Saturday,
4/11/15
Peter
and John were brought before the elders and scribes who had cautioned them
against speaking in the name of Jesus whom their leaders had crucified. They were indignant with
the Apostles for ignoring their orders.
Peter
said, “Whether it is right in the sight of God for us to obey you rather than
God, you be the judges.”
Was it
realistic for Peter to say that? Really, could he expect the scribes and elders
to put aside their long experience in keeping the nation free from
quacks?
It
brings up the question of to what extent any of us can make fair, independent
decisions. As Catholics, if we do not think the way Catholics think, we may be
forced to stop being Catholics. As Democrats or Republicans if we seldom think
the way our party thinks, they will push us aside. Birds of a feather flock and
blog together
A recent
report on North Korea made a deep impression on me. It said that from morning
to night every home has a loud speaker telling the citizens to thank their
great leader, Kim Jong Un, for every bit of happiness in their lives. They can
hardly think otherwise.
This
morning, walking by a car, I saw its window sticker that said, “Talk English,
or go back to the sorry-ass place you came from.” To make a profit the printer
must have found thousands of people to pay for those stickers.
The people
with those stickers probably are not open to contrary views.
Can we ever free ourselves from group-think? Can we get a fresh insight into every moral issue that comes our way? Our only chance of knowing and doing what God wants of us demands three things. First, we must open our eyes to all the issues. Next we must embrace the considerations that come to us from prayer and the Scriptures. Finally, we would need to have disciplined lives that are supple to the promptings of God’s grace.
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