatist credit for a plot. Why can you not do that much with God? The mouse in the piano cannot understand why anyone should disturb his gnaw- ing at the keys by making weird sounds. Much less can our puny minds grasp the plan of God. The slaughter of the Innocents probably saved many boys from growing up into men who on Good Friday would have shouted, “Crucify.” The physician would not permit an operation if he could not draw health from it, HOPE 49 and God would not permit evil unless He could draw good from it. 3) We must do everything within our yower to fulfill God's will as it is made known to us hy His Mystical Body, the com- mandments, and our lawfully constituted superiors, and we must also fulfill our duties flow- ing from our state of life. But everything that is outside our power, we must abandon and sur- render to His Holy will. Notice the distinction between within our power, and outside our power. There is to be no fiataliem. Some things are under our control. We are not to be like the man who perilously walked the railing of a ship in a storm at sea saying: “I am a fatalist ! I believe that when your time comes, there is noth- ing you can do about it.” What is wrong in fatalism is its failure to recognize that, within certain limits, our will can affect the events of life. It would be wrong for us, then, not to do our very best to make that course one which does good to our neigh- bor and renders glory to God. It is God’s will that men should have a free will which they can use in subordination to His and thereby be happy. There was much wisdom in the colored preacher who said: “You run up against a brick wall every now and then during life. If God wants you to go through that wall, it is up to God to make the hole.” But we are here concerned with those things outside your poiver, for example, sickness, accidents, bumps on buses, trampled toes in subways, the barbed word of a fellow-worker, rain on picnic days, the death of Aunt Ellen on your wedding day, colds on vacation, the loiss of your purse, and moth holes in your suit. God could have pre- vented any of these things. He could have stopped your head- ache, prevented a bullet from hitting your boy, forestalled cramps during a swim, and killed the germ that laid you low. But if He did not, it was for a su- perior reason. Therefore say: “God’s will be done.” If you tell an Irishman it is a bad day, nine times out of ten he will answer: “It’s a good day to save your soul.” It is one of the paradoxes of creation that you gain control by submission. Does not the scientist gain control over nature by humbly sitting down before the facts of 60 you nature and being docile to its teachings? In like manner, sur- render yourself to God, and all is yours. Even the irritations of life can be made stepping stones to salvation. An oyster develops a pearl because a grain of sand irritates it. Cease com- plaining about your pains and aches. When anyone asks, ‘‘How are you?” remember it is not a question, it is a greeting. An act of thanksgiving when things go against our will means more than a thousand acts of thanks- giving when things go according to our will. Every person in the world is possessed : some are possessed by the devil, some are possessed by self, others are possessed by God. This broadcast is an appeal to give your heart to God as if it were yours no longer, for your will is yours only to make it His. Pray not to change God’s will; pray rather to change your own. Measure not God’s Goodness by His readiness to do your will. Shall we call Him “Father” and still not believe He wills what is best for His children? Think not that you could do more good for souls if you were well, or if you had another position. What matters in life is not where we are but whether we are doing God’s will. Trust not in God because you are good, but because He is good and you are not. Often during the day say: “God loves me, and He is on my side, by my side.” In wartime, do not ask: “If the Japanese and the English, the Germans and the Americans, pray to God; on whose side is God?” For the answer to this question is: “If we all prayed as we ought, we would all be on the same side : ‘Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven/ ” Neither ask : “Why do na- tions which love God fight one another?” The answer is: “They don’t.” You see how important is the love of God. CHARITY Address Delivered On February 4, 1945 America’s greatest enemy is not from without, but from with- in, and that enemy is hate : hatred of races, peoples, classes, and religions. If America ever dies, it will not be through con- quest, but suicide. Tolerance pleas will not reme- dy this hate, for why should any creature on God’s earth be merely tolerated ? There is more tragedy than we suspect in the fact that we have become most united as a nation at a moment when we have developed a hate against certain foreign countries. Hate can be eradicated only by creating a new focus, and that is possible only by charity. By charity we do not mean kindness, philanthropy, generosity, or big-heartedness, but a superna- tural gift of God by which we are enabled to love Him above all things for His own sake alone, and in that love, to love all that He loves. The first quality of charity to be noted is that it resides in the will, not in the emotions or pas- sions or senses. In other words, charity does not mean to like, but to love. Liking is in the feelings or emotions; loving is in the will. A little boy cannot help disliking spinach, as per- haps you cannot help disliking sauerkraut, and I cannot help disliking chicken. The same is true of your reactions to certain people. You cannot help feeling an emotional reaction against the egotistical, the sophisticated, and the loud, or those who run for first seats, or those who snore in their sleep. But though you cannot like everyone because you have no control over your physiological reactions, you can love everyone in the divine sense, for love, being in the will, can be com- manded. As Our Lord said: “A new commandment I give unto you : That you love one another, as I have loved you” {John 13: 34). Outwardly, your neighbor may be very unlikeable ; but inwardly he is one in whom the image of God can be recreated by the kiss of charity. You can like only those who like you, but you can love those who dislike you. You can go through life liking those who like you without the love of 52 YOU God. Humanism is sufficient for those of our set, or for those who like to go slumming from ivory towers, but it is not enough to make us love those who ap- parently are not worth loving. To will to be kind when the emotion is unkind, requires a stronger dynamic than “love of humanity.” To love them, we must recall that we who are not worth loving are loved by Love. “For if you love them that love you, what reward shall you have ? Do not even the publicans this? And if you salute your brethren only, what do you more? Do not also the heathens this? Be therefore perfect as also your heavenly Father is perfect” {Matthew 5:46-48). A second feature of charity is that it is a habit, not a single act. There is a tremendous amount of sentimental romanti- cism associated with much hu- man kindness. Remember the great glow you got from giving your overcoat to the beggar on the street, for assisting a blind man up the stairs, for escorting an old woman through traffic, or for contributing a ten dollar bill to relieve an indigent widow. The warmth of self-approval surged through your body, and though you never said it aloud. you did inwardly say: “Gee! I’m swell.” These good deeds are not to be reproved but com- mended. But what we wish to emphasize is that nothing has done so much harm to healthy friendliness as the belief that we ought to do one good act a day. Why one good act? What about all the other acts? Charity is a habit, not an isolated act. A husband and wife are out driv- ing. They see a young blonde along the roadside changing a tire. The husband gets out to help her. Would he have done it if the blonde were fifty? He changes the tire, dirties his clothes, cuts his finger, but is all politeness, overflowing sweet- ness, exuding charm. When he gets back into his own car, his heart aglow with the good deed, his wife says : “I wish you would talk that nice to me. Yes- terday when I asked you to bring in the milk you said: ‘Are you a cripple?’ ” See the difference between one act and a habit? Charity is a habit, not a gush, or a senti- ment ; it is a virtue, not an ephemeral thing of moods and impulses; it is a quality of the soul, rather than an individual good deed. How do you judge a good CHAIRITY 63 piano player? By an occasional right note or by the habit or virtue of striking right notes? An habitually evil man every now and then may do a good deed. Gangsters endowed soup kitchens and the movies glori- fied them. But in Christian eyes, this did not prove they were good. Occasionally, an habitu- ally good man may fall, but evil is the exception in his life, while it is the rule in the life of the gangster. Whether we know it or not, the actions of our daily life are fixing our character for good or for evil. The things you do, the thoughts you think, the words you say, are turning you either into a saint or a devil, to be placed at either the right or the left side of the Di- vine Judge. If love of God and neighbor becomes a habit of your soul you are developing heaven within you. But if hatred and evil become the habit of your soul, then you are develop- ing hell within you. Heaven is a place where charity is eternal- ized. In heaven there will be no faith, for then we will see God; in heaven there will be no hope, for then we will possess God; but in heaven there will be char- ity, for “love endureth forever.” Finally, love is universal. Translating charity’s command- ment into the concrete, it means that you must love your enemy as you love yourself. Does that mean that you must love Hitler as you love yourself, or Koiso, or the thief who stole your tires, or the woman who said you had so many wrinkles that you had to screw on your hat? It means just that. But how can you love that kind of an enemy as you love yourself? Well, how do you love your- self? Do you like the way you look? If you did, you would not try to improve it out of a box. Did you ever wish to be anyone else ? Why do you lie about your age and say you just turned thirty when you mean you re- turned thirty? Do you like yourself when you develop a sense of rumor, or when you spread gossip and run down ’ your neighbor’s reputation, or when you are irritable and moody? You do not like yourself in these moments. But at the same time, you do love yourself, and you know you do! When you come into a room you invariably pick out the softest chair; you buy yourself good clothes, treat yourself to nice presents; when anyone says you are intelligent 54 YOU or beautiful, you always feel that such a person is of very sound judgment. But when anyone says you are “catty” or selfish, you feel they have not understood your good nature, or maybe they are “Fascists.” Thus you love yourself, and yet you do not love yourself. What you love ^bout yourself is the person that God made; what you hate about yourself is that God-made person whom you spoiled. You like the sinner, but you hate the sin. That is why, when you do wrong, you ask to be given another chance, or you promise to do better, or you find excuses, or you say “It was not my true self.” But you never deny there is hope. That is just the way Our Lord intended that you should love your enemies: love them as you love yourself, hating their sin, loving them as sinners; dis- liking that which blurs the di- vine image, loving the divine image beneath the blur; never arrogating to yourself a greater right to God’s love than they, since deep in your own heart you know that no one could be less deserving of His love than you. And when you see them receiv- ing the just due of their crimes, you do not gloat over them, but say: “There I go, except for the grace of God.” In this spirit, we are to understand the words of Our Lord: “Love your enemies, do good to them that hate you. Bless them that curse jmu, and pray for them that calumniate you. And to him that striketh thee on the one cheek offer also the other. And him that taketh away from thee thy cloak) forbid not to take thy coat also” (Luke 6:27-29). It is Christian to hate the evil of anti-Christians, but not without praying for these enemies that they might be saved—for God loved us when as yet we were sinners. If, then, you bear a hatred toward anyone, overcome it by doing that person a favor. You can begin to like classical music only by listening to it, and you can make friends out of your enemies only by practicing char- ity. The reason you love some- one else is because that person supplies your lack or fills up your void. You find in the other something you do not have : kindliness, beauty, wealth, vir- tue, etc. But God does not love you be- cause you supply His lack. He finds you lovable not because, of and by yourself, you are lovable. CHARFTY 55 but because He puts some of His love in you. As a mother loves her child because her nature is in the child, as the artist loves the canvas because his idea and his colored pattern is in it, sc God loves you because His Power or His Nature or His Love is in some way in you. If, then, God’s love for you makes you lovable, why not put some of your love in other peo- ple and make them lovable. Where you do not find love, put it there. Love therefore all things, and all persons in God. So long as there are poor, I am poor: So long as there are prisons, I am a prisoner: So long as there are sick, I am weak: So long as there is igno- rance, I must learn: So long as there is hate, I must love. THE HELL THERE IS Address Delivered On February 11, 1945 This is going to be a very unpopular broadcast. It is about a subject the modern mind does not want to hear, namely, hell. Why do our modern minds deny hell? Very simply because they deny sin. If you deny human guilt, then you must deny the right of a state to judge a crim- inal, or to sentence him to prison. Once you deny the sovereignty of God, you must deny hell. The existence of hell is God’s eternal guarantee of the inviolability of human freedom. You can dis- believe in hell, but you must also disbelieve in freedom; you can disbelieve in Sing Sing, but you must also disbelieve in respon- sibility. You can no more make a free nation without judges and prisons than you can make a free world without Judgment and Hell. No State constitution could exist for six months on the basis of a Liberal Christianity which denies that Christ meant what He said: “Depart from me, you cursed, into everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels” (Matthew 25: 41). What is the nature of the pun- ishment of hell? It is two-fold because it corresponds to the double character of sin. Every mortal sin consists in a) a turn- ing away from God and b) a turning to creatures. Because we turn away from God, we feel the absence of His Love, His Beauty, His Truth—and this is called the Pain of Loss. Because we turned to creatures and per- verted them to our sinful pur- pose, we are punished in some way by the very creatures which we abused. This is called the Pain of Sense, one of its aspects being the fire of hell. The Pain of Sense is based on the principle that the punish- ment should fit the crime. If you disobey one of nature’s laws, you suffer a corresponding retribu- tion. If you become intoxicated some night and put yourself in a state of amiable incandescence, you do not necessarily wake up the next morning with an over- drawn bank account. But you do feel the effects of abusing the God-given thirst by something vaguely described as a “hang- over.” In almost so many words, the alcohol says to you: “I was MlHiK IHiBi'Iilj TIHiEiiRS XS 67 made by God to be used by you as a reasonable creature. You perverted me from the purpose God intended. Now since I am on God’s side, not yours, I shall abuse you, because you abused me.” In hell, in like manner, we shall suffer from the very crea- tures we perverted. Hence there will be different kinds of punish- ment in hell. The fiercer the grip sinful pleasures had on a soul in this life, the more fiercely will the fires torment it in eternity. As the Scriptures tell us: “By what things a man sinneth, by the same also he is tormented” (Wisdom 11:17). And do not try to escape this logic or blind your- self to Divine Authority by argu- ing that hell could not be as you have heard some preachers pic- ture it. I am only saying, do not reject the truth of the book be- cause the pictures are bad. Now, what is the Pain of Loss? That is best understood as the loss of Divine Love, and from three distinct points of view, we shall describe it. Hell is the hatred of the things you love. A sailor lost on a raft at sea loves water. He was made for it, and water was made for him. He knows that he ought not drink the water from the sea, but he violates the dictates of his reason. The result is, he is now more thirsty than before, even thirsty when he is the most filled. He hates water as poison ; at the same time he is mad with the thirst for it. In like manner, the soul was made to live on the love of God, but if it perverts that love by salting it with sin, then as the sailor hates the very water he drinks, so the soul hates the very thing it desires, name- ly, the love of God. As the insane hate most the very persons whom in their saner moments they really love the most, so the damned in hell hate God whom they were really meant to love above all things. The wicked do not want hell because they enjoy its torments; they want hell because they do not want God. They need God, but they do not want Him. Hell is eternal suicide for hating love. Hell is the hatred of the God you love. Hell is the mind eternally mad at itself for wounding Love. How often during life you have said: “I hate myself.” No one who ever condemned you could add to the consciousness of your guilt. You knew it a thousand times better than they. When did you hate yourself most? Certainly not when you failed to act on a tip 58 YOU on the stock market. You hated yourself most when you hurt someone you loved. You even said: “I can never forgive my- self for doing that.” The souls in hell hate themselves most for wounding Perfect Love. They can never forgive themselves. Hence their hell is eternal: eter- nal self-imposed unforgiveness. It is not that God would not for- give them. It is rather that they will not forgive themselves. How often in this ^orld the sight of moral goodness arouses indignation. The evil person in- cessantly wants a recasting of all values. Put one good boy in a gang of boys which spends its time in petty thievery or break- ing school windows, and the chances are the gang will turn against that good boy, ridicule his moral principles, tell him he is a coward or old-fashioned. Ex- actly that same mentality is pres- ent in adult life. Whenever a professor attacks morality and makes fun of religion before his pupils, you can be sure nine times out of ten that his life is rotten. Goodness is a reproach to such professors: they want everyone CO be like themselves, so no one can reproach their conscience. This revolt against goodness and truth :* the basic cause of the persecution and mockery of re- ligion today. Now if such things are possible to corrupt souls on earth, why should they not be possible in eternity? These wicked souls will still hate Love because hate is the essence of their souls. They reject the one remedy that could have helped them, the love of Someone be- sides themselves, and for that reason hell is the house of in- curables who hate themselves for hating Love. Hell is submission to Love un- der Justice. We are free in this world ; we can no more be forced to love God than we can be forced to love classical music, antiques, swing bands, olives, or Bach. Force and love are contraries. Love and freedom are correla- tives. When you came into this world, God said: ‘T ask jou to love me freely, that you may be perfect.” Suppose we freely say: “I re- fuse to love Truth and Justice and Beauty or my neighbor. I shall love error, and graft, and ugliness.” Later on you die in that state. But you do not escape that Divine Love which you abused, any more than the trait- or escapes the country whose love he despised. Either you possess love, or love possesses you. In THE HECLiL THERE IS 59 marriage a man and woman were meant to possess love. But that love can be perverted so that in the end, love possesses them. How often a husband, for ex- ample, tied to a woman by mar- riage, is possessed by her, by her wants, her selfishness, and her jealousies. Often, too, many a wife is tied to a drunkard or worthless husband until death do them part. They do not free- ly love one another; they are forced in virtue of the justice of their contracts to love one an- other until death do them part. And to be forced to love anyone is hell. The lost souls could have loved God freely. But they chose to rebel against that love and in doing so came under Divine Jus- tice, as the criminal falls from the love of a country to its jus- tice. The souls in hell do not possess love, love possesses them. Justice forces them to love God, that is, to submit to the Divine Order, but to be forced to love is the very negation of love. It is hdl! Think not that hell ever ends, or that some day souls in hell will go to heaven. If a soul in hell went to heaven, heaven to it would be a hell. Suppose you hated higher mathematics; sup- pose your morning paper had nothing in it but logarithms, everyone you met talked to you about Space-Time differentials, every broadcast you heard was on the theory of relativity, every book you read was on the subject of pointer-readings. After a while mathematics would drive you mad. Now the souls in hell hate Perfect Life, Perfect Truth and Perfect Love—^which is God —and if they had to live with that which they hated more than you hate mathematics, then God would be their great punishment as mathematics would be yours. Heaven would be hell. Hell must be eternal. What is the one thing that life can never forgive? Death, because death is the negation of life. What is the one thing that truth can never forgive? Error, for error is its contradiction. What is the one thing that love can never for- give? It is the refusal to love; that is why Hell is Eternal. Everything does not come out right in the end, for we cannot at one moment believe that we are saved by doing God’s will, and the next moment believe that it has no significance. Hell means that the consequences of your good and bad acts are not in- 4iffeiC^ut. It makes a tremen^ 60 YOU dous amount of difference to your body if you drink tea or TNT, and it makes a greater dif- ference if your soul drinks vir- tue or vice. Where the tree falls, there it lies. You ask: “How can a good God be so wrathful as to sentence souls to hell?” Remember that God does not sentence us to hell, as much as we sentence our- selves. When the cage is opened the bird flies out to the air which it loved; when our body dies, the good soul flies out to its eternity of love of God. But a soul in the state of sin at the moment of death casts itself into hell just as naturally as a stone released from my hand falls to the ground. God has not a different mood for those who go to hell, and for those who go to heaven. The dif- ference is in us, not in Him. The sun which shines on wax softens it; the sun which shines on mud hardens it. There is no dif- ference in the sun, but only in that upon which it shines. So there is no difference in the God of love when He judges the wick- ed and the just; the difference is in those whom He judges. Hell is at the foot of the hill of Calvary, and no one of us can go down to hell without first passing over the hill where there is a God-man enthroned with arms outstretched to embrace, head bent to kiss, and heart open to love. I do not find it hard to understand God preparing a hell for those who want to hate themselves eternally for having hated Him. But I do find it hard to understand why that same God should die upon a Cross to save unworthy me from a hell which my sins so rightly deserve. Hell is a place where there is no love. That there may be no hell in our final destinies, one final word : God love you ! THE VALUE OF IGNORANCE Address Delivered On February 18, 1945 One thousand years before Our Blessed Lord was born, there lived one of the greatest of all poets : the glorious Homer of the Greeks. Two great epics are ascribed to him: one the Iliad, the other the Odyssey. The hero of the Ilaid was not Achilles, but Hector, the leader of the enemy Trojans whom Achilles defeated an^ killed. The poem ends not with a tribute to Achilles, but with a glorification of the de- feated Hector. The other poem, the Odyssey, had as its hero, not Odysseus, but Penelope, his wife, who was faithful to him during the years of his travels. As the suitors pressed for her affections, she told them that when she fin- ished weaving the garment they saw before them, she would listen to their courtship. But each night she unraveled what she had woven in the day, and thus remained faithful until her hus- band returned. “Of all women,” she said, “I am the most sorrow- ful.” Well might be applied to her the words of Shakespeare: “Sorrow sits in my soul as on a throne. Bid kings come and bow lown to it.” For a thousand years before the birth of Our Blessed Lord, pagan antiquity resounded with these two stories of the poet who threw into the teeth of history the mysterious challenge of glori- fying a defeated man and hailing a sorrowful woman. The subse- quent centuries asked, how could anyone be victorious in defeat and glorious in sorrow? And the answer was never given until that day when there came One who was glorious in defeat: the Christ on His Cross; and one who was magnificent in sorrow: His Blessed Mother beneath the Cross. It is interesting that Our Lord spoke seven times on Calvary and that His Mother is recorded as having spoken seven times in Sacred Scripture. Her last re corded word was at the Marriage Feast of Cana, when her Divine Son began His Public life. No^ that the sun was out, there was no longer need of the moon to shine. Now that the Word had spoken, there was no longer need of words. One wonders, as Our Blessed Lord spoke each of His Seven 62 YOU Words, if Our Blessed Mother at the foot of the Cross did not think of each of her correspond- ing Words? Such will be the subject of our Lenten medita- tions: Our Lord’s Seven Words on the Cross and the Seven Words of Mary’s life. Generally, when innocent men suffer at the hands of im- pious judges, their last words are either, “I am innocent” or “The courts are rotten.” But here for the first time in the hearing of the world is one who asked neither for the forgiveness of His own sins, for He is God, nor proclaimed His own inno- cence, for men are not judges of God. Rather does He plead for those who kill Him: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” {Luke 23:34). Mary, beneath the Cross, heard Her Divine Son speak that First Word. I wonder, when she heard Him say “know not,” if she did not recall her own First Word. It too, contained those words, “know not.” The occasion was the annunciation, the first good news to reach the earth in centuries. The angel announced to her that she was to become the Mother of God: “Behold thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and shalt bring forth a son ; and thou shalt call his name Jesus . . . And Mary said to the Angel: How shall this be done, because I know not man?” {Luke 1 :31-34). These words of Jesus and Mary seem to suggest that there is sometimes wisdom in not knowing. Ignorance is here rep- resented not as a curse, but as a blessing. This rather shocks our modern sensibilities concerning education—^but that is because we fail to distinguish between true wisdom and false wisdom. St. Paul called the wisdom of the world “foolishness with God,” and Our Blessed Lord thanked His Heavenly Father that He had not revealed Heaven- ly Wisdom to the worldly wise. The ignorance which is here extolled is not ignorance of the truth, but ignorance of evil. Notice it first of all in the word of Our Savior to His execution- ers : He implied that they could be forgiven only because they were ignorant of their terrible crime. It was not their wisdom that would save them, but their ignorance. In like manner if we knew what we were doing when we smote the Hands of Everlast- ing Mercy, dug the Feet of the Good Shepherd, crowned the Head of Wisdom Incarnate, and THE VALUE OF IGNORANCE 63 still went on doing it, we would never be saved. We would be damned ! It is only our ignorance which brings us within the pale of redemption and forgiveness. As St. Peter told them on Pente- cost: “I know that you did it through ignorance, as did also your rulers” (Acts 3:17). The First Word our Blessed Mother spoke at the Annuncia- tion revealed the same lesson. She said: “I know not man.” Why was there a value in not knowing man? Because she had consecrated her virginity to God. At a moment when every woman sought the privilege of being the Mother of the Messias, Mary gave up the hope—and received the privilege. She refuses to discuss with an angel any kind of compromise with her high re- solve. If the condition of be- coming the Mother of God was the surrender of her vow, she would not make that surrender, knowing man would have been evil for her—though it would not have been evil in other circum- stances. Not knowing man is a kind of ignorance, but here it proves to be such a blessing that in an instant the Holy Spirit overshadows her, making her a living ciborium privileged to bear within herself for nine months the Guest who is the Host of the world. You live in a world in which the worldly wise say: “You do not know life; you have never lived.” They assume that you can know nothing except by experience—experience not only of good but of evil. Examine your own life. If you know evil by experience, are you wiser because of it? Do you not now despise that very evil, and are you not the more tragic for having experienced it? You may even have become mas- tered by the evil you experienced. How often the disillusioned say: “I wish I had never tasted liquor,” or “I regret the day I stole my first dollar,” or “I wish I had never known that person.” How much wiser you would have been had you been ignorant! Think not, then, that in order to “know life” you must “experi- ence evil.” Is a doctor wiser be- cause he is prostrate with dis- ease? Do we know cleanliness by living in sewers? Do you be- come a better pianist by striking the wrong keys? Do not excuse yourself by say- ing “temptations are too strong,” or “good people do not know what temptation is.” The good know more about the strength of 64 YOU temptations than those who fall. How do you know how strong the enemy is in battle? By being cap- tured or by conquering? How can you know the strength of a temptation unless you overcome it? Our Blessed Lord really understands the power of temp- tation better than anyone, be- cause He overcame the tempta- tions of Satan. There is so much evil in the world today, so many lies propa- gated, so many ideas known that are untrue, that it would be a great blessing if some generous soul would endow a University for unlearning. Its purpose, would be to do with error and evil exactly what doctors do with disease! Well, such an institu- tion does exist and here are two practical courses it offers for un- learning evil. 1) If you are a Catholic, go to confession and have your sins blotted out, for here is an act as great as creation. In making the world, God made something out of nothing; in forgiving, God put something into nothing, namely your sins. Would you not like to be right now just as you were when you came from the hands of God at the baptis- mal font, with no false wisdom yet gathered to your mind so that, like an empty chalice, you might spend your life filling it with the wisdom of His Love? Honestly, if you had the choice now either of learning more about the world or of unlearning the evil you know, would you not rather unlearn than learn? Well, that is what absolution does ; it makes you wise by igno- rance. You will not be given a sheepskin when you walk out of the Confessional Box, that great University of Unlearning, but you will feel like a lamb, for Christ will be your Shepherd. 2) A second way to unlearn evil is to spend a Holy Hour a day in meditation. This can be done by everyone, whether you be Jew, Protestant, or Catholic. If you are a Catholic, spend that hour in the presence of Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament, making your morning Mass the first half of that hour. Be ignorant of propaganda, politics, economics, and gossip for an hour a day and become truly wise being instructed by the Spirit of God. You need to get away from the world now and then to know what you ought to be. God writes better on a blank page than on one covered with your scribblings. People living in dirt hardly THE VALUE OF IGNORANCE 65 ever realize how dirty dirt is. Those who live in sin hardly understand the horror of sin. The one peculiar and terrifying thing about sin is, the more ex- perience you have with it, the less you know about it. You be- come so identified with it that you know neither the depths to which you have sunk, nor the heights from which you have fallen. You never know you were asleep until you wake up; and you never know the horror of sin until you get out of sin. Hence, only the sinless really know what sin is. One hour a day spent with God in meditation will help you unlearn your sin. Since there on the Cross and in its shadow there is Innocence at its highest, it follows that there was also the greatest sorrow. Since there was no sin, there was the greatest understanding of its evil. It was their innocence which made the agonies of Cal- vary so tragic. St. Thomas Aquinas tells us that the least love of God is worth more than the knowledge of all created things, because by knowing the world we identify ourselves with the corruptible, but by loving God we become assimilated to Eternal Perfec- tion. We all know enough to be bet- ter than we are ; our unhappiness comes from our want of love. THE SECRET OF SANCTITY Address Delivered On February 25, 1945 There is one thing in the world that is definitely and abso- lutely your own, and that is your will. Health, power, life, and honor can all be snatched from you, but your will is irrevocably your own, even in hell. Hence, nothing really matters in life, ex- cept what you do with your will. It is the drama of will which makes the story of the two thieves crucified on either side of our Lord one of the absorbing incidents of history. Both thieves at first blasphem- ed. There was no such thing as the good thief at the beginning of the Crucifixion. But when the thief on the right heard that Man on the Central Cross forgive His executioners, he had a change of soul. He began to accept his sorrows. He took up his cross as a yoke rather than as a gibbet, abandoned himself to God’s will, and turning to the rebellious thief on the left said: “Neither dost thou fear God, seeing thou art under the same condemna- tion? And we indeed justly, for we receive the due reward of our deeds: but this man hath done no evil.” Then frpm his heart al- ready so full of surrender to His Savior, there came this plea, “Remember me when thou shalt come into thy kingdom.” Im- mediately there came the answer of the Lord, “Amen I say to thee, this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise” {Luke 23:40-43). “Thou.” We are all individu- als in the sight of God. He call- eth His sheep by name. This Word was the foundation of Christian democracy. Every soul is precious in God’s sight, even those whom the State casts out and kills. At the foot of the Cross, Mary witnessed the conversion of the good thief, and her soul rejoiced that he bad accepted the will of God. Her Divine Son’s Second Word promising Paradise as a reward for that surrender, re- minded her of her own Second Word some thirty years before, when the angel had appeared to her and told her that she was to be the Mother of Him who was now dying on the Cross. In her First Word she asked how this would be accomplished since she knew not man. But when the angel said she would conceive of TOffiE SECRET OF SANOTITY 67 the Holy Spirit, Mary immedi- ately answered: “Be it done to me according to thy word.” Fiat mihi secundum verhum tuum. {Luke 1:38). This was one of the great Fiats of the world. The first was at Creation when God said: Fiat lux: “Let there be light.” An- other was in Gethsemane when the Savior, pressing the chalice of redemption to His lips, cried: Fiat voluntas tua: “Thy will be done” (Matthew 26:42). The third was Mary’s, pronounced in a Nazarene cottage, which prov- ed to be a declaration of war against the empire of evil: Fiat mihi secundum verhum tuum, “Be it done to me according to thy word” (Luke 1:38). The Second Word of Jesus on Golgotha and the Second Word of Mary in Nazareth teach the same lesson : Everyone in the world has a cross, hut the cross is riot the same for any two of us. The cross of the thief was not the cross of Mary. The dif- ference was due to God’s will toward each. The thief was to give his life; Mary to accept life. The thief was to hang on his cross; Mary to remain be- hind. The thief received a dis- missal ; Mary received a mission. The thief was to be received into Paradise ; but Paradise was to be received into Mary. Each of us, too, has a cross. Our Lord said : “If any man will follow me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and fol- low me” {Mark 8:34). He did not say: “Take up My Cross.” His cross is not the same as yours, and yours is not the same as mine. Every cross in the world is' tailor made, custom built, patterned to fit its bearer and no one else. That is why we say : “My cross is hard.” We assume that other people’s crosses are lighter, for- getful that the only reason our cross is hard is simply because it is our own. Our Lord did not make His cross ; it was made for Him. So yours is made by the circumstances of your life, and by your routine duties. That is why it fits so tight. Crosses are not made by machines. Our Lord deals separately with each of your souls. The crown of gold you want may have underneath it the crown of thorns, but the heroes who choose the crown of thorns often find that underneath it is the crown of gold. Even those that seem to be without a cross actually have one. No one would have suspect- ed that when Mary resigned her- YOU self to God’s will by accepting the honor of becoming the Mother of God she would ever have to bear a cross. It would seem too, that one who was pre- served free from original sin should be dispensed from the penalties of that sin, such as pain. And yet this honor brought to her seven crosses and ended by making her the Queen of Martyrs. There are, therefore, as many kinds of crosses as there are per- sons: crosses of grief and sor- row, crosses of want, crosses of abuse, crosses of wounded love, and crosses of defeat! There is the cross of widows. How often Our Lord spoke of them; for example, in the parable of the judge and the widow {Luke 18:1-8) ; when He rebuked the Pharisees who “devoured widows’ houses” {Mark 12:40); when He spoke to the widow of Naim {Luke 7 :12) ; and when He praised the widow who threw two mites into the temple treas- ury {Mark 12:42). Widowhood may have been particularly dear to Him because His own mother was a widow, for Joseph His foster-father was presumably al- ready dead. There is the cross of death when God takes someone from you, as He may be doing in this war. It is always for a good reason. When the sheep have grazed and thinned the grass in the lower regions, the shepherd arms, carry it up the mountain will take a little lamb in his where the grass is green, lay it down, and soon the other sheep will follow. Every now and then Our Blessed Lord, too, takes a lamb from the parched pasture of a family up to those Heavenly Green Pastures, that the rest of the family may keep their eyes on their true home and follow through. Then there is the cross of sick- ness, which always has a divine purpose. Our Blessed Lord said of a particular illness : “This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of God” (John 11:4). Resignation to this par- ticular kind of cross is one of the very highest forms of prayer. Unfortunately, the sick generally want to be doing something else than being sick which God has willed at least permissively. The tragedy of this world is not so much the pain in it; the tragedy is that so much of pain is wasted. It is only when a log is thrown into the fire that it begins to sing. It was only when the thief was thrown into the fire of a THE .SECRET OR SuAH^CTITY 69 cross that he found God. It is only in pain that some discover Love. Because our crosses differ, soul will differ from soul in glory. We think too often that in Heaven there is going to be somewhat the same inequality in social positions that we have here ; that servants on earth will be servants in heaven; that the important people on earth will be the important people in heaven. This is not true. God will take into account our crosses. He seemed to suggest that in the parable of Dives and Lazarus: “Son, remember that thou didst receive good things in thy life- time, and likewise Lazarus evil things: But now he is comfort- ed; and thou art tormented” {Luke 16:25). There will be a bright jewel of merit for those who suffer in this world. Be- cause we live in a world where position is determined economi- cally, we forget that in God’s world the royalty are those who do His will. Heaven will be a complete reversal of the values of earth. The first shall be last and the last first, for God is no re- specter of persons. A wealthy and socially important woman wgnt to heaven. St. Peter point- ed to a beautiful mansion and said, “This is your chauflE^ur’s home.” “Well,” said she, “if that is his home, think what mine will be like.” Pointing to a tiny cottage, Peter said, “There is yours.” “I can’t live in that,” she answered. And Peter said, “I’m sorry, that is the best I could do with the material you sent me.” Those who suffer as the good thief did, have sent ahead some fine material. It makes no difference, then, what you do here on earth ; what matters is the love with which you do it. The street cleaner who accepts in God’s name a cross arising from his state in life, such as the scorn of his fellowmen; the mother who pro- nounces her Fiat to the Divine Will as she raises a family for the Kingdom of God; the afflict- ed in hospitals who say Fiat to their cross of suffering, are the uncanonized saints; for what is sanctity but fixation in goodness by abandonment to God’s Holy Will? It is typically American to feel that we are not doing any- thing unless we are doing some- thing big. But from the Chris- tian point of viev/, there is no one thing that is bigger than any other thing. The bigness comes from the way our wills utilize 70 YOU things. Hence mopping an office for the love of God is “higger” -than running the office for the love of money. Each of us is to praise and love God in his own way. The bird praises God by singing, the flower by blooming, the clouds with their rain, the sun with its light, the moon with its reflec- tion, and each of us by our pa- tient resignation to the trials of our state in life. If the gold in the bowels of the earth did not say Fiat to the miner and the goldsmith, it would never become the chalice of the altar; if the pencil did not say Fiat to the hand of the writer, we would never have the poem; if Our Lady did not say Fiat to the angel, she would never have become the House of God; if Our Lord did not say Fiat to the Father’s will in Gethsemane, we would never have been redeemed; if the thief did not say Fiat in his heart, he never would have been the escort . for the Master into Paradise. The reason most of us are what we are, mediocre Chris- tians, ‘"up” one day. “down” the next, is simply because we refuse to let God work on us. As crude marble, we rebel against the hand of the sculptor; as unvar- nished canvas, we shrink from the oils and tints of the Heavenly Artist. We are so “fearful lest having Him we may have naught else beside,” forgetful that if we have the fire of Love, why worry about the sparks, and if we have the perfect round, why trouble ourselves with the arc. We always make the fatal mis- take of thinking that it is what we do that matters, when really what matters is what we let God do to us. God sent the angel to Mary, not to ask her to do some- thing, but to let something be done. Since God is a better artisan than you, the more you abandon yourself to Him, the happier He can make you. It is well to be a self-made man, but it is better to be a God-made man. Try it — I mean you, whether you be Jew, Protestant, or Catholic — by spending a Holy Hour a day in prayer and meditation. Catho- lics should include morning Mass in their Hour, thus taking advantage of Calvary’s sacrifice in a world of lesser Calvaries. God will love you, of course, even though you do not love Him; but remember, if you give Him only half your heart. He can make you only 50% hap- py. THE SEiCRET OF SANCTITY 71 You have freedom only to give you will have no freedom of it away. To whom do you give choice, because once you possess yours? You give it either to the the Perfect, there is nothing left moods, the hour, to your egotism, to choose ; and still you will be to creatures, or to God. perfectly free, because you will Do you know that, if you give be one with Him whose heart is your freedom to God, in heaven Freedom and Love. THE FELLOWSHIP OF RELIGION Address Delivered On March 4, 1945 This war has proved that hu- man beings are morally closer to one another in a bomb shelter or shell-hole than they are in a brokerage office or at a bridge table. Sorrow draws hearts to- gether. Given therefore the trag- edy of Calvary, one should ex- pect to find Our Lord and His Blessed Mother and all humanity in the deepest fellowship of re- ligion. St. John prefaces the Word Our Lord spoke to His Mother from the Cross by the mention of the Lord’s seamless garment for which the soldiers were now shaking dice. Why, out of all the details of the Passion, should he suddenly begin thinking about a robe? Be- cause it was woven by Mary’s hands. It was such a beautiful robe that these hardened crim- inals refused to tear it apart. Custom gave them the right to the perquisites of those whom they crucified. But here the criminals refused to divide the spoils. They shook dice for it, so that the winner could have the whole robe. After having yielded up His garment to those who gambled for it. He on the Cross now yields up her who wove it. Our Blessed Lord looks down to the two most beloved creatures He has on earth: Mary and John. He speaks first to His Blessed Mother. He does not call her “Mother,” but “Woman.” As St. Bernard so lovingly suggests, if He had called her “Mother,” she would have been just His Mother and no one else’s. In order to indicate that she is now becom- ing the Mother of all men whom He redeems. He endows her with the title of universal mother- hood: “Woman.” Then indicat- ing with a gesture of His head the presence of His beloved dis- ciple, He added : “Behold thy Son.” He does not call him John, for if He did, John would have been only the son of Zebedee; He left him unnamed that he might stand for all humanity. Our Lord was equivalently saying to His Mother: “You al- ready have one Son, and I am He. You cannot have another. All the other sons will be in Me as the branches are in the vine. THE PELLOWSHTP OP RELIGION Hence I say not; ‘Behold another son !’ but ‘Behold thy son/ ” As she was the custodian of the Vine so now she would be custodian of the branches through time and eternity. In Bethlehem she had given birth to the King; now on Calvary she was begetting the Kingdom. At the crib Mary was the Madonna of the Son of God. At the cross Mary became our Madonna. When Mary heard Our Bless- ed Lord speak His Third Word establishing this new relation- ship, she remembered so well when it began. Her Third Word, as His, was about relationship. It was a long time ago. After the angel announced to her that she was to be the Mother of God, which alone would have bound her to all humanity, the angel added that her elderly cousin, Elizabeth, was now six months with child. “And Mary rising up in those days, went into the hill country with haste into a city of Juda. And she entered into the house of Zachary, and saluted Elizabeth” {Luke 1:39- 40). It is rightly assumed that no one may more justly claim im- munity from service to others than a woman bearing a child. If one adds to this, noblesse ob- m lige, the fact that this Wom- an bears within herself the very Lord of the Universe, then of all creatures Mary might rightfully claim dispensation from social bonds and duties to neighbor. Women in that con- dition are not to minister but to be ministered unto. But here we have the spectacle of the greatest of all women becoming the servant of others. Not stand- ing on her dignity saying, “I am the Mother of God,” but recognizing the need of her aged cousin, the pregnant Queen, in- stead of awaiting her hour in isolation like other women, mounts a donkey, makes a five day journey over hill country^ and with such a consciousness of spiritual fellowship that she does it, in the language of Sacred Scripture, “with haste.” Before the Savior is born, Mary recognizes that her mis- sion is to bring the Savior to humanity ; and with such a holy impatience is she filled, that she begins it before her Son has seen the light of day. I love to think of her on this journey as the first Christian Nurse whose service to neighbor is in- separable from bringing Christ into the life of her patient. There is no record of the ex- 74 YOU act words that Mary spoke. The Evangelist merely tells us that she saluted Elizabeth. But no- tice that just as soon as she sa- luted her cousin, new relation- ships were immediately estab- lished. Elizabeth no longer ad- dressed her as cousin. She calls her: “The mother of my Lord’’ {Luke 1:43). - But that was not the end of the relationship. Elizabeth’s own child who was to be called later by Our Lord, “The greatest man ever born of woman,” now stirs in his moth- er’s womb. As Elizabeth said: “For behold as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded in my ears, the infant in my womb leaped for joy” {Luke 1:44). We might almost say John the Baptist danced to his birth in salutation to the King of Kings ! Two unborn children establish a relationship before either had swung open the portals of flesh. Every record we have of our Blessed Lady is one of bringing Christ into humanity. First of all, it was through her as a Gate of Heaven that He walked into this earth. It was in her as a Mirror of Justice that He first saw with human eyes the re- flection of the world He had made. It is in her as a kind of living ciborium that He is car- ried to the First Communion rail of her cousin’s home, where an unborn babe salutes Him as the Host who is to be the Guest of the world. It is through her intercession at Cana that He brings His Divine Power to sup- ply a human need. And it is finally at the Cross that she who gave Christ to the world, now receives Him back again in us who have the high and undeserv- ed honor to call ourselves Christ- ians. Because of this Divinely es- tablished intimacy I wonder if it is not true that as the world loses veneration for Christ’s mother, it loses also its ador- ation of Christ. Is it not true in earthly relationships that, as a so-called friend ig- nores your mother when he comes to your home, sooner or later he will ignore you? Con- versely, as the world begins knocking at Mary’s door, it will find that Our Lord Himself will answer. How shall we escape this con- clusion? If Christ Himself will- ed to be physically formed in her for nine months and then be spiritually formed by her for thirty years, is it not to her that we must go to learn how to have Christ formed in us? THE FELLOWSHIP OF RELIGION 76 Only she who raised Christ can raise a Christian. That is why every single broadcast I give is dedicated to Our Lady, in the hope that as the sponsor of each broadcast she may bring her Divine Son into your souls as she brought Him to Elizabeth, John, and to the young married couple at Cana. So firmly convinced am I that it is through Mary that the world will find Our Lord again, that I am going to ask every one of you of good will to say the Rosary daily for this inten- tion. What favors may you expect from a daily recitation of the Rosary? 1. You will never lose your soul if you say it daily and co- operate with God’s grace. 2. Your family will be blessed in peace and war if you say the Rosary every night in the family circle. 3. If you desire to bring a soul to the fullness of God’s faith and charity, teach that person to say the Rosary. He will either stop saying the Rosary or will receive the gift of Faith. Finally, the purpose of the Rosary is to bring you to God. Mary is treacherous in the sense that she will betray you into the hands of her Divine Son. As Francis Thompson bade her: The celestiai Temptress play, And all mankind to bliss betray; With sacrosanct cajoleries And starry treachery of your eyes. Tempt us back to Paradise! Since Our Lord gave His Mother to us on the Cross, then we are her children, and as such we say to her in the language of Mary Dixon Thayer: Lovely Lady dressed in blue Teach me how to Pray I God was just your little Boy, Tell me what to say! Did you lift Him up, sometimes, Gently, on your knee? Did you sing to Him the way Mother does to me? Did you hold his hand at night? Did you ever try Telling stories of the world 0! And did He cry? Do you really think He cares If I tell Him things — Little things that happen? And Do the Angels’ wings Make a noise? And can He hear Me if I speak low? Tell me—^for you know. Lovely Lady dressed in blue Teach me how to pray! God was just your little Boy And you know the way.* The poem To Our Lady by Mary Dixon Thayer quoted with the per- mission of the Macmillan Com- pany. CONFIDENCE IN VICTORY Address Delivered On March 11, 1945 Perhaps at no time in modern history was there ever such a flight from life as at the present day. Also, there is the flight from consciousness , through alcohol- ism, or the flight from decision through religious indifference, or the flight from freedom by the denial of responsibility. All these are symptoms of despair. Many people as a result are cracking up, emotionally, mentally, and morally. But our problem is not to diagnose the malady, but to heal it. Is there another way out, even in these dark days ? For an answer one must go back to the darkest day the world ever saw, the day when the sun hid its face at noon, as if ashamed to shed its light on the crime men committed at Calvary. As dark- ness spread over the earth three crosses became silhouetted against a black horizon. We see nothing; there is only an awful silence, a thick gloom, relieved by one cry, sent up from a brok- en heart of self-abasement: “My God, why hast thou forsaken pae?” (Mark 15:34). These words were the first words of prophetic Psalm 21, written about a thousand years before this black day. Though the Psalm begins with this cry of sadness, if Our Lord had fin- ished reciting it He would have ended with words of joy, victory, and the promise to feed the hun- gry and to establish spiritual sovereignty over the earth. Mary, standing at the foot of the Cross, knew her scriptures well. When she heard Our Lord begin Psalm 21 it reminded her of a song that she once sang. It was her Fourth Word which she chanted in the home of Eliza- beth, the greatest song ever writ- ten—The Magnificat: “My soul doth magnify the Lord.^’ The end of her song contains very much the same sentiments as the end of Psalm 21, namely, that her Divine Son would feed the poor, exalt her among na- tions, and that His victory would endure forever. There is something common to both these songs: both were spoken before there was any as- surance of victory. In His Fourth Word from the Cross, CONFIDENCE IN VICTORY 77 the suffering figure looks for- ward through the darkness to the triumph of the Resurrection and His spiritual dominion over the earth. In her Fourth Word the woman, nine months before her child is born, looks down the long procession of the com- ing ages, and proclaims that when the world’s great women like Livia, Julia, and Octavia shall have been forgotten, the ordinary law of human oblivion will be suspended in her favor, because she is the Mother of Him whose Name is Holy, and who would make her remembered from generation unto genera- tion because His Cross is the re- demption of men. Both were really words of tri- umph, one of victory before the battle was over, one of Overlord- ship before the Lord was born. To both Jesus and Mary, there were treasures in darkness, whether the darkness be on a black hill or in a dark womb. Are you in the valley of des- pair? Then learn that the Gos- pel of Christ can be heard as Good News even by those whose life has been shattered by Bad News, for only those who walk in darkness ever see the stars. The reason therefore why some souls emerge purified from catastrophe, while other souls come out worse, is because the first had One in whom they could trust and the second had none but themselves. The atheist, therefore, is properly defined as the person who has no invisible means of support. Have you ever noticed, as you talked to your fellow-men, the different reactions of those who have faith in God and His pur- poses, and those who have not? The man without faith was gen- erally greatly surprised at the dark turn of events with two world wars in 21 years, with the resurgence of barbarism, and the abandonment of moral prin- ciples. But the man with faith in God was not so surprised. The sum came out just as he had expected ; chaos was in the cards, though they had not yet been dealt, for he knew that “Unless the Lord bufid the -house, they labor in vain that build it” {Psalm 126:1). H. G. Wells, for example, whose optimism once hoped that “man with his feet on earth, would one day have hands reach- ing among the stars,” became pessimistic as darkness fell over the earth in these last few years. Now he says that “the universe is bored with man, is turning a 78 YOU hard face to him, and I see him being carried more and more rap- idly . . . along the stream of fate to degradation, suffering and death.” Now hear St. Paul, a man of faith who lived in dark days too. He had been persecuted and he knew that the tyrant who held the sword would one day draw it across his neck, yet in full trust he says: “Who then shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation? or distress? or famine? or naked- ness, or danger? or persecu- tion? or the sword? . . . For I am sure that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor princi- palities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor might, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus Our Lord” {Romans 8 :35, 38-39) . You see the difference? Now choose! Will you slip down into abysmal despair, or will you, like Christ in a blackness at high noon, and like Mary ere her Tree of Life had seen the earth, trust in God, His mercy, and His vic- tory? If you are unhappy, or sad, or despondent, it is basically for only one reason : you have refus- ed to respond to Love's plea: “Come to me, all you that labor, and are burdened, and I will re- fresh you” {Matthew 11:29). Everywhere else but in Him, the liberation promised is either armed or forced, and that can mean slavery. Only nailed love is free. Unnailed and crucified love can compel. But hands pin- ioned to a wooden beam cannot force, nor can a lifted Host and an elevated Chalice constrain — but they can beckon and solicit. That kind of love gives you these three suggestions for liv- ing in troubled times : 1) Never forget that there are only two philosophies to rule your life: The one of the Cross which starts with the fast and ends with the feast; the other of Satan, which starts with the feast and ends with the head- ache. Unless there is the Cross, there will never be the empty tomb; unless there is faith, in darkness, there will never be vision in light; unless there is a Good Friday there will never be an Easter Sunday. 2) When bereavement comes, when the “slings and arrows of outrageous fortune” strike, when like Simon of Gyrene a cross is laid on your reluctant shoulders. CONFEDENOE IN VICTORY 79 then I say to you who are Cath- olics, take that cross to daily Mass, as part of your daily Holy Hour and say to our Lord at the moment of consecration : “As Thou my Savior in love for me dost say: ‘This is My Body! This is My Blood!’ so I say to Thee : ‘This is my body ! Take it. This is my blood! Take it. They are yours. I care not if the ac- cidents or “species” of my life remain, such as my daily work, my routine duties, but all that I am substantially, take, conse- crate, ennoble, spiritualize so that I am no longer mine, but Thine, 0 Lord Divine.’ ” 3) In your daily Holy Hour of prayers and meditation, wheth- er you be Jew, Protestant or Catholic, think not of Almighty God as a kind of absentee land- lord with whom you hardly dare to be familiar. Do not fear Him with a servile fear, for God is more patient with you than you are with yourself. Would you, for example, be as patient with the wicked world today as He is? Would you even be as patient with anyone else who had the same faults as you? Rather ap- proach Him in full confidence and even with the boldness of a loving child who has a right to ask a Father for favors. Though He may not grant all you desire, be sure that in a certain sense there is no un- answered prayer. A child asks his father for something that may not be good for him—for example, a gun. The father, while refusing, will pick up the child in his arms to console him, giving the response of love, even in the denial of a request. As the child forgets in that embrace that he ever asked a favor, so in praying you forget what you wanted when you receive what you really need : communion with Divine Love. Do not forget ei- ther, that there are not two kinds of answers to prayer, but three: One is “Yes.” Another is “No.” The third is “Wait.” You will find that, as you pray, the nature of your requests will change. You will ask less and less things for yourself, and more and more for His love. Is it not true in human relation- ships that the more you love someone, the more you seek to give and the less you desire to receive. The deepest love never says, “Give me,” but it does say, “Take.” You probably think that if Our Lord came into your room some night as you were praying, you would ask Him fa- vors, or present your difficulties. ^0 YOU or say: “When will the war end?” or “Should I buy General Motors stock?” or “Give me a million.” No! You would throw your- self on your knees and kiss the hem of His garment. And the moment He laid His hands on your head you would feel such a peace and ti;ust and confidence —even in darkness—^that you would not even remember you had questions to ask, or favors to beg. You would consider them a kind of desecration. You would want only to look into His face, and you would be in a world which only lovers know. That would be the Heaven you wanted 1 RELIGtON IS A QUEST Address Delivered On March 18, 1945 Every human heart in the world without exception is on the quest of God. Not everyone may be conscious of it, but it is as natural for the soul to want God as for the body to want food or drink. It was natural for the prodigal son to be hungry; it was unnatural to live on husks. It is natural to want God; it is unnatural to satisfy that want with false gods. Not only is the soul on the quest of God, but God is on the quest of the soul, not because He needs us, but because we need Him. This double quest of the Cre- ator for the creature and the creature for the Creator is re- vealed in the Fifth Word of our Lord from the Cross, and the Fifth Word of our Lady, pro- nounced when her son was only twelve years of age. One day Our Blessed Lord said to the multitude: “If any man thirst, let him come to me and drink” (John 7:37). But on the Cross, He from whose finger tips toppled planets and worlds. He who filled the valleys with the song of a thousand fountains, now cries not to God but to man : “I thirst” (John 19:28). And yet that thirst could not have been only physical, for the Gospel tells us that He spoke in order that the Scriptures might be ful- filled. It therefore was spiritual as well as physical. God was or the quest of souls, trusting that one of the trivial ministrations of life, the offering of a cup in His name, might bring the of- ferer within the sweet radiance of His grace. Mary, standing in the shadow of her Son’s hard death-bed, heard His Word and was remind- ed of the time she thirsted, too. It was when her little Son, who had reached the age of twelve, was lost during the pilgrimage she and Joseph made to the Holy City. If the trumpets of doom had sounded, their hearts would have been less heavy. For three days they flushed the hills and caravans, and on the third day they found Him. We know not where He was during those three days. We can only guess. Per- haps He was visiting Gethsemane where His blood twenty-one years later would crimson the YOUS2 olive roots; perhaps He stood on Calvary’s hill and looked for- ward to this sad hour. In any case, on the third day they found Him in the temple, teaching the doctors of the law. Mary said: “Son, why hast thou done so to us ? Behold thy father and I have sought thee sorrowing” {Luke 2:48). In a land where women were reticent, where men were masters, it was not Joseph who spoke; it was Mary. Mary was the virgin mother, Joseph was the foster father. Here was a creature on the quest of God. As our Blessed Lord’s thirst on the Cross re- vealed the Creator in search of man, Mary’s words revealed its complementary truth, that the creature is in search of God. If each is seeking for the oth- er, why do they not find? God does not always find man be- cause man is free, and like Adam he can hide from God. Like a child who hides from his mother when he does something wrong, so does man turn from God when he sins. God then always seems “so far away”; but the truth is, it is man who is “far away.” Sin creates a distance. Respect- ing human freedom, God calls but He does not force. “I thirst” is the language of liberty. Man in his turn does not always find God because he gives up his search too quickly. God is found on the third day, for in the language of our Lord, that is the day of perfection. God is closer to us than we know: “The angels keep their an- cient places ; Turn but a stone, and start a wing! ’Tis ye, ’tis your estranged faces, That miss the many-splen- doured thing.”* If, then, you are interested in saving souls, always start with the assumption that everyone wants God, and God loves every- one. How about bigots? Do they want Our Lord and His Church? Certainly! Sometimes their hat- red is a vain attempt to ignore. Never be too hard on bigots. They do not really hate the Church. They hate only what they mistakenly believe to be the Church. If I had heard the same lies about the Church they have heard, and if I had been taught the same historical per- versions, with my own peculiar character and temperment I would hate the Church ten times *From Kingdom of God, by Fran- cis Thompson. RELIGION IS A QUEST 83 more than they do. At least they have some zeal and some fire. It may be misdirected, but with God’s grace it can be channeled into love. These souls who peddle anti-religious tracts or anti-Cath- olic publications are to be re- garded in exactly the same light as St. Paul before his conver- sion. And as he preached and lectured against the Church, aft- er assisting at the killing of the most brilliant of the early churchmen, St. Stephen, there were many believers who de- spaired. Prayers were multiplied to God: “Send someone to refute Paul.” And God heard their prayers. God sent Paul to an- swer Paul. A bigot made the best Apostle. In my radio audience a few years ago was a young woman who used to sit before the radio and ridicule and scoff at every word. She is now enjoying the fullness of Faith and the Sac- raments. In another town was a man who used to make records of these broadcasts, then take them to a nearby convent, and. play them for the sisters who had no radio. But he mitigated this act of kindness by making a running commentary of ridi- cule while the record played. He recently built the new Sisters’ School in that city. Everyone is on the quest of God, and if the soul gives God a chance, God will win. How about those who lost the faith? Here I refer in particular to the fallen-away Catholic. His fall is serious because of the height from which he fell. Is God thirsting for him? Obvious- ly, for the Good Shepherd never gives up seeking His lost sheep. On the other hand, the fallen- away, too, thirsts for reunion with Our Lord and His Body, the Church, but in an oblique sort of way. Having tasted the best, he is miserable without it; hav- ing eaten the Bread of Life all else makes hungry where most it satisfies. Because wandering sheep are broken-hearted with- out the Shepherd, make it a rule never to argue with a fallen- away Catholic. If, for example, any such tells you that he no longer believes in confession, do not believe it. Like the woman at the well, who had five hus- bands, he wants to keep religion in the realm of the speculative. What he needs is to have it brought down to the realm of the moral, as Our Blessed Lord did for that woman. He wants an argument to salve his con- 84 TOU science, but he needs absolution to heal it. If there be any such soul in my audience, please go to con- fession during Holy Week and recover the peace 'which only God can give. If there is anything I can do to help your return, please call on me, for I assure you the greatest joy of a priest’s heart comes from lifting sheep from the thorns and brambles into the embrace of the Shepherd of Life. Do sinners want God too ? Con- scious sinners do. That is why one need hardly ever tell such a sinner how wicked he is. He knows it a thousand times bet- ter than you. His conscience has pointed an accusing finger at him in his sleep; his fears have emblazoned his sins on his mind ; his neuroses, anxieties, and unhappiness have been like trumpets of his inner death. The Divine Savior wants sinners par- ticularly, for He said that He came to save not the just but the sinners. His pardoning grace will save you, if you do not lock it out. In that case you would be like the cobbler mentioned by Charles Dickens. For years he had been a prisoner in the Bastille, where he cobbled shoes. He became so enamored of the walls, the dark- ness, and the monotony of his task, that when he was liberated he built a cell at the center of his English home, and on days when skies were clear and birds were singing, the taps of the cobbler in the dark could still be heard. So men by habitual resi- dence in imprisoning moods ren- der themselves incapable of liv- ing in the wider horizons of God’s grace. Do I hear you object: “But I am a sinner. God will not hear me.” If God will not hear a sin- ner, why did He praise the pub- lican in the rear of the temple, who struck his breast saying: “0 God, be merciful to me a sin- ner” {Luke 18:13). There were two sinners on Calvary on either side of our Lord. One was saved because he asked to be saved. Did not our Divine Savior say: “Come to me, all you that labor and are burdened”? (Matthew 12:28). And who is more heavily burdened than a sinner? Do not stunt your spiritual life by looking always for your faults. Think of God’s love. Never despair! Not until God ceases to be infinitely good and you begin to be infinitely wicked have you a right to be hope- less. RELIGION IS A QUEST 86 If you still insist that you listen to you now, my answer is : never before prayed in your life Pray anyway. A strange voice and therefore God would not is one most quickly heard. THE PURPOSE OF LIFE Address Delivered On March 25, 1945 There is no word more often used in our modern world and more often misunderstood than the word freedom. Almost every- one thinks of it as freedom from something, but rarely as freedom for something. Some think they are free only because they have no ball and chain on their feet, without ever adverting to why they want to be free, and what is the purpose of life. The root of all our trouble is that freedom for God and in God has been interpreted as free- dom from God. Before we ask what you do with your freedom, let us turn to the life of Our Lord and Our Lady, for the su- preme example of how freedom is to be used. The First Word Our Lord is recorded as speaking in the Scripture is at the age of twelve : “I must be about my Father’s business” {Luke 2:49). During His public life. He re-affirmed this dedication to His Father’s will : “I do always the things that please him” {John 8:29). Now on the Cross, when He goes oul to meet death by freely surren- dering His Life, His last words are: “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit” {Luke 23:46). Father—Note the word of Eternal Parenthood. He did not say Our Father as we do, for the Father was not His and ours in the same way. He is the Nat- ural Son of the Father; we are only the adopted sons. Into thy hands—These were the hands the prophet called “good”; the hands that guided Israel to its historical fulfillment of God’s Providence; the hands that provided good things even for the birds of the air and the grass of the field. / commend my spirit—Surren- der! Consecration! Life is a cycle. We come from God and we go back again to God. Hence the purpose of living is to do God’s will. When Our Blessed Mother saw Him bow His head and deliver His Spirit, she remembered the last Word that she is recorded to have spoken in Scripture. It was to the wine steward at the mar- riage feast of Cana; that day when, in the language of Cra- shaw, “the unconscious waters THE PURPOSE OF LI^^E 8^ saw their God and blushed.” “Whatsoever he shall say to you, do ye” {John 2:5). What a beautiful valedictory! They are the most magnificent words that ever came from the lips of a woman. At the Trans- figuration the Father spoke from the Heavens and said: “This is my Beloved Son . . . hear ye him” {Matthew 17:5). Now our Blessed Mother speaks and says, “Do His will.” The sweet rela- tionship of three decades in Naz- areth now draws to a close, as Mary is about to give Emmanuel to us all. She does it by point- ing out to us the one and only way of salvation: complete con- secration to her Divine Son. No- where in the Scripture is it ever said that Mary loved her Son. Words do not prove love. True love is surrender of the will, and such is her final injunction to us: “Whatsoever he shall say to you, do ye” {John 2:5). Both the last recorded words of Jesus and those of Mary were words about freedom : a freedom for something. For Jesus it was the will of the Father, for Mary the will of the Son. This is the law of the universe: Nature is for man, man is for Christ, and Christ is God’s. What do you do with your freedom? You can do one of three things with it: 1) Keep it for your selfish de- sires. 2) Break it up into tiny little areas of trivial allegiance or passing fancy. 3) Surrender it to God. If you keep freedom only for yourself, then, because it is ar- bitrary and without standards, you will find it deteriorating, in- to a defiant self-affirmation. Once all things become allowable, sim- ply because you desire them, you will become the slave of your choices. If your self-will decides to drink as much as you please, you soon find not only that you are no longer free not to drink, but that you belong to drink; it is your master, you are its slave. Boundless liberty is boundless tyranny. The abuse of freedom ends in the destruction of free- dom. This is what Our Lord meant when He said: “Whoso- ever committeth sin, is the ser- vant of sin” {John 8:34). The second way to use free- dom is to become like a humming bird, hovering first over this flower, then over that, but liv- ing for none and dying without any. In that case, you desire nothing with your whole heart. 88 YOU because your heart is broken into a thousand pieces. You thus be- come divided against yourself; a civil war rages within you; you are striking out in con- tradictory directions. You change your likes and desires when dissatisfied, but you never change yourself. You become very much like the man who complained to the cook at break- fast that the egg was not fresh and asked for another. She brought in an egg a minute later, but when he got to the bottom of it, he found it was the same old egg turned upside down. So it is with human nature ; what has changed is the desire, not the soul. As a result, your interest in others is not real. In your more honest moments you discover that you deal with them on the basis of self-interest; you let them speak when they agree with you, but you silence them when they disagree. Your mo- ments of love, if you look into your soul, are nothing but a bar- ren exchange of egotism—you talk about yourself five minutes, and your neighbor talks about himself five minutes, but if he takes longer you call him a “bore.” No wonder such people often say: “I must pull myself togeth- er.” Thus do they confess that they are like broken mirrors, each reflecting a different image. In essence this is debauchery, or the inability to choose one among many attractions ; the soul is diffused, multiple, or “legion,” as Satan called him- self. And this is the sad state of millions in the world; they are free from something, but free for nothing, because they have no purpose in life. Finally, you can use your free- dom as Our Lord did on the Cross, by surrendering His Spirit to the Father, and as Mary bade us at Cana, by doing His will in all things. This is per- fect freedom: the displacement of self as the center of motiva- tion and the fixation of our choices, decisions, and actions in the words of Our Lord: “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” We are all like limpets that can live only when they cling to a rock. Our freedom forces us to adhere to something. Freedom is ours to surrender; we are free to choose our servi- tudes. To give that freedom to anything less than the perfect never brings ultimate peace. But to surrender to Perfect Love is to surrender to happiness and THE PURPOSE OP LIFE 89 thereby be perfectly free. Thus to “serve God is to reign.” But we are afraid to give away our will. Like St. Augus- tine in his early life we say: “I want to love you dear Lord, a little later on, but not now.” Fearful of One who comes to us purple-robed and cypress- crowned, we ask : “Must Thy harvest fields be dunged with rotten death?” Must gold be purified by fire? Must hands that beckon bear the red livid marks of nails? Must I give up my can- dle, if I have the sun? Must I give up knocking if the door of love is opened? Do we not act toward God as a child who re- sents the affectionate embrace of his parents, because it is not our mood to love? Francis Thompson so reflected when he heard these words from the mouth of a child : ‘Why do you so clasp me. And draw me to your knee? Forsooth, you do but chafe me, I pray you let me be: I will be loved but now and then When it liketh me!' So I heard a young child, A thwart child, a young child Rebellious against love’s arms. Make its peevish cry. To the tender God I turn; — ‘Pardon, Love most High! For I think those arms were even Thine, And that child even I.’ There is hope for you if you are dissatisfied with your pres- ent choices, and you want the Perfect: the very void you thus create makes it possible for God to fill it. I would rather hear you say, “I am a sinner,” than to hear you say, “I have no need of religion.” If you admit you are a sinner, you acknowledge the need of a Redeemer; but if you have no need of religion, then you are your own god, and if you are God, I am an atheist. If you are empty, God can pour in His waters of Life; if you are filled with self, there is no room for anything else. No man who has ever shed a sincere tear before God for the way he abused his freedom was ever lost. Even in an earthly way, have you ever noticed how much more beautiful the hills look when there are tears in your eyes. You may even see rainbows of hope. Our Lord took St. Augustine to Himself even though Augustine lament- ed: “Too late, 0 ancient Beauty, have I loved Thee.” So He will take your freedom to choose between good and evil and make it a freedom in per- fection and goodness if you but surrender to that “love we fall short of in all love” and to that 90 YOU “Beauty that leaves all other beauty pain.” This is the week Divine Love died for you. He makes His final appeal as Love crucified. When dictators want the wills of men, they nail them to a cross. When God wants our wills, He permits Himself to be nailed, that He may never force and that we may be uncaught cap- tives in the hands of Love. Do you know anyone else who loves you enough to die for you? You know your own mind, yes; but do you know your own heart? Your tears may be dried; but your heart filled? Never! Only God can fill that. May you then give Him an hour a day in prayer and meditation al- ways remembering that it does not require much time to make you a saint; it requires only much love. EASTER Address Delivered On April 1, 1945 If this second World War had not broken out, I would have found it hard to believe in God. I do not mean the World War with its peculiar accidents of time and place and nations, but in the larger moral aspect of judgment and retribution. If nature, for example, were indif- erent to infractions of its laws, if health did not decline with the refusal to eat, if blindness did not follow the plucking out of an eye, if one gathered figs of thistles, and water ran up hill, it would be difficult to believe that Supreme Intelligence had imposed order and law on the visible universe in which we live. In like manner, if the moral order were indifferent to our in- fractions, if the breakdown of the nations did not follow the col- lapse of family life, if the af- firmation that man is an animal did not make men act like ani- mals, if the denial that God is the Author of Law did not pro- duce a lawless and therefore a warring world, then it would be difficult to believe that God made a moral universe in which men reaped where they sowed, and where the wages of sin are deatJbk At no time in modern history has it been easier to believe in God than now. It used to be that evil was considered a stumbling block to a belief in the Goodness of God, but today men are com- ing to a belief in the Goodness of God because of evil. They ad- mit that evil today has taken on such proportions that it can be explained only by the infraction of a universal moral law that must have come from God. In a word, the modern man is com- ing to God by way of the devil. And such is the lesson of this Resurrection day: We come to the glory of Easter Sunday through the evil of a Good Fri- day; to a halo of dazzling light through the ignominy of a crown of thorns; to the dawn of a new day through the darkness of a high noon. Calvary is only a momentary scandal. Goodness in the face of evil must suffer, for when love meets sin it will be crucified. A God who bears His Sacred Heart upon His sleeve as Our Lord did in the Incarnation, , must be pre- pared to have daws peck at it. But at the same time. Goodness can use that suffering as the con- D-J Y dition of overcoming evil! It can take anger and wrath and hate and say “Forgive.” It can take life and offer it for another. Evil may have its hour, but God will have His day. When therefore at one mo- ment I see a naked criminal on the gallows, forsaken by follow- ers, rejected by the dominant spiritual forces of His time, con- demned by the State whose name stands in all history as the synonym for human law; when three days later I hear an angel say to a woman in search of a grave, “Why seek you the living with the dead?” {Luke 24: 5) ; when I hear Him as the Divine Stranger on a roadway Easter afternoon say to His companions: “Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and so to enter into his glory?” {Luke 24:26); when I see Him who had been nailed, walking in the newness of life in the clouds of the morning—then I begin to understand that since evil could never do anything worse than crucify Goodness, it could never be truly victorious again. Con- quered in its full armor and in the moment of its monumental momentum, evil might in the future win some battles, but it would always lose the war. Evil is more powerful than goodness when the battlefield is the physi- cal, as a Niagara Falls can sweep a good man to his destruction; nevertheless, goodness is more powerful than evil when the issue is spiritual, for as the mind of a man can harness the de- structive forces of a Niagara, so the Goodness of God can let evil do its mightiest, which is to cru- cify Divine Life and still con- quer it by rising not with wounds, but with glorious scars on hands and feet and side. From that day on, all the dark- ness in the world cannot put out the light of a single candle. All the swords of earth cannot kill the life of a single immortal soul. All the evil in the universe can- not black out the fixed flash of that instant and intolerant en- lightenment — the Lightning made eternal as the Light. No one therefore shall take away our hope for any person or nation regardless of the passing forces of evil. Would you point to Russia then on this Easter day? I tell you, that this land and this peo- ple (here I speak not of its ideo- logy nor its present hours nor the immediate future) shall one day, not because of any present human tendencies in that direc- tion but because of the Christ- likeness of its great souls, hidden BASTBR 98 away from the eye of man, come to the glory of the Risen Christ. Other lands have loved Christ the Teacher, others Christ the Captain, others Christ the Truth, but here is a land whose dedica- tion is to Christ on the Cross; the emptied Christ, the humiliat- ed Christ, the suffering Christ. Their long traditional concept of charity is not like ours of the Western world. We look upon salvation and redemption verti- cally. We live on the second floor: down in the basement there is poverty, evil and pain. We go down to the basement, bind up wounds, educate, sweep the floor and feed the hungry, and when we have done all we can, we go back again into the comforts of our second floor ex- istence. The Russians for centuries, on the contrary, have looked at re- demption horizontally. On one side there is goodness, abun- dance, life; on the other side is evil, sorrow, pain. Once their great souls cross that line, the sunny side of the gap, they never go back. They go to wretched- ness and evil, not to alleviate but to share, not to ease burdens but to take them on, not to do all one can and then leave, not to alleviate but to partake and to commune. This love of participation in the sufferings of others has peopled Russia in the past and even now with the greatest spir- itual underground in the world, an underground dedicated not to the destruction but the salvation of a nation, namely the ‘yuro- divy,’ or the “born fools.” He is nobody’s son, nobody’s father, but everybody’s brother. A true fool of Christ, he becomes a spectacle to men and angels, in the stark madness of absorbing the shocks of evil, by forgiving, blessing, and praying, because the love of his fellowmen is stronger than his love of life. A Russian woman who lived in close contact with these suf- fering unknown souls tells us the heroic Legend that the yuro- divy’s whisper in Russia, even this very minute. It is a varia- tion of the old legend of St. George and the Dragon. It seems that one day St. George was about to slay the dragon, and as he drew his sword, Christ step- ped in between the two, not to protect St. George, but the dragon, bidding St. George to put up his sword. There is some suggestion here of Gethsemane, where Christ so participated in the sins of the world, that He waited until the cup of iniquity was full. Not YOU»4 until the chalice of the world’s sin had been drained of its last drop of evil, could it be smashed and shattered without fear of spilling the dregs either on man or mother earth. So the yuro- divy awaits the hour until he has filled up in his body the suf- ferings that are wanting to the passion of Christ, and then shall be fulfilled the vocation of Rus- sia to bring the treasures of Christ to all the nations. May we too learn that the bur- den of the world’s sin is on us too, that we are responsible to some extent for the sins of all men. While earth wears wounds, we must say in Christ’s name: “My Pain ! My Grief ! My Woe ! My Tears! My Sin!” • But why should we share the burden of others? Because we love others with the love with which Christ loved us. Love everyone. Love man in sin, for to love man in sin is the only way to crush sin in man and save him. Love the lilies, for they tell us of the Father’s care. Love the birds, for their song is Nature’s Vespers. Love the lit- tle children, for their angels see the Face of the Father. Love families, for they are magnified trinities—Lover, the Beloved, and Love. Love the weak, for God has chosen them to confound the strong. Love the wounded, for they bear the vestigial scars of Calvary. Love the sick, for in them God’s glory can be revealed. Love the ignorant, for if they know God they are the wisest of men. Love Thyself, knowing that love’s greatest victory is laying siege to selfishness. Each night as the sun goes down in the “flaming monstrance of the west,” think of it as the bleeding Heart of the world, cry- ing to you to love, for there will never be peace in the world so long as we understand VE-Day to mean Victory over Europe, but only if it means Victory over Evil through the grace and peace of our Risen Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. THE PURPOSE OF THE CATHOLIC HOUR (Extract from the address of the late Patrick Cardinal Hayes at the in- augural program of the Catholic Hour in the studio of the National Broadcasting Company, New York City, March 2, 1930.) Our congratulations and our gratitude are extended to the National Council of Catholic Men and its officials, and to all who, by their financial support, have made it possible to use this offer of the National Broad- casting Company. The heavy expense of managing and financing a weekly program, its musical numbers, its speakers, the subsequent an- swering of inquiries, must be met. . . . This radio hour is for all the people of the United States. To our fellow-citizens, in this word of dedication, we wish to express a cordial greeting and, indeed, congratulations. For this radio hour is one of service to America, which certainly will listen in interestedly, and even sympathetically, I am sure, to the voice of the ancient Church with its historic background of all the centuries of the Christian era, and with its own notable contribution to the discovery, exploration, foundation and growth of our glorious country. . . . Thus to voice before a vast public the Catholic Church is no light task. Our prayers will be with those who have that task in hand. We feel certain that it will have both the good will and the good wishes of the great majority of our countrymen. Surely, there is no true lover of our Country who does not eagerly hope for a less worldly, a less material, and a more spiritual standard among our people. With good will, with kindness and with Christ-like sympathy for all. this work is inaugurated. So may it continue. So may it be ful- filled. This word of dedication voices, therefore, the hope that this radio hour may servp to make known, to explain with the charity of Christ, our faith, which we love even as we love Christ Himself. May it serve to make better understood that faith as it really is—a light revealing the pathway to heaven: a strength, and a power divine through Christ; pardoning our sins, elevating, consecrating our common every-day duties and joys, bringing not only justice but gladness and peace to our search- ing and questioning hearts. 120 CATHOLIC HOUR STATIONS In 42 AInhnmn States, the District of Columbio, and Hawaii WRRC* 960 kc Arizona WAI A 1410 kc WSFA* 1440 kc ....KAWT 1 450 kc ninhP ....KWJR 1240 kc kTAR 620 kc kYCA 1490 kc <;nffnrH KGLU 1450 kc KVHA 1290 kc k-YIlM 1240 kc . KERO 1230 kc KMI 580 kc RFI 640 kc RrRA* 1340 kc i^pn 680 kc ..KIST 1340 kc KOA 850 kc WTir* 1090 kc WRr 980 kc WIAY 930 kc Winn 610 kc WnR7 740 kc wrnA 1370 kc ...WFLA .. - ...970-620 kc . 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WRAI 1090 kc Cumberland WTRO lAsn kr Massachusetts Rn<;tnn WR7 1030 kc •springfiplH WR7A 1030 kc Mirhignn Detroit .. .WWJ 950 kc Flint WTCR 600 kc Saginaw WSAM* 1400 kc Minnesota Dull ith-'?ijpprinr WFRC 1320 kc Hihhing WMFn 1300 kc Mnnkntn RYSM 1230 kc Minneapolis-St. Paul KSTP 1500 kc Rnrhpstpr KROr 1340 kc St. Cloud.. ....KFAM 1450 kc Virginia WHLB 120 CATHOLIC HOUR STATIONS In 42 States, the District of Columbia, and Hawaii Mississippi- Missouri Montana. Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire. New Mexico New York North Carolina- North Dakota. Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania... Rhode Island South Carolina. South Dakota... Tennessee Texas Utah ..... Virginia. ..Jackson -Kansas City Springfield Saint Louis .Billings Bozeman Butte Great Falls Helena .North Platte Omaha Reno .Manchester -Albuquerque -Buffalo New York Schenectady .Asheville Charlotte Raleigh Winston-Salem . .Bismark Fargo .Cleveland Lima Toledo Oklahoma City. 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WNBC ...WGY ..WISE ...WSOC ...WPTF ..WSJS .. 930 kc .. 660 kc .. 810 kc .1230 kc -.1240 kc -. 680 kc .. 600 kc ..WTAM 1100 kc ..WLOK 1240 kc ..WSPD* 1340 kc ...WSAN ...WFBG ..WERC . .WJAC ...WMRF . .KYW . .KDKA .WRAW . .WBRE ..WRAK -.WJAR .. .WTMA ...WIS* ...WFBC* ..1470 kc -1340 kc ..1230 kc ..1400 kc .1490 kc ..1060 kc . 1020 kc -.1340 kc . 1340 kc -.1400 kc -- 920 kc -1250 kc - 560 kc -1330 kc ...KSOO-KELO -1140-1230 kc ...WKPT ...WMC* ...WSM* . .KGNC* . -KTSM .WPAB* -KPRC* ..WOAI ..KRGV* ...KYDL* -.1400 kc .. 790 kc .. 650 kc 820 kc 950 kc 1200 kc —-1 290 kc ...WMVA 1450 kc . .WTAR>1= 790 kc -WMBG 1380 kc 120 CATHOLIC HOUR STATIONS In 42 States, the District of Columbia, and Hawaii Washington Seattle .KOMO 950 kc Spokane KHQ 590 kc Wisconsin Eau Claire WEAU 790 kc Lacrosse WKBH 1410 kc Marinette WMAM* 570 kc Hawaii Honolulu .KGU 760 kc * Delayed Broadcast ** AM and FM (Revised as of April 1, 1948) CATHOLIC HOUR RADIO ADDRESSES IN PAMPHLET FORM Prices Subject to change without notice. OUR SUNDAY VISITOR is the authorized publisher of all CATHOLIC HOUR ad- dresses in pamphlet form. The addresses published to date, all of which are available, are listed below. Others \yill be published as they are delivered. Quantity Prices Do Not Include Carriage Charge “The Divine Romance,” by Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen, 80 pages and cover. Single copy, 25c postpaid ; 5 or more, 20c each. In quantities, $10.75 per 100. “A Trilogy on Prayer,” by Rev. Thomas F. Burke, C.S.P., 32 pages and cover. Single copy, 20c postpaid ; 5 or more, 15c each. In quantities, $7.50 per 100. “Christ and His Church,” by Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph M. Corrigan, 88 pages and cover. Single copy, 25c postpaid ; 5 or more, 20c each. In quantities, $13.00 per 100. “The Marks of the Church,” by Rev. Dr. John K. Cartwright, 48 pages and cover. Single copy, 20c postpaid ; 5 or more, 15c each. In quantities, $8.00 per 100. “The Organization and Government of the Church,” by Rev. Dr, Francis J. 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