Friday, June 22, 2012

God reforms our vision – 2 Kings 11, Matt 6:19-23, SS. John Fisher and Thomas More.


When did you last have your vision checked?  I don’t mean by an eye-doctor; I mean by Jesus.  In today’s gospel, Jesus tells us that the quality of our vision will determine the health of our entire self.  Our Holy Cross Constitutions tell us that “for the kingdom to come, disciples need the competence to see and the courage to act.”  The world looks different through eyes of faith, through kingdom-focused eyes, through compassionate eyes, through courageous eyes.

Godly vision doesn’t make the world looked rose-tinted; it doesn’t look nicer in a cheap way.  The priest Jehoiada in our first reading had the keen vision to see more clearly the injustice of Athaliah’s power-hungry reign. He also had the courageous vision to see this as injustice he must right, and we just heard how he managed to preserve an heir, depose Athaliah, destroy the site of Ba’al worship, and bring calm to Judah.

SS. John Fisher and Thomas More also had the God-given vision for injustice to see how Henry VIII was acting irreverently towards the Pope, wickedly towards his first wife, Catherine of Aragorn, and hubristically towards God by claiming the power to annul his own marriage.  They also had the courageous vision to see these wrongs as wrongs they must try to address.  They failed.  They were put to death and Henry abandoned Catherine and the Catholic Church.

But we celebrate their feast day today.  Why would we celebrate failures?  To see them as failures is to see them with clouded eyes.  Godly eyes do not let their death blot out the rest of reality.  Godly eyes see two men who loved: who loved their queen, loved England, loved the Church, loved justice, loved God… who loved enough to die for love.

That’s not failure, that’s what Jesus died for.

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