They say the memory is the first to go. Well, that may or may not be true
in the natural life. But it is certainly true in the supernatural life. Once
we fail to remember the Lord and His works, our spiritual and moral life
begins to founder. Thus Scripture is full of the commands "remember" and "do
not forget." The Ten Commandments likewise begin, not with a commandment,
but with a reminder: "I am the Lord your God" (Ex 20:2). After all, if we
forget that truth, then we should not hope to keep the commandments.
The parable of the wicked tenants (Mt 21:33-43) presents Israel’s tragic
failure to remember. The parable’s landowner represents God, and the
vineyard he built is Jerusalem, or Israel in general. The tenants — Israel’s
leaders — failed to remember that He was the One Who made their vineyard.
They had, as Isaiah warned, "forgotten the God of [their] salvation" (Is
17:10). Their forgetfulness caused them in turn to resent His commands. They
beat and even killed his servants — that is, the prophets sent to remind
them of God. The landowner’s son — our Lord Himself — they killed outside
the vineyard. He came into the world to collect the harvest but received
instead the full brunt of their resentment.
We face the same danger as the wicked tenants: forgetfulness. When
forgetfulness creeps in — when we forget that it is He Who made us and
redeemed us — then we begin to view ourselves as independent from Him. We
fall into a false sense of self-sufficiency. We grow to resent His commands
as inconveniences, intrusions and violations of our autonomy. His messengers
become annoying to us, and we dismiss them, reject them or persecute them.
Unchecked, such resentment gradually becomes hatred for anything that
threatens our independence — hatred even for our Lord Himself.
The Church constantly guards us against this forgetfulness. As a good
mother she forever reminds us of the Lord, His works and His law. Although
in our more childish moments we might regard it as nagging, she persistently
says, in effect, "Take heed lest you forget the Lord" (Dt 6:12). Through her
priests and bishops she puts our Lord’s teachings before us always. She
points to what He has already accomplished, reminding us that it was He Who
established us as His vineyard. At the same time she looks to the future and
makes us "remember" that moment when He will come again and gather His
harvest.
Mother Church fulfills this apostolate to the memory most especially in
the Liturgy. In the cycle of the Liturgical Year she walks us through the
life of Christ. Year after year she causes us to remember His Incarnation,
birth, life, Passion, death and Resurrection. We revisit His words and deeds
over and over again. Furthermore, in the Mass she actually makes present our
Lord’s greatest work — His Sacrifice on the Cross. She does not just recall
or recollect His Sacrifice. Rather, she makes His Sacrifice truly present,
so that we can conform our lives to it. And she does this in obedience to
His command: "Do this in memory of me."
If the memory is the first to go, it must also be the first to guard. Our
Lord has established the Church as His continuing presence in the world. She
is the constant reminder and living memory of Who He was and what He did.
Let us then heed her teachings and follow her instructions, lest we fall
into that dark and dangerous forgetfulness of God.
Fr. Scalia is parochial vicar at St. Rita Parish in Alexandria.