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The
Pharisee and the Tax Collector
October 28, 2007
Readings for the 30th
Sunday in Ordinary Time
| Reading
1: Sir. 35:12–14, 16–18 |
| Responsorial
Psalm: Ps. 34:2–3, 17–18, 19, 23 |
| Reading
2: 2 Tim. 4:6–8, 16–18 |
| Gospel:
Lk. 18:9–14 |
| Link
to Readings |
By
Saint Augustine and Pope John Paul II
But to you it is
not said, Be anything less than you are; but acknowledge what
you are. Acknowledge yourself feeble, acknowledge yourself
man, acknowledge yourself a sinner; acknowledge that it is
He That justifies, acknowledge that you are full of stains.
Let the stain of your heart appear in your confession, and
you shall belong to Christ’s flock. For the confession
of sins invites the physician’s healing; as in sickness,
he that says, “I am well,” seeks not the physician.
Did not the Pharisee
and the Publican go up to the temple? The one boasted of his
sound estate, the other showed his wounds to the Physician.
For the Pharisee said, “I thank You, O God, that I am
not as this publican.” He gloried over the other. So
then if that publican had been whole, the Pharisee would have
grudged it him; for that he would not have had any one over
whom to extol himself. In what state then had he come, who
had this envious spirit? Surely he was not whole; and whereas
he called himself whole, he went not down cured.
But the other,
casting his eyes down to the ground, and not daring to lift
them up unto heaven, smote his breast, saying,” God
be merciful to me a sinner.” And what says the Lord?
“Verily I say unto you, that the publican went down
from the temple justified rather than the Pharisee. For every
one that exalts himself shall be abased, and he that humbles
himself shall be exalted.”
They,
then, who exalt themselves, would go up into the sheepfold
by another way; but they who humble themselves, enter in by
the Door into the sheepfold. Therefore said He of the one,
“he enters in”; of the other, “he goes up.”
He that goes up, you see, who seeks exaltation, does not enter
in, but falls. Whereas he that abases himself, that he may
enter in by the Door, falls not, but is the shepherd.
(From
St. Augustine's Sermon
87 on the New Testament)
Our Sin
and God's Mercy
. . .
. In this context, appropriate allowance is made both for
God’s mercy towards the sinner who converts
and for the understanding of human weakness. Such
understanding never means compromising and falsifying the
standard of good and evil in order to adapt it to particular
circumstances. It is quite human for the sinner to acknowledge
his weakness and to ask mercy for his failings; what is unacceptable
is the attitude of one who makes his own weakness the criterion
of the truth about the good, so that he can feel self-justified,
without even the need to have recourse to God and his mercy.
An attitude of this sort corrupts the morality of society
as a whole, since it encourages doubt about the objectivity
of the moral law in general and a rejection of the absoluteness
of moral prohibitions regarding specific human acts, and it
ends up by confusing all judgments about values.
Instead,
we should take to heart the message of the Gospel parable
of the Pharisee and the tax collector (cf. Lk. 18:9–14).
The tax collector might possibly have had some justification
for the sins he committed, such as to diminish his responsibility.
But his prayer does not dwell on such justifications, but
rather on his own unworthiness before God’s infinite
holiness: “God, be merciful to me a sinner!” (Lk.
18:13). The Pharisee, on the other hand, is self-justified,
finding some excuse for each of his failings. Here we encounter
two different attitudes of the moral conscience of man in
every age. The tax collector represents a “repentant”
conscience, fully aware of the frailty of its own nature and
seeing in its own failings, whatever their subjective justifications,
a confirmation of its need for redemption. The Pharisee represents
a “self-satisfied” conscience, under the illusion
that it is able to observe the law without the help of grace
and convinced that it does not need mercy.
All people must
take great care not to allow themselves to be tainted by the
attitude of the Pharisee, which would seek to eliminate awareness
of one’s own limits and of one’s own sin. In our
own day this attitude is expressed particularly in the attempt
to adapt the moral norm to one’s own capacities and
personal interests, and even in the rejection of the very
idea of a norm. Accepting, on the other hand, the “disproportion”
between the law and human ability (that is, the capacity of
the moral forces of man left to himself) kindles the desire
for grace and prepares one to receive it. “Who will
deliver me from this body of death?” asks the Apostle
Paul. And in an outburst of joy and gratitude he replies:
“Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord!”
(Rom. 7:24–25).
We find
the same awareness in the following prayer of Saint Ambrose
of Milan: “What then is man, if you do not visit him?
Remember, Lord, that you have made me as one who is weak,
that you formed me from dust. How can I stand, if you do not
constantly look upon me, to strengthen this clay, so that
my strength may proceed from your face? When you hide
your face, all grows weak (Ps. 104:29): if you turn to
look at me, woe is me! You have nothing to see in me but the
stain of my crimes; there is no gain either in being abandoned
or in being seen, because when we are seen, we offend you.
Still, we can imagine that God does not reject those he sees,
because he purifies those upon whom he gazes. Before him burns
a fire capable of consuming our guilt (cf. Joel 2:3).”
(From
John Paul II's encyclical Veritas
Splendor, nos. 104–105)
Saint
Augustine of Hippo (AD 354–430) is a Doctor of the Church.
Among his most influential works are his autobiographical
Confessions and his defense of Christianity against
paganism, City of God. For a biography of St. Augustine
from The Catholic Encyclopedia, click
here.
Pope
John Paul II (1920–2005) was Pope from 1978 until his
death in 2005. The Vatican
website provides a myriad of resources pertaining to our
beloved Holy Father.
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