“Cowardice” a Homily for the Memorial
of St. Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr
I was
blessed to give a witness talk and have the Mass yesterday at a local senior
retreat. I then enjoyed lunch with the seniors
and the retreat chaperones. While in
line, someone took the Lord’s name in vain.
I am not sure if it was a chaperone or a student, but I know other
people heard it, and that other people knew I heard it, and other people saw
that I didn’t do anything to correct it.
Today the
Church remembers St. Stanislaus, who was a bishop in Poland martyred by a King
that St. Stanislaus stood up to. The
reading in the Breviary today for St. Stanislaus is from Saint Cyprian, and his
letter ends in this way “The soldier of Christ, trained by Christ’s commands
and instructions, does not begin to panic at the thought of battle, but is
ready for the crown of victory.”
As I was
reading that this morning, I was convicted that St. Stanislaus stood up to a
king, and I didn’t correct a person out of fear. I resolved, this morning in the confessional,
to go back to the retreat and apologize to anyone who heard this person take
the Lord’s name in vain and also saw me not do anything to correct him.
I love the
Catholic Church for so many reasons, and one of the reasons I love the Catholic Church is that the Church
sees EVERY action of ours to have eternal repercussions, NOTHING is
insignificant…and so I sinned in not correcting the person, and I sinned by the
scandal I caused…and so I am going to confess that sin but also make
reparations for my sins and go and apologize, and hopefully, in doing that, the
next time something like this happens, and I will have the courage to correct a
person out of love. Amen.
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