30 B 2006
The curing of the blind man easily establishes a theme for the homilist and I do
well in following the lead of that Gospel.
Often I think how heaven has taken such personal interest in us as individuals.
What could motivate this care other than love? I’m thinking here, for example,
of the time when our Lady said to Jesus about the wedding guests “they have no
wine.” That Mary should have on her mind not only those great and large concerns
of ours (such as our salvation), but even our physical needs and desires is
astonishing. Heaven truly cares about us–and not just as a lump of corporate
humanity–but as individuals. One blind man out of so many was cured, not so that
we might think of God as exercising selective care, but rather to indicate that
it’s the individual who matters to Him.
Blindness in the Scriptures is not only a physical condition but is also
symbolic of spiritual maladies. It’s used as such to indicate the ignorance of
God or of His commandments, or of a want of faith, or even–as in the phrase
‘willed blindness’–the deliberate and obstinate turning from truth or grace.
Surely this last sort of ‘blindness’ is the most serious because it is capable
of being overcome, if only there were good will. While we gladly acknowledge the
compassion of Jesus on those who are ‘in the dark’ innocently, through no fault
of their own, we must also confess His severity with those of bad disposition.
For example, He foretold the damnation of certain men who were the cause of
scandal to others: men who misled others by their bad example. So, Christ is
indeed ‘good news’ to those of integrity, to those who are sincere, to weak
sinners who, despising evil, want to do what is right. But towards the malicious
and the hypocrites, Jesus was demonstrably intolerant.
The subject of blindness of the willed or blameworthy kind comes to mind when I
hear about men and women–reputedly Catholics–who obstinately follow a course
other than the one directed by the Church. What sort of madness is it to claim
allegiance to the Church only to betray her? I am thinking here not only of
Catholic people who practice divorce, contraception, abortion and pornography,
but, with even greater force, those in high places who do not defend truth on
our behalf. Of these there are two varieties according to their position:
leaders in the Church (bishops and priests) and civil servants (those we elect
to public office). As our Lord teaches, being higher up, in places of authority,
will demand a stricter, not an easier, accounting. The implication is that the
higher one ascends the better a person he ought to be. As the well-known dictum
has it, ‘noblesse oblige,’ the rich, the noble or the important ones ought to
deport themselves honorably. Yet, for reasons of human respect, we tend to
reverse this axiom and permit the influential a certain ‘dispensation’ from the
laws that bind the rest of us, as if their prestige exempted them from the laws
of God. In actual fact, however, as I already said, a more stringent moral
requirement ought to attend those in high places. ‘To whom much is given, much
is expected.’
We have been much distressed in recent history over the fact that those who are
our leaders, and who thus should know and act better, have scandalized us by
betraying their calling through their cowardice and failure to uphold the honor
of their offices. And why have they done this? Because there are certain moral
requirements that demand observance against the grain of popular opinion. One
begins to wonder whether their failure of our leaders to defend the truth is due
to having themselves fallen prey to corruption or whether they are merely
lacking the courage to speak forthrightly. We see evidences of this failure in
this many ways: clergy who never speak a word on the sins of impurity that are
devouring our society; corporate leaders who betray our trust through
mismanagement of monies; politicians–even allegedly Catholic ones–who speaking
approvingly of abortion and homosexual marriage while their bishops do not
reprimand them and allow them to receive the sacraments; educators violating the
innocence of children through shameful things introduced into the academic
curriculum; and, needless to add, those in the arts and entertainment fields who
have been among the most ardent fomenters of moral turpitude. The cumulative
effect of this persistent betrayal is for us to tend to become skeptics,
reticent to trust our leaders in nearly every aspect of societal life. This is
an unfortunate consequence which, if allowed to go unchecked, might lead to a
rebellion against authority and a subsequent social chaos which, in the end,
would constitute an even greater societal evil.
In exasperation many wonder what should be done. As mentioned, one should not
cultivate a suspicious attitude towards all those in positions of authority.
Rightly understood, all authority comes from God. However, one of the great
problems of being in a position over others is that it gives an illusory feeling
of superiority over them beyond what their office warrants. Do our leaders ever
ponder the fact that they will be held to greater accounting for their actions
than the rest of us? And if not, here you have the very sort of blindness that
sparked these reflections. Our correct response–besides prayer for good
leadership–which is no small thing–must be that we pledge ourselves personally
and individually to believe in and to uphold what is right so as not to fall
victim to the prevailing corruption. As Saint Paul warned, everyone will be
judged according to his deeds. That should be a sufficient admonition for us to
focus our energies on self reform.
Those in authority over us are appointed in various ways. We do not get to elect
our parents, our or our priests bishops 9as the second reading reminds us): the
one (parents) are given of nature, the other (clergy) are appointed by the
Church. But we do have a say-so about who our political leaders will be. Whom
shall we appoint to be over us?
An election is approaching, as you know, and before God you have a duty to cast
your votes for those who have pledged to uphold what is right. So many issues
are facing us at this time in the world that we cannot afford to allow any
secondary considerations from obscuring what is our clear duty in voting as
Christians. You must find out who is pro-life, pro-marriage, pro-family or else
bear your part before God for the consequences of what may likely follow in an
even more corrupted society.
One hears Jesus ask in the Gospel, “What do you want me to do for you?” The
response is ‘I want to see.’ May our Lord open your eyes to the light, the light
of reason and the even superior light of faith to act responsibly for the good
of society, the good of the Church and for the good of your own homes.