Dan Everiss
| Sun, Feb 21, 2016 at 9:02 PM |
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Category: The steady and on-going decline and fall of our once great nation of America.
Comment: Newly departed
Justice Antonin Scalia was a very intelligent and moral and
conservative a presence and VOTE, on our national supreme court, a
steady man of high Christian and American patriotic principals. Now
he is gone. And now Mr. Barack Hussein Obama, [ who acts as if he were
the close personal friend of all of America's detractors and enemies,
domestic and foreign,] our leftist Marxist, pro-Muslim and
anti-Christian despiser of this country and our founding traditional
values, and free-enterprise economic system, of which he is our president, will appoint another of his own mentality to this high court.
Mr. Obama steadily tramples on our Constitution, taking more and more ILLEGAL dictatorial powers to himself, while Congress looks the other way or simply goes along, -that Constitution, and thus the sole protection of all of our American freedoms and rights, which Judge Scalia defended.
Will Congress delay or stop Mr. Obama?, -will it FINALLY! impeach and remove him from office in disgrace? as it should? Doubtful.
The leadership of both parties is exceedingly corrupt, drunk ...with all of their power and great wealth.
They are the immoral and super rich corrupt ruling class of this nation, The
Regime In Power....ever pushing us to full blown total ruinous
socialism, otherwise known as Marxist-Leninist Communism...a Godless
hell on earth.
Full blown socialism/communism has never worked anywhere it has ever been tried!
It
depresses the population and keeps them, in abject never ending
hopeless poverty, with few rights and no real freedoms, but as virtual
SLAVES, while the small ruling class, elite, live like kings.
Prison or death awaits any who speak out and oppose this.
America is headed that way. GOD SAVE US!
Rd.
Daniel, in mourning for our once free and once prosperous great
country, which we are in reality witnessing its dying and it being
buried in the ground.
From: Date: Sun, 21 Feb 2016 22:53:57 -0500 Subject: Transcript: Rev. Paul Scalia's eulogy for his father, Justice Antonin Scalia
Transcript: Rev. Paul Scalia's eulogy for his father, Justice Antonin Scalia
The
following is a transcript of the homily by Rev. Paul Scalia, the son of
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, at the funeral Mass for his
father at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate
Conception. Your Eminence Cardinal Wuerl, Your Excellencies,
Archbishop ViganĂ², Bishop Loverde, Bishop Higgins, my brother priests,
deacons, distinguished guests, dear friends and faithful gathered: On
behalf of our mother and the entire Scalia family, I want to thank you
for your presence here, for your many words of consolation, and even
more for the many prayers and Masses you have offered at the death of
our father, Antonin Scalia. In particular I thank Cardinal Wuerl,
first for reaching out so quickly and so graciously to console our
mother. It was a consolation to her and therefore to us as well. Thank
you also for allowing us to have this parish funeral Mass here in this
basilica dedicated to Our Lady. What a great privilege and consolation
that we were able to bring our father through the holy doors and for
him gain the indulgence promised to those who enter in faith. I thank
Bishop Loverde, the bishop of our diocese of Arlington, a bishop our
father liked and respected a great deal. Thank you, Bishop Loverde,
for your prompt visit to our mother, for your words of consolation, for
your prayers. The family will depart for the private burial
immediately after Mass and will not have time to visit, so I want to
express our thanks at this time so that you all know our profound
appreciation and thanks. You will notice in the program mention of a
memorial that will be held on March 1st. We hope to see many of you
there. We hope the Lord will repay your great goodness to us. We are
gathered here because of one man. A man known personally to many of us,
known only by reputation to even more. A man loved by many, scorned by
others. A man known for great controversy, and for great
compassion. That man, of course, is Jesus of Nazareth. It is He whom
we proclaim. Jesus Christ, son of the father, born of the Virgin Mary,
crucified, buried, risen, seated at the right hand of the Father. It is
because of him. because of his life, death and resurrection that we do
not mourn as those who have no hope, but in confidence we commend
Antonin Scalia to the mercy of God. Scripture says Jesus Christ is
the same yesterday today and forever. And that sets a good course for
our thoughts and our prayers here today. In effect, we look in three
directions. To yesterday, in thanksgiving. To today, in petition. And
into eternity, with hope. We look to Jesus Christ yesterday, that is,
to the past, in thanksgiving for the blessings God bestowed upon Dad.
In the past week, many have recounted what Dad did for them. But here
today, we recount what God did for Dad, how he blessed him. We give
thanks first of all for the atoning death and life-giving resurrection
of Jesus Christ. Our Lord died and rose not only for all of us, but also
for each of us. And at this time we look to that yesterday of his death
and resurrection, and we give thanks that he died and rose for Dad. Further,
we give thanks that Jesus brought him to new life in baptism, nourished
him with the Eucharist, and healed him in the confessional. We give
thanks that Jesus bestowed upon him 55 years of marriage to the woman he
loved, a woman who could match him at every step, and even hold him
accountable. God blessed Dad with a deep Catholic faith: The
conviction that Christ's presence and power continue in the world today
through His body, the Church. He loved the clarity and coherence of the
church's teachings. He treasured the church's ceremonies, especially the
beauty of her ancient worship. He trusted the power of her
sacraments as the means of salvation as Christ working within him for
his salvation. Although one time, one Saturday afternoon, he did
scold me for having heard confessions that afternoon, that same day. And
I hope that it's some source of consolation, if there are any lawyers
present, that the Roman collar was not a shield against his criticism. The
issue that evening was not that I had been hearing confessions, but
that he had found himself in my confessional line, and he quickly
departed it. As he put it later, "Like heck if I'm confessing to you!" The feeling was mutual. God
blessed Dad, as is well known, with a love for his country. He knew
well what a close-run thing the founding of our nation was. And he saw
in that founding, as did the founders themselves, a blessing, a blessing
quickly lost when faith is banned form the public square, or when we
refuse to bring it there. So he understood that there is no conflict
between loving God and loving one's country, between one's faith and
one's public service. Dad understood that the deeper he went in his
Catholic faith, the better a citizen and public servant he became. God
blessed him with the desire to be the country's good servant because he was God's first. We
Scalias, however, give thanks for a particular blessing God bestowed.
God blessed Dad with a love for his family. We have been thrilled to
read and hear the many words of praise and admiration for him, for his
intellect, his writings, his speeches, his influence and so on. But
more important to us — and to him — is that he was Dad. He was the
father that God gave us for the great adventure of family life. Sure he
forgot our names at times, or mixed them up, but there are nine of us. He
loved us, and sought to show that love. And sought to share the
blessing of the faith he treasured. And he gave us one another, to have
each other for support. That's the greatest wealth parents can bestow,
and right now we are particularly grateful for it. So we look to the
past, to Jesus Christ yesterday. We call to mind all of these blessings,
and we give our Lord the honor and glory for them, for they are His
work. We look to Jesus today, in petition, to the present moment, here
and now, as we mourn the one we love and admire, the one whose absence
pains us. Today we pray for him. We pray for the repose of his soul. We
thank God for his goodness to Dad as is right and just. But we also know
that although dad believed, he did so imperfectly, like the rest of us.
He tried to love God and neighbor, but like the rest of us did so
imperfectly. He was a practicing Catholic, "practicing" in
the sense that he hadn't perfected it yet. Or rather, Christ was not yet
perfected in him. And only those in whom Christ is brought to
perfection can enter heaven. We are here, then, to lend our prayers to
that perfecting, to that final work of God's grace, in freeing Dad from
every encumbrance of sin. But don't take my word for it. Dad himself,
not surprisingly, had something to say on the matter. Writing years ago
to a Presbyterian minister whose funeral service he admired, he
summarized quite nicely the pitfalls of funerals and why he didn't like
eulogies. He wrote: "Even when the deceased was an admirable person, indeed especially when
the deceased was an admirable person, praise for his virtues can cause
us to forget that we are praying for and giving thanks for God's
inexplicable mercy to a sinner." Now he would not have exempted
himself from that. We are here then, as he would want, to pray for God's
inexplicable mercy to a sinner. To this sinner, Antonin Scalia. Let us
not show him a false love and allow our admiration to deprive him of our
prayers. We continue to show affection for him and do good for him by
praying for him: That all stain of sin be washed away, that all wounds
be healed, that he be purified of all that is not Christ. That he rest
in peace. Finally we look to Jesus forever, into eternity. Or better,
we consider our own place in eternity and whether it will be with the
Lord. Even as we pray for Dad to enter swiftly into eternal glory, we
should be mindful of ourselves. Every funeral reminds us of just how
thin the veil is between this world and the next, between time and
eternity, between the opportunity for conversion and the moment of
judgment. So we cannot depart here unchanged. It makes no sense to
celebrate God's goodness and mercy to Dad if we are not attentive and
responsive to those realities in our own lives. We must allow this
encounter with eternity to change us, to turn us from sin and towards
the Lord. The English Dominican, Father Bede Jarrett, put it
beautifully when he prayed, "O strong son of God, while you prepare a
place for us, prepare us also for that happy place, that we may be with
you and with those we love for all eternity." Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today and forever,. My
dear friends, this is also the structure of the Mass, the greatest
prayer we can offer for Dad, because it's not our prayer, but the
Lord's. The Mass looks to Jesus yesterday. It reaches into the
past — reaches to the Last Supper, to the crucifixion, to the
resurrection — and it makes those mysteries and their power present here
on this altar. Jesus himself becomes present here today under the
form of bread and wine so that we can unite all our prayers of
thanksgiving, sorrow and petition with Christ himself as an offering to
the father. And all of this with a view to eternity, stretching towards
heaven, where we hope one day to enjoy that perfect union with God
himself and to see Dad again and, with him, rejoice in the communion of
saints. Rev. Paul Scalia is a Roman Catholic priest in
the Diocese of Arlington, Virginia and the son of the late Supreme Court
Justice Antonin Scalia.
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