by Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
January 6th, we celebrate the arrival of the Three Kings to adore the
Infant King and to offer Him their gifts of gold, frankincense, and
myrrh.
Through the centuries, others will also come to venerate Thy crib:
from India, Ancient Nubia, Macedonia, Rome, Carthage, and Spain;
Gauls, Franks, Germans, Angles, Saxons, and Normans.
Both pilgrims and crusaders will come from the West to kiss the
ground of the cave where Thou were born. Your manger will be venerated
all over the earth. In the great Gothic or Romanesque cathedrals,
multitudes will gather around Thee, offering Thee presents of gold,
silver, incense, and above all the piety and sincerity of their
hearts.
Then will come the period of the Western discoveries in which the benefits of Thy Redemption will reach new lands.
Incas, Aztecs, natives of various tribes, blacks from African shores
or further inland, bronze-skinned Indians, slender and pensive Chinese,
short and agile Nipponese, all will gather around Thy crib and adore
Thee.
The star of Bethlehem now shines
over the whole world. The angelic promise has been heard by all
peoples, and all across the earth hearts of goodwill have found the
inestimable treasure of Thy peace.
Overcoming all obstacles, the gospel has finally spread to people all over the world.
In the midst of contemporary
desolation, this great gathering of people from all nations and races
around Thee is our only consolation, indeed our only hope. We are among them, kneeling before Thee. See us, Lord, and have pity on us. There is something we would like to say.
Who are we? We are those who will not kneel before the modern Baal.
We carry Thy law engraved upon the bronze of our hearts and we do not
allow the errors of our times to become engraved upon this bronze
sanctified by Thy Redemption.
We love the immaculate purity of orthodoxy above all else and reject
any pact whatsoever with heresy, its wiles and infiltrations. We are
merciful to the repentant sinner, and since - due to our unworthiness
and infidelity - we count ourselves among that number, we implore Thy
mercy. We spare no criticism, either, of insolent and conceited impiety
or of strutting vice that scorns virtue.
We pity all men, particularly the blessed who suffer persecution for
love of the Church, who are oppressed everywhere because they hunger
and thirst for virtue, who are abandoned, ridiculed, betrayed, and
disdained because they remain faithful to Thy commandments.
Many are those whose suffering is not celebrated in contemporary
literature: the Christian mother who will pray alone before Thy crib
because her children no longer practice the Faith; the strong yet
austere husband who is misunderstood or even loathed by his own due to
his fidelity to Thy teachings; the faithful wife who bears the solitude
of both heart and soul because frivolous habits have led to adultery he
who should be her support, her "other half"; the pious son or daughter
who - while Christian homes are celebrating - sense how in their own
home, family life has been stifled by egotism, hedonism, and
secularism; the student who is shunned and mocked by his colleagues
because of his fidelity to Thee; the professor who is eschewed by
fellow staff because he will not condone their errors; the parish
priest or bishop around whom a menacing wall of misunderstanding or
indifference has been raised because he refuses to compromise the
integrity of the doctrine entrusted to his care; the honest man made
penniless for refusing to swindle.
All
of these isolated people, scattered across the globe, ignorant of each
other, now gather around Thee with the Three Kings to offer Thee a
gift and a prayer.
Their gift exceeds the sun and the stars, the oceans with all its
riches, and the earth in all its splendour: they give themselves
entirely and faithfully.
By preferring complete orthodoxy over approval, purity over
popularity among the impure, honesty over gold; by remaining faithful
to Thy law even when this entails sacrificing career and fame, they
attain perfection in their spiritual life by practicing love of God
above all things, which is a sincere and lasting love.
Such love differs greatly from love as it is understood nowadays,
which predominantly consists of gushy and illogical feelings, senseless
and blurry affections, obscure self-condescension and trite
justifications to appease one's conscience. Instead theirs is true
love, enlightened by Faith, justified by reason, serious, chaste,
upright and persevering - in a word, theirs is love of God.
They also offer a prayer. Before all else - because they love it
above all else in this world - for Thy holy and immaculate Church: for
both the pastors and the flock; foremost, for the pastor of the pastors
of the flock, that is for Peter, whom today we call Benedict.
May the Church, which now moans as a captive in the dungeons of this
anti-Christian "civilization", finally triumph over this era of sin
and implant a new civilization for Thy greater glory.
May the saints become ever holier, may the good be sanctified, may
sinners become good, and may the impious convert. May the impenitent
who have rejected grace and are jeopardising souls be dispersed,
humbled, and their efforts frustrated. May the souls in purgatory rise
to heaven straight away.
They also pray for themselves: may their orthodoxy be ever purer, their purity ever more rigorous.
May they be more faithful amidst adversity, stand ever taller amidst humiliations, be more energetic in their struggles.
May they be more terrible to the impious, yet more compassionate
towards those who are ashamed of their sins, seriously strive to
overcome them and publicly acclaim virtue.
Finally, they pray for Thy Grace, without which no will can durably
persevere in good, and no soul can be saved; may it be more abundant
in proportion to the number of their miseries and infidelities.
Originally published in O Legionário, Nº 750 - 12-22-46, slightly adapted, by Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira