Private Letter to Pastor From Justice Antonin Scalia Reveals His Personal Faith

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A private letter written after a funeral by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, a leading conservative voice on the high court who died recently, offers a glimpse his personal faith.Addressing it to Dr. James C. Goodloe, who conducted the service, Scalia said he found it “reverent and inspiring.”

“When the deceased and his family are nonbelievers, of course, there is not much to be said except praise for the departed who is no more,” he continued. “But even in Christian services conducted for deceased Christians, I am surprised at how often eulogy is the centerpiece of the service, rather than (as it was in your church) the Resurrection of Christ, and the eternal life which follows from that.”

“I have always thought there is much to be said for such a prohibition, not only because it spares from embarrassment or dissembling those of us about whom little good can truthfully be said, but also because, even when the deceased was an admirable person — indeed, especially when the deceased was an admirable person — praise for his virtues can cause us to forget that we are praying for, and giving thanks for, God’s inexplicable mercy to a sinner. (My goodness, that seems more like a Presbyterian thought than a Catholic one!).”

“What a great mistake,” he continued. “Weddings and funerals (but especially funerals) are the principal occasions left in modern America when you can preach the Good News not just to the faithful, but to those who have never really heard it.”http://www.christianpost.com/

It was a service that did honor to Lewis and homage to God, he added. “It was a privilege to sit with your congregation.”

Justice Scalia said the clergymen who conduct relatively secular services are perhaps moved by a desire not to offend the nonbelievers in attendance, “whose numbers tend to increase in proportion to the prominence of the deceased.”

Justice Scalia said he was told that Roman Catholic canon law doesn’t allow praising someone of something highly in the Church, noting, “though if that is the rule, I have never seen it observed except in the breach.”

“In my aging years, I have attended so many funerals of prominent people that I consider myself a connoisseur of the genre,” Justice wrote to Goodloe, who read out the letter after Scalia’s death, according to The American Conservative.

Justice Scalia wrote the letter in 1998, sharing his thoughts on the funeral of Justice Lewis Powell at Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church in Richmond, Virginia, that he had attended.

http://www.christianpost.com/

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