December 20, 2017
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Through the Mists, the Christmas Message Appears and Brightens Our Lives
Friends,
My
initial inclination today was to offer comments on one of several important
topics that currently dominate the news cycle.
Of
course, front and center is the new and very important tax reform bill which is
emerging from Congress. On the whole, from what I read, it appears a generally beneficial
measure that should enable most Americans, especially those in the so-called
“middle class” to keep more of their hard-earned earnings. Standard deductions
have been doubled for both individuals and couples (and with families); and
rates have been substantially reduced for business, which should be a major
inducement for significant growth in business start-ups and commerce. Look for
major investment to return to American shores. And the Obamacare mandate is
eliminated, which may eventually gut that government boondoggle.
And,
then, there is the continuing drip-drip-drip coming from the shipwreck of the
“Russians Did It!” investigation. That investigation by Robert Mueller’s Office
of Special Counsel is becoming both a constitutional crisis of immense
proportions as it also continues to be a glaringly visible attempt to overthrow
our elected president and undo the results of the 2016 presidential election.
The testimony yesterday of Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe behind closed
congressional doors, and no doubt his history of compromise with the Clinton
campaign and probable collaboration with top FBI operatives Peter Strzok and
Lisa Page, would have been—most certainly should have been—the major topic of
questioning. There is an excellent analysis by former Reagan budget director,
David Stockman, of this ongoing “silent coup.” [http://original.antiwar.com/david_stockman/2017/12/18/russiagate-witch-hunt-deep-states-insurance-policy/]
While
the Deep State continues in all earnestness to relentlessly push this line of
attack against the President and his agenda, its obvious weaknesses and
fraudulence—its increasing and offensive vacuity—scream out in loud voice: scandal.
Another
critical topic that looms right under the veneer of the current discussions
about the tax bill and about Russia and our elections is immigration, most
particularly, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), the infamous
Obama executive action that President Trump is letting expire, pending action
by Congress. Yesterday Senate Majority Leader Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
announced that “negotiations” about DACA would proceed into mid-January, with
Trump administration Chief of Staff General John Kelly leading the negotiating
team for the White House. President
Trump wants real and palpable immigration reform, including a real “beautiful”
border wall and the end to chain migration, while the Democrats and the Left,
and various Republican “open border traitors,” including Senators Jeff Flake
and Lindsay Graham, want a settlement that will permit the DACA children (many
of whom are now in their late 20s or even 30s) to stay in the United States. Immigration
patriots must take action to stop such an action.
In the past, efforts
to gain control of our border and our runaway immigration problems, both
illegal and legal, including so-called “immigration” reform under President
Reagan (the Simpson-Mazzoli Immigration Reform and Control Act of November
1986) and earlier legislative action under President John Kennedy, have
failed…or, rather, proponents of “open borders” have been far more agile and
successful than—have outmaneuvered—defenders of American national sovereignty.
And critical to these efforts have been the globalist and big business, Chamber
of Commerce Republicans—think here of someone like Senator Thom Tillis of North
Carolina, who promised his constituents that he would “defend our borders,” but
now is in the forefront of the kind of usual GOP “compromise” stance with the
Democrats which basically states: “You give me all sorts of soothing rhetoric,
and I cede to you all the major applications in practice”—and all done with a
careful wink-and-a-nod [See numerous reports, including: http://www.wsj.com/articles/gop-senator-lays-groundwork-for-broad-immigration-overhaul-1485270321 as well as http://nclisten.com/our-us-senator-thom-tillis-choses-foreign-workers-over-fellow-unemployed-citizens/ ]
Nevertheless,
as Christmas is just five days away, and since, along with Easter, it is one of
the two most significant days of the calendar year for Christians, and, indeed,
for ALL men worldwide, let’s turn our thoughts to this Holy Feast “In Nativitate Domini Nostri Jesu Christi,” as the ancient Latin liturgy announces to us.
There will be time and opportunities—probably far more than we would desire—to
continue considerations of those other, yes, important topics affecting our
nation. But what happened in Bethlehem a little over 2,000 years ago, and our
memory and commemoration of that oh-so-critical event that forever changed
human history, and its implications and clarion call to us now twenty centuries
distant, demand our attention…and action.
No one,
not even the pagan, nor the ISIS militant, nor the raving village atheist who
believes that with modern “science” he has figured out everything and doesn’t
need a “God”—No one escapes Christmas and the Question it poses to mankind. The
Creator’s Grace through Our Lord is offered to all men, sufficient grace for us
all and an ironclad promise of Salvation, if we choose to accept it. And the Question is: How shall we respond?
We cannot
avoid that offer, even if we attempt to hide from it. Our Lord chases us down, searches
us out, He will not let us go until the very last moment of our lives. He is
the Good Shepherd as He recounts in the Parable of the Lost Sheep [St. Matthew
18: 12-14; St Luke 15:3-7].
I remember
the fascinating case of the great Irish writer and professed atheist, James
Joyce. Early on an apostate from his Catholic upbringing, he had one of his
literary characters proclaim: “I will not serve what I do not believe,” [from A Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man]
and in a letter he wrote: “My mind rejects the whole present social order and
Christianity….” Yet Joyce, like many fallen-away Christians, could not escape
the Faith and its message. For his entire life he wrestled with it and could
not get away from it, for it was and is the Faith and its message that make the
oftentimes insanity and complexity of life intelligible, give it order and
purpose. According to one observer: "Joyce
may have vigorously resisted the oppressive power of [Catholic] tradition. But
there was another Joyce who asserted his allegiance to that Christian tradition,
and never left it, or wanted to leave it, behind him." Indeed, a witness
tells us that he cried "secret tears" upon hearing Jesus' words on
the cross.
In so many ways archetypical modern man is like the wide-eyed
teenager, exercising his newly-encountered maturity, filled with his belief
that unlimited opportunities lie before him, that he has the full confidence
and ability to do almost anything—and that he no longer really needs the
strictures of mother and dad, and their wise counsels.
But he is wrong, for as the great St. Bernard of Clairvaux
stated nearly 1,000 years ago, “We are as infants who stand upon the shoulders
of giants.” And just as we need our parents and their wisdom and direction and
the inherited culture around us, so to make sense of our existence we need that
free gift of immeasurable worth, that Gift of Faith and Promise of Salvation
that came to us in a humble cradle in Bethlehem of Judaea.
As a small boy—I think I was about six at the time—I spent
one Christmas at old Rex Hospital in Raleigh getting my tonsils taken out. I
remember clearly Christmas Eve looking out the window from my fourth floor
hospital room and seeing what I thought surely must be Santa Claus and his
sleigh. I sat up in my bed and literally cried with joy! I had not been
forgotten, and this was surely a sign that Santa was on the way to my house, and
that tomorrow my parents would come and share his bounty with me, right there
in my room.
As the next day came, I woke up early—there were nurses who
came in first to see how I was doing: I recounted to them my marvelous vision.
To which they smiled and agreed that it was indeed “very special” (although I
think they attributed my vision to pain-killer!). Still, when mother and dad
arrived with those special gifts, I knew—I had confirmation—that what I had
seen was truthful. Santa had come and had let me know that even though I was in
a hospital bed away from home, I was not forgotten.
Although I am more inclined these days to agree with those
nurses’ assessment of my story—even if today I cannot explain that very vivid
sight out the window, the greater message of that special Christmas remains
etched in my mind. No matter where we are, no matter if we are away from home,
no matter if we have been separated or declared our separation from Our
Creator, He does not separate Himself from us. He lets us see that “Heavenly Sleigh
of Graces” that is intended for us, and which, miraculously, “came upon a
Midnight clear” in all simplicity and purity.
So, while we take our collective breath and a slight reprieve
from all the “important” and “critical” issues that confront us and our nation,
and all the serious ills that afflict us as a people—there will be time for
those--we also are reminded, vividly, of God’s decision to send His Son, the
Second Person of the Trinity, to live and teach among us, and to offer us His annealing
Grace.
Is this not the ultimate Christmas Gift to and for us? And
does not it—He—beckon us to answer the Question in the affirmative? And in so
doing, not only Faith and Love enter our lives, but also sustaining
Hope...which enables us to meet those other challenges and issues, even if all
appears lost?
And, so, we are expectant as we wait for
that magical and special night, when we like the Angels can repeat that we are
of good cheer, for unto us is born the Savior of the World: “And the
angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great
joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of
David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.” [St. Luke 2:10-11]
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