Monsignor Ronald
Knox said, “we are here to colonize heaven, not make things better on earth.”
Knox (1888-1957)
was an Anglican priest who converted to Catholicism at age 30. I know basically nothing about him, but came
across the above quote in an article on St. Augustine’s commentary on the
Sermon on the Mount. About Augustine and
the Sermon on the Mount I know a little bit.
However, Knox’s
phrase intrigues me. In three words: is
it true? Is it true we are here to
colonize heaven, not to make things better on earth?
To my
non-professional yet interested eye, I agree with the first half of the sentence,
but not the second.
And I think
Catholic doctrine – all Catholic doctrine, from the “pro-life” movement so
anathema to many American progressives to the “Catholic social teaching” so
anathema to many American conservatives – agrees with me.
We are called to
fight injustice, be it legalized infanticide that’s the law of the land or the
ever-widening wage disparities between CEOs, poor working joes in the middle
class, and the poorest citizens of the inner city or Appalachia. And every injustice in between.
But I do believe
Knox has the order correct. And I think
Jesus says so, too, and states it most explicitly in His command that we be
first and foremost concerned with the logs in our own eyes before those in our
neighbors’.
So I would
re-phrase the phrase thusly:
“We are here
primarily to colonize heaven, and secondarily to make things better on earth.”
Not as poetic,
but more to the truth, I think.
However, I could
be wrong, and would not be adverse to listening to why.
(Postscript – I
am fully cognizant that Msg. Knox is most likely being hyperbolic to make a
point. Heck, I do that at least once a
week here on the Hopper, to an audience 0.00000000000372% the size of his …)
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