Letter to Penny Quostal, continued:
At
this point in our disquisition we come to an interesting point. God makes
use of some very shady people. I am thoroughly tired of people complaining
about Renaissance popes and their decadence. In the past century or two, the
popes have been routinely virtuous men, but in times past there have been
popes who came with, well, baggage. And sometimes with an illegitimate child
or five. The Catholic Church has cleaned up its act over the past 500 years
pretty well, despite some recent unpleasantness. The track record of
Pentecostal faith-healer-miracle-workers is at least as dicey as the worst
epochs of Catholic history. I have already mentioned Brother Swaggart.
Don’t forget the amazing Jim and Tammy Faye Baker, Marvin Gorman, Ted
Haggard and the great Benny Hinn whose wife is divorcing him. One only
wonders who will get possession of the Gulf Stream jet that he purchased for
his ministry at the price of $36 million.
Catholics have had their share of venal, sinful, money-grubbing idiots and
so has every other Christian group. The abuse of the manifestations of God’s
Holy Spirit does not detract from their reality. I’ve had worried people
asked me “If the preacher who healed my lumbago has been disgraced, will my
lumbago come back?” We Catholics solved this problem in 313 AD when we dealt
with the Donatist heresy. The Donatists held that sinful clergy, who may
have handed over the sacred books during the Roman persecutions could not
validly administer sacraments. In 311, a new bishop was ordained for
Carthage by a bishop who had weakened during persecution. The Donatists
eventually left the Catholic Church and chose a fellow named Donatus as
their bishop, hence the name. Pope Miltiades said that the moral perfection
of the man is not the point. It is grace that saves and if the bishop or
priest or deacon administers a sacrament doing what the Church says and
intending what the Church intends, sinner though he may be, the Sacrament
is valid. After all, you may think you confirmation was just swell followed
by a great party and a lot of nice presents, but secretly the bishop who
confirmed you was running guns to the Hottentots and losing Archdiocesan
funds at the dog track, so, without knowing it, you wouldn’t really be
confirmed! Or still worse ordained! The Donatists kept long pedigrees of
perfect bishops to prove that they had nothing but saints in their
background. Yeah, right.
Because of this episode, the Catholic Church developed the principal of “Ex
opere operato” or “From the work having been done.” ( It loses a little in
the translation.) It means that if a bad priest says Mass it is still Mass
if he says it the way he’s supposed to. On the other hand a very good
priest can say a very bad Mass. He may be a saint who is clueless, who
writes his own consecration that is politically correct, consecrates
twinkies and Hawaiian punch at children’s liturgies and is the nicest guy in
the world. No matter what a sweetheart he may be and no matter how good he
is with dogs and small children, his Masses are still not valid.
Entertaining maybe, but not valid. A bad priest can say a good Mass, a bad
bishop can ordain good priests, a bad pope can still count on the guidance
of the Holy Spirit, because it’s all grace. Christ is the one who works in
the Sacraments, not the priest or the bishop or the pope, and though God may
work through a bad man, that man will have a harsher judgment, St. James
tells us. (James 3:1) Herein lies part of the answer to the question asked:
Sacraments are external and objective. The manifestations of the Holy Spirit
are not. They are internal and subjective. They are a reaction of our
humanity to the experience of God’s amazing love and grace. They are subject
to our own personal interpretation and sometimes misinterpretation. They are
words from God to the human heart and, to the degree that the heart clings
to corruption, it corrupts the word that God may send prophetically.
Sacraments are completely different. They are outward, objective visible
signs established by Christ to give grace. More on this later.
The
whole strange business points out some very important truths regarding the
“manifestations” of the Holy Spirit. First, they are not necessarily signs
of a person’s sanctity. The Scriptures say that “by their fruits you shall
know them” (Matt 7:16), not by their “gifts.” And what are the fruits of the
Holy Spirit? (Galatians 5:22) “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control
...” The Christian life and the indwelling of the Spirit of God are to be
judged not by whether you fall over, or can heal the sick, but by a life of
genuine love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness, self-control. Manifestations of the Holy Spirit are always
prophetic, that is, they are in a certain sense, words from God and so are
subject to our imperfect understanding. They are the reaction of the human
person to the sensed presence of God. They are always part God and part us.
In 1st
Corinthians 13:9 we read, “For we know in part and we prophesy in part...”
In other words, no prophecy outside of the word of Scripture is 100% and
even our individual interpretation of Biblical prophecy is incorrect, at
least in part. That’s why God gave us a pope in Rome. Part of his job is to
guard the authentic tradition of revealed truth. Without real authority, you
get some really weird stuff. Just think of the many times that “Biblical
prophecy” has pinpointed the return of Lord at tea time of a Thursday, and
then the prophet calls a press conference on Friday, explains how
miscalculated and calls it for the coming Monday. You think people would get
tired of it. “For we know in part and we prophesy in part.” All these
things are part God and part us. And that’s just fine. It makes them no less
real, but I want to arrive at the point of holiness and humility that it is
mostly God and not mostly me! Scripture tells us to “test the spirits to see
if they are from God because many false prophets have gone out into the
world.”(1John 4:1) Sometimes it’s mostly us and very little God. This
goes for Pentecostal faith healers and Catholic mystic wanna-bees who see
the blessed Mother appearing every Tuesday and Thursday in a cabbage patch
on the family farm.
For
all its problems and abuses, the Pentecostal/Charismatic renewal was not a
waste of time. Fr. Branagan of St. Armadillo’s in Amarillo makes a good
point. “The real struggle in the Church is not between the so-called liberal
and conservative. It is between those who believe in supernatural reality
and those who don’t.” At a time when my teachers, most of whom left the
priesthood, didn’t believe a word of this stuff. It was always “Christ
as...” Christ as liberator Christ as healer, Christ as leftist rebel,
Christ as misunderstood rabbi... Christ as, Christ as, Christ as... never
just Christ. They were gnostics who believed in salvation by progressive
theology, not by grace through faith. St Paul told St. Timothy that “people
will be lovers of themselves ....not lovers of the good,..lovers of pleasure
rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power.
Have nothing to do with them.”(1Tim3:2-5) Novenas and rosaries and
Eucharistic adoration were all discouraged to the point of being forbidden
in my seminary days and a young man could be tossed from the seminary for
being too pious. The Pentecostals were my hiding place until the worst of
the storm was past and it was once again allowed to believe in the power of
God to heal and change lives. They were very dark times, but for all the
abuses of the Holy Spirit’s manifestations, we Pentecostals never let the
theologians quite forget that God works in a real and powerful way in the
world. Still, I miss Pentecostalism and long for a return of the real thing.
There is so little of it left these days.
So
what’s the difference between the laying of hands that confers a Sacrament
and praying over people in Pentecostal prayer groups? What are Sacraments
anyway?
That, dear reader, will have to wait until next week.....