Skip to main content


Thomas More, Man for this Moment: Moral Coherence and Religious Freedom

6/24/2012

(Page 2 of 2)

usurp the authority of the Church which had been granted to it by the King of Kings, he resigned his political position. He tried to do so with the kind of integrity that had characterized his entire life. He withdrew from public life and bore the ridicule and taunts of those who once praised him.

He offered the suffering to the Lord by joining it to the Cross of the Savior. 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, but he gained the peace which always comes through fidelity to the Lord. His hopes for a life with his family, lived in simplicity and fidelity to the Church, were short lived. The King, by now drunk on his own power, insisted that Thomas take the oath under the Act of Succession, thereby acknowledging the legitimacy of his marriage to Anne and his authority over the Church.

Thomas would not do so because he refused to violate his truly formed conscience. So, 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 some within his own family and circle of friends who failed to understand his actions because their minds had been dulled by compromise.

At the time, few would have even noticed if Thomas had succumbed to the Royal request. He could have "justified" the action through the exercise of his well honed rhetorical and logical skills by calling it a merely perfunctory action. He could have thereby restored his political position, some would have argued, in order to try to influence the King for the good over the long haul. He could have had his substantial properties restored if he had just sworn that oath, others would say, in order to provide material safety for his beloved family. Instead, this man who loved life, loved his family, loved his career and properly loved the world and all of its goods, loved the Lord first and would not compromise the Truth.

He was an ordinary Christian who shows us ordinary Christians the way to living a unity of life in the midst of the creeping darkness and distractions of our own age. He was a Catholic Christian who held in harmony his vocation as the father of a family with his profession as a lawyer and his service in the highest of Political offices. He knew that there is a hierarchy of values which bring with them a hierarchy of duties and loyalties. His witness in life and in death challenges us to examine whether we do. How did he do it? Quite simply, he prayed. He lived in a communion with the Risen Lord as a faithful son of the Church which is His Body.

He was truly in love with the Lord and chose to live in the Heart of the Catholic Church for the sake of the world. He teaches us, that the Christian vocation requires our constant response to the Lord's invitation to follow him and that we cannot get by on yesterdays' decisions. During that brief time which he had with his family, after attempting to quietly resign rather than violate his formed conscience and 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 regularly to reflect upon the privation and sufferings of Jesus on our behalf and he prayed with them for the grace to join their own to Him on the Cross. He would not compromise the truth.

Thomas More was a morally coherent Catholic Christian. That is the lesson of his life and of his Martyrs death. He beckons millions, across the expanse of time unto today, to follow his example as he followed the example of the Lord. This champion of heroic courage in the face of a State which has lost its soul never wavered in his fidelity to the Truth. He would not betray the truth or compromise it on the altar of public opinion or for political opportunism. He knew that to do so would not only have dishonored God and led his family and so many others astray, but that it would have given tacit assent to the emerging despotism of his age.

He was brought to trial for his fidelity to the Truth. Oh, as is always the case with persecution against Christians, it was framed as a charge against the "positive law". There, this outstanding lawyer defended the Truth for which he would later give his life. Thomas used the occasion of the Courtroom, where he had practiced his trade, to defend the Truth and its obligations in the temporal order. In the eloquent words of the Servant of God, John Paul II, who proclaimed him not only the Patron of all lawyers but the Patron of all politicians, "he made an impassioned defense of his own convictions on the indissolubility of marriage, the respect due to the juridical patrimony of Christian civilization, and the freedom of the Church in her relations with the State."

He was found "guilty", even though he was a guardian of true innocence. That unjust verdict brings shame upon every unjust tribunal and misuse of governmental power. Thomas More was martyred for his moral coherence, his fidelity to the Catholic Christian faith. He was beheaded by the minions of a temporal leader who had abused his office and wielded the awful sword, the power of the State (which has as its very source God Himself) to inflict evil against those who refused to bow down in idolatrous worship of lies.

Thomas faced his executioners with the very same dignity he had shown in life, speaking with humor and affection to them even before they beheaded him. After his death it was found that he had left these words in the margin of his Book of Hours: "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..."

We need to reflect on how we are living our own Catholic faith in the midst of an increasingly hostile age. We face a similar challenge to that which faced St. Thomas More. The attacks on true marriage are increasing in their severity. We are being invited to compromise for our own convenience and tempted to accept the rulings of Judicial Oligarchs and Alchemists who think that they can change the nature of this institution by the stroke of a pen. Their collaborators in political office, some of whom are apostate Catholics, are now beginning to wield the figurative sword of temporal power against us.The recent HHS Mandate which threatens the fundamental human right to religious freedom is the tip of an iceberg.  

The truths taught by the Catholic Church, and revealed within the common patrimony of the Natural Law, are rejected in an age struggling under what was called by Pope Benedict XVI a "Dictatorship of Relativism." The most egregious example is the rejection of the truth concerning the dignity and inviolability of ever human life. This fundamental Right to Life is taught by the Natural Law and confirmed by medical science. Yet it is denied by those in control of the power of the State, and the blood of the innocent flows.

Thomas More is called a "Man for all Seasons". As we approach the next Presidential election in the United States, and the election of a significant number of other officeholders, I suggest he is he is a man for this season. He is a man for this moment. He calls us to live a unity of life. He calls us to moral coherence and integrity in our exercise of our civic duty. On this Feast of St. Thomas More, let us reflect on this patron assigned to a special role in political affairs, and ask for his intercession. Let us also choose candidates who reflect his integrity and moral coherence. Elections have consequences and we are the ones who determine those consequences.


- - -

Pope Benedict XVI's Prayer Intentions for January 2013
General Intention:
The Faith of Christians. That in this Year of Faith Christians may deepen their knowledge of the mystery of Christ and witness joyfully to the gift of faith in him.
Missionary Intention: Middle Eastern Christians. That the Christian communities of the Middle East, often discriminated against, may receive from the Holy Spirit the strength of fidelity and perseverance.

Keywords: Thomas More, Fortnight for Freedom, First Freedom, Moral Coherence, Religious Freedom, First Freedom, USCCB, Bishops, Kathleen Sebelius, Barack Obama, Thomas More, St. Thomas More, Deacon Keith Fournier

NEWSLETTERS »

E-mail:       Zip Code: (ex. 90001)
Today's Headlines

Sign up for a roundup of the day's top stories. 5 days / week. See Sample

Previous Page  1 | 2

Rate This Article

Very Helpful Somewhat Helpful Not Helpful at All

Yes, I am Interested No, I am not Interested

Rate Article

1 - 6 of 6 Comments

  1. Jim Conrad
    10 months ago

    An outstanding article with great application to our spiritual battles of this day. I remember seeing the movie, "A Man for All Seasons" years ago but this article by Deacon Keith Fournier clearly explains the substance of a great man and one that we need to emulate. Thank you, Keith, for a very well written and inspired article that some how, all Catholics should read.
    God's Blessings on you!

  2. Judy Claar
    10 months ago

    Deacon Keith: Thank you again for another excellent, well-written and thought provoking article. Ever since "A Man For All Seasons" came out, he has been the model I try to use to live my life. It is a hard one to follow. But one that I have always aspired to. In him I saw a human man, w/a family; teaching kindly and loving them. And, no matter what one's profession might be, he lived and breathed his work and his Catholic Faith. He, as you said, was that living example of what we all should be and do: Living his Catholic civic duty through moral coherency with personal integrity. In my choosing him to follow, I knew I could strive for humility and follow a man of Christ. Even in my day and my time. He spoke out when he needed to. And remained silent, when that served a better purpose. He is a hard act to follow at times...just like our Lord.
    Thank you dear Lord, for blessing us w/St. Thomas More. St. Thomas More, pray for us.

  3. Avila Power
    10 months ago

    Wish this article could be published for every citizen in America...not only to the converted. Brilliant article and so well written. How could any one deny the TRUTH after reading about Thomas More.

  4. Diane
    10 months ago

    Great article. Love the last words"elections have consequences and we determine those consequences". St. Thomas More knew you cannot justify the means by the desired outcome. Too many politicians, even Catholic politicians and yes, even some Catholic voters did just that in the last election by voting for Obama&Co. They actually believed they could help the poor by electing the most anti life, anti marriage and anti religious politician in American history. You cannot build prosperity on the murder of innocent children who so also happen to be the "poorest of the poor" (Mother Teresa). Homosexuality is a preference, not a civil right and they have no "right" to marriage which was created by God as between 1 man and 1 woman. Religious freedom is part of our God created human natures and any gov't which restricts them must fall. St. Thomas More would have understood any of the above and would have undergone martyrdom in defense of the right to life, the defense of true marriage and religious freedom. If needed, so do we. Also, I just attended a Rally for Religious Rights this afternoon in Ravenna, Ohio and it wasn't lost on me that many there were also prolifers. They well understand what is at stake. I urge everyone to attend these rallies and unite with the Bishops.

  5. Andrew
    10 months ago

    Wonderful. St. Thomas More was a man's man, that is to say, a saint.

  6. Susy
    11 months ago

    Beautiful article. Thank you for it.

Leave a Comment

Comments submitted must be civil, remain on-topic and not violate any laws including copyright. We reserve the right to delete any comments which are abusive, inappropriate or not constructive to the discussion.

Though we invite robust discussion, we reserve the right to not publish any comment which denigrates the human person, undermines marriage and the family, or advocates for positions which openly oppose the teaching of the Catholic Church.

This is a supervised forum and the Editors of Catholic Online retain the right to direct it.

We also reserve the right to block any commenter for repeated violations. Your email address is required to post, but it will not be published on the site.

We ask that you NOT post your comment more than once. Catholic Online is growing and our ability to review all comments sometimes results in a delay in their publication.

Send me important information from Catholic Online and it's partners. See Sample

Post Comment


Newsletter Sign Up

Daily Readings

Reading 1, Sirach 4:11-19
Wisdom brings up her own children and cares for those who seek ... Read More

Psalm, Psalms 119:165, 168, 171, 172, 174, 175
Great peace for those who love your Law; no stumbling-blocks ... Read More

Gospel, Mark 9:38-40
John said to him, 'Master, we saw someone who is not one of us ... Read More

Saint of the Day

May 22 Saint of the Day

St. Rita
May 22: St. Rita was born at Spoleto, Italy in 1381. At an early age, ... Read More




Marketplace

Click Here

The Final Harvest
Final Harvest is the most important work since publication of his ... Read More


Click Here

St Jude. Engravable. Engraved Necklace. Keychain. Catholic Gift. Read More