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37 TRANSFIGURATION BEGINNING


 

MY HEART JUST, this instant, became suddenly aware of the extent to which this feast of the Transfiguration, and the events surrounding its celebration was a lavishness of His love, His mercy.

 

Graced gift, wherein I was suddenly some twenty years ago, granted yet another moment in which to choose!

To choose between the blessing or curse placed before me, that embrace of love or His refusal, of life or the continued death I was living [Dt. 30: 11-20]!

It was a day in the year dubbed in the press as the “year of three popes! “

IT IS ONE of those sunny, yet cool, spring afternoons as I begin to write again.

In this house of the infirm, where I have been living and serving for some time, along with my duties as chaplain for the hospital, we are holding, today, a fund raiser through the sale of flowers.

Thus the whole place is ablaze with beauty!

My heart looks at the faces of the elderly and the infirm.

Before the beauty of any human face all other beauty fades into the background.

It is the reflected radiance of Your Holy Face, O Incarnate One, O Transfigured One, O Suffering One, O Most Glorious Risen One!

I ponder many mysteries in my heart today: human suffering, sin, death, grace, conversion, ordination, priesthood, hiddenness, this moment!

It is striking, the insistence of St. Paul, that the transformation of the person is connected to the renewal of our mind — in a word — a radical conversion of the way we think. [Col. 2: 6-8]

It is a matter of opening wide not only our hearts but the entire resource of our intellect, imagination, memory, to Divine Wisdom, that we become purified of the shackles of any philosophy, mode of thinking, attitude, rationale, which is contradictory to our God given sacred dignity and person.

During that mysterious long, hot summer, so many decades ago, I was indeed, not merely captivated by, but an advocate of, empty philosophy, and the sheer weight of that emptiness was crushing my being.

I remember that August was ferocious with its heat and humidity, as if the doors of hell hadbeen opened and the heat from that infernal fire was loosed upon the earth.

At the beginning of the month the man who was at that time my companion, left, as they say: ‘for the coast ‘.

For a few days I gave into my old habitual patterns, but there was within me a distinct lack, both of energy and enthusiasm.

Some weeks previous I had gotten word my spiritual director — whom, frankly, I long had considered to be my ‘former’, spiritual director — would be in the city to address a national Catholic Charismatic rally and that he wanted to see me.

The event was to take place in the local sports stadium on August 6th.

For the world: the horrific anniversary of the first use of the atomic bomb against human beings, against our brothers and sisters.

It was a day I’d normally be in some protest against such weapons.

For the Church: the celebration of the Holy Transfiguration of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

As the sun rose, that particular morning, it was already extremely, brutally hot.

The light and heat sweeping across the balcony, through the open glass doors, slammed into my face with such hot force I awoke feeling my face was blistering.

Opening my eyes the intense light burned as if I had my face right against a strobe light flashing before my eyes.

My being shuddered with a dual sensation of fear and anticipation.

There were hours to go before the rally where my former spiritual director would be speaking.

Time enough to go to that other rally where I would join my voice with others, and groups across the globe, crying out for an end to the seemingly relentless lemming-like drift of the militarists towards a nuclear holocaust.

By mid-afternoon I left the rally and headed towards the stadium.

The city, it seemed to me, was already broiled to a crisp.

The ravaging by the extraordinary beating down of sun’s heat and light seemed to have inflamed my entire being.

When I arrived at the stadium I was astounded not only to see the place packed, the large numbers of Bishops and priests processing towards a raised platform in the middle of the football field, a platform on which was an altar, but even more so by the impassioned energy and enthusiasm of the assembled people.

This was too much religious fervour for me.

I climbed into the higher rows of seats, figuring if I stayed away from the density of the crowd, and especially far out of line of sight with that altar, I’d be protected from whatever, all day long, my being seemed to sense was about to happen.

I was sensing within me an odd mixture of fear, and anticipation.

Suddenly a mitred Bishop approached the makeshift pulpit and motioned for everyone to be quiet.

He announced he had just been informed Pope Paul VI was seriously ill.

The Bishop then called for prayer as a strange murmur washed across the crowd, a murmur not unlike that of a family who has just been told their father is dying.

Suddenly I was thrust back in my imaginative emotions to the sixties and the horrendous anger which I carried when this Pope came out with Humane Vitae.

I had never read the actual encyclical, of course.

I uncritically believed everything both the secular and the rebellious ‘catholic’ press of the time had to say.

After all I was a champion of social justice and what the Pope had done, refuse the pill, was unquestionably an injustice.

How darkly ignorant was I in those days about the extent to which I had been captivated by a secular, empty philosophy, by lie.

After what seemed about a half hour the Bishop interrupted the Mass and approached the microphone once more.

I remember sitting there in that instant as if I were reviewing my entire life and an immense hunger to be real was welling up inside of me.

Yet at the same time there was a strange taste in my mouth as if an immense, sour, blackness was being regurgitated.

I had no idea who I was.

It was as if I were standing beside that seat, looking down at a pathetic lost child.

In a broken voice the Bishop announced that Pope Paul was dead.

Suddenly all around me people were sobbing.

I sat there, stunned, rigid, as if I had no idea what was happening.

Bishops, priests, nuns, old men, women, younger people, children, the police doing crowd control, everyone, it seemed, was sobbing.

How could this be?

How could these people weep over the death of that man?

Only these decades later do I see clearly now, understand, they were weeping over the death of their father, their shepherd.

Perhaps the first awareness was that the wetness on my face felt different from the sweat that had bathed me all day long; perhaps the first awareness was the hug given me by a woman who herself was weeping.

Perhaps it was that I too had been looked at. [Lk. 22: 61]

I don’t recall much after that, not until the whole event was over and I went to search out the priest who still saw himself as my spiritual father.

When I found him near the exit, where he had sent word weeks before we were to meet, he instantly apologized for being in a rush. Then before I could say a word he said he was leaving The Community but would be in touch and he ran to catch the bus!

Jesus had come to Jericho.

I had, so I thought at any rate, started to climb the tree.

Before I did so, Jesus had just taken off on a bus!

In that instant the immense heat seemed to engulf me once more. Within my being it seemed too that whatever I had unknowingly anticipated had been snatched away, or rather taken off on that bus.

How utterly wrong, as time would tell, I was.

How utterly ignorant too of the way the Divine Lover works, in the garden enclosed.

Sin is a terrible burden, the weight of the whole world’s evil pulling our hearts into a darkness worse than annihilation. It begins so simply with little acts of rejection or mere non-acceptance that hook into our infantile need for total love and create in us fear and rage, guilt and sadness. By the time we reach adulthood, even if we have been baptized as babies and raised as Christians, almost all of us have chosen again and again and again to be accomplices in our own rejection. We choose to be woven into the web of selfish fear that is the world’s darkness. We choose to believe in the absence of God, and that absence weighs on our hearts with such constant force that we think it is as normal as gravity.

Then one day, who knows when, we hear that Jesus is passing by. Perhaps we have heard it every Sunday of our lives, but this day that weight of God’s absence in us at last wearies us beyond pride, beyond fear, breaks through to that core of us where we are all emptiness, all longing, and we want only to know one thing; what kind of man is this Jesus? Suddenly, without knowing how we got there, we are up in that tree with Zaccheus, our whole being in our eyes, looking for the face of Jesus. And Jesus looks at us and says, ‘ Hurry up and come down! I MUST stay at your house today. ‘ [Lk.19:5]

All that waiting, all those dreadful years, and it turns out that God has been waiting for us.

…….REPENT means to turn around, to stop believing in the absence of God, to stop building a life without Him, to stop trying to find rest by our own efforts –and, like Zaccheus, to start climbing the tree of salvation so that we can see the life-creating face of Jesus. [by]

 

18 A TREE FOR THE HANGING

THERE is a personal grace in this writing, as well as, since it is written under obedience and in fidelity to the duty of the moment, a grace for you whose eyes fall upon these words in this moment.

 

 

The Spirit tells my heart to give a glimpse of the grace so others might come to trust Him.

The glimpse I am moved to give is simply this: it is part of the original satanic lie hissed to Adam and Eve that there will come a moment in our lives when God abandons us.

The truth is, it is we who deny Him a place within us, and we deny the truth He is with us.

We abandon Him.

Indeed in so doing we abandon our true self.

That is why, among many reasons, hopefully by now most of them self-evident, I keep mentioning that this writing is NOT so much the story of my particular life, as it is the proclamation, the account of the persistence, the tender, faithful, relentless, seeking, calling, inviting, all-loving, redemptive, activity in the soul, mine, yours, of the Blessed Trinity, through the mystery of Jesus, the reality of Jesus, He whose Incarnation, Passion, Death, Resurrection makes real the fact of our being, and of our being beloved children of the Father.

The true teacher here is NOT this neurotic, sinful priest commanded to write.

I have been given the grace to understand, a grace of insight, as never before in my life how so much evil came to pass within my life.

The gift of conversion and healing entails such struggle.

 Often too there is much resistance until finally grace overcomes what holds us in bondage, layer after deeper layer, after deeper layer, until it is finished — usually at the moment when we are laid deep, deep in the earth under layers of earth when we have come finally to surrender to Love!

One of the great spiritual tragedies of internecine warfare within the Church today is rooted in the refusal of many of Her children, especially bishops and priests, the teachers and shepherds, to accept the clear truth of the Holy Gospel.

This is particularly so when it comes to denying the reality of satan and his permitted assault on the followers of Christ, and the constitutive reality of sin and its aftermath.

 

When a soul comes to the priest for instruction, seeking truth, and is told such things as satan, mortal sin, hell, etc. are medieval notions best left aside by we enlightened moderns, the soul is relentlessly pushed back by such fatherly betrayal into the very clutches of evil, evil which the soul had come to the priest to be delivered from.

The more priests refrain from truth-speaking, from exercising our ordained paternal authority to enlighten, encourage, absolve, deliver, the firmer the grip of the evil one upon the person of the child of God, upon their very soul, upon the entire world.

Factually the abomination of the desolation occurs within the soul, the living temple of the Holy Spirit, more horrifically than anything we can image in an external structure.

This occurs when souls are denied sacramental solace by priests who have surrendered truth of faith to the illusion of modern scepticism.

This loss of faith/refusal to believe, by priests, results from the failure of priests themselves to approach each other for spiritual direction, authentic confession of sins, humble supplication for healing of interior neurotic wounds, those bitter roots and inner vows which form the sins of our youth, and unhanded over to Christ, hobble our adulthood.

Scripture is filled with stark descriptions of the hobbled soul in bondage to disorder and sin: Dn.9:27; 11:31. Often these passages are narrowly understood as end time prophecies, but everything in Scripture has a personal aspect to it, a teaching for us or a warning: Mk.13:14; Mt.24:15.

I have long wondered what my own personal ‘original’ sin was, how I came to close myself off to the activity and voice of the Holy Spirit, to allow the one who should never stand within my being enter as abomination and render me desolate.

How could this happen, or rather how could I choose this at such a tender age?

Why, within a few hours of arriving back in the city of my youth did I seek out a particular place, as if going to a shrine?

I’D BEEN back in the city but a day or so when this compulsion overtook me, with relative ease as I recall, that I should seek out a particular place, a place of horrific death in the last century, a place which was no mere place but more a thing, a living thing consecrated to death, the hanging tree.

I am deeply aware of the danger in writing about evil spirits, satan, the devil, demons, all names for the same spirits of evil, cast from heaven (Rv.12) because of their free-will, irredeemable sin against the Holy Triune God.

The danger is not merely to myself, but to others if this writing triggers extremely dangerous curiosity.

Or an equally disordered scepticism.

So as I write these lines I am in constant prayer for the protection of Our Lady and St. Michael the Archangel, for inspiration from the Holy Fathers and Doctors of the Church, so that I write truth, truth which is cautionary for souls.

CHRIST is a witness. He came down from heaven to destroy the work of the devil, that is, sin (1Jn.3:8). This is why He is called ‘the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world (Jn.1:29). Who can explain or even imagine all that Christ suffered to destroy the work of the devil and to satisfy perfectly the justice of God? ‘Though He was by nature God, He emptied Himself, taking the nature of a slave ‘(Phil.2:6). ‘Being rich, He became poor for our sakes ‘(2Cor.8:9). He ‘had nowhere to lay His head ‘(Lk.9:58), although He made heaven and earth. ‘He came into His own, and His own received Him not ‘(Jn.1:11). ‘When He was reviled He did not revile, when He suffered, did not threaten, but yielded Himself up to him who judged Him unjustly; who Himself bore our sins in His body upon the tree ‘(1Pet.2:23, 24). ‘He humbled Himself and became obedient unto death, even death on the cross ‘(Phil.2:8). ‘By His stripes we were healed ‘(1Pet.2:24). At last mocked, spit upon, scourged, crowned with thorns, crucified in complete shame and excruciating pain, He poured out all His Blood and His Life. He bore all this to destroy the works of the devil and wipe out our sin. [an]

 

Places where there has been, things used for, in either the ancient or near past, violent death, occult activity, blasphemy, satanic ritual, unless these places, things, are reclaimed for Christ, in Christ, through Christ, by the power of His Redeeming Cross, Blood, Name, such places and things will remain cesspools, swamps, bogs, of devouring evil.

There is a defined limit to the movement and power of the evil one and his minions as is attested to by Sacred Scripture and Church teaching, which we should never forget because it is as seriously dangerous to over-estimate the power of evil as it is to under-estimate same.

Scripture shows us the limits the Lord Himself has placed upon the evil one [Jb. 1:6-12; 2:6], as well as the fear evil spirits have in the presence of Jesus [Mk. 1:23, 24], and the power Jesus has over them [Mk. 5: 9, 10 & 12].

The Church herself in her Catechism teaches:

The devil and the other demons were indeed created naturally good by God, but they    became evil by their own doing……{# 391 CCC*} Scripture speaks of a sin of these angels. This ‘ fall ‘ consists in the free choice of these created spirits, who radically and irrevocably rejected God and His reign…..The devil ‘ has sinned from the beginning ‘; he is ‘ a liar and the father of lies ‘. {# 392 CCC*}

 The power of satan is, nonetheless, not infinite…It is a great mystery that Providence should permit diabolical activity, but ‘ we know that in everything God works for good with those who love Him. {# 395 *Catechism of the Catholic Church}

 

The evil one then can only suggest, what is accurately called ‘tempt’ the soul, us, to sin, to choose against God’s love for us.

Satan CANNOT make a soul commit a sin.

We have free will and must, in order to sin, freely choose to follow the evil idea, in a word to cooperate with the evil one.

The imminent danger in minor cooperation with evil, known as venial sin, is the progressive weakening of our free will and the increased predisposition of our will towards greater evil, known as mortal sin, the deadly sinning which, persisted in, leads necessarily towards such a distortion of our freedom that in extreme cases we will hand our will over to satan, i.e. become actually in bondage to, if not possessed by, an evil spirit.

We, I, You, and no one else bear the responsibility for our choices and the repercussions of those choices.

True, the sins of others against us may, because of the severity of the impact of the sin against us, damage our notion of self, weakening our will, our emotional stability, render it more facile for us to choose evil and more of a struggle to choose good. Nonetheless, we remain with a free will and therefore responsible for the choices we make.

In this spiritual warfare we have the person, the victory, of Christ Himself as our encouragement. Through His Passion and Death, His Redemption of us, by the power of the Holy Spirit operative in the Sacraments, especially of Baptism, Confession, Holy Communion, we have the forgiveness of our sins, the grace to begin, with God, anew, moment by moment to choose the life of goodness over the death of evil.

Christ’s own struggle with the evil one is amply attested in the Holy Gospels, very dramatically at the outset of His public life in Matthew 4:1-11.

Another example from Matthew of the struggle with evil, which illustrates both that which occurred within my soul during my monastic years, and what happened to me when I returned to the city.

The passage is found in Matthew 12:43-45 and illustrates the true conversion is not just the action of Jesus setting us free but what happens if we fail to live in the reality of conversion. We cannot be passive!

When I returned home from the monastery I had within me a closed heart, a shutting down of my baptized self, soul, mind, heart, will, towards any and all activity of God within me.

Now partially this was due to the fact that while, through entrance into and life within the monastic vocation I had, in a true sense, been freed of the evil I had clung to prior to my monastic life, and thus to a real degree the house of my soul was indeed tidied and swept clean, I had not invited Christ to occupy the house of my being.

Because there had been no work done to deal with the ‘why’ of my previous life of sin, there had been no invitation to Christ to fully occupy my being.

This thus enabled those tendril roots to spread and grow, to become eventually the returned evil spirit with his legion of seven worse than him. They occupied the place within me which belongs to Christ but which was empty of Him because I had never invited Him to enter. Even when I sometimes desperately went through the motions I never trusted He actually would enter as the fullness of my being.

The means by which I sustained the new occupants within me was to deliberately silence the voice of my conscience, which in fact means I deliberately chose to ignore, to render myself deaf and oblivious to, the voice of the Holy Spirit.

…..the conscience is ‘the most secret core and sanctuary of a man, where he is alone with God, whose voice echoes in his depths ‘. It ‘can…speak to his heart more specifically: do this, shun that ‘. This capacity to command what is good and to forbid evil, placed in man by the Creator, is the main characteristic of the personal subject. But at the same time, ‘in the depths of his conscience, man detects a law which he does not impose upon himself, but which holds him to obedience ‘. The conscience therefore is not an independent and exclusive capacity to decide what is good and what is evil. Rather there is profoundly imprinted upon it a principle of obedience…..the conscience is the ‘secret sanctuary ‘ in which ‘ God’s voice echoes ‘. The conscience is ‘the voice of God ‘….[ao]

 

The result of remaining an empty house upon my return from the monastery, and the result of my free will choice to remain empty, was of my being seized by an urgent need to seek out that place of the hanging tree and, frankly, the tree itself, to touch it, feel its raw bark against my cheek, to hopefully find there the original lad, the one who though he had held me in bondage, had tortured me and beaten me when I wanted someone else, and from whose grasp I illusory supposedly had escaped, been free of while in the monastery. This need for him seized me urgently still with an intensity as if it had never left me…which it hadn’t in the bitter, deep rooted depths of my being.

It was that lad who had first introduced me to this place, this thing of dark, cruel, death. It was within its shadow that I consciously committed my first mortal sin in the clutch of that same lad.

Though I myself was but a lad at the time, I was old enough to choose.

 I chose death, darkness, evil.

I choose immediate gratification over trust and waiting upon the Lord.

Now I was returning to that thing, to distrust.

I have no patience with those who advance dubious evidence to suggest, actually to propose, as excuse and justification for activities, the origins of, sexual deviance, homosexual or otherwise, as being irrevocably bound up in the genetic roots of persons.

Even if that were so, as language skill is bound up within those same genetic roots, someone has to loosen the skill, teach the child to talk by first speaking to, and with, the child.

Patterns of behaviour are learned, from those who are already practitioners.

The informing and forming practitioner need not necessarily be an adult, they may be a peer, but, if only the truth would be told, when it comes to sexual deviance, sooner or later within the scope of promiscuity of all kinds will be found elements, if not overt practices of, black oracles, occult activity, satanic games, pornography, mind/mood altering drugs, abuse of power, use of violence and, of course, recourse to being habitués of places like the hanging tree.

This was the world, the world of the dark, the lost, deaf, blind, addicted, the habitués of the underbelly of cities, the corridors of political, social, philosophical, ethical, eventually even theological manipulation to achieve an evil agenda, the agenda of the licentious, that I was seeking to enter as surely, if not at the time as clearly aware as I am able to be in retrospect, as I sought out the place of the hanging tree.

Found there the place from which to suspend the last vestiges of dignity and conscience.

I DON’T WANT TO. I know I should, but I don’t want to. I’ll pretend I’m deaf; I’ll curl up and show my bristles. Let him touch me who dares! The arrow of the Call, sharply aimed, ricochets off. My skin is thick and weather-proofed. The Demand slides from it like water from a duck’s feathers. I stand on my rights, bestowed on me from the highest source in virtue of the nature which I have received, which I am, in virtue of the instincts and habits which are implanted in me and which strive for life and development. Let no one contest these rights, not even the highest authority! And even if someone should dare, let him know that I don’t want to do it.

  Soft it approaches, almost inaudible and yet quite unavoidable: a ray of light, an offer of power, a command that is more and less than a command — a wish, a request, an invitation, an enticement: brief as an instant, simple to grasp as the glance of two eyes. It contains a promise: love, delight and a vision extending over an immense and vertiginous distance. Liberation from the unbearable dungeon of ego. The adventure that I always longed for. The perfect feat of daring in which I am sure to win only by losing all. The source of life opening up inexhaustibly to me, who am dying of thirst! The gaze is perfectly tranquil, having nothing of magical power or of hypnotic compulsion: a questioning gaze which allows me my freedom. At the bottom of it the shadows of affliction and of hope alternate.

I lower my eyes; I look to the side. I don’t want to say ‘no’ in the face of those eyes. I give them time to turn away, time to withdraw into their cave of eternity, time to grow dark, to be blurred. I am not at home: ‘The master says he cannot see you at the moment’. I give those eyes time to disappear again behind their heavy lid, the curtain of eternity. For a second, precisely at the moment when I know it is too late, a nameless sorrow makes me tremble: happiness has been forfeited, love mocked, and no one can bring them back to me! The prison door thuds into its lock: again I am prisoner in what is to me so dead and so hated – myself [ap]

 

It is late in the evening of the first day of writing again and I am tired and need pray, need celebrate Holy Mass… need, but not in the negative sense…I need the way you feel when you do not turn away from the eyes of the Divine Lover and you need linger within those infinite streams of love which flow from the Risen One.

It is time to be bathed in light.

This is our hope, is it not, that no matter how often we turn away from those eyes, He is always seeking a moment within which to gaze upon us again, to offer us again the opportunity to look at Him straight in the eye and say: YES!

Ah Jesus, I yearn that You should pass by this way again this evening, gaze that I might linger within the Light of Your Eyes!

How come we remember the Holy Gospels so narrowly that we recall the walking away sad, but not Love’s Gaze? {Mark 10:21}