Anti-Catholic
Politician Clings for Dear Life to Altar as Bishop Preaches
Vanity of vanities, all is vanity
STUART WEISS
NOV 04, 2024
Jean-Paul Laurens
- Saint John Chrysostom and Empress Eudoxia; Oil on canvas, 1893, 131
x 164 cm, Musée des Augustins, Toulouse
Have mercy upon
us, O Lord, the God of all, and look upon us,
and cause the fear of thee to fall upon all the
nations…
and let them know thee, as we have known
that there is not God but thee, O Lord.
Show signs anew, and work further wonders;
make thy hand and thy right arm glorious.
-cf. Sirach 36:3-6
One of the most dramatic political events in history
unfolded in a Catholic Church.
A very high-ranking politician in the Eastern Roman Empire
named Eutropius lived in the 300’s at the same time as Saint John Chrysostom,
who was Archbishop of Constantinople. The Church at this time enjoyed a right
that you may have seen in movies: that of sanctuary, or asylum. This allowed
the Church the right in the Empire to give shelter to fugitives who fled there
seeking refuge. Eutropius was no friend of the Church, and he was also
ambitious. In his quest for power, he restricted what we would call today the
“religious freedom” of the Church to provide sanctuary in order to cut off any
route of escape for his political opponents.
Slowly but surely however [Eutropius] climbed to the summit
of power by the simple process of putting out of the way on various pretexts
all dangerous competitors. He deprived his victims of their last hope of escape
by abolishing the right of the Church to afford shelter to fugitives.1
However, after he rose to power by persecuting the Church,
Eutropius eventually fell out of favor when he scorned a promotion for a
deserving military officer. The offended officer retaliated by leading his
troops in a revolt, which ultimately resulted in the fall of Eutropius.
Eutropius was deprived of his official dignity, his property
was declared confiscated, and he was commanded to quit the palace instantly
under pain of death. Whither could the poor wretch fly who was thus in a moment
hurled from the pinnacle of power into the lowest depths of degradation and
destitution. There was but one place to which he could naturally turn in his
distress—the sanctuary of the Church; but by the cruel irony of his fate, a law
of his own devising here barred his entrance.2
Nevertheless, despite the fact that his own persecution of
the Church had removed the sanctuary laws, he trusted in the mercy of
Chrysostom, found his way into the Cathedral, slunk past the sanctuary curtain
and clung to a pillar of the altar. Soldiers entered the church looking for
Eutropius, but Chrysostom came out and actually defended his
enemy Eutropius with his own life.
He concealed Eutropius in the sacristy, confronted his
pursuers, and refused to surrender him. “None shall violate the sanctuary save
over my body: the church is the bride of Christ who has entrusted her honor to
me and I will never betray it.”3
Things only get more dramatic from here. Remember, Eutropius
is what we would consider today a “culturally Catholic” politician who
persecuted the Church, second in power only to the Emperor. The modern
equivalent of this in the United States would be someone like Nancy Pelosi or
Joe Biden. Can you imagine how significant and dramatic it would be to see a
career anti-Catholic politician suddenly cast down from power, only to be
defended by the same Bishop they persecuted? But that is not the end…
The next day was Sunday. The Cathedral was filled, and
Chrysostom took his place to preach the homily. As he took his place, the
curtain concealing the altar was drawn aside, and there clung Eutropius—no
doubt disheveled from sleep deprivation and fear. It is thus that Chrysostom
begins this homily:
Vanity of vanities, all is vanity—it is always
seasonable to utter this but more especially at the present time. Where are now
the brilliant surroundings of your consulship? Where are the gleaming torches?
Where is the dancing, and the noise of dancers' feet, and the banquets and the
festivals? Where are the garlands and the curtains of the theatre? Where is the
applause which greeted you in the city, where the acclamation in the hippodrome
and the flatteries of spectators? They are gone — all gone: a wind has blown
upon the tree shattering down all its leaves, and showing it to us quite bare,
and shaken from its very root; for so great has been the violence of the blast,
that it has given a shock to all these fibres of the tree and threatens to tear
it up from the roots.
Where now are your feigned friends? Where are your drinking
parties, and your suppers? Where is the swarm of parasites, and the wine which
used to be poured forth all day long, and the manifold dainties invented by
your cooks? Where are they who courted your power and did and said everything
to win your favour? They were all mere visions of the night, and dreams which
have vanished with the dawn of day: they were spring flowers, and when the
spring was over they all withered: they were a shadow which has passed away —
they were a smoke which has dispersed, bubbles which have burst, cobwebs which
have been rent in pieces. Therefore we chant continually this spiritual song —Vanity
of vanities, all is vanity.
For this saying ought to be continually written on our
walls, and garments, in the market place, and in the house, on the streets, and
on the doors and entrances, and above all on the conscience of each one, and to
be a perpetual theme for meditation. And inasmuch as deceitful things, and
maskings and pretence seem to many to be realities it behooves each one every
day both at supper and at breakfast, and in social assemblies to say to his
neighbour and to hear his neighbour say in return vanity of vanities,
all is vanity.
Was I not continually telling you that wealth was
a runaway? But you would not heed me. Did I not tell you that it was an
unthankful servant? But you would not be persuaded. Behold actual experience
has now proved that it is not only a runaway, and ungrateful
servant, but also a murderous one, for it is this which has caused you now to
fear and tremble. Did I not say to you when you continually rebuked
me for speaking the truth, I love you better than they do who flatter
you?I who reprove you care more for you than they who pay you court? Did
I not add to these words by saying that the wounds of friends were more to be
relied upon than the voluntary kisses of enemies. If
you had submitted to my wounds their kisses would not have wrought you this
destruction: for my wounds work health, but their kisses have produced an
incurable disease.
Where are now your cup-bearers, where are they who cleared
the way for you in the market place, and sounded your praises endlessly in the
ears of all? They have fled, they have disowned your friendship, they are
providing for their own safety by means of your distress. But I do not act
thus, nay in your misfortune I do not abandon you, and now when you are fallen
I protect and tend you. And the Church which you treated as an enemy has opened
her bosom and received you into it; whereas the theatres which you courted, and
about which you were oftentimes indignant with me have betrayed and ruined you.
And yet I never ceased saying to you why doest thou these things? You
are exasperating the Church, and casting yourself down headlong, yet you
hurried away from all my warnings. And now the hippodromes, having exhausted
your wealth, have whetted the sword against you, but the Church which
experienced your untimely wrath is hurrying in every direction, in
her desire to pluck you out of the net.
The homily continues, and you can find the whole thing
at New Advent. It
is an incredible testimony to the vanity of the world, the power of God, and
the impact one bold shepherd can have.
Let us remember how vain and fleeting the honors and riches
of this life are, and how glorious and lasting are those of Heaven for which we
strive. Let us also pray, through the intercession of Saint John Chrysostom,
for boldness and zeal for our Bishops and Priests, and for the conversion of
our politicians.
Saint John Chrysostom, Pray for us.
https://lettersformychildren.substack.com/p/anti-catholic-politician-clings-for
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét