"THAT
RELIGION will become passé in the next 30 years. Lalong lalabas na ang mga abuses nila."
So
what else is new in this recentmost of the spastic ululations of President Duterte
against the Catholic Church? Why, it comes even tamer compared to his previous
excretory ejaculations at the Church, and has none of the arrogance of his
campaign vow: “I will destroy the Catholic Church!”
Passé
in 30 years. A destroyed Catholic Church. Fortunately for us the faithful,
neither God – at least ours in the Church – nor history takes Duterte’s side of
his irreligious divide. As propounded in our Zona Libre piece dated Sunday, May
29, 2016:
Destroy the Church? What
nut!
DEFENSELESS ROME at the mercy of the rampaging barbarian horde, the seat
of Christendom ready for the sacking, for scorching, for reduction to rubble.
The populace cowering in terror, their armies having long abandoned them
to the slaughter. Who stands against the impending mayhem and murder? None but
the Santo Papa, in his full papal
regalia meeting the Barbaro at the
very gates of the Holy City. Whereupon heaven opens, San Miguel Arcangel with flaming
sword descending, scaring the wits out of the invaders. And Iglesia Catolica Apostolica Romana was
saved.
The earliest tale of the invincibility of the Catholic Church I heard
from my maternal grandmother, Rita Pineda Canlas vda. de Zapata, as part of my
catechetical studies at age 4.
It did not matter that my Apu Rita
did not even know the characters in the story, neither did she care of its
veracity. All that counted was that it came from the cura parroco of her youth, the saintly Padre Daniel and served as an affirming moment of her Faith. And
assured that I, her beloved apo, believed
and would live up to that Faith.
I was already in high school, in the seminary, when grandma’s story
found flesh in the encounter of Attila the Hun and Pope Leo I at Mincio –
outside Rome – where the pontiff successfully convinced “the scourge of God” to
withdraw from all of Italy. No Archangel Michael appearing in the clouds there,
but “divine intervention” still cited – at least by my History professor Ciso
Tantingco – in the famine and disasters visited upon the Hun tribes that gave
Attila the scare to call off his invasion and plunder of Rome.
In those formative years, Attila’s story made one manifestation of
gospel truth on the impregnability of the Church, as in Matthew 16:18: “And I say also unto thee, That thou art
Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall
not prevail against it.”
Thus, the Church not only surviving but triumphing over every
persecution, its persecutors cast to damnation: from its earliest days in the
pagan Rome of Nero onto Diocletian and Galerius, to the Visigoths of Alaric,
from the reign of empires and authoritarianism, to the spectre of
communism.
Stalin
“The Pope! How many divisions has he got?” Famously, and haughtily,
asked Stalin dismissing the relevance of the Vatican in the post-WWII
restructuring of Europe.
Less famously but as disdainfully, he told Churchill: “God is on your
side? Is He a Conservative? The Devil's on my side, he's a good Communist.”
But, apparently, not good enough when it comes to sustainability:
Stalin’s pride -- the monolith that was the USSR – totally disintegrating on
its 74th year. Though outliving the Soviet supremo by 38 years.
Afflicted with the worst case of odium
fidei – hatred of the Faith – was Hitler who subjected Catholics – second
only to the Jews – to his persecutory perversity. The Church having stood up
and spoke against the Fuehrer even at the very beginning of his ascendancy.
History still holds that Hitler ended a suicide in a bunker under the
rubble of Berlin; his thousand-year Reich lasting but a decade.
Truly, G.K. Chesterton with his usual paradox: “Faith is always at a disadvantage; it is a perpetually defeated thing
which survives all its conquerors.”
Indeed, as that anecdote -- currently trending in the web – of Napoleon
boasting to a Cardinal how, if he, Bonaparte, so desired, could destroy the
Catholic Church in an instant. And the Cardinal responding with a laugh: “We
the clergy, with our sins and stupidity have been trying to destroy the Church
for 1,800 years. What makes you think you can do better?”
That the Church has not imploded with all the vicious battering from
within, incessant through the ages – from the heresies to the schisms, the
forgeries, the decadence of the medieval papacy finding its zenith in the
depravity of Alexander VI, the excesses of the Inquisition, the impact of the
Reformation, all the way down to the cases of priestly paedophilia – can only
bespeak of, aye, witness to, its divine foundation.
The Rock
Taking on Matthew 16:18, St. Augustine wrote in Interpreting John’s Gospel:
“Peter, because he was the first apostle, represented the person of the
church by synecdoche…(W)hen he was told ‘I will give you the keys of heaven’s
kingdom…’ he was standing for the entire church, which does not collapse though
it is beaten, in this world, by every kind of trial, as if by rain, flood and
tempest. It is founded on a Stone [Petra], from which Peter took his name
Stone-Founded [Peter] – for the Stone did not take its name
from the Stone-Founded but the Stone-Founded from the Stone…because the Stone
was Christ.”
How providential for this to be written on Corpus Christi Sunday,
imbuing a deeply personal meaning to that truth long revealed and ever
revealing: The Church is the Body of Christ. We are the Church. We are the Body
of Christ.
Then, who can be against us? Indeed, not even the devil can destroy us?
Lest I lapse into some Catholic conceit, and dare all self-proclaimed
wanna-be-destroyers of the Church to “Bring it On,” let me just leave it to
Luke 1:52: “He hath put down the mighty
from their seat, he hath exalted the humble.”
The arrogance of power. Hubris, it is called in Greek tragedy. Finding
its full meaning in Proverbs 16:18: “Pride
goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.”
So shall it come to pass. Have faith.
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