Monday, 15 May 2017

ORATORIAN COMMUNITY IN FORMATION - FIFTH SUNDAY OF EASTER - 2017

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About ten years ago, the press “exposed” a Cape Town club which had alleged­ly been running a brothel. Some of us might remember, right back in the Eighties, the horrid and embarrassing incident of the “Squidgy” telephone call between Princess Diana and a sup­posed extramarital lover, to which it was possible to listen on what was called a “hot line”? How often do we approach our media, be it newspaper, news magazine or broadcast, only to find the real news displaced by yet another exposé of “the truth,” as such publications like to call it?
If one were to ask an editor about the heartache and humiliation, the destruction of homes, happiness and lives which these exposures entail, we might receive answers on these lines: “The public have a right to know…we are here to serve the truth, we can’t help it if others behave like this…The consequences are no concern of ours, our task is just to publish things as they are…” and so on. And, of course, scandal increases circulation, and increased circulation increases profit, not that anyone, God forbid, should publish “the truth” merely for these reasons.
Tellers of Truth in the modern media are today largely distinguishable by two characteristics: a high level of moral indignation and self-righteousness, and a refusal to be held accountable for their views, though they hold others accountable for their actions in no uncertain terms. In fact, moral indignation is the principal means by which they thwart anyone trying to bring them to account.
It is a sad fact that many Christians take the same easy option which the modern media have embraced, and exercise the same ruthless and unforgiving moral indignation against their neighbour. This idea of truth as a harsh exposure of wrongdoing is in fact the antithesis of what God and the Scriptures have to say on the subject.
The Old Testament teaching on truth is to be found it the shortest of all the Psalms, Psalm 117. In the Authorised Version it reads as follows:

O Praise the Lord, all ye nations,
Praise him, all ye peoples.
For his merciful kindness is evermore towards us,
And the truth of the Lord endureth forever.

The significance of this passage, is that it joins together two of the closest-linked ideas in the Old Testament: ideas represented by the Hebrew words hesed and emet.
Emet is the Jews’ word for truth. Truth for the Jews is not to be confused with the passing facts of everyday existence. “Squidgy” is not truth for them, since who even today really remembers the facts of that story? Truth, for the Jews, was that which is revealed by God, things of eternal significance and endurance. “The truth of the Lord endures for ever.” One somehow does not think, thank God, that “Squidgy” will endure for ever. God in three persons; the Word made Flesh; the death of the Saviour of the cross; The coming of the Holy Spirit; the Consummation of all things at the end of time; “God is Love’; these are emet, and for a Christian, there can be no other kind of truth. For a Christian, in fact, all truth is summed up in the person of Jesus: “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life.”
But the idea of emet, or truth, is bound together with that of hesed. There is no single English equivalent, but the Authorised version comes very close to it with its “merciful kindness.” Compassion would be the single word which most closely captures its meaning. It is an idea which stretches through the Old Testament, particularly in passages such as:

 The Lord is kind and full of compassion,
 Slow to anger, abounding in love.
How good is the Lord to all,
Compassionate to all his creatures.

Here is the heart of divine Truth; that God, who is truth, is kind and compassionate. God’s moral law is absolute, but God applies that law with love and compassion, raising up, forgiving…yes, forgetting. “I will turn my face from their iniquities, and never call their sins to mind.” The sins of man are in the first place offences against God, yet it is God who is “slow to anger.” The picture which emerges here is quite the opposite of the newspaper idea of truth as an exposure of others’ sins. For God, human sins are offences against the truth. But they are offences which God wants to forgive precisely because they are an affront to the truth. “It is not the death of the sinner that I require, but his repentance.”
God’s reaction to human sin is not to seek the humiliation and destruction of the sinner, but his redemption. It is a singular fact of Christianity, and one which we take into too little account in the day-by-day practice of our faith, that it is God, who is affronted by sin, who humiliates himself on our account in order to achieve our salvation. “on Him lies a punishment that brings us peace, and by his stripes we are healed.” In this union of truth and loving compassion are echoed the powerful words of the Gospel of John: “The truth will set you free…when I am lifted up from the earth I will draw all men to myself…I am the Way, the Truth and the Life.”
Has the editor who exposes the sins of others (who very likely have never offended him) in the name of “printing the truth,” any idea of the exalted meaning of that word in the mouth of God? For that matter, have Christians who wax indignant over the sins of others, and spread gossip all round, albeit in hushed, self-righteous tones of “How shocking!” any better an understanding of the God who has called them, loved them, and died in humiliation on the cross for them in order to redeem them from their sins?
On many occasions people, both Catholics and others, have spoken with me about the confessional. Not a few have articulated the idea that a priest “knows the truth” about the members of his congregation. In that fact they are right; but they are generally most wrong as to what exactly “the truth” is. For, as any priest will tell you, it has nothing to do with whether Mr. X and Mrs. Y are having an extramarital affair, or what sort of dirty thoughts Miss Z enjoys, or even whether Mrs. Q is a secret tippler, who finances her beverage out of the petty cash.
The truth that comes out of the confessional is “the truth (which) endures for ever”; that human beings are created in the image of God; that we have fallen short of the glory of God; that we are in desperate need of redemption; that God in his loving compassion has given us a Saviour who died that we might be forgiven; and that in those words “I absolve you from your sins…” we have the absolute certainty that our sins have been forgiven in His name. That is the astonishing and miraculous truth of the confessional; all the rest is just passing detail. Sin, after all, is marked down for total destruction; it is the truth of the Lord that endures for ever.
Truth, in God’s mind, consists of unchanging, eternal reality, and there can be no truth without the hesed, the loving compassion of God. If we wish to serve that truth, our task is not to humiliate and expose in self-righteousness. It is rather to come in humble service to our brother or sister, and self-effacingly to help them to find their way back to God, keeping all the time before our eyes the fact that we ourselves are sinners in need of his mercy.

“There is more rejoicing in heaven over one repentant sinner than over ninety-nine righteous men.” May God bring each one of us to a self-knowledge of our own sinfulness, and may he use us, through loving compassion for one another, in service of his eternal truth, so that many might find their way to him, and learn to know his love and forgiveness, and so in turn be brought to knowledge of the Truth that endures for ever.

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