The Young Emperor
Another story from the Desert Fathers…
Pictured, St. Benedict Joseph Labre.
There was a young emperor
who went to the desert
to visit an old monk.
The Emperor ordered his retinue to wait at a distance, and he approached the monk’s cell alone. He removed the crown from his head and hid it and then knocked on the door to the monk’s cell. The monk, upon opening the door, immediately knew that it was the Emperor standing before him, but he pretended not to recognize him, and he welcomed him as a fellow monk. They prayed and sat down together. Then the Emperor began to question the monk saying,
“How are all the fathers in the desert?”
The monk replied,
“They all pray for your health.”
Then the Emperor looked around the cell and saw nothing except a small basket containing bread, and the monk said to him,
“Eat.”
Then the monk dipped the bread in water, poured oil on it and salt, and gave it to the Emperor, who ate it. And the monk gave him some water, and he drank. Then the Emperor asked,
“Do you know who I am?”
The monk replied,
“God knows who you are.”
The Emperor then identified himself, and the monk bowed at the waist in homage. The Emperor said to him,
“You are truly blessed because you do not have the cares of this world. I was born to kingship, and the affairs of my empire are a constant concern to me. Each day I dine on the richest meats and cakes and the finest wines are poured into my goblet. And yet, today mere bread and water have satisfied me as no sumptuous feast ever has.”
And the young emperor marveled and went his way. - Stories From The Desert Fathers.
“I rejoice to do your will as though all riches were mine.” - Psalm 119:14
Wow! Now this is a good post…
“Is it a sin to rebuke a priest?” from Roman Catholic Blog.

Pictured, San Pietro Damiani
Can one rebuke a cleric?
I would have commented at the post, but I thought I’d link to the piece instead, with a few comments here. I would definitely answer, “No, it is not a sin to rebuke a priest - I’ve done so in the past, and for good reason.”
What would be sinful is to insult a priest (or anyone for that matter) or to use abusive language, slander, or violence - anything that would unjustly demean the dignity of the person and his station. (So avoid speaking out of anger - I’m here to tell you it is hard to do.)
For me, the interesting point in his post, were the examples of saints rebuking clergy. He cites St. Peter Damian, St. Basil, and St. Catherine of Siena, among others. I have long been acquainted with Catherine’s writing concerning the sin of sodomy amongst clerics, I was not aware of St. Peter Damian’s condemnations until today.
Very often, I think we believe the phenomenon of homosexual and pedophile priests is something new, a product of the corruption of morals and decadence so unique to modern man. The writings of the saints altogether contradict this notion. Perhaps the prevalence and tolerance of it today has been greater since whole communities may be deceived into thinking it is harmless, or as in the case of some religious superiors and bishops, they have been in collusion with the perpetrators. Nevertheless, the sin has been around for centuries, always more obvious in an era of decadence.
Today, political correctness, along with sentimental piety, and other more sinister motives, prevents most from speaking out against the sin, preferring to cover it up, or denying it’s prevalence. Groups such as “New Ways Ministry” who recently had a sort of convention here in Minneapolis, even attempt to justify and sanitize the evil.
Words from St. Peter Damian.
Here is the piece by St. Peter Damian from Roman Catholic Blog that opened my eyes a little bit more:
“The befouling cancer of sodomy is, in fact, spreading so through the clergy or rather, like a savage beast, is raging with such shameless abandon through the flock of Christ, that for many of them it would be more salutary to be burdened with service in the world than, under the pretext of religion, to be enslaved so easily under the iron rule of satanic tyranny. It would be better for them to perish alone as laymen that, after having changed their attire but not their disposition, to drag others with them to destruction, as Truth itself testifies when It says, “But if anyone is a cause of stumbling to one of these little ones, it would be better for him to be drowned in the depths of the sea with a great millstone round his neck.” Unless immediate effort be exerted by the Apostolic See, there is little that, even if one wished to curb this unbridled evil, he could not check the momentum of its progress.
Unquestionable, this vice, since it surpasses the enormity of all others, is impossible to compare with any other vice. Without fail it brings death of the body and destruction to the soul. It pollutes the flesh, extinguishes the light of the mind, expels the Holy Spirit from the temple of the human heart and gives entrance to the devil, the stimulator of lust…” - St. Peter Damian
And yet we wonder why there have been and are so many other abuses in the Church and the liturgy.
