Rousing Her Radiance: Day 31
Author: Andrew Comiskey
November 10, 2023
Holy
Fear

‘He
will be the foundation for our times—a rich store of salvation, wisdom, and
knowledge: fear of the Lord is key to this treasure.’-Is. 33:6
Every
Christian can be bought. The unthinkable becomes a thought then desire; a look
becomes touch, the hug a kiss. Adultery inches its way into our hearts and
blazes to burn vows, ministries, a family, a friend, people God entrusted to
us.
Let’s
focus on ministers. Most Christian leaders never intend to seduce anyone. We vow
to flee fornication, even its appearance, and live faithful lives. But boundaries
wear thin under pressure; historic temptations become current. The faithful helper
who loves us now in the trenches may no longer be the spouse who has grown
distant due to our neglect. That fresh face and body and spirit loves us new,
awakens dormant need we forget we had.
Most infidelities
occur in service of the Kingdom: a well-intentioned task or mission with
another who rouses us onward then arouses us. The greatest sin: not the arousal
per se but denying it. We quietly stoke the potent mix of flesh and Spirit that
enlivens us through the relationship.
In
the end, our downfall is pride. That could never happen to us, to me. Jesus uses
humble self-awareness to gently expose us before we are exposed.
We
come to our senses. Fear of God provokes us. We could lose Him. That’s why the
Catholic Church calls sexual sins ‘mortal’ ones. Josef Pieper says it best: ‘I
could be separated by sin from the Ultimate ground of my being.’ Really? What’s
so bad about a little sweetness in the dark with a friend? A lot. Sex unites us
with another and makes us theirs. When illicit, it threatens union with the One
to whom we first espoused ourselves.
That’s
a big deal. If we have become dull in our moral conviction here, worldly in our
thinking, we need to wake up and fall before the Sovereign Lord. Father Alfred
Delp writes: ‘Fear of God means knowing the absolute dominion of the Lord of
all’ in our thoughts, affections, and physicality. Many of us are not inclined
to recognize and reverence God in this way.

He
rouses us. Illicit lovers divide not only our bodies but our spiritual
communion with Him. That’s why adulterous David cried out: ‘Against You, You
only, have I sinned, and done what is wicked in Your sight, so You are proved
right when You speak, and justified when You judge’ (Ps. 51:4). And that’s why
St. Paul reminds us that the body, first and foremost, is for the Lord—illicit
bonds fracture our primary communion with Him (1 Cor. 6:12-20).
Holy
fear of God must be aimed also at a fear of wrecking other lives, however
tender and ‘meaningful’ the illicit bond. We kill people softly with sexual
sin: spouses and children and congregants and the lover herself who deserved
better than our self-serving seduction. When I am tempted by another, I think
of Annette. I think of my children. I think of the other’s family, spouse, and
kids. I think of the people who need me to be chaste. Would I say or do those
things with Annette present? My kids? My Living Waters group? Unsexy.
I try
to cultivate a chaste fear of sin, my sin. I could be lost to idols in the form
of people or images of people. I am just vulnerable to sexual stuff. A long
history of porn and ‘gay’ stuff humbles me and invites me into merciful
self-evaluation more than I would like. I’d rather have a healthy respect for
sin than heed it. I want to be faithful, all the way around.
My
choice is to stay humble: aware that I could fall, be bought. That gives me
holy fear. I tell others the truth of that fact in the specifics of the
struggle. Usually that works. Holy fear requires holy earthy friends who also
tell the truth of their lives so that together we can be true.
It’s
so basic. The disconnection from reality at the core of our lusts is healed only
through connection with reality, Jesus, who is present in whole-enough members.
Only the Church keeps us humble and holy, one humiliation at a time.
‘Thank
You Jesus for exposing pride. We haven’t energy to lie anymore. We just want
You. And in truth we want what’s best for everyone, especially those we love
most who need our chastity and trust. Help us to be faithful. We aren’t good at
that. But You help us to be good. Be patient with us as we find those members
that we can trust to help us overcome sin. May holy fear prompt us to break the
silence. We want to reflect You more nearly. We want to shine as a radiant
Bride.’
‘Father,
we thank You for Jesus who established the Church on a Rock against which hell
will not prevail (Matt 16:18). We pray for every Christian leader to build on
Her firm foundation of sexual clarity and integrity. Father, unmask the
deceiver and divider of Christians and unite us in one Spirit. As weak members
of Christ, we ask for truth to guide our pursuit of sexual wholeness, for grace
to sustain it, and for spiritual power to transform us. May we reflect the
chaste radiance of Jesus (2 Cor. 3:18) as we “shine like stars in the universe,
holding out the word of life” (Phil. 2:15-16) to a lost and hurting world.’
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