Posted on 05/15/2018 7:28:18 AM PDT by Salvation
The first reading from Tuesday’s Mass is Pauls farewell speech to the presbyters (priests) of the early Church. Here is a skilled bishop and pastor exhorting others who have pastoral roles within the Church. Lets examine this text and apply its wisdom to bishops and priests as well as to parents and other leaders in the Church.
Pauls Farewell Sermon – The scene is Miletus, a town in Asia Minor on the coast not far from Ephesus. Paul, who is about to depart for Jerusalem, summons the presbyters of the early Church at Ephesus. He has ministered there for three years and now summons the priests for this final exhortation. In the sermon, St. Paul cites his own example of having been a zealous teacher of the faith who did not fail to preach the whole counsel of God. He did not merely preach what suited him or made him popular; he preached it all. To these early priests, Paul leaves this legacy and would have them follow in his footsteps. Lets look at some excerpts from this final exhortation.
From Miletus Paul had the presbyters of the Church at Ephesus summoned. When they came to him, he addressed them, You know how I lived among you the whole time from the day I first came to the province of Asia. I served the Lord with all humility and with the tears and trials that came to me … and I did not at all shrink from telling you what was for your benefit, or from teaching you in public or in your homes. I earnestly bore witness for both Jews and Greeks to repentance before God and to faith in our Lord Jesus … But now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Jerusalem … But now I know that none of you to whom I preached the kingdom during my travels will ever see my face again. And so I solemnly declare to you this day that I am not responsible for the blood of any of you, for I did not shrink from proclaiming to you the entire plan of God … (Acts 20:17-27 selected).
Here, then, is the prescription for every bishop, priest, deacon, catechist, parent, and Catholic: we should preach the whole counsel, the entire plan of God. It is too easy for us to emphasize only that which pleases us, or makes sense to us, or fits in with our world view. There are some who love the Lords sermons on love but cannot abide his teachings on death, judgment, Heaven, and Hell. Some love to discuss liturgy and ceremony, but the care of the poor is far from them. Others point to His compassion but neglect His call to repentance. Some love the way He dispatches the Pharisees and other leaders of the day but suddenly become deaf when the Lord warns against fornication or insists that we love our spouse, neighbor, and enemy. Some love to focus inwardly and debate doctrine but neglect the outward focus of true evangelization to which we are commanded (cf Mat 28:19).
In the Church today, we too easily divide out rather predictably along certain lines and emphases: life issues here and social justice over there, strong moral preaching here and compassionate inclusiveness over there. When one side speaks, the other side says, There they go again!
We must be able to say, like St. Paul, that we did not shrink from proclaiming the whole counsel of God. While this is especially incumbent on the clergy, it is also the responsibility of parents and all who attain any leadership in the Church. All the issues above are important and must have their proper places in the preaching and witness of every Catholic, both clergy and lay. While we may have particular gifts to work in certain areas, we should learn to appreciate the whole counsel and the fact that others in the Church may be needed to balance and complete our work. While we must exclude notions that stray from revealed doctrine, within doctrines protective walls it is necessary that we not shrink from proclaiming and appreciating the whole counsel of God.
If we do this, we will suffer. Paul speaks above of tears and trials. In preaching the whole counsel of God (not just your favorite passages or politically correct, safe themes), expect to suffer. Expect to not quite fit in with peoples expectations. Jesus got into trouble with just about everyone. He didnt offend just the elite and powerful. For example, even His own disciples puzzled over His teachings on divorce, saying, If that is the case of man not being able to divorce his wife it is better never to marry! (Matt 19) As a result of Jesus teaching on the Eucharist, many left Him and would no longer walk in His company (John 6). When Jesus spoke of His divine origins, many took up stones with which to stone Him, but He passed through their midst unharmed (Jn 8). In addition, Jesus spoke of taking up crosses, forgiving ones enemies, and preferring nothing to Him. He forbade even lustful thoughts, let alone fornication, and insisted we learn to curb our unrighteous anger. Yes, preaching the whole counsel of God is guaranteed to earn us the wrath of many.
Sadly, over my years as a priest, I have had to bid farewell to many congregations. This farewell speech of Paul is a critical one I use to examine my ministry. Did I preach even the difficult things? Was I willing to suffer for the truth? Did my people hear from me the whole counsel of God or just what was safe?
What about you? Have you proclaimed the whole counsel of God? If you are a clergyman, when you move on; if you are a parent, when your child leaves for college; if you are a youth catechist, when the children are ready to be confirmed; if you teach in RCIA, when the time comes for Easter sacramentscan you say you preached it all? God warned Ezekiel that if he failed to warn the sinner, that sinner would surely die for his sins but that Ezekiel himself would be responsible for his death (Ez 3:17 ff). Paul can truthfully say that he is not responsible for the death (the blood) of any of them because he did not shrink from proclaiming the whole counsel of God. What about us?
We must proclaim the whole counsel of God, not just the safe or popular things, not just what agrees with our own politics or those of our friends. We must present the whole counsel, even the hard parts, even the things that are ridiculed. Yes, we must proclaim the whole counsel of God.
There is no interpretation. I agreed literally with what God through Paul literally wrote!
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I can’t see how there can BE any possible other interpretation.
But it really sounds like he’s trying to argue that “Not by works” actually means “Definitely by works.”
sounds like hes trying to argue that Not by works actually means Definitely by works.
Once you buy into a lie, you are forced to support the lie by denying the truth of Gods simple words.
And as you know, the truth is that salvation is by grace through faith and not by works, as God through Paul states.
This is a good example of Sola Scriptura - sufficient for salvation and authoritative as mans religious ideas shift. Gods Word is eternal and remains.
Thank God for blessed Father Luther, who stood up for Gods amazing Word and against us he perversions of his time.
Oman’s sin was disobeying God. God told Onan that his seed was to conceive a child to his dead brother.
Of course you are correct.
To elaborate on the sin involved for those who are unfamiliar with the passage...
Genesis 38:1 (TCENB): Onans refusal to give Tamar a child not only demonstrated a lack of love for his deceased brother.
It also revealed Onans selfish heart that wanted for himself what would have gone to his elder brothers heir. If Tamar had born him a son, that child would have been the perpetuator of Ers name as well as that of Onan (cf. Ruth 4:5, 2122).
God judged Onans sin severely because descendants were important in His plans for the patriarchs. Onan was deliberately frustrating the fulfillment of Gods promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (cf. 11:4).
I Corinthians 12:3
Brothers and sisters: No one can say, Jesus is Lord, except by the Holy Spirit.
There are different kinds of spiritual gifts but the same Spirit; there are different forms of service but the same Lord; there are different workings but the same God who produces all of them in everyone.
well and truly stated. And with such focused brevity!
Well posed. Would you please then put the phrase ‘a man after God’s own heart’ into the mill of that wisdom?... to answer how was David a man after God’s own heart.
‘Oh, for goodness sake!’ Did God teach you anything more than be fruitful and multiply? How much does catholiciism want to exclude from ‘the marriage bed is holy and undefiled’, to empower your institution the more? BTW, becoming as one is not limited to making a baby ... so if the Bible doesn’t tell Catholics what they can do sexually, will you grab that ridiculous manual (the DSM) from APA to lecture folks?
And the dna of every human alive or ever lived will fit in a teaspoon. What is your obtuse point?
Your empty assertion will fail miserably when you try to use it at the Great White Throne ... How is the Word of God lacking in logic ... to you?
Um, didn’t you know that all loans are cancelled in the Jubilee year, and interest is no longer collectible?
The Word of God is Truth. The lack of logic is in those who articulate and/or accept the interpretation of the Word beginning with the Reformation.
Oh Good grief! Don’t you believe God? GOD defined Onan’s offense, but apparently the catholic trained mind must focus upon sex-sin rather than defying God’s command to produce a descendant for the deceased brother!
BTW, ‘teacher’ did you know that some ‘seed’ can be lost when a man urinates, especially first thing in the morning? God doesn’t fit in the Catholic box, sorry.
But so what?
Why would that bother me? Why would YOU think that would bother me?
Many, many sperm are lost, but so what? Many, many ova are lost --- women die with thousands of "unused " ova still present in their post-menopausal ovaries. So what? Many, many zygotes are lost in the womb before implantation. So what? Every person dies --- that's a 100% death rate -- but so what? That doesn't make direct, intentionally destructive attacks on life, and on the natural sources of life, OK.
Once again, you are proceeding on an incredibily stupid, as well as false, idea of what the Catholic Church teaches and what I believe.
As I suspected, you really didn’t read the passage posted, you just took your little chance to condemn non-Catholics who read the Bible and see Truth. Figures
Your assertion: "It is a sin to have intentionally barren intercourse."
Later, you skip off into sex while not fertile (the Catholic way of family planning) is okay and a blessing for bonding; you contradict your own assertion! The consistence missing in your lengthy 'teaching texts' is glaring.
Now, entertain us with your effort to reconcile your inconsistencies ...
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