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The Good News
...Conscience
This week I have
very good news. This is an excellent article on Conscience
written by Most Reverend J.
Peter Sartain, Bishop of Little
Rock. We are grateful that Bishop Sartain has given
us permission to reprint this article in our Sooner
Catholic.
As an infant develops into a toddler,
his or her newly acquired mobility presents a challenge
to parents. Crawling limbs can now go where they should
not go. Tiny hands can grab things they should not grab.
Growing but fragile bodies can bump into sharp surfaces
and tumble down stairs. Houses have to be baby-proofed,
hazardous materials placed out of reach. Moms and dads get
plenty of exercise following the kids around the house.
Physical growth is a natural, beautiful
part of every life - it demonstrates the potential we have
in countless areas and the wisdom of God’s creative hand.
But human development must be guided, taught and formed.
No responsible parents would ever leave a little one to
fend for herself, assuming she could pick up skills and
lessons to be learned on her own. They teach her to walk,
carefully show her the difference between “hot” and “cold,”
deny her certain foods that would be bad for her, protect
her from hidden dangers, keep her clean, hug and praise
her constantly, and love her unconditionally. They would
not think of doing otherwise.
Our lives of faith must be similarly
guided, taught and formed. No Christian parents would ever
think of letting their son fend for himself in learning
about God, since they know faith is God’s gift to be cherished
and passed on. They teach him about God and how to pray.
They take him to church and help with his prayers each night
They give good example and show him what faith in action
means. They instill in him reverence for God and a proper
sense of religious obligation. They know that faith in God
is essential to every human life.
There is another area of life I would
like to address this week and next: the development of conscience.
Here, too, we must be guided, taught and formed. No wise
parents would ever think of telling little children, “Do
whatever you want,” for disaster would not be far away.
They teach them the difference between right and wrong,
good and evil. They explain the meaning of sin. They demonstrate
proper behavior and respect for others. They set down rules
and expect them to be followed. They lay out principles
by which their children can make good decisions. They find
the proper time to instruct them in sexual morality and
give good example in family life. They teach them how to
say both “I’m sorry” and “I forgive you.” They encourage
and support them when they fail.
It is especially important that parents
teach children the intimate connection between one’s relationship
with God and the formation of conscience, because growth
in both is lifelong - and destined for eternity.
True morality has its source and goal
in God, The moral law is God’s gift to us, through which
we are guided, taught, formed and led to union with Him.
God has given us freedom, and He never coerces us to love
him or denies us the use of freedom, even in the most delicate
and complicated matters. However, He also offers us the
wisdom to use our freedom properly by doing good and avoiding
evil. We were made for God - we were made for good - and
God knows we will never be happy when doing evil. Evil is
beneath our dignity, for we were made in God’s image and
likeness.
The fathers of the Second Vatican Council
gave a beautiful definition of “conscience” in the “Pastoral
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World:”
“Deep within his conscience man discovers
a law which he has not laid upon himself but which he must
obey Its voice, ever calling him to love and to do what
is good and to avoid evil, sounds in his heart at the right
moment... For man has in his heart a law inscribed by God
... His conscience is man’s most secret core and his sanctuary
... There he is alone with God whose voice echoes in his
depths (16).”
Commenting on this passage. Pope John
Paul II wrote: “Conscience is the most secret, core and
sanctuary of a person, where we are alone with God. In the
depths of our conscience, we detect a moral law, which does
not impose itself on us, but which holds us to a higher
obedience. This law is not an external human law, but the
voice of God, calling us to free ourselves from the grip
of evil desires and sin, and stimulating us to seek what
is good and true in life.”
If freedom is to be full and authentic,
it must be educated by the formation of a right conscience;
otherwise, we risk misusing our freedom and falling into
evil, intentionally or unintentionally God, our loving and
protective Father, would never think of leaving us to fend
for ourselves in living good, moral, and holy lives. He
guides, teaches, and forms us as his children, giving us
everything we need to grow in faith and goodness.
Next week I will address the formation
of conscience and how conscience comes into play in many
aspects of life.
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