Seventh Sunday after
Pentecost
Thoughts for the Week - Fr. R. Taouk
28th July 2019
The Blessedness of the Clean of Heart
by Cardinal Antonio Bacci
"Blessed are the clean of heart", says Jesus in the
Beatitudes, for they shall see God (Matt. 5). "The sensual
man", adds St. Paul, "does not perceive the things that are
of the Spirit of God" (1 Cor. 2). How true this is. When the
flesh gains control over the spirit and our lower instincts
enslave the intellect, we are overcome by confusion and
spiritual blindness. No longer can we see God's reflection
in created things; no longer do we hear His voice. Impurity
and sensuality lead to disregard for the law of God, whereas
purity of heart makes it easy for us to love His law.
One day, as was his custom, St. Joseph Cafasso went to the
prison to visit the convicts. Among them there was a
hardened old sinner who was interested neither in God nor in
confessing his sins. The Saint met him and tried to persuade
him to kneel down and make his confession. "I do not believe
in God", replied the old man. The Saint simply looked at
him. "Kneel down," he said, "confess your sins, and
afterwards you will believe". It turned out as he had
predicted. The old crime-hardened sinner told his sins, wept
for them, and became a new man. It was as if the scales had
fallen from his eyes, which now saw God clearly once more.
Through the forgiveness of his sins he found again the way
of supernatural love.
The clean of heart will see God. St. Thomas observes that
the heart may and should be purified in two ways, even as
God may be seen in two ways (S.T. II-II, q. 8, a. 7). The
first essential is to purify the disturbed passions, which
blind the soul to heavenly things. The second is to cleanse
the mind and to make it immune from error and from evil
fancies so that it may be permanently enlightened by God.
Similarly, the vision of God is twofold. When we see God
perfectly, we see His Divine Essence, and such happiness is
possible only in the Beatific Vision. There is also an
imperfect vision of God, by which we see Him not in Himself
but in created things. We can and should have this vision in
this life.
All the wonders of creation are rays of the eternal beauty
of God. Creatures, therefore, should form for us a mystical
ladder which leads us to God. We should never become
entangled with transient worldly goods, but should see and
love God in them all. The Saints were clean of heart and
could see God more clearly than the most learned scholars.
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