CAPG's Blog 

Sunday Sermons: EVIL INFLUENCES

by VP


Posted on Sunday September 21, 2025 at 12:00AM in Sunday Sermons



The Resurrection of the Widow's Son at Nain (La résurrection du fils de la veuve de Naïm) - James Tissot


"Behold a dead man was carried out."— Saint Luke vii. 12. 

1. Description of the miracle. 
2. Same mercy shown to us; can we expect it again and again? 
3. The influences that keep us in sin: 
Attachment to sin ; 
Cowardice ; 
Foolish hope of a long life ; 
Presumption. 
4. “‘He gave him to his mother”—the Church. 


"The prophet of old said : “‘ These things I shall think over in my heart, therefore will I hope. The mercies of the Lord that we are not consumed: because His commiserations have not failed.” (Lam. iii. 21, 22.) This thought comes back to our mind when we read the Gospel today. The young man was dead ; they were carrying him to the grave, his poor widowed mother following him in her grief and desolation, and a great multitude of the city accompanying her. And the mercy of God met and stopped that mournful procession, raised the youth to life, and gave him to his mother. 

God in His goodness, not once, but many a time, has worked this miracle upon our souls! Let us recall to mind days gone by when our souls, alas! were borne along by evil influences, dead to God’s grace, the Church, our Mother, and the angels mourning the lost one. And God’s mercy has stopped that procession of death, forgiveness has raised our soul to life, and we have been restored to the Church. 

The danger is that we are not sure that this may happen again. Sure of it? No, we have no right to expect it or to claim it. For when we sin mortally, in that same moment we deserve to be abandoned by God, to be handed over to the devil, and be eternally lost. It is therefore the ineffable mercy of God that the sinner, who has offended Him so grievously, is not only not condemned, but even meets with mercy and forgiveness. 

Let us see, then, what are the evil influences that prevent a sinner repenting at once, and that carry us on in our sins without reflection, without fear of our destruction. What more helpless than the dead carried to the grave! And such are we, when in sin, borne on by these bearers, these evil influences. 

And what are they? First, the love of sin. The attachment to vanity and pleasure, the feeling that we could not live without them. How many have turned away from repentance because they could not give up that wicked and impure love; because they could not attempt to master that craving for drink; because they could not bring themselves to restore that ill-gotten gain which their avarice clings to; because they could not forgive their neighbours ! 

And another bearer to destruction is the fear of spiritual labour—the work of penance and piety. We think God’s service is hard; it is repugnant to us to fight against temptation and to do penance. We look at the labour and are appalled ; we have not the courage nor the strength. Oh, we have forgotten to raise our eyes and look at Him, who bids us “Come to Me, all ye that labour and are burdened, and I will refresh you.” (Matt. xi. 28.) 

The third bearer is the false hope of a longer life. We comfort ourselves with vain and empty words. Oh, there is time yet for repentance ; we need not abandon our pleasant, easy, sinful ways as yet. And this in spite of what our Blessed Lord has said: “Watch, for ye know not the day nor the hour.” (Matt. xxv. 13.) And if we are assured of a long life, of many years to come, when should we be stronger to break with sin and begin a new life ? For the longer we remain in sin, the heavier our burden and the weaker we become ; the more under the power of the devil, the more estranged from our insulted Saviour. 

And the last bearer is presumption of God’s mercy. Our Heavenly Father delays His Divine justice, and we take advantage of that, and presumptuously reckon on His forgiveness as assured. "Add not sin upon sin; and say not the mercy of God is great, and He will have mercy on the multitude of our sins. For mercy and wrath quickly come from Him, and His wrath looketh upon sinners. Delay not to be converted to the Lord, and defer it not from day to day. For His wrath shall come on a sudden, and in the time of vengeance He will destroy thee.” (Ecclus. v. 5, 9.) 

Whilst, then, the mercy of God is still with us, let us earnestly beg of Him grace to fear these evil influences which seek to carry our souls to perdition. Beware of them — attachment to sin; the fear of making an endeavour, the foolish hope of a long life, the presuming on God’s goodness, Let us drive them from our hearts, and implore our Blessed Lord to restore us to the life of grace and to the care of the Church. “And He gave him to his mother.” (Luke vii. 15.) There is our safeguard and our hope —to be taught by the Church, advised by the Church, guided by the Church, strengthened by the Church. Strengthened ! Yes, strengthened by prayer, by the Holy Mass, by the Sacrament of Penance, by frequent Communion. Greater strength than this God Himself cannot give us. “If any man eat of this Bread, he shall live for ever.” (John vi. 52.) 

And with the Church there is "the great multitude of the city" -the angels and Saints of God, and the prayers of good friends, whose wish and endeavour is to counteract the evil influences bearing us to destruction. Within the Church we are in communion with these, are strengthened and encouraged by them to be manful and earnest as they were; we are helped by their prayers, filled with hope by their example. Alas! on the other hand, if we wander away from the Church, we shall fall under the evil influences of sin once again, and, borne along to death, we shall trust to a mere chance whether the mercy of God will meet us once again, raise us to life, and restore us to our Mother." Short sermons,by Rev. Fr. F. P Hickey 1913, 15th Sunday after Pentecost



No one has commented yet.

Leave a Comment

HTML Syntax: Allowed