Showing posts with label Mercy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mercy. Show all posts

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Spiritual Quote of the Day (St. Maria Faustina Kowalska, on Mercy)

“All grace flows from mercy, and the last hour abounds with mercy for us. Let no one doubt concerning the goodness of God; even if a person's sins were as dark as night, God's mercy is stronger than our misery. One thing alone is necessary: that the sinner set ajar the door of his heart, be it ever so little, to let in a ray of God's merciful grace, and then God will do the rest.”— Polish Catholic religious sister and mystic St. Maria Faustina Kowalska (1905-1938), Divine Mercy in My Soul: The Diary of St. Maria Faustina Kowalska (1981)

It's funny, how the Gospels talk continually of mercy, and the men and women that Christianity has honored over the years do likewise. Yet so many who hear the words on Sunday refuse to apply it in any way in their lives the rest of the week.

Case in point: The leader whom The Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde urged, in the Washington Prayer Service at the inaugural events, to display compassion for undocumented immigrants and the LGBTQ showed not mercy but his own thin skin. It was a ghastly sight.

Look at this YouTube clip of the Episcopal Bishop of Washington, DC last week. Does her dulcet, pleading tone seem remotely “nasty”?

Does she strike you as “not compelling or smart” (unlike, presumably, her annoyed listener, who once bragged about being “a very stable genius”)? Me neither.

It is rich, this demand that she apologize coming from Donald Trump—who, in his 50 years in the spotlight, has been known to say he was sorry only once, and that when he was in danger of losing the 2016 election following his gleeful comments about groping women on the leaked “Access Hollywood” tape.

Contrast Trump with Mike Pence when a cast member of the Broadway musical Hamilton read a statement saying "We, sir, are the diverse America who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us."

What, you don’t remember what Pence said? Neither did I, so I had to look it up. The then-Veep said he wasn’t offended by the message and that even the boos he endured from audience members didn’t bother him, because they were “what freedom sounds like.”

On the other hand, Trump’s digital thermonuclear thunderclap has set off predictable responses from his followers. 

Congressman Mike Collins of Georgia has even tweeted that Bishop Budde “should be added to the deportation list.” 

On Facebook, an “I’m with her” meme got people I’ve known for years acting most unsocially with each other on the social media platform. 

And Budde has been bombarded with death wishes from people who call themselves Christians.

Judging from the President’s response after he withdrew a security detail from Dr. Anthony Fauci (“Certainly I would not take responsibility”), I don’t anticipate pangs of remorse to fill Trump’s heart about the bishop’s well-being.

I also didn’t presume Trump would act like anything but a kindergarten crybaby when Budde implored him to treat with mercy America’s new marginalized. But I expected more from the nation’s other religious leaders, including, I’m sorry to say, so many in my own Roman Catholic Church.

I’m looking at you, Timothy Cardinal Dolan. I’m disappointed, but not surprised, by your lack of moral backbone.

At the inauguration, the head of New York’s archdiocese asked God to “give our leader wisdom, for he is your servant aware of his own weakness and brevity of life.”

Sorry, but there has been nothing in “our leader,” before his inauguration or in the week and a half since, that remotely suggests he’s “aware of his own weakness.” In fact, one of his favorite putdowns of opponents is that they’re “weak.”

More comically, Cardinal Dolan told Maria Bartiromo before the inauguration that he had talks with Trump “in the past where he’s pretty blunt about, you know, he can’t say that he was raised as a, as a very zealous Christian, but he takes his Christian faith seriously.”

This mealy-mouthed, selective see-no-evil act reached its nadir twice since 2016, involving the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner in Midtown Manhattan, a charity event once notable for Presidential candidates in both parties taking a break from political warfare to make comically self-deprecating remarks.

Until Trump, as he so often does, made a shambles of the dinner in his first election bid with a cascade of insults that provoked boos from many in the audience, then delivered another disgraceful performance last autumn.

Nobody could have blamed Cardinal Dolan if he had pulled the tablecloth out from under Trump either time. Instead, he uttered not the slightest word of disapproval, not even an earnest request to leave any spiteful remarks at the door.

The fallout was bad enough to make you wonder if the Smith Dinner had outlived its purpose by devolving into an irredeemable fat-cat forum.

Cardinal Dolan was never shy about criticizing Joe Biden about abortion or the influx of migrants, to name a few issues. But when has he disagreed with Trump about anything?

What is the Cardinal afraid of? The fury of Trump, or the cooled ardor of well-heeled conservative Catholics in the archdiocese?

Silence about Trump’s bullying, of both Budde and those she championed, is by no means universal in the Catholic Church. In fact, a local parish priest, in a sermon I heard earlier this week, indicated, correctly, that there was nothing contrary to Catholic teaching in what she said.

But it matters enormously when the leading Catholic cleric in the world’s media capital fails to defend a fellow person of the cloth who is guilty of nothing but reminding the new President and his followers of the biblical admonition, “Do not mistreat or oppress a foreigner, for you were foreigners in Egypt.” (Exodus 22:21)

Leave aside (though you shouldn’t) the verse noting that “as long as you did it to one of these my least brethren, you did it to me.” (Matthew 25:40)

By resorting to another one of his social media tantrums, against a cleric that the mass of Americans hadn’t even heard of before this, Trump was engaging in the same sort of dangerous petulance shown when King Henry II of England screamed, “What miserable drones and traitors have I nurtured and promoted in my household who let their lord be treated with such shameful contempt by a low-born cleric!” (Or, as shortened by posterity: “Will someone rid me of this meddlesome priest?”)

That didn’t end well in Canterbury Cathedral for St. Thomas Becket.

What President before Trump has ever demanded an apology from a religious leader? What President before him has ever misbehaved in the way that led biblical prophets like Daniel, Elijah, Isaiah, and Jeremiah to risk the wrath of their rulers by calling them to account?

Bishop Budde would have been well within her rights to quote Nathan’s denunciation of King David to Trump: “Why did you despise the word of the Lord by doing what is evil in his eyes?” (2 Samuel 12: 9)

Yet she never said a word about how he has broken his marriage vows multiple times, stiffed his company’s creditors, ruined investors, steered government meetings and business to his own properties, ridiculed a reporter with disabilities, mocked the looks of an opposing candidate’s wife, used sensitive information for blackmail and for charitable donations for his own purposes, excused dictators responsible for the deaths of thousands, and promised retribution (now in progress) for anyone who opposed him.

She only asked him to use what he saw as God’s providential rescue of his life after last year’s assassination attempt on behalf of the people who need mercy the most.

Contrary to the charge in his post-sermon tweet that she had “brought her church into the World of politics in a very ungracious way," it was he who meanly dragged the “world of politics” into the church with the opportunistic adoption of right-to-life beliefs he had never held before entering the GOP primaries nine years ago, and by entangling so many in the Christian Nationalism movement in his January 6 plotting.

And it was not Budde who promoted division in a nation that one of Trump’s GOP predecessors, Ronald Reagan, likened to the biblical “city on a hill. 

Look, I get that people, whatever their leanings, don’t want to hear continually about politics from the pulpit. Neither do I, if for no other reason than that there’s no spiritual component to ensuring basic government functions like picking up garbage and delivering the mail.

But this week’s 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz reminds us that some political issues are inherently moral; that lasting dishonor accrues to any nation that stigmatizes outsiders; and that the road to the death camps began with seeing others as less than human before proceeding to seizing them in their homes.

I fear that, by not protesting the President’s attempt at winning through intimidation against another spiritual leader, Cardinal Dolan is doing more than simply encouraging an already rampant cynicism among the young about organized religion that, as New York Times opinion writer Jessica Grose recently noted, is “contributing to a more disconnected, careless and cruel society.”

I worry that the Cardinal is silently consenting to outright religious intolerance spurred on by a capricious, vindictive leader who recognizes no limits on his impulses or appetites.

 Already, Trump has taken heart from Dolan’s muted trumpet on behalf of the threatened. A mild statement from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops condemning some of the President’s executive orders relating to immigration elicited a faux-sorrowful insinuation from Vice President J.D. Vance that the Church was more concerned about “their bottom line” than humanitarian concerns. 

The smear—surely cleared in advance with Trump—was so weaselly and egregious that it couldn’t by shrugged off by Dolan, who rightly called the remarks “nasty” and “scurrilous.” (Even in this instance, the Cardinal couldn’t bring himself to blame the truculent corner man who directed the hit below the belt.)

The prelate could have justifiably applied the same adjectives to Trump’s diatribe against Budde.

History will relegate him to the shadows reserved for the timid and temporizing, while it will hail Bishop Budde as following the example of St. Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons:

“If we lived in a state where virtue was profitable, common sense would make us saintly. But since we see that avarice, anger, pride, and stupidity commonly profit far beyond charity, modesty, justice, and thought, perhaps we must stand fast a little—even at the risk of being heroes.”

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Spiritual Quote of the Day (Pope St. Leo the Great, on the Paramount Importance of Mercy to the Poor)

“Although a man be full of faith, and chaste, and sober, and adorned with other still greater decorations, yet if he is not merciful, he cannot deserve mercy: for the Lord says, blessed are the merciful, for God shall have mercy upon them [Matthew 5:7]. And when the Son of Man comes in His Majesty and is seated on His glorious throne, and all nations being gathered together, division is made between the good and the bad, for what shall they be praised who stand upon the fight except for works of benevolence and deeds of love which Jesus Christ shall reckon as done to Himself? For He who has made man's nature His own, has separated Himself in nothing from man's humility. And what objection shall be made to those on the left except for their neglect of love, their inhuman harshness, their refusal of mercy to the poor? As if those on the right had no other virtues those on the left no other faults. But at the great and final day of judgment large-hearted liberality and ungodly meanness will be counted of such importance as to outweigh all other virtues and all other shortcomings, so that for the one men shall gain entrance into the Kingdom, for the other they shall be sent into eternal fire.”— Pope St. Leo the Great (c.400-461), “Sermon 10,” translated by Charles Lett Feltoe from Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 12, edited by Philip Schaff and Henry Wace

Sunday, September 18, 2022

Spiritual Quote of the Day (Pope Francis, on the Parable of the Merciful Father)

“I am always struck when I reread the parable of the merciful father; it impresses me because it always gives me great hope. Think of that younger son who was in the father’s house, who was loved; and yet he wants his part of the inheritance. He goes off, spends everything, hits rock bottom, where he could not be more distant from the father. Yet when he is at his lowest, he misses the warmth of the father’s house and he goes back. And the father? Had he forgotten the son? No, never. He is there, he sees the son from afar; he was waiting for him every hour of every day. The son was always in his father’s heart, even though he had left him, even though he had squandered his whole inheritance, his freedom. The father, with patience, love, hope, and mercy had never for a second stopped thinking about him, and as soon as he sees him still far off, he runs out to meet him and embraces him with tenderness, the tenderness of God, without a word of reproach: his son has returned! And that is the joy of the father. In that embrace for his son is all this joy: he has returned! God is always waiting for us; he never grows tired. Jesus shows us this merciful patience of God so that we can regain confidence, hope—always!” —Pope Francis, The Church of Mercy (2014)

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Spiritual Quote of the Day (St. Augustine of Hippo, on God’s Mercy)


“What mercy could be greater, so far as we poor wretches are concerned, than that which drew the Creator of the heavens down from heaven, clothed the Maker of the earth with earthly vesture, made Him, who in eternity remains equal to His Father, equal to us in mortality, and imposed on the Lord of the universe the form of a servant, so that He, our Bread, might hunger; that He, our Fulfillment, might thirst; that He, our Strength, might be weakened; that He, our Health, might be injured; that He, our Life, might die? And all this [He did] to satisfy our hunger, to moisten our dryness, to soothe our infirmity, to wipe out our iniquity, to enkindle our charity. What greater mercy could there be than that the Creator be created, the Ruler be served, the Redeemer be sold, the Exalted be humbled and the Reviver be killed?” — Theologian, philosopher, and bishop St. Augustine of Hippo (354 AD-430 AD), The Fathers of the Church: St. Augustine: Sermons on the Liturgical Seasons, Volume 38, Sermon 207, translated by Sister Mary Sarah Muldowney (1959)

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Spiritual Quote of the Day (St. Teresa of Avila, on Mercy and Gratitude to God)


 “I cannot believe that a soul which has arrived so near to Mercy itself, where she knows what she is, and how many sins God has forgiven her, should not instantly and willingly forgive others, and be pacified and wish well to everyone who has injured her, because she remembers the kindness and favors our Lord has shown her, whereby she has seen proofs of exceeding great love, and she is glad to have an opportunity offered to show some gratitude to her Lord.” — Spanish nun and mystic St. Teresa of Avila (1515-1582), The Way of Perfection, and Conceptions of Divine Love, translated by the Rev. John Dalton (1852)

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Quote of the Day (St. John Fisher, on the Overwhelming Mercy of God)

“It is written, nemo bonus nisi solus Deus, no man is good but only almighty God (Lk 18:19). Only He is of so great a meekness and pity that no pint of malice or falseness can be in him. Therefore, since he is so meek and merciful, and since he is above his laws, or in no way subject to them, he can forgive and be merciful to whom he will. And so shall he do, for he cannot have little mercy but always great and plentiful mercy. Truly, the mercy of our most might and best Lord God is great, that it has all measures of greatness. Trees are sometimes called great for their excellent height; pits are called great for their depth; far journeys are called great for their length; and streets and highways are called great for their breadth and width. But the mercy of God contains and is measured by all these measures of greatness, not just by one of them. Of its greatness in height it is written, Domine, usque ad celos misericordia tua. Lord, your mercy extends and reaches up to the heavens (Ps. 56:11). It is also great in depth, for it reach down to the lowest hell. The prophet says, misericordia tua magna est super me, et eruisti animam meam ex inferno inferiori, Lord, your mercy is great over me, and you have delivered me form the lowest and deepest hell (Ps. 85:13). It is broad, for it occupies and spans all the world, the same prophet saying, misericordia Domini plena est terra, the earth is full of the mercy of our Lord (Ps. 32:5). It lacks no length, for also by the same prophet it is spoken: misericordia eius ab eterno, et usque in eternum supertimentes eum, the mercy of God is without end on those who fear him (Ps. 102:127). Therefore since the mercy of God is so high, so deep, so broad, and so long, who can say or think it is little? Who will not call it great by all measures of greatness? Then everyone who want to acquaint himself with this mercy can say, Miserere mei, Deus, secunum magnam misericordiam tuam, Lord, have mercy on me according to Thy great mercy.”—English archbishop, theologian and martyr St. John Fisher (1469-1535), sermon on Psalm 50

Sunday, March 24, 2019

Quote of the Day (Thomas Merton, on ‘The Love and Mercy of God’)


“The secret of my identity is hidden in the love and mercy of God.” — American Trappist monk Thomas Merton (1915-1968), New Seeds of Contemplation (1962)