Blessed Are the Poor
in Spirit
It cannot be
doubted that the poor can more easily attain the blessing of humility than
those who are rich. In the case of the poor, the lack of worldly goods is often
accompanied by a quiet gentleness, whereas the rich are more prone to
arrogance. Nevertheless, many wealthy people are disposed to use their
abundance not to swell their own pride but to perform works of benevolence.
They consider their greatest gain what they spend to alleviate the distress of
others.
This virtue is
open to all men, no matter what their class or condition because all can be
equal in their willingness to give, however unequal they may be in earthly
fortune. Indeed, their inequality in regard to worldly means is unimportant,
provided they are found equal in spiritual possessions. Blessed, therefore, is
that poverty which is not trapped by the love of temporal things and does not
seek to be enriched by worldly wealth, but desires rather to grow rich in
heavenly goods.
The apostles were
the first after the Lord himself to provide us with an example of this generous
poverty, when they all equally left their belongings at the call of the
heavenly master. By an immediate conversion they were turned from the catching
of fish to become fishers of men, and by their own example they won many others
to the imitation of their own faith. In these first sons of the Church there
was but one heart and one soul among all who believed. Abandoning all their
worldly property and possessions in their dedicated poverty, they were enriched
with eternal goods, and in accordance with the apostolic preaching, they
rejoiced to have nothing of this world and to possess all things with Christ.
Therefore, when
the apostle Peter was on his way up to the temple and was asked for alms by the
lame man, he replied: Silver and
gold I have not; but what I have I give you. In
the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, arise and walk. What is more sublime than
this humility? And what could be richer than this poverty? Though Peter cannot
assist with money, he can confer gifts of nature. With a word Peter brought
healing to the man who had been lame from birth; he who did not give a coin
with the emperor’s image refashioned the image of Jesus in this man.
And by the riches
of this treasure, not only did he help the man who recovered the power to walk,
but also five thousand others who believed the preaching of the apostle because
of this miraculous cure. Thus Peter, who in his poverty had no money to give to
the beggar, bestowed such a bounty of divine grace that in restoring to health
the feet of one man, he healed the hearts of many thousands of believers. He
had found all of them lame; but he made them leap for joy in Christ.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a sermon by Saint Leo the Great, popeImage taken from Wikimedia Commons
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