Letter to Kerry Zmatick, (Could it
be? Yes! The end!!!)
There are a few more phenomena to
discuss before I quit fulminating.
Healing. I have seen real healings,
but for a Catholic this is nothing new. We have always believed in healing. We
just don’t understand it. Have you ever noticed that Jesus didn’t heal everyone
in the Holy Land? He just healed a few. If Jesus could alleviate suffering, why
didn’t he alleviate everyone’s suffering? My guess is that his healing ministry
is meant to be a foretaste of heaven and not just a cheap medical plan. Not
only did Jesus heal only a few, but all those he healed eventually got sick
again and ultimately died. Even Lazarus whom he raised from the dead eventually
died again.
What can the point of healing
possibly be if it is only a stop gap measure?
In the Acts of the Apostles, we read that the “Lord, bore witness to the
word of his grace, granting signs and wonders to be done by their hands.” (Acts
14:3) Miracles and healing are exactly that: “signs and wonders that bear
witness to grace.” They are not given for the sake of convenience, but for the
sake of the Gospel.
I once had a friend who had been
stricken with polio in the great polio epidemic of the early 50's. He was
severely paralyzed from the waist down. His family took him to the healing
shrine of St. Anne de Beaupre in Canada. He was waiting in his wheelchair to be
taken forward for prayer when a severely crippled young woman was brought
forward before him and as she passed him, their eyes met. There was a great
commotion up in front and the girl whom my friend had just seen was completely
and instantly healed. She strode back past him walking on two good legs and
their eyes met again. In that moment he realized he would not be healed and that
was alright. God’s grace would be sufficient in his life. And so it was.
There isn’t time to tell you about
all the people I have seen healed, and all the people I have seen not healed.
The message is the same. It is that grace that is sufficient even though health
in this world is of limited duration.
The hunger most people have for
healing is understandable. The suffering and pain that is the common lot of
human beings is not to be taken lightly. People long for healing, especially
the parents of sick children. It is hard to accept that, as the Lord said to
St. Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in
weakness.” (2 Cor. 12:9)
I don’t want to be weak. I don’t
want to depend on grace. Healing is given to increase our dependence on grace,
not to lessen it. Most people want healing because they want not only an end to
their suffering but the freedom that health confers. I remember a neon sign on
a west side Pentecostal church that billed itself as a healing church. The sign
brightly proclaimed, “Why should you suffer when others are being healed?”
Nothing about Christ, just an end to suffering.
That is not the point of healing.
Healing is a sign and a wonder meant to draw us into a deeper trust in the
Lord. How often have I been asked to offer healing Masses? I cringe at the
request. Every Mass is a healing Mass. “Speak but the word and my soul shall be
healed.” It is a beautiful thing to see a few believers gathered around a sick
person praying for healing. It is a sad spectacle to see people lined up around
the block waiting to get into the church because the faith healer is scheduled
to do his thing at 7PM.
Just this morning I saw something
that moved me deeply. I go to the gym every morning and chug around in circles
like some moribund hamster. As I passed the whirlpool for the umpteenth time, I
saw and old Korean man holding his wife’s hands as they sat in the pool. Their
eyes were closed and he was quietly praying. I knew what was going on. He was
praying for his dear wife’s aches and pains. He understood that God’s grace was
better than the warm water. He was commending her to the Lord. It was beautiful
to watch his tender affection for his wife. That is what healing is
about.
There is a corollary to healing; it
is called “being slain in the Spirit.” It is a wonderfully goofy manifestation
which is only vaguely alluded to in the Bible, but we Pentecostals and
Charismatics just love it. And, like all of this, it is real and it is easily
abused. In the Gospel we read that those who came to arrest Jesus fell to the
ground, just as St. Paul fell to the ground on the Damascus road. Saul fell to
the ground in the Books of the Kings when he met the prophets. It often happens
that when a person is being prayed for a very disorienting peace comes over
them and they collapse.
This has happened to me many a time
and I must say it is one of the most peaceful feelings I have ever had. One
just totally relaxes. You don’t lose consciousness. You’re standing, but you
realize there is no really good reason to be standing and over you go. You
usually just lay there for a while wearing a silly grin on your face. It’s has
no great purpose as far as I can tell, and it is completely unimportant. It is
a very gentle experience of resting in the Lord’s presence.
Needless to say, it is all the rage
at faith healing services, Charismatic Masses and spirit filled conferences. If
you didn’t fall over, there must be something wrong with you. Or, if the faith
healer/conference speaker is really good, they fall over by the busload when
prayed for. That’s how you can tell that the conference speaker is the real
thing. You fall over. If there is not sufficient falling over, it’s obvious
that the Holy Spirit hasn’t really shown up. What you get then are people who
keep coming up for prayer until they fall over. Or even worse you have the
pushers and the catchers. A pusher is a faith healer who as he prays over a
person gives them a shove on the forehead when he’s done. The catcher is
someone who stands behind the “pray-ee” to keep them from cracking their heads
open when they go over. I have often cringed at the thwack of a cranium hitting
the cold marble of a church floor.
I remember a very distressed woman
asking my advice after a meeting. She was worried that God hadn’t blessed her
because she hadn’t fallen over. When I used to pray for people at these
services, I would have them kneel at the altar rail or sit so that they
couldn’t do much damage as they fell. This falling out business is a fine
thing, if it’s real. If it’s contrived it’s just silly. Healing is real, but
when it becomes a cottage industry, it’s time to move on to more important
things, like repentance.
Three more gifts and I’m done. They
are related, the word of knowledge, discernment of spirits and prophecy. St.
Paul sums it all up when he says “You know that when you were pagans you were
led astray to mute idols...” (1Cor. 12:2) That’s the amazing thing about the
Lord. If we are ready to listen, He speaks. If an individual or a congregation
sincerely wants to hear the Lord, they will hear him. No one ever hears him
perfectly. Remember that St. Paul says, “We know in part, and we prophesy in
part.” (1Cor.13:9) Still, if we get Him wrong, but our desire to obey is
genuine, I have found that He makes up the slack.
Most of the prophecies that I have
heard are pretty much hokum. I cannot count the number of times I have heard
that the Lord is returning next Tuesday, or some such nonsense. I have heard
endless soliloquies that claim to be prophecy. They are usually just filler in
a boring prayer meeting. A real prophecy, as St. Paul tells us, cuts to the
heart. The only real prophecies I have heard have been very personal and very
much to the point. No soliloquies.
Once I walked into a prayer meeting,
and a real prophet looked at me and said, “Father is going to be sent to work
with the poorest of the poor.” I had been asked that very day to move to a very
poor parish in very bad part of town. I was “praying” about it and planning to
say, “No thanks.” The Lord threw His two cents in by means of someone who had a
real prophetic gift, even though I was not very interested in the Lord’s
opinion at that moment. I was so jolted that I told my superiors that I would
accept the assignment and was at that parish for twenty of the happiest years
of my life.
Prophecies are not sweet nothings
whispered in our soul’s ear by the Holy Spirit. They are marching orders. They
are usually not about the future, they about the sovereignty of God in our
lives. I believe that God has people in every congregation who can read souls,
who can tell when a spirit is from the Lord or from the enemy, and that He has
given people who can help us to know His will for us. If any clergy are making
the mistake of reading these rants, know that if the Lord has given you
prophets in your life, you are a very blessed person. I will always be grateful
to the Lord for the honest prophets He has sent me. When they speak, they do so
with authority. They have never been afraid to say what they think I don’t want
to hear, and the few times I have been wise enough to listen, they have been
blessings form the Lord.
One more thing. There is a phrase
that one finds in Scripture and that Pentecostal/Charismatics love to bandy
about: “In the Spirit.” I have pondered its meaning for years, and I think I
understand it a little, now that I am old. The Greek New Testament word that is
usually translated “Spirit” is “pneuma”. It means breath or wind, as in
“to have the wind knocked out of you.” We get words like pneumonia and
pneumatic drill from it. When you go into a church and stick your hand in the
holy water fountain and say “In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit”, you are really saying “In the name of the ... Holy Breath.” The third person of the Holy Trinity is the
called Holy Breath. In confirmation one is anointed with oil for the
strengthening with the Holy Breath, and so on. The Holy Breath.
Think about it. We have theology and
dogma and ritual and buildings and committees and church suppers and fund
drives and second collections and ministry programs and religious education
programs and and and. Do we have Holy Breath? Are we breathing? Is the church
breathing? When Christians gather for worship or a meeting of any kind, whether
a committee or a prayer meeting, can one smell the sweet aroma of Holy Breath?
The Holy Spirit doesn’t bother to
show up at most church meetings I attend. There is no Holy Breath. There is
great deal of bloviating. To be “In the Spirit” is to be surrounded by the
Breath of God. It is real. It is palpable and it is essential. If the Church
doesn’t breathe with the Breath of God, it is just going through a pointless
exercise. Without the Breath of God, the Church is an “it” and not a “she.” If a thing is not begun, conducted and ended
by means of Holy Breath, it may be a fine event enjoyed by all, but it will
change no lives and soon be forgotten. If you are not filled with the Breath of
God, all your piety is an external exercise. You cannot reach Heaven and Heaven
does not reach you, expect by the Breathing of God.
So I ask you, have you ever been
filled with Holy Breath? If you haven’t, ask the Breath of God to fill you.
What have you got to lose?
Lord, breathe on us once again, as
you did that first Easter Sunday night. Fill our sails with Holy Breath once
again as you did on Pentecost so long ago!
So that’s it. I’m done.
Pentecostal/Charismatic renewal is very real and desperately needed. It’s just
that there isn’t much of it out there.
Well written and thanks.
ReplyDelete<<>>
ReplyDeleteThat is exactly my experience when I have been slain in the Spirit.
I love the end where you talk about the breath of God. Everyone once in awhile I meditate on the fact that God breathed into Adam, to give him life. Imagine we carry the breath of God!
ReplyDeleteI don’t understand how a “wonderfully goofy manifestation” can be reconciled with the directives of the CDF in “INSTRUCTION ON PRAYERS FOR HEALING”. It states that during prayer meetings for healing:
ReplyDelete“Anything resembling hysteria, artificiality, theatricality or sensationalism, above all on the part of those who are in charge of such gatherings, must not take place.”
And also:
“Those who direct healing services, whether liturgical or non-liturgical, are to strive to maintain a climate of peaceful devotion in the assembly and to exercise the necessary prudence if healings should take place among those present; when the celebration is over, any testimony can be collected with honesty and accuracy, and submitted to the proper ecclesiastical authority.”
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20001123_istruzione_en.html