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Laetare Sunday and mistaken ideas of Paradise

  • FATHER GEORGE RUTLER

Laetare Sunday is a relaxation from what, in our culture, are usually the not-too-rigorous rigors of this penitential season. 


mary4949Thoughts of the Heavenly Jerusalem occasioned the hymn "Jerusalem the Golden."  Ours is a translation by the Victorian classicist, John Mason Neale.  The hymn is the fourth part of a poem by Bernard of Cluny in the twelfth century.  He had dedicated it to the Abbot Peter the Venerable who oversaw the operation of nearly two thousand monasteries nurturing the revival of European civilization.  In his attempt to better understand the twisted zeal of the Saracen Muslims who were massacring Christian pilgrims, Abbot Peter translated into Latin the Koran and various Arabic astronomical texts.

"Jerusalem the golden, with milk and honey blest . . . I know not, O I know not, what joys await us there, What radiancy of glory, what bliss beyond compare."  The imagery, based on the divine Revelation of Saint John, is light years removed from the materialist Paradise envisioned in the Koran, with its rivers of wine to make up for earthly abstinence, and the free use of women.

Mistaken ideas of Paradise are rooted in rejection of the mystery by which Christ conquers death by the victory of the Cross.  The one consistency in such heresies is the typical resentment of the Cross.  A friend of mine who is a priest has bravely gone to Iraq to assist the persecuted Christians there.  Along with pictures of bombed Christian towns and burned churches, is the evidence that "enemies of the cross of Christ" (Philippians 3:18) have destroyed every image of the Cross.  To drive home the point, the graves of Christians have been desecrated, bodies exhumed, and coffins left littering the ground.

In Mosul in 2007, a 35-year-old Chaldean Catholic priest and three sub-deacons refused to renounce Christ and were martyred.  Father Ragheed Ghanni had been secretary to Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho, who promoted many good works for the local people, including an orphanage for handicapped children.  Both had studied in Rome at the University of St. Thomas Aquinas (the Angelicum), where I did my theology with the kind and bright Dominicans.  A year later, the Archbishop, having opposed the imposition of Shariah law, was martyred.

For years, it was politically incorrect in our own country to publicize these sufferings.  The same university students who retreat to psychoanalysis when they hear views contrary to their own, act as though the genocide in the Middle East did not exist.  Christians in the Middle East must feel betrayed to hear comfortable clerics in the West speak glibly of "dialogue" with their persecutors.  Ignorance is not innocence, and naiveté is not knowledge. But Laetare Sunday now is enriched by the heavenly help of modern witnesses who embraced the Cross:

"They stand those halls of Zion, all jubilant with song, And bright with many an angel, and all the martyr throng."

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Acknowledgement

Rutler5smFather George W. Rutler. "Laetare Sunday and mistaken ideas of Paradise." From the Pastor (March 27, 2017).

Reprinted with permission from Father George W. Rutler.

The Author

witwisdomrFather George W. Rutler is the pastor of St. Michael's church in New York City.  He has written many books, including: The Wit and Wisdom of Father George Rutler, The Stories of Hymns, Hints of Heaven: The Parables of Christ and What They Mean for You, Principalities and Powers: Spiritual Combat 1942-1943, Cloud of Witnesses — Dead People I Knew When They Were Alive, Coincidentally: Unserious Reflections on Trivial Connections, A Crisis of Saints: Essays on People and Principles, Brightest and Bestand Adam Danced: The Cross and the Seven Deadly Sins.

Copyright © 2017 Father George W. Rutler