Explanation of Catholic Morals eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 347 pages of information about Explanation of Catholic Morals.

Explanation of Catholic Morals eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 347 pages of information about Explanation of Catholic Morals.

You may slander a community, a class as well as an individual.  It is not necessary to charge all with crime; it is sufficient so to manipulate your words that suspicion may fall on any one of said class or community.  If the charge be particularly heinous, or if the body of men be such that all its usefulness depends on its reputation, as is the case especially with religious bodies, the malice of such slander acquires a dignity far above the ordinary.

The Church of God has suffered more in the long centuries of her existence from the tongue of slander than from sword and flame and chains combined.  In the mind of her enemies, any weapon is lawful with which to smite her, and the climax of infamy is reached when they affirm, to justify their dishonesty, that they turn Rome’s weapons against her.  There is only one answer to this, and that is the silence of contempt.  Slander and dollars are the wheels on which moves the propaganda that would substitute Gospel Christianity for the superstitions of Rome.  It is slander that vilifies in convention and synod the friars who did more for pure Christianity in the Philippines in a hundred years than the whole nest of their revilers will do in ten thousand.  It is slander that holds up to public ridicule the congregations that suffer persecution and exile in France in the name of liberty, fraternity, etc.  It is slander that the long-tailed missionary with the sanctimonious face brings back from the countries of the South with which to regale the minds of those who furnish the Bibles and shekels.  And who will measure the slander that grows out of the dunghill of Protestant ignorance of what Catholics really believe!

CHAPTER XCI.  RASH JUDGMENT.

The Eighth Commandment is based on the natural right every fellow-man has to our good opinion, unless he forfeits it justly and publicly.  It forbids all injury to his reputation, first, in the estimation of others, which is done by calumny and detraction; secondly, in our own estimation, and this is done by rash judgment, by hastily and without sufficient grounds thinking evil of him, forming a bad opinion of him.  He may be, as he has a right to be, anxious to stand well in our esteem as well as in the esteem of others.

A judgment, rash or otherwise, is not a. doubt, neither is it a suspicion.  Everybody knows what a doubt is.  When I doubt if another is doing or has done wrong, the idea of his or her guilt simply enters my mind, occurs to me and I turn it over and around, from one side to another, without being satisfied to accept or reject it.  I do not say:  yes, it is true; neither do I say:  no, it is not true.  I say nothing, I pass no judgment; I suspend for the moment all judgment, I doubt.

A doubt is not evil unless there be absolutely no reason for doubting, and then the doubt is born of passion and malice.  And the evil, whatever there is of it, is not in the doubt’s entering our mind—­ something beyond our control; but in our entertaining the doubt, in our making the doubt personal, which supposes an act of the will.

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Explanation of Catholic Morals from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.