ASK FATHER: Does idolatry incur a greater penalty than other mortal sins? Wherein Fr. Z rants.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Does violation of the First Commandment of the Decalogue (such as acts of literal idolatry and/or demon worship) entail a greater penalty / injury to the offending baptized Catholic than mortal sins against the other Commandments? Is it more serious because it is an explicit rejection of the True God, rather than a “mere” offense against God like violations of the other commandments? Should it incur automatic excommunication? Is violating this Commandment in a category of its own?

Mortal sin is mortal, deadly to the life of the soul.   Mortal sin kills the life of grace in the soul.

Both human experience and divine revelation verify that some sins are worse than others.

Some sins, venial sins, while bad because they involve the choice of a good inferior to God, are not so bad that they destroy charity and turn a person from God.    Other sins are more than just bad.  When they involve grave matter and are done with full knowledge and deliberation and consent of will, they do destroy charity, constitute a rejection of God and grace. They need healing from God, especially through the ordinary means He Himself established, the Sacrament of Penance.

Just as mortal sins are worse than venial sins, so too some mortal sins are worse than other mortal sins.

Please stop and note this, however.   If you are dead, you are dead.  You can’t be deader than dead.  But when it comes to the reckoning of your life before the Just Judge, the King of Fearful Majesty, and your final and eternal disposition… there are degrees.  Depending on one’s sins and on one’s final state of life at the time of death, some people’s eternal destiny will be worse than others.

Mind you: there isn’t a good place to be in Hell.  There are only hideous and more hideous degrees. Damned means damned… not sort of damned.   (I leave aside here the issue of limbo, an concept that has not been formally defined by the Church )

We have an indication from the Lord Himself about the gradations of Hell when he said in Matthew 11:

20 Then he began to upbraid the cities where most of his mighty works had been done, because they did not repent. 21 “Woe to you, Chorazin! woe to you, Bethsaida! for if the mighty works done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. 22 But I tell you, it shall be more tolerable on the day of judgment for Tyre and Sidon than for you. 23 And you, Capernaum, will you be exalted to heaven? You shall be brought down to Hades. For if the mighty works done in you had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. 24 But I tell you that it shall be more tolerable on the day of judgment for the land of Sodom than for you.”

I get a little shiver reading that and I consider how in these United States … well…. you know.   Sometimes I think that if God doesn’t burn us down to the dirt, He’ll owe Sodom an apology.  Who knows?  Maybe bad government and a virus will wake at least some of us up to our collective wrongs.  But I digress.

In addition to Chorazin, Bethsaida and Capernaum, in the parable of the faithful and unfaithful slave in Luke 12, one receives a lighter beating and the other a heavier beating.   This is not just a moral story for our earthly rewards and punishments.  It is about the return of the Master at the unexpected hour and the reckoning of our lives.

Also, if we are to “treasure up” treasure in Heaven by good deeds and so forth, so that we have greater reward in heaven, so to we can “hoard down” payment in Hell.  Some will have more hoarded than others.  All of it will be bad, no matter how long and intensely you are hoarding now.

You ask about idolatry and the 1st Commandment of the Decalogue.

It is the FIRST of the Decalogue for a reason.  It is the most important.  It is reasonable to say that violations of the FIRST Commandment, when deliberate, understood and willed, are worse than other sins, such as sins of the flesh.

Mind you: just because one sin is worse than another, that doesn’t mean that that lesser sins is not of consequence.  As I said before, dead is dead.  If you are dead from being shot through the heart, or if you are dead because you died of a disease, you are still dead, either way.

Commit idolatry or deliberately, repeatedly, publicly harm someone’s reputation and scandalously work to get others to do the same… you are dead in your soul and you are going to go to Hell if you don’t repent and make public reparation.

Should idolatry incur excommunication?

Good question.

Idolatry is the giving of divine worship to anything other than God.  It is, if deliberate and understood and willed, the worst of mortal sins.

Even unwilling acts of idolatry, such as when in time of persecution some Christians out of fear of death or torture offered incense to the “genius” of the Emperor, are grave, mortal sins.

Get this: worshipping God in the wrong way is a serious sin.  Think about THAT and our scrambled sacred liturgical worship in some places in the Church today!

Of course, there are unquestionably those mitigating factors of ignorance and so forth involved in one’s subjective guilt for this sin: some people don’t know any better.  Objectively, however, it is still wrong and displeasing to God.  It is idolatry.

Non-Catholics will sometimes accuse Catholics of idolatry because they think, wrongly, that we worship Mary or the saints and their images.   We do worship Blessed Sacrament, because the Eucharist is the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ in our presence.  We venerate Mary and the saints and honor them lovingly for the sake of our love of the of the Trinity.   In their case, God is worshipped through the honor we give to them.  They are not honored or worshipped in themselves only, apart from God.

And speaking of non-Catholics, it would be wrong, an act of idolatry, to participate fully, consciously, actively in false, non-Catholic worship.  That does not mean that a Catholic cannot attend the, say, the Jewish funeral of a friend or the Lutheran wedding of cousin.   We can do so out of friendship and respect, but we cannot actively and consciously participate in false worship as we would if we were attending Holy Mass.   That sort of thing can indeed incur a censure in some instances, such as participating in the impossible attempt to ordain a women with the Sacrament of Holy Orders.  Such an act of false worship is not just sacrilege, it is idolatry.

Hence, when it comes to excommunication for idolatry, there are already canons on the book that impose censures for certain sins.  And since every grave sin that can incur a censure is, to one extent or another, a turning from God to a lesser good, then every sin has an implicit element of idolatry.

However, the question remains: should explicit acts of idolatry incur an excommunication, either automatic or declared after a process?

Yes, salvo meliore iudicio, they probably should.  If we acknowledge that idolatry is the worst of sins and if lesser sins can bring censures, then it is reasonable that at least explicit, deliberate public acts of idolatry should incur a censure.

However, the Church gets to decide which sins incur which censures.

The Church has, in different times, had different censures, different disciplines, depending on the needs of the day.  From time to time they change.  In a similar but more positive way, the Church elevates certain saints to the honor of our altars because, in that time period, they were deemed to be examples for the faithful needed for that time.   In other centuries, others were emphasized.  This is a prudential judgement made by the Church for the sake of our living our vocations well.  Similarly, the change of laws from time to time is for the good ordering of the Church.  At least that is supposed to be the intention.   The Church’s laws do not share the same level of authority that doctrinal definitions will have.  The Church’s laws are positive laws of an institution which are crafted by little, well-intentioned (hopefully) human beings.  They are not the same as God’s positive law, manifested in the Ten Commandments.   The Church’s laws require our respect and obedience, but not our veneration.

And so we circle back to the Decalogue.

Is idolatry in a category of its own?

In a way, yes.  There seems to be an element of idolatry in every sin, since every sins is, to one extent or another, a replacement of God with a created good.  Perhaps it is for that reason that the Church seems to stick to applying censures to the lesser sins, which are still grave.

It was a good question.  It could be that our canonists reading this will know more.

Meanwhile, GO TO CONFESSION!

I want to keep as many of you as possible out of Hell and safe on the road to heaven.  I mean that for my manifest, public haters and enemies as well.  Search your hearts well.  Repent and make amends.  If you don’t, you are in serious spiritual peril.   I want only what is best for you, whatever that might be, because I want you to wind up in the bliss of heaven one day.

As long as I am digressing…

Just as there are two “levels” of sorrow for sin, less perfect attrition and more perfect contrition, I have two motives for desiring that even enemies make it to heaven.  First, there is a good, but perhaps less perfect motive: I want the Devil to lose… big time, every time.  Each time a soul goes before God and is damned to eternal separation from God, you can imagine the Enemy to shout in self-agonizing malice, “That’s one more that You won’t have!”   The reason we are in existence at all is to bring greater glory to God.  For this we exist as our over-arching vocations.  So, I want the Enemy to lose big time.  The conversion of sinners and the entrance of souls before the Beatific Vision brings immense joy to Heaven.   And that’s the more perfect reason for wanting the conversion of enemies, that more souls will be happy before God and with as many others as possible, so that His praise and glory and charity be multiplied through the pleasing worship by His images.

GO TO CONFESSION!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Four Last Things, GO TO CONFESSION | Tagged
12 Comments

Society and God’s role

I was sent a brief video made a few years ago. It is about religious freedom. It is about the bedrock of our society. The video features Clay Christensen, a Mormon and economist, etc., who died in 2020 from cancer.

I was struck by the concise clarity, ending with a one-line, prophetic conclusion presently being verified almost every day in the news.

This is also on YouTube HERE

Posted in Religious Liberty, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged
9 Comments

YOUR URGENT PRAYER REQUESTS

PLEASE use the sharing buttons! Thanks!

Registered here or not, will you in your charity please take a moment look at the requests and to pray for the people about whom you read?

Continued from THESE.

Let’s remember all who are ill, who will die soon, who have lost their jobs, and who are afraid.

I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Some are heart-achingly grave and urgent.

As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand. We should support each other in works of mercy.

If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below.

You have to be registered here to be able to post.

I still have a new personal petition.  Please pray for me not to hate my enemies.

 

Posted in Urgent Prayer Requests |
18 Comments

If you don’t know your catechism… don’t know your Homer… your Dante… well….

Today is one of those days when there are several good reads on the interwebs.  I can recommend two more from Crisis both from today.

First, there is an important piece from Aaron Seng, “The Catechism Crisis”.  He is the head of the initiative Tradivox, which is collecting and reprinting old catechisms.

In a nutshell, he says that if the Catechism of the Catholic Church is perpetually to be amended, then it is hardly a sure reference.  It is even less sure if the things being added produce confusion rather than clarity through unprecedented innovation, as in the case of the change about the death penalty.  What will happen is a Protestant-like requirement to be up to date with the latest evolution (devolution?) of teaching, whereas in the past Catechisms over the centuries presented the Faith in a consistent way.   As Seng ironically quips: “Oh, you have the 1997 edition of the Catechism? Sorry, we don’t believe that anymore. Check the new edition.”

It is said that more changes to the CCC may be coming.  Imagine what they might be.

The perennial harmony of teaching on faith and morals seems to be teetering on a knife’s edge.

If you don’t know your catechism, friends, then you don’t know yourself.  And our modern catechisms are being compromised by certain additions which suggest that faith and morals are moving targets.

And yet we still have to know our catechism.  If we don’t, …. well….

Next, there is a terrific piece by Paul Krause, “Reclaiming Homer”.  As someone who was in Classics, this got my attention.

I’ve written recently about the “woke” attack on the Western Civilization through attacks on the Western Canon.  Everything ever produced by dead white European males… with the exception of eugenics and communism… has to go.

At the top of their hit list will be Homer.  Mind you, they don’t understand Homer, for the most part. They haven’t read Homer, except for a few of them.   But they viscerally understand that Homer is the enemy.

What Krause does, and does masterfully, is show how Homer, properly understand, really confounds the objectives of woke cancel culture … if such a chaotic, anarchic, will-to-power ignorant rage mob can have objectives that aren’t handed to them by their puppet masters.

Go over there and read Krause’s description of the contrast between Hesiod’s view of the universe and Homer’s.  You might want to rush out to get yourself a copy of the Iliad.   I used to like the translation by Robert Fagles.

US HERE – UK HERE

If you don’t know Homer, well….

Tradition, friends.

Finally, as a perfect addition to the above, Robert Royal of The Catholic Thing, is going to have an online course on Dante’s Divine Comedy.  That could be a great pursuit.  HERE   I think it will be quite good.  He knows his stuff.

And if you don’t know Dante … well.

Posted in Pò sì jiù, REVIEWS, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
10 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 61

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
5 Comments

Fr Longenecker: “Be Subversive — Get Married!” and Fr Z rants a little.

Fr. Longenecker has a good piece at Stream.   It’s as subversive as his advice to young people.

In the setup for his argument for young couples (male and female) to marry in church, have kids, stick close to the Church and stay married, he wrote:

[…]

We then go on to talk about the situation in our society. It used to be normal and respectable to get married, stay married, have lots of kids and go to church. That is not the new normal.

Instead, the sexual status quo is that anything goes. The creed is that of the 1968 revolution, “The only thing forbidden is forbidding.” Our society says about sex, “It’s no big deal. Any sex act is OK as long as the participants are consenting adults … and we’re not too sure about the need for consent or the definition of “adult.” The anthem is the 70’s pop song, “If you can’t be with the one you love, baby, love the one you’re with.”

Sexual intercourse between two men? No problem. Sado-masochism? Whatever turns you on, man! Two women together? That’s cool. Not happy with your husband going with another man’s wife or your wife with another woman’s husband? Get a good lawyer — there’s no fault divorce. The girl’s pregnant? Hop down to Planned Parenthood, they’ll get rid of the kid for you. Pornography and masturbation? It’s natural. Get over it.

When it comes to making babies everything is also up for grabs. A lesbian uses sperm from her gay man friend and impregnates herself with a turkey baster? No big deal. Two gay men pay a woman in Thailand to be artificially inseminated so they can have a baby? “That’s not abusing women. That’s giving her employment!” Aborting unborn baby girls for sex selection? That’s not misogynistic. That’s reproductive choice! Abortion clinics targeting racial minority neighborhoods? That’s not racism. Give them the Margaret Sanger award!

Sexual identity? There’s umpteen genders, don’t you know? If you don’t like who you are, save up, go to the clinic, and if you can pay, they can change you from a woman to a man. You’ll have to endure weird hormone shots, start growing a beard and have part of your arm cut out so they can make you a pretend penis. Wait … you’re only sixteen? Now’s the time to choose, honey! If you’re a man we can make you into a lady! Look at Bruce Jenner. He’s called Caitlin now!

[…]

The next years will be critical for the future of the Church in these USA.  True marriage and nature itself is under attack by forces now also inside the Church.   At the same time, we will see a massive drop of people attending church or pretending that they are Catholic in any meaningful way.  It will be like sinkhole opening up under us, and properties and swathes of people will fall through and be gone.   Demographics matter.

On the other hand, where Tradition is tried you inevitably start seeing young families with lots of kids or kids on the way.  I had another confirmation of this a few days ago when I met some priests for a meal.  No surprise: young people and kids at the Traditional Mass.

When will more priests and bishops figure out that Tradition is the future?   What we have been doing is not working.   Yes, there must be efforts at New Evangelization and other initiatives as well.  However, were they to be integrated with traditional sacred liturgical worship… then we’d see something new.

 

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Be The Maquis, Mail from priests, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
8 Comments

ASK FATHER: Hosts and wine for when we have to shelter an underground priest – UPDATE

UPDATE: 27 January 2021:

A post by Peter Kwasniewski over at NLM dovetails well with this post. He writes about the building of home altars, that is, altars useful for the celebration of Mass in your home. This might be necessary in the future. In the meantime, in this time of relative calm, it will be good and wholesome. Use good weather to sow crops and to reap and to fill your barn against the day of famine, plague and sword.

Peter has a great quote from St. John Golden-mouth (Commentary on Ps 41) at the end to support his point.

As those who bring comedians, dancers, and harlots into their feasts call in demons and Satan himself and fill their homes with innumerable contentions (among them jealousy, adultery, debauchery, and countless evils); so those who invoke David with his lyre call inwardly on Christ. Where Christ is, let no demon enter; let him not even dare to look in in passing. Peace, delight, and all good things flow here as from fountains. Those [pagans] make their home a theatre; make yours a church. For where there are psalms, and prayers, and the dance of the prophets, and singers with pious intentions, no one will err if he call the assembly a church.

If you can have a big screen TV and sound system, perhaps you can have a home altar.

ORIGINALLY Published on: Jan 27, 2021


From a reader….

QUAERITUR:

IF/when we would need to shelter an underground priest, what do we need on hand to make hosts and what type of wine should we have for proper matter for consecration? thanks!

I’ve written about this before, for example, HERE.   That post has more detail and suggestions.

However, for the sake of your question, here is a quick answer.

Now, you can buy hosts pretty easily: link to 1000 small HERE and lovely priest’s hosts HERE.  All you need for valid matter for the hosts, is wheat flour and water and heat.  Any sort of wheat flour will do, provided that it is truly wheat.  There are different varieties.    There shouldn’t be anything else mixed in with the flour and water.  Host irons are generally used to form and cook/bake/sear the hosts. US HERE – UK HERE   But in a pinch hosts need not be uniform or pretty.  Just make sure they are unleavened and pure.  Thin batter… flat hot surface… ZAM!  Host.

Wine is a little more complicated.  You can get a lots of hosts out of a bag of flour but not so many Masses from a bottle of wine.  Also, wine can go bad.  Some fortified wines are valid matter for Mass.  I’ve written about that HERE.  Fortified wines are valid if the added spirits are distilled from grapes and the quantity of alcohol does not exceed 18%.   Marsala and Port and Vin Santo, which have long shelf life, can be valid, but not Sherry due to when the spirits were added.     I these still relatively calm times it is still easy to buy certified altar wine by the bottle or jug.   Otherwise, in a pinch other wines from grapes with natural fermentation will do.  Most store bought wine, even with sulfites, is valid matter.

Also, and this is important for the sort of days you might be describing, where priests are on the move or at least forced into homes, etc., because churches have be closed or targeted… here is a way to make wine valid for Mass from raisins.   For example, this recipe HERE.

You might want to try gathering the ingredients and making some.    You will need more than raisins.  You could stock up on things used in the process like campden tablets and Montrachet dry wine yeast and yeast nutrient and pectic enzyme and acid blend (or lemon juice) and wine tannin (or tea bags).  Some of those – like the tannin – could be optional, but they might make the process easier and more likely to produce the desired result, wine from grapes which has alcohol, even a small percent, through fermentation.   You should have a hydrometer for that.  Whereas bottles or purchased wine might be hard to store in great quantities for a long period, the ingredients could be, including raisins.    Some simpler recipes could work as well, so long as they produce valid matter.  Remember, the wine produced must have had some natural fermentation which produces alcohol as a by product.  It doesn’t have to be high percentage.  Also, some raisins get a treatment of oil, which can affect your outcome, or of sulfites or sulphur.  I’d go with organic if possible.  If you go off to some other site to hunt up recipes for grape wine, please do use my links to get your supplies.

And don’t imagine that wine from raisins will be awful.  Very fine wines are made in Italy from grapes that are desiccated, including Amarone and Recioto.

So, perhaps when I get myself settled down in a new QTH we could start a collective Mass wine from raisin project and see how our efforts turn out!

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ACTION ITEM!, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Semper Paratus, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
3 Comments

Pecknold on Biden on Augustine

I studiously avoided any coverage of the “inauguration” last week.  I have, after that, done my best to avert my eyes from news.   I did see that D.C. was turned into an armed bastion through the deployment of subsequently abused National Guardsmen.   Sounds American to me.  Right up there with, “Ausweis, bitte!”

Today I read a good piece at First Things by Chad Pecknold about Biden’s use of St. Augustine in his address.  Pecknold exposes how “Biden’s call to unity is empty rhetoric.”

Pecknold explains how Biden misused (missed the point of) a line from City of God about what unifies a commonwealth or people: the common objects of their love.  I direct the readership to go read the clear and concise piece over there.  It’s really good.

Let’s just say that Augustine and Biden have rather different views.

For a good commentary on the monumental City of God, you might try Gerard O’Daly.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in The Coming Storm, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
8 Comments

ASK FATHER: Indulgence for kissing a new priest’s hands

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Is there really an indulgence for kissing the hands of a newly ordained priest?  I’ve heard different accounts.  And how long is “newly”?

I have written about this before.   For example, HERE.

There is no indulgence, at this time, for a priest’s first blessing or for kissing the new priest’s hand.  It is a praiseworthy custom and it should be fostered.   The hands of the priest are important, because they are consecrated.  It is a good custom to kiss the hand of the priest and to ask for his blessing.

Also, the law permits diocesan bishops to grant a partial indulgence to their subjects (EnchInd 7).  Thus, deacons about to be ordained to the priesthood could ask – ahead of time – the bishop to grant an indulgence for those who receive their first blessing for, say, a period of a year.  In the case of religious, their major superior could grant it.  This should be arranged ahead of time, not at the last minute.  Perhaps it could be part of a diocese’s regular practice.  Perhaps the vocation director or the liturgy director could put a note in their file for “ordination preparation” along the lines of “ASK THE BISHOP FOR…”.

More about “hands”.  Why hands?

Obviously, the priest holds the Host in his hands.  He holds the chalice, which ought to be consecrated with chrism.  But these days, anyone, it seems, and everyone can hold the Most Holy (aka “the white thing”).  This has done horrific damage to our Catholic identity and self-understanding.   The priest’s hands are consecrated for a reason: to handle that which is Most Holy.

On an amusing note, someone wrote recently that a perennial fanatic about women’s ordination made the false claim that women were forbidden to wash altar linens because of the Church’s misogyny.  Women were only allowed to touch the linens after the priest did a first washing.   Imagine the outrage!  The horror of such hatred of women!

The fact is that no lay person, male or female, was to wash linens until a priest had done a first washing or rinsing because the there could be particles of the Eucharist on the linens, stains from the Precious Blood, and the priest’ hands are consecrated to handle the Eucharist.   So, consecrated hands do the first washing and then lay people, male or female, can do the rest.   It’s not that lay hands or people are bad.  It’s just that the priest’s hands are consecrated to handle that which is Most Holy.

This is why there is, in some places, a good custom of altar boys using gloves to move sacred vessels, such as emptied and purified ciboria.

The hands of the priest are indeed special.  We already have a hint about this in the writings of Paul.  In 1 Timothy 2:8 we read:

I desire then that in every place the men should pray, lifting holy hands [hosious xeiras] without anger or quarreling;

Yeah… without “anger or quarreling”.  Nice try, Paul.

Anyway, I think that “lifting holy hands” business indicates a liturgical setting and also points to priesthood.

Paul clearly envisions a liturgical setting that is modelled on the old covenant liturgy.

In Hebrew, the idea of consecration of priestly hands involves the word “filled”.  “Filled” hands are doing holy work.  To “fill the hand” is a way of saying in Hebrew, “ordain, consecrate”.  The Greek version of the Old Testament, when a man was ordained the Greek used for consecrated was “perfected”.  This hearkens to how Christ Himself was “perfected” through His suffering and death.  The Greek talks about the perfection of the priest’s hands.   Priests would fill their hands with the sacrifices of the people, incense, wave-offerings, animals, etc.

In 1 Timothy 2, when Paul talks about “lifting holy hands” he is sure talking about sacred worship and priesthood, liturgy and proper roles.

Paul already underscores how the priest’s hand’s are important.   Since Paul and the early Church, our understanding of the priesthood, Holy Orders, the Eucharist – both its celebration and species themselves – and their interconnection, has become deeper and wider.   Indulgence or not, customs associated with the priest’s hand are sound and helpful and they reflect our ever maturing Faith.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Priests and Priesthood, Seminarians and Seminaries | Tagged , , , ,
3 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 60

Photo by Bree Dail.

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
4 Comments