Rev. Fr. Leonard Goffine's
The Church's Year
FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY
INTROIT Adore
God, all ye His angels: Sion heard, and was glad; and the daughters of
Juda rejoiced. The Lord hath reigned; let the earth rejoice; let the
many islands be glad. (Ps. XCVI. 1.) Glory be to the Father, etc.
COLLECT O
God, who knowest us to be set in the midst of so great perils, that
because of the frailty of our nature we cannot stand; grant to us health
of mind and body, that those things which we suffer for our sins, we
may by Thy aid overcome. Through the same Jesus Christ, our Lord &c.
EPISTLE (Romans
XIII. 8-10.) Brethren, owe no man anything, but to love one another;
for he that loveth his neighbor hath fulfilled the law. For thou shaft
not commit adultery; thou shaft not kill; thou shaft not steal; thou
shaft not bear false witness; thou shaft not covet; and if there be any
other commandment, it is comprised in this word: Thou shaft love thy
neighbor as thyself. The love of our neighbor worketh no evil. Love,
therefore, is the fulfilling of the law.
What is meant by St Paul's words: He that loveth his neighbor, hath fulfilled the law?
St.
Augustine in reference to these words says: that he who loves his
neighbor, fulfils as well the precepts of the first as of the second
tablet of the law. The reason is, that the love of our neighbor contains
and presupposes the love of God as its fountain and foundation. The
neighbor must be loved on account of God; for the neighbor cannot be
loved with true love, if we do not first love God. On this account, the
holy Evangelist St. John in his old age, always gave the exhortation:
Little children, love one another. And when asked why, he answered:
Because it is the command of the Lord, and it is enough to fulfill it.
Therefore in this love of the neighbor which comes from the love of God
and is contained in it, consists the fulfillment of the whole law.
(Matt. XXII. 40.)
GOSPEL (Matt.
VIII 23-27) At that time, when Jesus entered into the boat, his
disciples followed him. And behold, a great tempest arose in the sea, so
that the boat was covered with waves; but he was asleep. And they came
to him and awaked him, saying: Lord, save us, we perish. And Jesus saith
to them Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? Then rising up, he
commanded the winds and the sea, and there came a great calm. But the
men wondered, saying: What manner of man is this, for the winds and the
sea obey him?
Why did Christ sleep in the boat?
To
test the faith and confidence of His disciples; to exercise them in
enduring the persecutions which they were afterwards to endure; to teach
us that we should not waver in the storms of temptations. St. Augustine
writes: "Christ slept, and because of the danger the disciples were
confused. Why? Because Christ slept. In like manner thy heart becomes
confused, thy ship unquiet, when the waves of temptation break over it.
Why? Because thy faith sleeps. Then thou shouldst awaken Christ in thy
heart; then thy faith should be awakened, thy conscience quieted, thy
ship calmed."
Why did Christ reproach His disciples when they awaked Him and asked for help?
Because
of their little faith and trust; for if they firmly believed Him to be
true God, they would necessarily believe He could aid them sleeping as
well as waking.
Nothing
so displeases God as to doubt His powerful assistance. Cursed be the
man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh (mortal man) his arm (aid),
and whose heart departeth from the Lord. Blessed be the man that
trusteth in the Lord, and the Lord shall be his confidence. (Jerem.
XVII. 5. 7.) God sometimes permits storms to assail us, such as poverty,
persecution, sickness, so that we may have occasion to put our
confidence in Him alone. Of this St. Bernard very beautifully says:
"When the world rages, when the wicked become furious, when the flesh
turns against the spirit, I will hope in Him. Who ever trusted in Him,
and was put to shame?" We should therefore trust in God only, and take
refuge to Him, invoking Him as did the disciples: Lord, save us, we
perish; or cry out with David: Arise, why sleepest thou, O Lord? Arise,
and cast us not off to the end. (Ps. XLIII. 23.)
Why did Jesus stand up and command the sea to be still?
To
show His readiness to aid us, and His omnipotence to which all things
are subject. His disciples who saw this miracle, wondered and said: What
manner of man is this, for the winds and the sea obey Him?
We
see daily in all creatures the wonders of the Omnipotence, the wisdom,
and the goodness of God, and yet we are not touched; we continue cold
and indifferent. The reason is, that we look upon all with the eyes of
the body and not with the eyes of the soul; that is, we do not seek to
ascend by meditation to the Creator, and to judge from the manifold
beauty and usefulness of created things the goodness and the wisdom of
God. The saints rejoiced in all the works of the Lord; a flower, a
little worm of the earth would move the heart of St. Francis of Sales,
and St. Francis the Seraph, to wonderment and to the love of God; they
ascended, as on a ladder, from the contemplation of creatures to Him who
gives to every thing life, motion, and existence. If we were to follow
their example, we would certainly love God more, and more ardently
desire Him; if we do not, we live like irrational men, we who were
created only to know and to love God.
ASPIRATION Grant
us, O good Jesus! in all our needs, a great confidence in Thy divine
assistance, and do not allow us to become faint-hearted; let Thy
assistance come to us in the many dangers to which we are exposed;
command the turbulent winds and waves of persecution to be still, and
give peace and calmness to Thy Church, which Thou hast redeemed with Thy
precious blood, that we may serve Thee in sanctity and justice, and
arrive safely at the desired haven of eternal happiness. Amen.
ON THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD
But he was asleep. (Matt VIII. 24.)
It
is an article of faith in the holy Catholic Church that God has not
only created the world, but that He sustains and governs it; this
preservation and ruling of the whole world and of each individual
creature is called Providence. There are people who think that God is
too great a Lord to busy Himself about the care of this world, that to
do so is beneath His majesty; it was enough for Him to create the world,
for the rest, He leaves it to itself or to fate, enjoys His own
happiness, and, as it were, sleeps in regard to us. Thus think some, but
only the ignorant and impious. Were He as these imagine Him, He would
not or could not have aught to do with creation. If He could not, then
He is neither all-wise nor almighty, if He would not, then He is not
good; and if He knows nothing of the world, then He is not omniscient.
If
we once believe that God created the world, (and what rational man can
doubt it?) then we must also believe He rules and sustains it. Can any
work of art, however well constructed and arranged, subsist without some
one to take charge of and watch aver the same? Would not the greatest
of all master-pieces, the world, therefore come to the greatest
confusion and fall back into its original nothingness, if God, who
created it from nothing, did not take care of its further order and
existence? It is indeed true that the method of Divine Providence with
which God controls all things is so mysterious that, when considering
some events, one is persuaded to admit a necessary fate, an accident,
the course of nature, the ill will of the devil or man, as the
fundamental cause. Yet in all this the providence of God is not denied,
for nothing does or can happen accidentally, not the smallest thing
occurs without the knowledge, permission, or direction of God. Not one
sparrow shall fall on the ground without your Father. But the very hairs
of your head are all numbered. (Matt. X. 29. 30.) Chance, fate, and
luck are but the ideas of insane or wicked men, which even the more
rational heathens have rejected, and the course of nature is but the
constant, uninterrupted, all-wise and bountiful preservation and
government of creation through God. The perverted will of men or of the
devil is but the instrument which God in His all-wise intention, uses to
effect the good, for He knows how to produce good from evil, and,
therefore, as St. Augustine says, "permits the evil that the good may
not be left undone." If we peruse the history of our first parents, of
Abraham, of Joseph in Egypt, of Moses, of the people of Israel, of Job,
Ruth, David, Tobias, Esther, Judith and others, we will easily see
everywhere the plainest signs of the wisest Providence, the best and
most careful, absolute power, by virtue of which God knows how to direct
all things according to His desire, and for the good of His chosen
ones. The gospel of this day furnishes us an instance of this? Why did
Christ go into the boat? Why did a storm arise? Why was He asleep? Did
all this occur by accident? No, it came about designedly by the
ordinance of Christ that His omnipotence might be seen, and the faith
and confidence of His disciples be strengthened.
Thus
it is certain that God foresees, directs, and governs all; as
Scripture, reason, and daily experience prove. Would we but pay more
attention to many events of our lives, we would certainly notice the
providence of God, and give ourselves up to His guidance and
dispensations. The Lord ruleth me, and I shall want nothing, says David.
(Ps. XXII. 1.) And we also, we shall want nothing if we resign
ourselves to God's will, and are contented with His dispensations in our
regard; while, on the contrary, if we oppose His will, we shall fall
into misfortune and error. God must rule over us with goodness, or with
sternness, He is no slumbering God. Behold! He shall neither slumber nor
sleep, that keepeth Israel. (Ps. CXX. 4.)