St. Basil the Great, Doctor ... and Prophet?
While trying to derive some wisdom from St. Basil, I came upon one sentence of his that seemed to strongly parallel our circumstances today. As the Saint wrote, "even though liberty be granted us," it made me think of the liberty granted the Mass in Summorum Pontificum. Was St. Basil's conclusion that liberty would signal the end of the crisis? Unfortunately, no. St. Basil, Pray for Us!
"Only one offense is now vigorously punished, an accurate observance of our fathers' traditions. For this cause the pious are driven from their countries and transported into the deserts. The people are in lamentation.... Joy and spiritual cheerfulness are no more; our feasts are turned into mourning; our houses of prayer are shut up; our altars are deprived of spiritual worship. No longer are there Christians assembling, teachers presiding, saving instructions, celebrations, hymns by night, or that blessed exultation of souls, which arises from communion and fellowship of spiritual gifts.... The ears of the simple are led astray, and have become accustomed to heretical profaneness. The infants of the Church are fed on the words of impiety. For what can they do? Baptisms are in Arian hands; the care of travelers, visitation of the sick, consolation of mourners; succors of the distressed.... Which all, being performed by them, become a bond to the people... so that in a little while, even though liberty be granted us, no hope will remain that they, who are encompassed by so lasting a deceit, should be brought back again to the acknowledgment of the truth."



