From
Monsignor Charles Pope:
What is scandal in its Catholic sense? When someone
“gives scandal,” he acts in such a way as to lead others into sin. This
is closely related to its secular meaning in that the most devastating
effect of scandals over time is that we cease to be shocked or unsettled
by sinful behavior. When we see others engaging in sin, especially
those in authority, we begin to think that perhaps it’s not so bad after
all. People were once shocked by things like divorce, cohabitation,
abortion, homosexual acts and suicide. But once cultural leaders
indulged in these sins, sometimes even bragging of them, many were led
to minimize, accept and even celebrate such sinfulness. This is the
ultimate effect of scandal: bad example leads us to justify and even
celebrate sin.
Jesus has no time for those who give scandal. He simply announces woe to them:
But if anyone causes one of these
little ones who believe in Me to stumble, it would be better for him to
have a large millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the
depths of the sea (Matthew 18:6).
Yes, it is better to die than to lead the faithful into error and sin.
Anyone who would consider “saving” his life in this way had better
reconsider, lest he inherit the deepest fires of Hell. Eleazar rightly
concludes that it is better to obey God than man, that the fear of the
Lord must be greater than the fear of any man no matter how powerful,
and that no punishment is worse than eternal damnation. Our relationship
with mere mortals can only affect our temporary standing in this world,
but our relationship with God affects our eternal destiny. It is never a
good thing to compromise our faith or to give scandal — never.
Eleazar further reasons that his life is not simply about what is best for him alone in the here and now. He
does not live merely for himself but for the sake of others. We must
sometimes suffer so that others may live, thrive and be edified. If we
refuse this suffering, we harm not only our eternal destiny but that of
others. We are our brother’s keeper, and we have an obligation
to live in such a way that others can be saved rather than hindered from
salvation and ignorant of the truth that sets them free. Jesus, who is
Truth, would not come down from the cross to save himself. He stayed on
the cross to save us. Eleazar preferred death to misleading others. How
about you?
In the Church today there is a form of giving scandal that has become far too common: silence in the face of sin and error.
Too many clergy and parents, as well, are silent in the midst of
today’s moral meltdown. Fearing for their well-being, desiring future
promotions, or just wanting to avoid the unpleasantry of conflict, many
refuse to teach against — or even talk about — moral error and sin.
We will all have to answer for our silence to the degree that we had an obligation to speak. Qui tacet consentire videtur
(He who remains silent is seen to consent). “He who winks at a fault
causes trouble” (Proverbs 10:10). In a 1933 letter to Pope Pius XI,
Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross wrote, “Those who remain silent are
responsible.”
As Catholics, we cannot avoid responsibility for the current moral
morass. Too many of us have been silent, some even collaborating with
evil and error. The primarily responsibility lies with the clergy, but
none of us is entirely exempt from the duty to repudiate error and speak
the truth. (Read more.)
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