December 23, 2021
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
Friends: In past years
I have sent out a Christmas message to all readers of this site, usually a day
or two prior to Christmas Day. This year, as we near the end of 2021—in many
ways a uniquely destructive and painfully difficult year for defenders of and
believers in the traditional Faith and our inherited our Western civilization—once
again I offer my sincere good wishes and my prayers for you and yours, and my
call to renewed Hope and Faith. For Faith and Hope are based on promises
that go far beyond the dashed optimism and swirling, fetid demonic Incubus that
seeks to overwhelm and engulf us.
*****
Christmas Reminds Us Who We Are
And
Our Obligations as Christians
St. John of Capistrano “The Crusader Saint”
It
seems that every day brings news of an additional collapse of our inherited institutions
and culture—our politics give off the stench of gross amorality, our schools
and universities have become the playground for evil indoctrination, our
so-called entertainment drowns us in filth of the worst kind. Angry divorce, widespread
abortion, “gender fluidity,” and every perversion imaginable wrack our society
and infect our souls and the souls of our children. Our supposed guardians are
rather become as minions of what can only be described as the rising globalist
Antichrist which seeks to reverse two-thousand years of Christianity and the
culture that it produced.
Yet,
we recall the promises of Our Lord and the eternal Hope that He inspires within
us. And that Hope which buttresses and supports our Faith will never leave us,
if we cling to it manfully.
Thus,
despite the woes around us, in our expectation of the Feast of the Nativity of
Our Lord, our hearts and minds are filled with anticipation and scarcely
concealed joy as we await the memorialization and recreation of that ineffable
Event—unimaginable in human terms—that forever changed human history.
The
sin of Adam—Original Sin—affected all mankind and left descendants marked,
indelibly stained by that original fault.
Adam’s sin was a form of disobedience, but a disobedience so grave and
monumental against God’s Creation, that only the Coming of the Messiah, the
Second Person of the Trinity of the Godhead, could repair it. And the Son of
God would be Incarnate in a woman who would be pure and herself immaculate,
untouched by the inheritance of sinfulness (by the merits of her Son). Only
such a pure womb would be fitting for the Incarnate God. And only the
Incarnation into one of His creatures would serve the purpose of demonstrating
that Our Blessed Saviour would come to us, not
only as God, but also in the form of Man—this was fitting because it was to Mankind that He was sent.
For
hundreds of years the People of Israel had awaited the coming of a Messiah to
lead them, to liberate them and, if you will, to repair Adam’s Fall. But this
vision—whether expressed in the revolts of the Maccabees or in later violent
episodes like the revolt of Simon bar Kokhba against the Romans (132
A.D.)—implied not just satisfaction for sinful ways, but increasingly the
establishment of an earthly and insular kingdom for and of the Hebrews.
And
although Our Lord and Saviour indeed came first
to the Jews, and offered them His reparative Grace and Salvation, it was by no
means to be limited to them. Indeed, His message was universal (as it had been
to Abraham). And those Hebrews who accepted the Messiah—and those gentiles who
also joined them—became the Church, the “New” Israel, receptor of God’s Grace
and holder of His Promises and carrier of His Light unto all the world.
While
a majority of old Israel rejected Our Lord, demanding His Crucifixion before
Pilate, those who followed Him and believed in Him entered the New Covenant, a
New Testament. It is in this sense that the Christian church inherited the
promises of Israel and the Old Testament, and fulfilled those prophesies. And
that fulfillment continues.
St.
Paul in his Epistle to Titus [2:11-15] summarizes both the dazzling and
miraculous wonder of Our Saviour’s Grace amongst us and its inexhaustible power
to transform us, as we await His final Coming in Glory: “The grace of God our
Saviour hath appeared to all men, instructing us, that, denying ungodliness and
worldly desires, we should live soberly and justly and godly in this world,
looking for the blessed hope and coming of the glory of the great God and our
Saviour Jesus Christ: Who gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all
iniquity, and might cleanse to Himself a people acceptable, a pursuer of good
works. These things speak and exhort: in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
We—the
Christian church, those chosen out of Grace who accept God’s gifts—are in a
journey to that final day when Our Lord will return. We have been given for
that journey the armament of Our Lord’s graces in the Sacraments, and through
His love, our Faith and a Hope that whenever we are tempted to despair, pulls
us back and redirects our vision.
Years
ago when I was doing my doctoral work in Pamplona (Navarra), Spain, I had
several dear friends. One of them, by name Teofilo Andueza, although he and
wife lived in the city, kept his family’s ancestral home and farm up in the
Pyrenees Mountains. On numerous Saturdays we would travel out there; the women
would busy themselves in the kitchen to prepare roasted lamb chops, pork
shoulder, “patatas fritas,” various “ensaladas mixtas,” all sorts of desserts
(flan and pastries), and, of course, there would be plenty of Rioja wine and
cognac. After eating—which usually continued off and on for most of the day—we men
would sit and smoke some “puros” (Cuban cigars—well, I didn’t worry about THAT
aspect of Cuban Communism back then!).
I
remember on one occasion Teofilo took me up to the crest of a nearby mountain;
below we could see the city of Pamplona, as he related how in 1875 the city was
occupied by “liberals” who supported the central and centralizing government in
Madrid, but that elsewhere in all of Navarra, in every rural village and small
hamlet, the people had risen up as one under the military banner of “God –
Country – States’ Rights – and the Rightful King” (against the liberal king
then installed in Madrid, the nation’s capital). In July 1936 Teofilo, his
father, and his elderly grandfather (who as a young teen had joined the earlier
Traditionalist rising sixty years earlier) all volunteered to fight under that
same banner, the standard of the Traditionalist Carlist Communion against the
secularist and socialist Spanish Republic (which is so loved by the
establishment far Left and Neoconservatives these days).
Like
his grandfather in 1875, Teofilo was barely 16 when he enlisted in 1936. And
while his grandfather was too old to see active, front line combat in the
Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939 (serving in medical rear-guard duty), Teofilo
saw combat in some of the fiercest battles against the Red Republic and marched
in the Victory parade in Madrid in 1939.
But
like my other Carlist Traditionalist friends—who were termed “Intransigentes” by more moderate (and
compromising) partisans on the Right—Teofilo believed that Francisco Franco had
not carried through with the actual re-establishment of a Christian kingdom as
promised—too many foreign influences, too many compromises, and, lastly,
opening the door in 1953 to all the worst aspects of American commercialism and
cultural decay. The national reawakening promised in 1939 had not taken place,
its fruits dispersed, and in exchange, Spanish society had increasingly
accepted the worst features of American mass culture and secularist thinking.
At the
top of that mountain crest, as we looked down at Pamplona, Teofilo became
emotional. “My grandfather fought against that liberal contagion 100 years
ago,” he exclaimed. “And in 1936 three generations of my family dropped
everything and went to war against the communists and socialists, to a crusade
for Christ the King—that He might reign in society.” And then, he turned to me,
took me firmly by the shoulder, and said: “And now, if it were just you and me—and we were on God’s side—once again we
would be victorious, for even if we are only two, nothing is impossible to men
if they fight on God’s side!”
I have
remembered that incident constantly over the years, especially when things
appear dark or despairing. For not only
did Grace and Salvation and the Healing for sin come into the world in a humble
Cradle in Bethlehem a little over 2,000 years ago, but Hope came also. And it
buoys us up, gives us balance and equilibrium, and acts as “Faith’s Sentry” to
protect our Faith from harm and the threat of despair and apostasy.
In the
year 312 A.D., facing an immense military challenge, the Roman Emperor
Constantine prayed to the Christian God, asking what he should do. As related
in Eusebius’ Ecclesiastical History,
he had grave doubts about the traditional Roman
gods. He prayed earnestly that the Christian God would “reveal to him who he
is, and stretch forth his right hand to help him.” His prayer changed the
course of human history. The answer came in a vision of a Cross emblazoned across the noonday
sky, and upon it the inscription read: “In
hoc signo vinces”—By this sign you
shall be victorious. The emperor then ordered that his soldiers have the
Christian cross inscribed on their shields.
Victorious
at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, Constantine then issued orders that the Christian
church was to be fully free in its mission and the exercise of its functions.
Although he did not make Christianity the official religion of the empire,
Constantine bestowed favors on it, built places of worship for Christians, and
presided over the first general church council. He became the first emperor to
embrace Christianity and was baptized on his death bed. In less than 300 years the faith
of Christ born in humble surroundings in remote Judaea and persecuted
mercilessly and ruthlessly, nourished by the blood or martyrs, now emerged from
the catacombs, triumphant, a light unto the pagans, to continue its salvific
mission.
Is this not the
power of Faith supported by Hope? That even if we be in the catacombs, even if
we see our civilization and culture coming apart at the seams, even if we see
the Church subverted and false prophets in positions of immense authority
preaching false doctrines—even in these circumstances, if we hold “fortes in
Fide,” firm and militant in the faith, bolstered by the Virtue of Hope, Faith’s
Sentry, Christ the King will be victorious.
So, then, as we
approach the Holy Day of indescribable joy, we know with assurance that the
ineffable Gift from God of salvation and forgiveness is ours, and that no one
can take our Faith from us, buoyed, as it is, by the unbreakable assurance of
Hope—which came to us that Christmas so long ago.
“Even if it were
just you and me—and we were on God’s side—once
again we would be victorious, for even if we are only
two, nothing is impossible to men if they fight on God’s side!”
Saving Grace
entered the world two millennia ago, and with it the Hope we possess. And there are broad smiles on our faces and
joy in our hearts.
Merry and Blessed
Christmas!
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