Paul Scalia - Sermons in Times of Crisis: Twelve Homilies to Stir Your Soul
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TIMES OF CRISIS
TIMES OF CRISIS
Twelve Homilies
to Stir Your Soul
With an Introduction and Commentary by
REV. PAUL D. SCALIA
TAN Books
Charlotte, North Carolina
Copyright 2019 TAN Books
Introduction and Commentary Copyright 2019 Rev. Paul D. Scalia
If not noted below, text of sermon was taken from a public domain source and freely adapted.
Sermons by Ambrose, Chrysostom, and Leo revised and edited by Kevin Knight for www.newadvent.org. Used with permission.
Charles Borromeo: Selected Orations, Homilies and Writings, (Cihak, John R. ed. Santogrossi, Ansgar (tr.), T & T Clark, 2017. Used with permission.
The version of Saint Edmund Challenge to the Privy Council appeared in This Rock magazine, a publication of Catholic Answers, in 1994. Used with permission.
Jacques-Bnigne Bossuet: On Preaching the Gospel, Translation by Christopher Blum. Used with permission.
Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman: The Second Spring, www.newmanreader.org. Used with permission.
Blessed Clemens Cardinal von Galen: Against Euthanasia, Translation by Daniel Utrecht of the Oratory for his biography of the cardinal entitled Lion of Mnster (TAN Books, 2017). Used with permission.
Blessed Jerzy Popieluszkos sermon at the Mass for the Homeland courtesy of a website in his honor maintained by the Polish Institute of National Remembrance. https://popieluszko.ipn.gov.pl/xje/documents/sermons/432,The-Sermon-of-25-September-1983.html
Sermons by Pope St. John Paul II and Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger and all other excerpts from papal homilies, messages, and encyclicals in Father Scalias introduction or comments copyright Libreria Editrice Vaticana. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Unless otherwise noted, or in the texts of the sermons themselves, Scripture quotations are from the Revised Standard Version of the BibleSecond Catholic Edition (Ignatius Edition). Copyright 2006 Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Excerpts from the English translation of the Catechism of the Catholic Church for use in the United States of America 1994, United States Catholic Conference, Inc. Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Used with permission.
Cover design by Caroline K. Green
ISBN: 978-1-5051-0878-1
Published in the United States by
TAN Books
PO Box 410487
Charlotte, NC 28241
www.TANBooks.com
Printed in the United States of America
PRESENTED TO
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IT IS AN honor for us here at TAN Books to present this magnificent collection of Sermons in Times of Crisis to our readers, as it is to have worked with Father Paul Scalia on the project. We also particularly would like to thank those who graciously granted us permission to use the versions of the sermons included within. They include T & T Clark (Borromeo), Catholic Answers (Campions Brag), the Newman Reader www.newmanreader.org (Newman), Libreria Editrice Vaticana (John Paul II and Benedict), and Kevin Knight at www.newadvent.org for his gracious permission to use his versionsslightly modified from a nineteenth-century collection of the writings of the Church Fathersof Ambrose, Chrysostom, and Leo. And, of course, we would like to thank the authors of original translations, Christopher Blum, Father Daniel Utrecht of the Oratory, and Father Ansgar Santogrossi, OSB.
Some of the entries, particularly those of the Church Fathers, Campions Brag, and Newmans, do not make for easy reading as most of these are long and the English may, in some cases, seem unfamiliar to the modern ear. That choice, to leave them largely as we found them, was deliberate, as we feel that much of the rhetorical force of the sermons is captured through reading them in their entirety in the older English. It was an edifying project for us to work on, and we hope the same will hold true for readers. It is also our hope that our beloved priests and bishops will find inspiration and encouragement in the words of these great orators of God, and that they will be fortified, for they, too, must preach sermons in a time of crisis.
THIS PROJECT HAS been in the works for far longer than John Moorehouse at TAN Books would like to consider. I want to thank him for his counsel, suggestions, and especially his patience. For their ideas, suggestions, cautions, edits, and most of all for their priestly counsel, I thank Father Paul Check, Father Carter Griffin, and Father Gary Selin. Finally, I am especially indebted to Christopher Blum of the Augustine Institute for his translation of the Bossuet sermon done specifically for this book.
Rev. Paul D. Scalia
AT ONE POINT in their frequent confrontations with Jesus, the chief priests and scribes sent officers to arrest him in the Temple. Those unfortunate men returned to their superiors empty-handed. When asked why they had not brought in the rabbi from Galilee, they explained in a tone of awe, No man ever spoke like this man! (Jn 7:46). That wonder characterizes the reaction to our Lords preaching from start to finish. At the beginning of his public ministry, after that first sermon on a hillside in Galilee, the crowds were astonished at his teaching (Mt 7:2829). And in his final days, the crowd was again astonished at his teaching (Mt 22:33)nor did anyone dare to ask him any more questions (Mt 22:46).
No man ever spoke like this man. Nor has any man since. Of course, this is a theological truth before all else. This man spoke perfectly because he is also God. The perfection of Jesuss words came not from any special training or method but from himself, the Incarnate Word. As God, he speaks the truth in its fullness. As perfect man, he lacks nothing in his manner of speaking. As the one who alone is fully divine and fully human, Jesus Christ perfectly unites the truth of God and the words of men. His sacred humanity is the instrument of the divinity, expressing divine truths in human words.
Further, he possesses a perfect union with his words. Every speaker must be in union with the truth he conveys to some degree or another. The greater the union, the more convincing his words; the lesser the union, the less convincing. Only in Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh, do we encounter the perfect unity of speaker and message. He is both the Word speaking and the Word spoken; the Truth proclaiming and the Truth proclaimed. No man ever spoke like this man because no man ever possessed such oneness with the truth he conveyed.
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