‘Where there
is no vision the people perish’, says Bishop Charles Drennan of Palmerston
North, in a piece published by Cathnews.co.nz.
+Charles is
quoting Proverbs 29, 18. In the Douay Rheims Bible, translated word for word from
the Vulgate which in turn was translated by that towering genius St Jerome from the original Aramaic, Hebrew and
Greek, and was the only bible used in the Catholic Church for over 1500 years,
this verse is rendered as ‘When prophecy
shall fail, the people shall be scattered abroad’.
Prophecy,
not ‘vision’. What a difference in meaning.
+Charles is quoting
‘vision’ in relation to Donald J Trump in the US, Duterte in the Philippines, and
John Key in NZ. I’m sorry but not surprised to see +Charles subscribe to the popular
view of Donald Trump as “a maverick” and “Facebook on steroids”. His election,
he says, left “almost everyone … disturbed and perplexed.”
Not me. Donald
Trump’s election filled me with joy and thanksgiving. His behaviour might not
have been and still isn’t what it should be (whose is?), but he defeated
Hillary Clinton, whose achievements and ambitions were thoroughly evil.
That aspect
of the US election campaign seemed to escape the Catholic Church in NZ. I was told
by a priest, after I interceded in the POF at a weekday Mass in regard to the
American elections, not to expect him to pray for Trump. Apparently I’d implied
I was interceding on behalf of Donald Trump.
Not so. I
was asking for God’s will to be done. God being Goodness itself could not have
wanted a win for Hillary Clinton, who proudly and totally supported Planned
Parenthood, for goodness’ sake, for devoting 97% of their business to exterminating
unborn children, and profiting by the sale of those children’s body parts, while
taking $500m annually from the American taxpayer - as we ourselves are forced
as taxpayers to fund abortions here in New Zealand.
Trump is
resolutely opposed to abortion. He pledged to appoint a judge to the Supreme
Court who would overturn the infamous Roe v Wade ruling, which opened the
Pandora’s box of legal abortion for the US and then for NZ, and that was his
first executive action as president. We should remember, in regard to Trump and
his past, and his silly utterances in
the present, that every saint made mistakes – think St Peter – which they
bitterly regretted and repented, and were converted.
This is
where ‘prophecy’ comes in. We know that ‘prophecy’ doesn’t mean just
foretelling the future. It also means the
interpretation and expounding by a preacher of Scripture or of divine mysteries
(Shorter Oxford).
+Charles has
the wisdom to see that politics and religion cannot be unmixed, and asks us as
Catholics for a vision for our nation. Well
my personal vision, for every child in the womb to be welcomed and loved, is
blurred by the fact that while in the past NZ’s pro-life organisations were largely
run by Catholics, in my neck of the woods at least Catholics have been replaced
by Protestants, who freely quote Scripture to support their stand and who pray
outside abortion clinics.
The only
reason as far as I can see, for Catholics’ falling support for the right to
life, is lack of leadership in the Church. We need to hear truth prophesied -
the sacred nature of human life from conception till natural death - as proclaimed
by God in Scripture, Tradition and the Magisterium. And if you’re going, “What?”
at mention of the Magisterium, that’s proof in itself that Catholics are no
longer taught the doctrine which for centuries was unchanged and is unchangeable.
And it’s not
just preaching that we need. We need encouragement to pray for the United
States and for Donald Trump, for his repentance, healing and conversion.
We need
to have prayer taught and modelled, most of all in fervent and frequent participation
in the Mass. Protestants are shown by their pastors how to pray and fast, and
they take to it like a duck to water. In the Catholic Church however, fasting
has been whittled away to next to nothing, and most Catholics know next to nothing
about the prayer practised and taught by the saints down through the ages, in a
tradition older even than the Douay-Rheims bible. It’s called mental prayer,
and we all need to learn it.
Because as
internationally renowned psychiatrist Dr Philip Ney stated in NZ recently,
people need to realise there is a discrepancy between what they believe and
what they live. “It’s time for pro-life people who say they are pro-life” (i.e.
Catholics) “to live it and stop giving themselves all sorts of excuses.”
To know oneself
like that and get up and doing, one needs to know Christ and the only way to
Christ is prayer.
Listen to St
John of the Cross, Doctor of the Church: “Those who are great actives, that
think to girdle the world with their outward works and their preachings, take
note here that they would bring far more profit to the Church, and be far more pleasing
to God (apart from the good example they would give) if they spent even half of
this time with God in prayer.”