DRINKING and TAVERNS
Taken, for the most part, from the writings and sayings of St. John Vianney, the great Cure D' Ars
Drunkenness is a great sin. It is a disgrace in the
eyes of men. The conversion of the habitual drunkard is difficult. Many
people are prone to make light of this vice and excuse the same. We will
attempt to show the enormity of this vice and the folly to make excuses
for it.
The Drunkenness of Noah by Giovanni Bellini |
It is beyond the power of mortal man to describe
the full extent of the
havoc wrought by this vice. Probably because it is so widespread, there
is too much tolerance for this evil. We cannot be indifferent to the
loss of good name, health and most of all, the loss of salvation for the
unreformed drunkard. The Holy Ghost tells us the drunkard should learn
moderation from the beasts. What a disgrace to human nature if the
beasts are held to us as examples. This sin of alcoholism does not abate
with advancing age. Drunkards are not easily reformed. The Council of
Mayence holds that the drunkard transgresses all the ten Commandments.
St. Paul in the Holy Bible, assures us that the
drunkard will not enter
into the kingdom of heaven; drunkenness, therefore, must be a great sin.
Some would use the excuse that alcoholism is a disease. If drinking is a
disease:
- It is the only disease contracted by an act of the will.
- It is the only disease that requires a license to propagate it.
- It is the only disease that is bottled and sold.
- It is the only disease that requires outlets to spread it.
- It is the only disease that produces revenue for the government.
- It is the only disease that is habit forming.
- It is the only disease that produces crime.
- It is the only disease that is permitted to be spread by advertising.
- It is the only disease without a germ or virus and for which there is no corrective medicine.
- It is the only disease that will condemn you to eternal separation from God in Hell. (Gal. 5:21)
Let us consider what St. John Vianney had to say
about taverns: "Was it not in those houses that dancers congregated and
men forgot their duty?" He tackled this enemy from the outset, nor did a
holy indignation allow him to mince his words. He made his own the
phraseology of St. John Climacus, in order to strike the harder: "The
tavern," he exclaimed, "is the devil's own shop, the school where hell
retails its dogmas, the market where souls are bartered, the place where
families are broken up, where health is undermined, where quarrels are
started and murders committed."
"The innkeepers", he used to say, "steal the
bread of a poor woman and her children by selling wine to drunkards who
spend on Sunday what they have earned during the week. If he wishes to
escape eternal damnation, a priest may not and cannot absolve innkeepers
who, either at night or during church hours, serve those drunkards
wine.
The ruthless struggle of St. John Vianney against
the taverns was successful as they were all closed down in his parish.
This yielded some unexpected results. The plague of pauperism abated.
"There were very few destitute persons at Ars itself." says M.
Pertinand, the schoolmaster; "by suppressing the taverns, M. le Cure had
eliminated the main cause of poverty."
M. Vianney knew that God was blasphemed in the taverns. For a soul
penetrated with such profound reverence for the holy Name, the mere
thought of such a thing was unbearable. And yet he experienced the
sorrow "of hearing blasphemies issuing from the mouths of the village
children who scarcely knew the Lord's Prayer." So successful was the
Saint's campaign against cursing and swearing that even expressions that
were merely coarse – he did not shrink from mentioning them in the
pulpit – gradually vanished from the vocabulary of the people of Ars. In
their place, they would recite the Lord's Prayer, the Hail Mary, or
formulas such as "How good God is! Blessed be God!"
If you do drink please drink in moderation and let us remember that alcohol in and of itself is not evil.
St Brigid's Prayer
I'd like to give a lake of beer to God.
I'd love the Heavenly
Host to be tippling there
For all eternity.
I'd love the men of Heaven to live with me,
To dance and sing.
If they wanted, I'd put at their disposal
Vats of suffering.
White cups of love I''d give them,
With a heart and a half;
Sweet pitchers of mercy I'd offer
To every man.
I'd make Heaven a cheerful spot,
Because the happy heart is true.
I'd make the men contented for their own sake
I'd like Jesus to love me too.
I'd like the people of heaven to gather
From all the parishes around,
I'd give a special welcome to the women,
The three Marys of great renown.
I'd sit with the men, the women of God
There by the lake of beer
We'd be drinking good health forever
And every drop would be a prayer.
If you do drink please drink in moderation and let us remember that alcohol in and of itself is not evil.
St Brigid's Prayer
I'd like to give a lake of beer to God.
I'd love the Heavenly
Host to be tippling there
For all eternity.
I'd love the men of Heaven to live with me,
To dance and sing.
If they wanted, I'd put at their disposal
Vats of suffering.
White cups of love I''d give them,
With a heart and a half;
Sweet pitchers of mercy I'd offer
To every man.
I'd make Heaven a cheerful spot,
Because the happy heart is true.
I'd make the men contented for their own sake
I'd like Jesus to love me too.
I'd like the people of heaven to gather
From all the parishes around,
I'd give a special welcome to the women,
The three Marys of great renown.
I'd sit with the men, the women of God
There by the lake of beer
We'd be drinking good health forever
And every drop would be a prayer.
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