Archbishop Sheen Today! -- Reparation
By Barbara Kralis
© Catholic Online 2004
“My sin is always before me,” Ps.50
In
the face of spreading agnosticism and relativism, the term 'reparation'
is most unusual. Moreover, not only is the term unusual but also is its
theology.
We witness today the loss of the meaning of penance,
prayer, fasting, confession, and reparation. The modernists call it
change when its real name is decay.
Why Reparation is Needed for America
In a culture where sin is no longer considered sin, why should anyone make reparation?
How
many today remove the body of Christ from the Crucifix and look only at
the empty cross. If we Christians have a Crucifix before us, instead of
an empty cross, we cannot forget about sin and reparation. "Paccatum
meum contra me est semper." [1]
To understand 'reparation,' we
first have to understand what St. Paul was teaching the Colossians about
our cooperation in Christ's sufferings. The following is part of what
the Church calls the 'paschal mystery.'
Christ's perfect
Sacrifice was accomplished when He said, "It is finished." [2] The
objective redemption is a 'fait accompli.' However, St. Paul said that
there is more to it.
Therefore, here comes the difficult part.
St.
Paul explained, "Now I rejoice in my suffering for your sake, and in my
flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake
of His body, that is, the Church...." [3]
What in heaven's sake is St. Paul saying?
St. Alphonsus [4] summarizes this statement as follows:
"Can
it be that Christ's passion alone was insufficient to save us? No. It
left nothing more to be done; it was more than sufficient to save all
men. However, for the merits of the Passion to be applied to us,
according to St. Thomas Aquinas, [5] we need to cooperate (subjective
redemption) by patiently bearing the trials God sends us, so as to
become like our head, Christ."
This is called 'reparation.' It is
a theological doctrine of the Catholic Church. Reparation is the
foundation of many confraternities and pious associations [6] — to make
reparation for our sins and for the sins of mankind.
That
infinite merit of Christ's Passion and Sacrifice on Calvary enables us
to add our daily prayers, labors, trials, and sufferings to those of our
Lord. Thus, we become actually co-redeemers with Christ, sharing in His
suffering.
Suffering, more than anything else, makes present in the history of humanity the force of the Redemption. [7]
Why
should we make reparation to God? For two reasons: 1) to repair for our
own offences against Him, 2) by virtue of the Communion of the Saints,
we can also make satisfaction or reparation for the sins of others.
However,
we first need to see ourselves as we really are so we can properly
intercede for the souls of others. We do this through frequent
Confession. [8]
The Catechism of the Catholic Church, n.2412,
n.2487, n.2454, n. 2509 teaches that every offense committed entails the
duty of reparation, even if its author has been forgiven.
The greatest offering of reparation is the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
So that we might join with Christ, He commanded his disciples at the Last Supper "Do this in memory of me."
Since
Holy Mass is the representation of Christ's infinitely perfect
Sacrifice of Calvary, it is one of the best means of offering
satisfaction or reparation of God's wrath.
In fact, St. Therese
of Lisieux said the best reparations she could ever make for sin was
attending Holy Mass and worthily receiving Holy Communion.
Here, below, is a popular Bishop Sheen vignette on this subject.
By Bishop Fulton J. Sheen
J.M.J.
The
past stays with us in our habits, in our consciousness of remembered
guilt, in our proclivity to repeat the same sin. Our past experiences
are in our blood, our brains, and even in the very expression that we
wear.
The future judgment is also with us; it haunts us, causing
our anxieties and fears, our dreads and preoccupations, giving us
insecurity and uncertainty.
A cow or a horse lives for the
present moment, without remorse or anxiety; but man not only drags his
past with him, but he is also burdened with worries about his eternal
future.
Because the past is with him in the form of remorse or
guilt, because the future is with him in his anxiety, it follows that
the only way man can escape either burden is by reparation — the making
up for the wrong done in the past — and by a firm resolution to avoid
such sin in the future.
How do we make reparation? Disposing of
the past is the first step to take, and in taking it, the important
distinction between forgiveness and reparation for sin should be
remembered.
Some who have done wrong mistakenly think that they
should only forget it, now that it is past and 'done with.' Others
believe, falsely, that once a wrong deed has been forgiven, nothing
further needs to be done. However, both of these attitudes are
incomplete, as they lack in love.
We all will have to unite our
cross with our Lord on the Cross in order to use it to purchase our
eternal salvation. About a year ago (circa l970), I was talking to Pope
Paul VI and I said to him, "You are well named." He was named Paul.
Paul
went from city to city, was stoned from Lystra to Derby to Antioch to
Pisidia, and so I said, "You were stoned by your own."
"Yes," he
said. "I open my mail at midnight and in almost every letter is a thorn
and when I put my head on my pillow an hour or two later, I really lay
it down upon a crown of thorns.
"But," he said, "I cannot tell you what ineffable joy I have to suffer."
Then Pope Paul VI quoted to me the twenty-fourth verse of St. Paul's letter to the Colossians:
"Now
I rejoice in my suffering for your sake, and in my flesh I complete
what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of His body, that
is, the Church...." [9]
"I suffer all of this for the sake of the Church," said the Pope.
That
is how we use suffering. I think the great tragedy of the world is the
suffering that goes to waste. People suffer and they have no one whom
they can love to suffer for. Love does not kill the pain but it
diminishes it.
Our Lord, in instituting the Sacrament of Penance,
made it clear that there is a difference between forgiveness and the
undoing of the past. That is why confession is followed by absolution,
or forgiveness, and why, when absolution has been given, the confessor
says: "For your penance say...."
Then he tells the penitent what payers to say or which good actions to perform to make atonement for his sins.
The high reasonableness of this is apparent if we translate the offence against God into purely human terms.
Suppose
that I have stolen your watch. When my conscience finally pricks me, I
admit it all to you and say: "Will you forgive me?"
No doubt, you will, but I am sure that you will also say: "Give me back the watch."
Returning
the watch is the best proof of the sincerity of my regret. Even
children know there must be a restoration of the balance or equilibrium
disturbed by sin.
For instance, a boy who breaks a window playing
ball often volunteers, "I'll pay for it." Forgiveness alone does not
wipe out the offence. It is as if a man, after every sin, was told to
drive a nail into a board and, every time he was forgiven, a nail was
pulled out. He would soon discover that the board was full of holes,
which had not been there in the beginning.
Similarly, we cannot
go back to the innocence that our sins have destroyed. When we turned
our backs upon God by sinning against Him, we burned our bridges behind
us; now they have to be rebuilt with patient labour.
A
businessman who has contracted heavy debts will find his credit cut off.
Until he has begun to settle the old obligations, he cannot carry on
his business. Our old sins must be paid for before we can continue with
the business of living.
Reparation is the act of paying for our
sins. When that is done, God's pardon is available to us. His pardon
means a restoration of the relationship of love, just as if we offended a
friend, we do not consider that we are forgiven until the friend loves
us again.
God's mercy is always present. His forgiveness is
forever ready, but it does not become operative until we show Him that
we really value it.
The father of the prodigal son had
forgiveness always waiting in his heart; but the prodigal son could not
avail himself of it until he had such a change of disposition that he
asked to be forgiven and offered to do penance as a servant in his
father's house.
So long as we continue our attachment to evil,
forgiveness is impossible; it is as simple as the law, which says that
living in the deep recesses of a cave makes sunlight unavailable to us.
Pardon is not automatic — to receive it, we have to make ourselves
pardonable.
The proof of our sorrow over having offended is our
readiness to root out the vice that caused the offence. The man who
holds a violent grudge against his neighbour and who confesses it in the
Sacrament of Penance cannot be forgiven unless he forgives his enemy.
"If you do not forgive, your Father Who is in Heaven will not forgive your transgressions either." (Mk.11:26). [10]
NOTES:
Paccatum meum contra me est semper" in English means "my sin is always before me," from Psalm 50, the 'Miserere.'
Cf. Jn 19:30.
Cf. Col. 1:24; 2 Cor 1:5f; Eph 3:1, 13.
Cf. St. Alphonsus, 'Thoughts on the Passion," n.10.
Cf. Summa theologiae, III, q. 49, ans. 3.
Cf.
The Archconfraternity of Reparation for blasphemy and the neglect of
the Holy Day of Sunday (founded 1847); excellent prayers available at
the Archconfraternity of the Holy Face, of Tours, France (1851); the
Archconfraternity of the Mass of Reparation, Parish (1886); Devotion to
the Sacred Heart of Jesus is another pious association.
Cf. 'Salvifici doloris,' n.27, John Paul II.
It is well known that the Pope John Paul II receives the Sacrament of Penance on a weekly basis.
Cf. Col 1: 24
Source:
"Christian life is struggle," by Fulton J. Sheen, from the book "Go to
Heaven," published 1949 by Catholic Book Club, 121 Charing Cross Road,
London W.C.2.
© Barbara Kralis
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