it is the Lord who does great things for us - 26th week Monday 2013 2
Humility
is the root of all virtues, as its opposite, pride, is the root of all sin. When a person is not humble, when a person is
full of himself he cannot truly serve others for he will always be thinking
about what’s in it for him. When a
person is full of himself he cannot truly love others because he will always
prioritize his desires rather than sacrifice for the sake of the other. When a person is not humble, when a person is
full of himself he cannot tell the truth except when the truth is to his
advantage. Otherwise he lies. When a person is full of himself he cannot
have real friends. He will try to buy
them, he will try to bribe them but they will not stay for long, for real
friendship requires an emptying of self, when a person begins to think of the
good of the other.
Today
the Lord gathers his disciples to teach them the humility. Humility is a virtue because there is in us
an undying desire for greatness, a desire for popularity, a desire to become
the center of attention. But true
greatness is not something that we do or something that we acquire on our own,
but something which the Lord confers in us, something the Lord alone can do for
us. Mary realized this in her magnificat
– the Lord has done great things for me, holy is his name.
Today
we celebrate the feast of St. Jerome. He
is one who learned humility quite painfully.
Jerome was the most learned among the Latin Church Fathers even
outranking Augustine, whose writing he criticized, Ambrose and Gregory the
Great. But Jerome never became a
bishop. He was just a priest in Rome,
one of its most prominent because he became the secretary of Pope Damasus, the
Pope who declared that the liturgy should be said in Latin instead of
Greek. He earned many enemies not just
because of his high position but also because he was sarcastic, kasakit
manghambal. So when his patron died he
was driven out of Rome, humiliated. From
there he went to Bethlehem and lived there as a recluse, an ascetic in a
cave. There he would receive his fame,
the fame reserved for him by God – not as prominent priest in the eternal and
cosmopolitan city of Rome but as a humble priest who lived in a cave
translating what we now call the Vulgata, the Latin Bible translated from Greek
and Hebrew. Jerome would be known to us
and receive prominence because of this.
Not in Rome but in a humble cave in Bethlehem. prominence and greatness is not something you
acquire on your own, it is something which the Lord alone can confer on
us. Be humble always.
Comments