Iva Joyce's
My Catholic Faith
LENT
STANDING AGAINST THE DECEITS OF THE DEVIL
Embracing Spiritual Combat
Lent  Standing Against The Deceits Of The Devil  Embracing Spiritual Combat
     Let it be with alacrity that we enter this holy Lenten season, happy that we
   have been chosen to fight the combat of the Faith. For Lent is not just a time to
   make a     little sacrifice here and there. It is a time to embrace with generosity the           
   spiritual combat, to strive for our sanctification, to ask for fidelity to divine grace,
   to put "on the armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the deceits of the
   devil�that you may be able to resist in the evil day, and to stand in all
   things perfect" (Eph 6:11, 13).
  
        We all long for Rome to come to its senses and for the crisis to come to an end,
   for Tradition to regain its recognition as the expression of the true Catholic Faith and
   life. But we seldom make the connection with our Lent, and our spiritual lives.
   Saint Paul, to the contrary, shows how courage in this combat for the Church is
   intimately linked up with the convictions of our Faith and the fervor of our
   spiritual life. This is the combat: "For our wrestling is not against flesh and blood;
   but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of this world of darkness,
   against the spirits of wickedness in the high places" (Eph 6:12). He spoke of
   pagans outside the Church, but alas, the words could just as easily be applied to the
   neo-paganism of religious indifferentism that has become a way of life since
   Vatican II. For the freemasonic ideal of the universal brotherhood of all peoples
   and religions is not fundamentally different from the Roman empire's absorption
   of all the gods of the peoples that it conquered. Placing all religions and cultures
   on an equal level in the formation of this brotherhood, it effectively denies the
   divinity of Christ and the divine institution of the One True Church.
             
       Yet this is precisely how Pope John Paul II began his message to begin this new
   year and millennium. He called for people to be "inspired by the ideal of a truly
   universal brotherhood�proclaimed in the great �charters' of human
   rights�embodied in�the United Nations" and calling for "the process of
   globalization" (�1). Such pacificism as a formula of peace is at the direct antipodes
   of the Lenten and Catholic spirit. The promotion of "a greater sense of human
   brotherhood and a more fraternal life together" (Ib.) as an answer to human
   conflict is pure naturalism, that we might become "men and women capable of
   solidarity, peace and love of life, with respect for everyone" (Ib. �22). It is the
   radical failure to see the origin of all human conflict: original sin and its four
   wounds of ignorance, malice, weakness and concupiscence. We know, to the
   contrary, that true peace is only possible for one who is willing to courageously
   enter into the battle, to fight against these wounds and his dominant fault, and thus
   attain to the tranquillity of order in his own soul. Lent is the test of our courage in
   the combat.

        Saint Paul continues, explaining the importance of conviction: "Stand therefore,
   having your loins girt about with truth�in all things taking the shield of faith,
   wherewith you may be able to extinguish all the fiery darts of the most wicked
   one" (Eph 6:14, 16). It is a well known fact, verified repeatedly in the history of
   the Church, that a Catholic cannot defend the Faith without fighting against the
   poisoned arrows of heresy, without standing up against falsehood. The modern
   tendency to Irenism (a Greek word meaning "peace at all costs") was clearly
   condemned by Pope Pius XII in his encyclical against the modern errors Humani
   Generis. Yet it is essential to the masonic notion of universal brotherhood that
   Pope John Paul II seems to have embraced.
  
        Saint Paul likewise demonstrates the crucial role that fervent prayer, that a true
   interior life, has to play in our attitude towards the world: "By all prayer and
   supplication praying at all times in the spirit; and in the same watching with all
   instance and supplication for all the saints" (Eph 6:18). Here then is the true
   scriptural Lenten formula: courage, conviction and prayer. St. Paul would not want
   us to think how alike we are to the rest of the world by some kind of naturalistic
   universal brotherhood, but in fact how different we must be from the rest of the
   world. As he points out from his prison cell in Rome, this is in fact what the
   mystery of our Redemption is all about. We are set aside, called in a profoundly
   supernatural way: "Who hath predestinated us unto the adoption of children
   through Jesus Christ unto himself; according to the purpose of his will: Unto the
   praise of the glory of his grace, in which he hath graced us in his beloved Son"
   (Eph 1:5, 6).

        The martyrs of the early centuries understood the importance of courage,
   conviction and prayer, so much so that they did not hesitate to give their lives
   rather than offer incense to the idols, and enter into the universal brotherhood of
   the pagan religion of the empire. Courage started to wain after peace was granted
   to the Church, when respectability replaced persecution and human respect
   replaced fortitude. It was the era of compromise of the Trinitarian and
   Christological heresies, starting with Arianism. Such was also the case with the
   Renaissance, with the resurgence of neopagan culture being the means for the
   brotherhood with the world. The combat of the Counter Reformation was the
   Catholic response, and was accompanied by a true spiritual renewal, with an
   abundance of saints and religious communities. The same could have happened
   with Modernism, at the beginning of the 20th century, except that the counter anti-
   modernist resistance was short lived, and, after the death of Saint Pius X, half-
   hearted. Combat and courage were not the order of the 20th century for the simple
   reason that there was not the sanctity, the spiritual heroism of the preceding
   centuries.

        Hence the paradox of a Pope leading into the 21st century, into the third
   millennium, with the most-unholy program of a universal brotherhood: a crisis of
   greater magnitude than Arianism, than the Renaissance, than the Reformation, for
   the freemasons have succeeded in their plan of infiltrating their ideas into the very
   seat of Peter. Let us not think that there is any other answer than that of courage,
   conviction and prayer, or as prescribed by Our Lady in Fatima: prayer and
   penance, and in particular the so-Catholic prayer of the Rosary. Let us offer our
   daily Rosary to sanctify ourselves, that each of us might have heroic courage and
   conviction, and we can be confident about the victory of Tradition. We do not
   know when or how, and we cannot expect that recent overtures by Rome will
   actually bring this about.

        However, you can be absolutely certain that the Society of Saint Pius X will not
   compromise, nor deviate from the path laid out by our holy founder. If we
   acknowledge John Paul II as the Pope, pray for his intentions and profess unity
   with him, it is only inasmuch as he is the successor of Peter, inasmuch as he
   teaches the doctrines of the Church, inasmuch as he bears magisterial authority,
   inasmuch as he upholds Tradition. This is the unity of the Church, of which he is
   the figure, but which he represents so poorly, for he often contradicts it in his
   personal behavior and ideas. In this, we are most assuredly not one with him, nor
   inasmuch as he allows the disorder of heresy, indifferentism and naturalism to
   infect the life of the Church, nor inasmuch as he undermines the unity of the Mass,
   sacraments, and supernatural life by embracing the false universal brotherhood of
   man. With this there will be neither agreement nor silence.

        How better to inspire us towards this courage and conviction than to remind
   ourselves of Our Lord's priestly prayer, after the Last Supper, in which he
   explained the basis of true unity: "They are not of the world, as I also am not of the
   world. Sanctify them in truth�And for them do I sanctify myself, that they also
   might be sanctified in truth�that they all may be one, as thou, Father, in me, and I
   in thee�I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one; and the
   world may know that thou hast sent me�" (Jn 17:16-23). Let this Lent be a time
   of prayer, spiritual reading, sacrifice. Remember, no worldly amusements, no
   television, but family prayers, and daily Mass for all those who can.
  
   Yours faithfully in Jesus, Mary and Joseph,
  
   Fr. Peter R. Scott, SSPX
My Catholic Faith  Meditations Lent Deceits of the Devil  Spiritual Combat
Iva Joyce's
My Catholic Faith
Copyright 2007
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