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CHASTISEMENT
The very fact that Jesus severely rebuked
his apostles when they asked Him if they shouldnt call down
fire from heaven to destroy a village of Samaritans who refused to
receive Him (Lk 9:53) shows that those who stay on the reserve
when they hear announcements of chastisements have good reason to
do so. All the more so when they encounter those who simply delight
in reading prophesies of doom that flourish here and there from time
to time.
By Rev. Francis Turner, O.P.
There is, for example, a book containing the prophesies of a peasant
visionary of western France that spell nothing but doom,
wars, catastrophes, floods, epidemics and the like. Another such book
has sold 400,000 copies in France, a country of 55 million inhabitants.
There is an unhealthy relish in some religious milieus for this type
of thing that Pope John XXIII alluded to when he opened the Second
Vatican Council on October 11, 1962.
However, a distinction must be made between these, prophesies
of doom and divine warnings that are given within a context
of spiritual and moral messages of a wide scope. Such was the case
at Garabandal.
The first Message of Garabandal carried a serious warning: the
cup is filling up
if we do not change, a very great chastisement
will come upon us. The second Message given four years later
in1965, goes even further and says that the cup is overflowing.
How best can we get a fuller understanding of the nature of chastisement?
Perhaps one way to deal with the subject is through a series of questions
that we will try to answer. Who chastises? Why? More precisely, what
is first, the principal cause and second, the purpose? While attempting
to answer these questions, others may arise which also will need to
be answered.
Who Chastises?
As the First Cause, of course, God chastises.
The Bible could be quoted a hundred times to express it in most vivid
terms. However, it is to be noted that either the devil (1 Cor 5:5)
or a number of creatures (Wis 11:15) or an angel (1 Cor 10:10) serve
as means. This holds true in the case of the Chastisement announced
at Garabandal. In fact, it always holds true in this world.
What causes it?
The answer to the question of what causes a
chastisement is twofold, taken from the point of view of man who suffers
it, or from the point of view of God Who sends it. Both
points of view are mentioned in the two formal Messages of Garabandal.
From the point of view of man, it is sin. This, we all know. We all
say that it is the cause of chastisement. It would be better to say
that it is its first and deepest underlying basic reality, a reality
without which the very notion of chastisement would be unthinkable.
We will not get into the gravity of sin here except to say that with
sin, everything, every relationship, has changed.
And now, let us look at it from the point of view of God. Upon this
basic reality (sin), that we shall call a layer, comes a second layer,
the wrath of God mentioned in the formal Messages of Garabandal, especially
the second. The very idea of Gods wrath seems irrational and
even revolting; nevertheless, there is such a thing s the wrath of
God. If we read Isaiah, chapter 30, verses 27 to 33, we will see that
its not a pure metaphor or image. Of course, this wrath has
to be purified of the imperfection that accompanies almost all human
angers except that found in Jesus and the saints.
But it does exist, and it exists as the proper, and the only proper
first response against sin. God has full mastery of His wrath, but
it does break out when the proper time comes as foreseen in His wisdom.
It springs from the jealousy of a holy love, a saving love that soon
turns to mercy (Is 54:7 ff).
Upon this second layer of Gods wrath, comes a third, that of
judgment, Gods judgment which can be considered from the point
of view of God Who is the just judge and from the point
of man who is justly judged.
Whenever a chastisement is announced in the Bible, for example, that
of original sin (Gn 3:14-19), the Deluge (Gn 6:13) or Sodom (Gn 10:20;
19:13), a decision of the just judge is mentioned, a judgment is pronounced.
This decision exists permanently both in God and in this world (this
world is already judged) although its execution and carrying
out may be postponed, even a long time, through longanimity, mercy
and meekness, not because of a weakness or flaw in Gods will.
What is the purpose of chastisement?
All chastisements are first, a sign and manifestation
of sin. This appears clearly in the case of original sin, that of
Cain, Babel, Sodom, Nineveh, Capernaum, Pharaoh, Egypt. Secondly,
chastisements are a fruit of sin, a natural, inherent consequence
of sin, which in no way is arbitrary or capricious. This is especially
easy to understand when there is a hardening of heart.
Thirdly, they are a revelation of God. It is the revelation of God
or visible manifestation appropriated to the sinner as such, as often
repeated by the prophets (Ez 11:10, 15:7). The chastisement reveals
Gods wrath, jealousy, justice, even forgiveness
and mercyalways ready to come into playand finally, His
pressing love.
Two Types
There are two types of chastisements
and depending on which type, they can have one or two final issues.
Some are locking-out while others are opening-up.
The first of the two types are of pure condemnation such as those
of Pharaoh whose heart hardenedor Ananias and Sapphira who lied
to the Holy Spirit (Acts 5:7-11). They lead to a dead end.
Others are a condemnation of sin and an invitation to conversation.
That is why we call them opening-up. They invite those
who are thus punished and afflicted to come back to God.4They remain
a condemnation of the sinful past, and eventually alas, an anticipation
of a locking-out condemnation if the invitation is ignored
as in the case of the foolish virgins of the parable (Mt 25:10-12).
It is not the chastisement that separates man from God, but sin, the
chastisement being its consequence, its retribution (Rom 6:23).
1 .Hos 13:7; Is 5:5; Lk 13:34 ff.
2. Am 4:6-11; Is 9:12; Jer 5:3
3. Ex 7:13, 32; 8:15; 9:12,35; 10:20, 27; 11:10; 14:4, 8
4. Hos 2:8 ff; Lk 15:14-20
The Chastisement of Christ
What about the chastisement suffered by Jesus,
our Savior? He did suffer a chastisement, not because of sins He had
personally committed, but because of the sins of men which He took
upon Himself and takes away. 5 The chastisement of Calvary is two-fold,
a locking-out chastisement of Satan and sin and an opening-up
chastisement for all those who cling to Jesus through faith (1 Pt
4:1; Phil 3:10) and for whom He obtained full atonement, full redemption.
Three Further Questions
There are still three questions that need to
be answered. Are announcements of chastisements conditional or unconditional?
Jeremiahs answer is fundamental and fully relevant. I must quote
him:
Indeed, like clay in the hand of the potter, so are you in My hand,
house of Israel. Sometimes I threaten to uproot and tear down and
destroy a nation or a kingdom. But if that nation which I have threatened
turns from its evil, I also repent of the evil which I threatened
to do. Sometimes, again, I promise to build up and plant a nation
or a kingdom. But if that nation does what is evil in My eyes, refusing
to obey My voice, I repent of the good with which I promised to bless
it (Jer 18:6-10).
There is no reason to think that it would be otherwise under the New
Covenant. Jeremiahs answer deals with prophecies addressed to
a people, made at a definite time, in order to obtain a conversation
from them. Such is the prophecy made at Garabandal although addressed
to the world.
Apocalyptic-style prophecies are global in nature and therefore different
from others. The apocalypse of Isaiah (chapters 24-27, 34-35); that
of Ezekiel (chapters 38-39), Joel (chapters 3,4), and Daniel (most
of the book), gives a general outline of the future fate of the universe.
They announce a judgment to come and a cosmic convulsion that which
no human can avert. Such is the Book of Revelation that, nevertheless,
is also the great epic of Christian hope, the song of triumph of the
persecuted Church (note from The Jerusalem Bible). It sheds a dazzling
light on all persecutions of the Church and chastisements of the Church
and the world as paradoxical prodromi* of the glorious and victorious
Advent of the Incarnate Word of God Who is coming.
Is the Bible of any help in trying to understand what could happen
depending on the response of mankind to the Warning, Miracle and the
Permanent Sign at Garabandal? The answer is positive. Because of what
happened to the Babylon of Mesopotamia, the Nineveh of Jonah, and
the symbolic Babylon that is Rome (see Rv 17:9 which says so clearly
enough) is symbolic of what may happen to, lets say Paris, Berlin,
Moscow, or New York. It is fruitful to turn to the Bible to understand
and to some extent, forecast, what may happen to such cities in a
future we cannot pinpoint.
There are three possibilities, the first being a locking-out chastisement
as those inflicted upon Sodom and Babylon of Mesopotamia. The second
is that of Nineveh where the king, the people and even the beasts
underwent severe penances although not a single miracle had been performed.
The city was saved and there was no chastisement.
The third possibility is a opening-up chastisement, and such was the
case of the symbolic Babylon that, I repeat, was Rome. It was ruined
and almost destroyed by the barbarians. Only many centuries later
was it restored and even at the time of Luther was but a small town.
Even then, this restoration took place thanks to its innumerable martyrs,
and because the city had given up its pagan ways. Today, to be saved,
a city would have to give up other pagan ways; the cult
of Moloch in Moscow, of Mammon in New York or of Venus in Paris.
A Chastisement is Announced
A chastisement has been announced at Garabandal. Now what is the purpose
of this announcement? That it be avoided, that the arm of the wrath
of God be held back. It is the proper purpose of such announcements.
And how is the vengeful arm of God to be held back? Through intercession,
conversations and the righteousness of the righteous. Lets examine
these three means.
Intercession. Intercessary prayer is exemplified by Abraham who pleaded
in favor of Sodom which would have been saved (because of Abrahams
prayer) if the Lord had found but ten righteous in the city
(Gn 18:13) and Moses who petitioned God in favor of the people after
their worship of the molten calf, saying, Let Your blazing wrath
die down; relent in punishing Your people. (Ex 32:12)
Under the New Covenant, we have a far more excellent High Priest than
under the old one, Jesus, Who ever liveth to make intercession
for us.
Conversion. This is expressed in almost every page of the prophets
with the best, simplest and clearest case being that of Nineveh. Jonah
announced, Forty days more and Nineveh shall be destroyed
(Jon 3:4). The penance and repentance of the city was such that when
God saw by their actions how they turned from their evil way, He repented
of the evil that He had threatened to do to them; He did not carry
it out (Jon 3:10)
Righteousness of the righteous. The wrath of God can be held back
by the righteousness of the righteous, some forming a great
cloud of witnesses in heaven while others who are among us either
known as such or, in most cases, not even by those close to them.
It has been said by a saint that Paris was spared destruction several
times thanks to the devotedness of some pious women. At any rate,
this was certainly true during the time of St. Genevieve.
We must also not forget the over-riding mercy of God that is founded
upon His justice as John Paul II has said in Dives in Misericordita:
The primacy and superiority of
love over justicethis is a mark of the whole of revelationare
revealed precisely through mercy. This seemed so obvious to the psalmists
and prophets that the very term justice ended up by meaning the salvation
accomplished by the Lord and His mercy. (No. 4) 6
To conclude, let it be said that we believe in the Power, Wisdom and
Grace of the Holy Trinity. Let it also be said that never before has
the powerful, wise and good Lord afforded such wondrous announcements
of events that manifest in the deepest possible measure His loving
kindness. So that mankind may avoid this chastisement, several excellent
God-given signs will occur which the reader already knows, the main
ones being: The Warning, The Miracle, and the Permanent Sign.
And it cannot be doubted that all of them will be accompanied by divine
grace flowing throughout the whole world, enlightening all the minds
and spirits, moving all the heartsdo we hopeon earth.
6. This can also be considered from the
general point of view of the complementarities of many aspects
of reality, whether natural or supernatural. Human reason is unable
to consider them at a glance and as a whole. It even sees but
contradictions in them. This holds true not only in physics, let
us say, but also in most domains of knowledge, such as this one.
Chastisement and mercy seem opposed and even contradictory, but
only because of the weakness of the human reason. In God, they
are inseparable and perfectly united. Faith gives us a certain
intuitive perception of this unity.
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