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Lord, that I may see
In today’s gospel (Luke 6: 39-42), Jesus simply offers His
disciples teaching, and it is a teaching all about vision: moral vision
by which we guide others and inner vision by which we know ourselves.
The former depends to a great extent on the latter. Who is
the person who sees a splinter in the eye of another but has not noticed the
plank in his own? It is every one of us! We do not automatically see ourselves truthfully;
our wills, our appetites, and our attachments will not permit it. Solzhenitsyn said
pride grows on the human heart like lard on a pig, but he could easily have called
it self-love: the need to take satisfaction in our own self image, a need that
is sometimes countered only by the opposite vice of self-hatred or abasement,
as if we were not lovable at all. The truthful mind breathes the oxygen of
reality in for all breath is somehow redolent of the Spirit of truth, the giver
of life; the untruthful mind – the self-serving mind – breathes in the carbon
monoxide of self-deceit and its senses slowly dim to uselessness. The truth of
who we are and how we stand before God underpins our path back to Him, and as
we come to know Him better, we know ourselves also better. Lack of
self-knowledge is no virtue in His children.
Indeed, lack of that inner vision is potentially a
catastrophe for others – for those we go out to and those we are responsible for.
In Jesus’ parable, the blind cannot lead the blind. The lack of self-knowledge –
the plank in one’s own eye – is a barrier to seeing the splinter in our brother’s
eye. Those who learn from us are dependent on us to illuminate the path before
them, for, as Jesus says, the pupil will be like his master.
Ultimately, charity begins at home, and mission begins with
contemplation of God, for what truthful inner vision of ourselves can there
really be if we do not see ourselves with God’s eyes or in His light? Through
faith we know God, but its ambient light tells us who we are, as a species and
as individuals. Knowledge without self-knowledge looks too much like a grab for
power over what is around us, and perhaps even over others. If, as in Matthew
Arnold’s poem Dover Beach, we too are
Here as on a darkling plain
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
Where ignorant armies clash by night
we must turn again towards to the source of all light and
vision who illumines every person who comes into the world.
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