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Thomas More: The Man for This Season

June 22, 2017 Posted by Deacon Keith Fournier Freedom, Uncategorized

Published on THE STREAM

The United States of America is in a spiraling crisis. We need heroic witnesses. So allow me to share my admiration of that great man of God Thomas More.

Saint John Paul II held Thomas More up as a model. “Whenever men or women heed the call of truth, their conscience then guides their actions reliably towards good,” he said. “Precisely because of the witness which he bore, even at the price of his life, to the primacy of truth over power, Saint Thomas More is venerated as an imperishable example of moral integrity.”

More is “a source of inspiration for a political system which has as its supreme goal, the service of the human person.” For Catholics, he’s the patron saint of lawyers and of politicians.

Thomas More’s Witness

What did he do? The England of the sixteenth century was in a serious crisis of politics, culture and faith, much like the times in which we now live in the United States of America. King Henry VIII used his power to demand people accept his new wife and renounce their religious faith. A faithful Catholic, Thomas could not go along.

He held one the highest offices in the land, and was a friend and counselor to the king. He resigned his political position. He withdrew from public life and bore the ridicule of those who once praised him.

He then tried to continue to care for his beloved family, the domestic church of the home, by teaching them how to live lives of virtue and simplicity. He had lost his prestige and his considerable financial resources. He offered his suffering to the Lord .

That wasn’t good enough for Henry. He insisted that Thomas give in. Thomas refused.

The king had his former counselor imprisoned in the Tower of London. There he underwent intense tortures of both body and soul. These came not only from the henchmen of the State but even from his family and friends who begged him to compromise.

At the time, few would have even noticed if Thomas gave in. Probably most people expected him to, because all of his peers had compromised their beliefs to save their positions. He could have justified it by telling himself he would restore his political position and once again influence the king for the good. He could take care of his beloved family.

Instead, this man who loved life, loved his family, properly loved the created world and all of its true goods, loved the Lord first and would not compromise the Truth. He was an ordinary Christian who shows the rest of us ordinary Christians the way to live in the midst of the creeping darkness and distractions of our own age.

He Loved the Lord First

How did he do it? Thomas truly loved the Lord. He prayed. He lived in a communion with the Risen Lord as a faithful son of the Church.  He teaches us that the Christian calling requires our constant response to the Lord’s invitation to follow him.

During that brief time which he had with his family before he was imprisoned, when his wife or children complained about their lack he would tell them that they could not expect to “go to heaven in featherbeds.” He taught them to reflect upon the privation and sufferings of Jesus on our behalf. He prayed with them for the grace to join their own sufferings to Jesus’s sufferings on the Cross.

After a year in the Tower, he was brought to trial for his fidelity to the Truth. He was found guilty and sentenced to death, as he knew he would be.

He faced his executioners with the same dignity he had shown in life, speaking with humor and affection to them even before they beheaded him. He said before the executioner cut off his head, “I die the king’s good servant, and God’s first.”

After his death it was found that he had left these words in the margin of the book of prayers he prayed every day:

Give me your grace, good Lord, to set the world at naught … to have my mind well united to you; to not depend on the changing opinions of others … so that I may think joyfully of the things of God and tenderly implore his help. So that I may lean on God’s strength and make an effort to love him …. So as to thank Him ceaselessly for his benefits; so as to redeem the time I have wasted.

A Man for All Seasons

Thomas More is called a Man for All Seasons. He is truly a man for this season. He calls us to a unity of life, to moral coherence and integrity in our exercise of our civic duty, to do what is right no matter what the state threatens us with . . .

To read the rest of this article please visit THE STREAM
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About Deacon Keith Fournier

Deacon Keith A. Fournier is the Founder and Chairman of Common Good Foundation and Common Good Alliance. A married Deacon of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Richmond, Virginia, he and his wife Laurine have five grown children and seven grandchildren. He is a human rights lawyer and public policy advocate who served as the first and founding Executive Director of the American Center for Law and Justice in the 1990’S. He has long been active at the intersection of faith and culture and serves as Special Counsel to Liberty Counsel. He is also the Editor in Chief of Catholic Online and is a Senior Contributor to The Stream.

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