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August 23rd, 2008 by Fr. Paul Scalia ·Print This Article Print This Article ·

Imagine you were purchasing or building a home for your family. Would you buy from a realtor who could not guarantee the strength and security of the house’s foundation? Or would you build on unstable footing? Of course not.

You would want your family — especially your children — to be secure. You would ensure that the house has a firm footing before you moved in. You would insist on some guarantee from the realtor or the builder that the foundation is solid. Otherwise you would be subjecting yourself and your loved ones to uncertainty and insecurity. You would be unable to dwell secure.

This good, natural instinct that we possess reflects a similar but deeper desire within the heart of God the Father. He desires a stable spiritual home for His children. Throughout Scripture we find this promise again and again — that God’s people will “dwell secure” (cf. Ps 102:28; Prv 1:33; Jer 23:16; 33:16, etc.). And Our Lord’s words to St. Peter fulfill this promise of God the Father: “You are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it” (Mt 16:18).

Notice first that Our Lord Himself establishes the Church. He has not commissioned someone else for this work. He has not sub-contracted or hired outside help. The Church does not come from the will of man, for man is insufficient to the task. In the person of Jesus Christ, God Himself establishes the Church as our secure dwelling. Therefore we can have confidence in the Church — despite the failures of her members and ministers — because the Founder of the Church is divine. He is the Master Builder Whose work does not falter or fail.

Further, Our Lord bears no resemblance to that foolish man who builds his house on sand. He is, rather, that wise man who establishes his house — the Church — on solid rock (cf. Mt 7:24-27). He founded the Church on rock so as to withstand any tribulations or attacks. Theologically, Our Lord’s words indicate the indefectibility of the Church: “built on a rock, she will continue to stand until the end of time” (Vatican Council I). This truth belongs to the deposit of faith. But the witness of history confirms what we already know by faith. History has seen many attempts on the Church’s life and even proclamations of her death. Yet she lives. Although at times she has seemed to have suffered an incurable wound — through the assault of her enemies or the scandalous behavior of her own members — still the Church survives and continues her pilgrimage through history.

We are the beneficiaries of this divine founding and guarantee. We know that when children dwell secure they dwell happily. A secure home provides them an atmosphere in which they can grow in confidence. When children have a sense of security, then — and only then — they can play joyfully, extend themselves in generosity and even take risks. Remove the security, however, and children will no longer play or grow. Rather, they will cower in uncertainty and shy away from challenges.

The children of God are no different. Without spiritual security we possess no joy, no generosity, no courage. So our heavenly Father has given us the Church as our secure spiritual dwelling here on earth. We do not have to worry or be in doubt about the Church — about the faith we profess, the grace we receive or the way of life we aspire to live. God Himself has built our home, has guaranteed the foundation and has promised its survival. As such, we can dwell secure.

But we can do more than dwell secure. From within this solid home we can securely play before our heavenly Father, confidently proclaim His truth, generously give ourselves in His service — and even dare great things for Him.

Fr. Scalia is parochial vicar of St. Rita parish in Alexandria, VA.

(This article courtesy of the Arlington Catholic Herald.)



4 Comments For This Post

  1. noelfitz says:

    I read:
    “We are the beneficiaries of this divine founding and guarantee. We know that when children dwell secure they dwell happily. A secure home provides them an atmosphere in which they can grow in confidence. ”

    This does not happen frequently in the US, due to the prison system harming family life.

    This is disgraceful.Please read the following and comment:

    ********************************************************************************* The United States has less than 5 percent of the world’s population. But it has almost a quarter of the world’s prisoners.

    Indeed, the United States leads the world in producing prisoners, a reflection of a relatively recent and now entirely distinctive American approach to crime and punishment. Americans are locked up for crimes — from writing bad checks to using drugs — that would rarely produce prison sentences in other countries. And in particular they are kept incarcerated far longer than prisoners in other nations.

    Criminologists and legal scholars in other industrialized nations say they are mystified and appalled by the number and length of American prison sentences.

    The United States has, for instance, 2.3 million criminals behind bars, more than any other nation, according to data maintained by the International Center for Prison Studies at King’s College London.

    China, which is four times more populous than the United States, is a distant second, with 1.6 million people in prison.

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/04/23/america/23prison.php

  2. Arkanabar Ilarsadin says:

    I agree that our drug laws are draconian, capricious, cruel, and absurd. But really, is a column about the divine foundation and nature of the Church the place to bring that up?

  3. noelfitz says:

    AI

    very good point.

    I wanted to discuss this issue and as the fora in CE seem moribund I thought sending it here might get a reply.

    I am disapppointed that the interaction between members of the CE roundtables seems to be almost nil. What can we do to get things going again?

  4. wgsullivan says:

    I don’t know if I am in favor of allowing more criminals off the hook so as to reduce the prison population.
    A secure and safe home in my mind would be free of drug users/alcoholics and the like. A secure dwelling fostering growth in confidence would be a safe house not a pot house. Allowing those that choose evil to run freely amongst us breeds fear.
    Looking at prisons in the U.S. is all together different than looking at prisons in China. If our prisons were as harsh as China’s our prison population would be much, much less. Many in China, whether guilty or falsely accused, don’t even make it to prison. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t believe in inhumane treatment but just wanted to point out apples and oranges.
    When we look to the U.S., it used to be a fairly safe place to grow in confidence when it based itself closer to Christ’s teachings. However without building on the “divine foundation and nature of the Church” it has become a less stable house to dwell and grow in confdence in. Hence we produce more prisoners (slaves) to sin.
    As a Catholic I need to better live my faith so as to help build a stronger foundation under my portion of the dwelling.

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