Five Gifts for Christmas
By: Dr. Donald DeMarco
If prayer and pen are efficacious, and can be converted into gifts, I
would like to utilize this possibility and be an instrument, this
Christmas, for indulging in such an unusual form of gift giving.
My “gifts” would be of an intellectual nature, “lights,” as it were, in
accordance with the Holy Father’s “Five Mysteries of Light.”
Christmas itself is about light that dispels darkness and illumines the
mind and heart so that the message of Jesus can be more clearly
discerned. My “gifts,” therefore, are intended to illuminate five
areas of darkness that have clouded certain truths of the Catholic
faith. It is hoped, naturally, that my “gifts,” which are merely
re-statements of axiomatic truths, will be well received and not
exchanged for something more trendy. Or to put it another way,
there are a few lights on the Christmas tree that are flickering and
need a little tightening so that they can shine again with their
original unwavering brightness.
1) Religion
cultivates spirituality:
The secular world is in love with spirituality. It is religion
that it objects to. Thus, the prevalent false dichotomy between
spirituality and religion. A certain book is in circulation that
tells the story of God’s plan for global peace. The plan,
entrusted to a monk, is completely sabotaged by members of organized
religion. The problem with unorganized spirituality, however, is
that it soon becomes disorganized spirituality. No one cries, “I
love baseball, but I don’t like organized baseball. Umpires are
spoiling the game.” The purpose of Catholicism as a religion is
to test and clarify spirituality, to ensure that it is directed to God
and in harmony with the needs of one’s neighbor. Religion is to
spirituality what music is to dancing, engineering is to mathematics,
and what a directed life is to an amorphous impulse.
2) Catholicism
teaches truth:
Do Catholic churches need to make available material that promotes
abortion, same-sex marriage, human cloning, and so forth, so that
churchgoers can become acquainted with the “other side”? The
“other side” is represented adequately enough by an almost incessant
bombardment through the Media and other highly visible avenues of
secular culture. Churches have a duty to represent the truth of
Church teachings. They have no need of either sleeping with the
enemy or having the enemy sleep with them. When a math teacher
explains that 2 + 2 = 4, he incurs no responsibility to represent
contradictory viewpoints. Adam and Eve may have been better off
had they not considered the viewpoint of the Serpent.
3)
Catholics are fundamentally humanists:
Secular journalists never tire of complaining that Catholics are
forever trying to “impose” their faith values on the public. But
Catholics do not try to impose Sunday Mass, Ash Wednesday abstinence,
and Holy Days of Obligation—which are faith-based—on
non-Catholics. In fact, they could not “impose” any values on
anyone, even if their life depended on it. Values are
intrinsically non-imposable. Moral issues, such as abortion and
euthanasia, however, are quite different. Catholic morality is
not a matter of faith but reason’s response to the natural law.
It is through the universal faculty of reason that Catholics embrace
all other human beings. We all begin at ground zero. Issues
involving human rights are not narrowly Catholic, but represent a
convergence that unites all human beings. Catholic morality is
simply anthropology put into practice.
4)
The dogma is the drama:
Dogma, which simply refers to teaching, is neither stifling nor a
barrier to creativity. Without dogma the Church would be devoid
of content and as a result, unintelligible. She would have no
story to tell. According to Church dogma, man is able to know
something about God and yet this knowledge is infinitely less than what
God is in Himself. Consequently, there is endless opportunity for
creativity, as man navigates between the finite and the infinite.
Thanks to her navigational instruments, a ship can explore no end of
hitherto unknown regions. But take away these instruments, and
the ship is lost. “I would not have sought Thee, has I not
already found Thee,” wrote Pascal. The dogma, which gives us the
confidence that our voyage has meaning and direction, is the drama.
5)
Christ must come first:
Everyone wants peace. But how many are willing to pay the
price? Peace is not simply an object of choice. It is the
fortuitous consequence of choosing to live life well. If I put
myself first, I inevitably find myself in conflict with all others who
put themselves first. My ego is no more spacious than itself and
can hardly be a peace formula for as small a multitude as two, let
alone all the people in the world. Christ’s way of love and truth
embraces all mankind. Without Him, as John the Evangelist tells
us, we can do nothing. The formula for JOY is Jesus first, others
second, and yourself third. “Thy will be done,” is a simple,
prayerful acknowledgement of the primacy of Christ, who is, par
excellence, the Prince of
Peace.