Thursday, October 30, 2014

Theology by the Slice: "The Vocation of Marriage"

Last week we had the pleasure of receiving two of our College chaplains, Martin and Megan Kelly (and, not to mention, their family!).  Appropriately, the couple gave a talk entitled “The Vocation of Marriage,” wherein they discussed how faith is integrated into a couple’s family and married life, as well as some of the sacramental theology behind marriage.

Like all other Sacraments, marriage is a visible sign of God’s invisible grace. Of interest, however, is that in marriage the couple is the minister of the sacrament, not the priest. As such, the couple is the external sign to each other and to the world of Christ’s love. While our culture tends to emphasize marriage as the wedding day itself, it is in fact much more. Marriage is a model of who God is – total self-sacrificing love.

Furthermore, marriage represents the effect of God’s grace, in that the couple is never alone. Our culture emphasizes the ephemeral, and warns us not to commit to anything that could very well change by tomorrow. Marriage, however, is a vocation; it is a path toward holiness, and traversing that path requires commitment and assistance. Thus, in marriage, the couple receives the gift of faith that allows them to remain committed, despite fear of the unknown.


The Kellys then shared some of their personal thoughts about their married and family experiences. Megan recalled that during their marriage preparation class they were advised to “outdo each other with kindness.” Though skeptical at first, she has learned that putting the other first is essential, because in doing so one shows the other who God is through kindness. Marty reflected on how patient Meg was when they first became parents. He admitted to having had a difficult time adapting to life with kids, but could always rely on Megan for support. In her patience, he saw God’s love.

Meg also reflected on the joy of having children. She had once heard that having children is like having your heart walking around outside your body. Upon becoming a mother, she realized this statement’s truth. She feels an overwhelming love for each of her children. Moreover, she feels as they feel; when one is hurting, she suffers as well, and if one is happy she is happy too. And, despite her overwhelming love, she knows that God’s love is even greater than that (as hard as it is to imagine).

Finally, Marty concluded with how parenting has been a learning experience, in that he has grown in knowledge about God. One of their children was born with club feet, and until he was four he needed casts, special shoes and a bar. Then, when one day he could walk unassisted, he got to see his son run in a race at school. On seeing him run, Marty was overwhelmed with joy and gratitude, because he realized that I had been god’s grace carrying him through his son’s affliction. And the love a parent feels in the married life is but a glimpse of the fullness of the divine love.

We thank the Kellys for their sincere and edifying presentation.


Monday, October 13, 2014

Theology by the Slice: "Confessions of a Confessor"

Last Monday we made our annual trip to Boston College, where our own Fr. John Gavin, S.J. gave a talk on the Sacrament of Confession. Fr. Gavin was invited by our sister group at BC, the St. Thomas More Society, to give a presentation, and a group of about fifteen members of the Society of Saints Peter and Paul accompanied him. Fr. Gavin’s talk to the two groups was entitled “Confessions of a Confessor;” Father spoke about the priestly formation that goes into becoming a Confessor, some stories from his first year as a priest and confessor, and about what we the faithful can do to make our priests better confessors.


It should be noted that at no time did Fr. Gavin reveal anything he had heard in Confession, nor reveal the identity of anyone to whom he had administered the Sacrament.   

Fr. Gavin began by saying that, although the efficacy of a Sacrament does not depend on the spiritual state of its minister (ex opere operato), it is nonetheless important for priests to be of high moral quality if they are to be good confessors. Priests should frequently go to confession themselves so that they can be a firm witness in the confessional and have an enriching impact on the penitent’s encounter with Christ. Priests need to be aware of their own weaknesses and their need for God’s mercy. Priests also need a sound theological formation, especially in the Bible, ways of interpreting the scriptures and in moral theology. They should also be up to date on ethical issues and Canon Law.

In the seminary, priests must take an ad audienda exam to become confessors, in which they are presented with scenarios and have to respond as they would in the confessional. Prior to the exam, priests are trained by being given cases they might encounter and practice responding to them. Cases include a person’s first confession, a child’s confession, or someone who had an abortion. They also receive training with regard to the Seal of Confession, where they are presented with situations in which they have to refrain from revealing and block out something they learned in the confessional.


After this, Father went on to tell some stories form his first year as a priest. He was ordained on June 15, 2002, and within a week he went off to Italy (where he would remain for nine years) to continue in his studies. It was there he heard his first confessions, at the Duomo in Florence. He admits to having been thoroughly terrified. As he was waiting for someone to come in, he was praying to Jesus to give him the right words, all the while wondering how he was going to bring the gospel to his penitents. After he heard his first few confessions, however, he found that his terror was subsiding and being replaced with joy. He loved seeing the humility and sincerity of the penitents and the outpouring of God’s grace.

He also recalled hearing confessions at the Gesù in Rome, the mother church of the Society of Jesus. The Jesuits are famous as confessors, and the church was always packed with people eager to go to Confession. The confessionals in the Gesù are marked with plates detailing which languages the Confessor speaks, and the priests there hear confessions from people all over the world and from all vocations. Fr. Gavin heard confessions there two hours a week for eight years. He loved hearing confessions, and would pray for the people he heard and always pondered how he could do better.

Father also told us about a shrine he heard confessions at in Lecco, a town in northern Italy. The shrine is famed as a place to go to confession. Once, during Holy Week, Father was one of eight priests at the shrine who heard confessions for nine hours a day, every day. After hearing confessions one day, one of the priests invited father to go see a monastery nearby. Although he was exhausted, Father went to go see it. When they arrived, they found a Franciscan outside the monastery door. The Franciscan was delighted to see them, and told them that they were having a confession service, and he invited them to help out. And they did.


Father also recalls how on one Good Friday he and other priests heard confessions for nine or ten hours straight. After all was done, father heard the church go quiet, and the lock slide on the church door. He left the confessional and saw all the other priests emerging too, stumbling from sitting so long. And this is exactly as it should be, for by hearing confessions priests nourish their own spiritual lives.

And this led nicely into the last part of the talk: how to make our priests better confessors. The answer is, simply, go to confession. The confessional is where priests mature. Like in marriage, where by entering into a union one grow outside himself to care for his spouse and child, so a priest grows by going outside of himself and seeing God’s grace being given to those who are in need of it.


We sincerely thank Fr. Gavin for his fantastic talk, and the St. Thomas More Society for hosting us. It was wonderful to hear it among our friends in our sister group. 



Friday, October 3, 2014

Theology by the Slice: "The Importance of Conversion in the Thought of Pope Benedict XVI"

Last Wednesday we had the pleasure of hearing a talk by Dr. William Schmitt on Pope Benedict XVI. Dr. Schmitt earned his Doctorate of Sacred Theology from the Pontifical John Paul II Institute. He taught at the Casa Balthasar, a house in Rome for men discerning vocations and was the managing editor of the journal Communio: International Catholic Review from 1996 to 1998. He is now the headmaster of Trivium School in Lancaster, Massachusetts. Dr. Schmitt studied under Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger’s patronage, and came to know him during his visits to the Casa Balthasar. Thus, his presentation to us was on the importance of conversion in the thought of Benedict XVI.


Dr. Schmitt began by outlining a definition of conversion. We tend to think of it more in the terms of switching from one religion to another, and not the same as growing in or losing one’s faith. Conversion can happen in a single moment (as it did for St. Paul) or it can take a lifetime (as it did for St. Augustine). However it happens, conversion gives new light to the convert’s life.

Because of his papal office, Pope Benedict XVI tended to be viewed more as an apologist for the faith than as a theologian. The pope, however, had been a university professor for much of his life. Thus, he ought to be seen in light of both his ministry and his scholarship. He is a man who ponders what he believes and sees theology as a vocation. The pope is especially interested in how the classical world and the people of the Old Testament came to interact with the Gospel their understanding of conversion. He is also sees the modern person as one transformed in conversion, and sees conversion as a door to a more profound understanding of the human person.

Conversion is a central theme to Benedict XVI, and one he often returned to. He thinks it the principle of the New Evangelization, and that the Second Vatican Council (at which he was an expert consultant) called on the whole Church to convert.


 Dr. Schmitt greatly admires Pope Benedict, not just as a great theologian but as a man who plays the piano and works hard, and as one free of any personal ambition. He once told Dr. Schmitt that he would have preferred to be a parish priest than a bishop. In his humility, the pope displayed his deep, internal disposition to God’s grace.

The Greek word that often appears in the New Testament for “convert” is metanoein (μετανοεῖν), one translation of which is “repent.” The word comes to mean not just a turning from one’s past life of sin toward God, but also a turning of one’s whole conduct. This Christian understanding, however, borrows heavily from classical, pagan notions of conversion. There were two Greek words for conversion: metanoia (μετάνοια), which means “change of heart,” and epistrophe (ἐπιστροφή), a Platonic term meaning “a turn to the form of the Good.”

Think of the allegory of the cave from Plato’s Republic: the philosopher turns the people imprisoned in the cave away from the false shadows and toward the light of the Good. He helps them begin the ascent to the truth.  This turn to goodness is the essence of conversion to Plato. For Pope Benedict, epistrohpe is a turning to our innermost depths and finding the divine in ourselves. That is, it is the discovery of the soul. This ancient idea comes to have an enormous influence on Christianity. 

In the modern world, however, we tend to think of repentance as something others need to do, not ourselves. We are scared of insulting others, and it seems as if the idea of repentance has become obsolete. We experience a dichotomy between the urgings of our innermost senses and the immediacy of our sense perceptions. Thus, we can fall into two extremes of either overemphasizing strict moralism or denying the existence of sin. In modernity, we tend toward the latter extreme. For example, Friedrich Nietzsche, the nineteenth century German philosopher and atheist) hated the idea of conversion and thought it foreign to Christianity. He finds the Gospel is lacking in calls to repentance and instead thinks it only proclaims tidings of joy. Dr. Schmitt commented that Nietzsche would have been horrified to see the “new men” who have tried to reconcile his “gospel” with the real one.

Conversion involves the entire person, both heart and mind, and is like a vow to follow the will of God. It happens when our lives are weighed and found wanting. For Pope Benedict, conversion is intimately tied to relationships. Aristotle thought that relations were accidental, random interactions with people nearby and not necessary to being human. For Pope Benedict, however, to be human is to have relationships. We see this in the person of Christ: the Son is the Son because of His relation to the Father, and vice versa; it is not an accidental relationship, but ineluctable to His person. Sin, as Origen of Alexandria noted, is divisive. This is the opposite of modernity’s disdain for relationships. Heaven is nothing but communion, with God and with our fellow humans.


 St. Augustine described conversions as homo incurvatus in se ipsum, “man turned in to his very self.” What we find in that very self is God, the Thou who reveals Himself and redeems us. From that proceeds the need to love the others who share in our divinely-oriented humanity. Conversion is also paradox in that it is a very real experience but also a continuous one. Due to this tension between its singularity and continuity, conversion has an element of uncertainty and mystery. Thus, we work out our salvation in fear and trembling, always trusting in God’s mercy. This constant turning, however, is central to Christianity.

Dr. Schmitt proposed a comment on this theology of conversion, in that Cardinal Ratzinger never seemed to get into the source of conversion. Conversion is in the call made by Christ, the living God, and in man’s response to that call. Dr. Schmitt felt that Cardinal Ratzinger did not emphasize this call (though he added that the answer may very well be swimming about in Cardinal Ratzinger’s vast sea of scholarship).

This turning is central to the economy of salvation. We might ask why Christ was baptized in the Jordan if he was without sin. Pope Benedict that Christ’s baptism was a foreshadowing of the cross where he was baptized. Christ offers up our sins to the Father; he turns and addresses Him. In this turn is the death and resurrection of Christ, wherein the entire world was reoriented toward God. This turn is in all the Sacraments, and is the foundational Christian act.

Dr. Schmitt concluded that, for Pope Benedict, conversion is a transformation of the entire person, but it must be done every day. Each day we need to reorient ourselves toward God, and find the strength to say no to ourselves.

As a final thought, he said that Pope Benedict XVI had an attitude of service animated by his humility, a humility which comes about only by constant conversion.


We thank Dr. Schmitt for all the time and effort he put into his presentation. We were honored to hear such an erudite talk from such a distinguished scholar and teacher.