Showing posts with label father of lies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label father of lies. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

In the Spirit of Saint Nicholas and Saint Augustine of Hippo

As Saint Augustine of Hippo said, "It is better to allow the birth of scandal, than to abandon the truth."

So let us, in a spirit of Charity and Muscular Catholicism, confront lies and liars, and (but only metaphorically) knock them down.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

LEFT-FOOTED HERESY? TRUTH, LOVE, LIES

Of mental reservation, lies
I've really had a bucket
-ful. I read long dissertations
On Truth, and think,"Well chuck it!"

When faced with murder, rape, seems we
Must check the Cathechism.
Saints Augustine and Acquinas,
Before we make decision

On whether to choose Life or Truth:
When murder may ensue,
To save an innocent life, I'd lie.
For me, better be true

To family, neighbours, those I love,
Than bow to an abstraction
And make a god of truthfulness.
Better the infraction

Of Truth  (what is it?  Ideas clothed
In speech, blurred in translation),
Than stand aghast, afraid to lie,
While Rachel mourns her Nation.

For what was good for Raphael,
For Rahab, Esau, And Pope
Pius XII will do for me.
Mercy my duty and Hope.

Words are the dress of thoughts, or so
Lord Chesterfield remarked.
Language translated, dress of dress,
Dog-matically barked,

By those who try to confine God
To Truth or Love or Beauty.
He's no abstraction, but Infinite,
Personal.  And our duty

Is to obey, love, follow Him, 
And after Him, love our neighbour,
Not erect doubtful words as gods
And use them to belabour

The brave, who for the Love of God
And neighbour, like serpents, wise
Weaponless, helpless, terrified, struck
With weakness's weapon: lies.


Notes:

1. Yes, "chuck it", with a nod to the shade of Bowdler!

 2. I am aware of the weak, half-rhyme or assonance of Cathechism - decision, and hope to improve on it.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

IN DEFENCE OF LYING or I THINK I MAY BE A HERETIC

I have read several blogs this last week which state, unequivocally, that it is always sinful to lie, even to save someone's life, and a fascinating entry in the New Advent Catholic encyclopoedia (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10195b.htm) on mental reservation, seems to support this view.

Hard cases, as lawyers say - or used to say, make bad law, but here are some hard cases:

In the last war, Polish Catholic Priests at risk of their own lives, forged baptismal documents, and the Home Army provided false non-Jewish birth certificates, for Jewish children who were taken into Catholic homes to avoid murder by the Germans. Lying? Certainly. Sin? Not in my opinion, just heroism.

Soldiers use camouflage and disinformation to deceive the enemy, as was done before the D Day landings in Normandy. Lying? Yup. Sin? Nope.

Captured Allied agents in Germany or Axis-occupied territory lied, even under torture, to save fellow agents, allies, or help their own country. A mortal sin? If so, one I may owe my life to.

Deceiving the enemy whether a foreign force, an occupying power, or in a civil war, in order to save the lives of others or your own: sin? No. Duty? Yes.

The police ask a Priest if Mr Badman has confessed to murdering his wife. The Priest, bound by the seal of the Confessional lies and says that he has not. A damned liar? I would not say so.

I would go further, and propose that a military or armed enemy or an evil civil power has no right to the truth, compared with the right people have to their lives.

I would propose even further that such an enemy should be routinely lied to and deceived directly and indirectly in any way which will make his purposes less realisable.

Satan is commonly referred to as the father of lies. Sometimes we lie, because the evil created by Satan gives us little choice.

So I guess I'm a heretic.

Huh!