Wait a minute Stan, I’ve always admired your common sense, but this time you said something that’s inconsistent with your persona. Do you really mean to tell me that you would be willing to go into schism over a gun rule?
Actually, that’s not what the scriptures are trying to tell us. If you scroll back you will find one of my posts where I explained why the Gospel writer mentions the swords.
It is true that Peter used a sword. It’s also true that Christ told him to put it away and reminded him that he who lives by the sword dies by the sword. But the reason for including this detail in the Gospel was to show the parallel between Jesus and Moses. It was not meant to be interpreted as a defense of weapons. If we’re going to be fair, we would have to say that there is neither a defense nor a condemnation of weapons. But there is a moral warning given by Jesus.
We also know that the martyrs did not fight back. They voluntarilly surrendered their lives for their faith. They could have legitimately fought off their attackers. But the very reason that we venerate them is because of their heroic courage.
My community looks to St. Maximilian Kolbe as one of our patrons. Check it out,
www.franciscansoflife.org. There is one thing that was so clear about Brother Max. This was his love for those who did harm to him.
There are wonderful journal entries by our brothers who lived with Brother Max when he was the Guardian of the house. It was clear that the Nazis were not all that they had painted themselves to be. Several journals tell of how the superior, Maximilian Kolbe, ordered the brothers to be gentle, kind, loving and obedient to the Nazis in all things but sin. He forbade any retaliation on the part of the brothers, under pain of grave sin. I should add an addendum here, Franciscan superiors have the power to threaten under pain of excommunication if they are not obeyed. That’s a story for another day.
Back to the point of guns and people who do bad things or want to hurt us. The night that the brothers were arrested, Brother Max told the friars to put on street clothes and to run as far and as fast as they could. But as they were leaving, he called out after them, “I order you, under holy obedience, to forget not love.”
Maximilian could have avoided the slaughter of the brothers by taking a more assertive position. But he did not. That night, not only was he arrested, but many brothers with him. He was not the only brother to be killed from that house. There were over 400 brothers in that house and over 100 of them were killed, because Maximillian refused to take an assertive stand or preventative measures. He taught us a great lesson on love and reliance on Divine Providence.
This is not to say that no one should carry a gun. This is my way of saying that we must always place greater trust on God’s love for us than on our love for ourselves. When it comes to obedience, the greater the sacrifice involved in obeying, the more pleasing that we are to God.
Superiors and bishops need not be wise. That is not a requirement. Otherwise, we’d have very few religious superiors and bishops, no disrespect intended to any of them. But like parents, they are to be obeyed. Obedience is something that they have a right to expect from their spiritual sons and daughters. I can’t think of anyone who taught this lesson better, in modern times, than St. Maximilian Kolbe.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF