Distinguishing between gnats and camels

From Cor ad Cor
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Mt 23:24
Blind guides, who strain out the gnat and swallow the camel!
Lev 19:17
You shall not bear hatred for your brother in your heart. Though you may have to reprove your fellow man, do not incur sin because of him.

It is bad enough when we see other people commit sin; it is far worse if we let their sins cause us to fall into sin ourselves.

Jesus has given us definite instructions on how to treat our enemies. While criticizing others for their shortcomings ("straining the gnat"), we ourselves may fall into a far worse sin ("swallowing the camel").

In matters of freedom, where there is no law, or in small matters that do not oblige under pain of sin, we should apply our high ideals to ourselves, but not hold them against others--we should be hard on ourselves but go easy on our neighbor.

Small matters

  • Genuflecting before entering the pew.
  • Kneeling and praying silently before Mass.
  • Using a priestly posture ("orans") to pray the Our Father.
  • Making a sign of reverence before receiving Communion.
  • Receiving Communion on the hand instead of on the tongue.
  • Celebrating Mass in English rather than Latin.
  • Wearing good clothes for Sunday Mass.
  • Women covering their heads in Church.

Things we probably can't correct

Many priests disregard the Church's instructions for how to celebrate Mass. Such priests:

  • Change the language of the Mass.
    • Create their own prologue to the Mass.
    • Make up their own prayers.
  • Change the order of rituals in the Mass.
  • Change the rituals themselves.
    • Do not wash their hands at the Offertory.
    • Do not bow while consecrating.
    • Offer the bread and wine simultaneously at the Offertory.
    • Do not genuflect after each consecration and before Communion.
    • Invite the people to hold hands during the Lord's Prayer.

The priests who do these things are almost certainly doing them on purpose. I have never heard of such deviations from the norms for liturgy being corrected by a bishop or abandoned by the disobedient priests.

The Little Way

Life is nothing but a series of little things.

It is easy to get small things right precisely because they are small.

Disorder in the little things in life can enrage us out of all proportion to their actual worth.

Small things do add up--like drops of water in the ocean, grains of sand on the shore, and snowflakes in a blizzard.

"The one who can be trusted with small things will be placed in charge of greater things."

Little things reveal the quality of our character.

Thou Shalt Not Gunnysack

Someone who cries out, "That's it! That's the last straw!" is guilty of collecting straws.

We can't reach the last straw if we don't hang on to the first straws.

Hanlon's Razor: "Never attribute to malice what is adequately explained by stupidity."

Paul's Thorn: 2 Cor 12:10 ...

Jesus' Prayer: "Father, forgive them, they know not what they do."

"How many times must I forgive my neighbor--or my pastor? When do I get to lower the boom on them and go postal?"