Wednesday of the 12th Week in Ordinary Time
Readings of the day: 2 Timothy 2:22b-26; Psalm 37:3-4, 5-6, 30-31; John 17:20-26
Readings of the day: 2 Timothy 2:22b-26; Psalm 37:3-4, 5-6, 30-31; John 17:20-26
How might we define glory? Does glory not seem like a somewhat abstract
concept? Glory could be what is achieved in military victory or, usually less
violently, when we out-argue somebody in a debate. These kinds of concepts of
glory are in the background of our readings today on this feast day of St.
Irenaeus, second century bishop and martyr. The second letter to Timothy asks
us to “avoid foolish and ignorant debates” that only “breed quarrels” and so
lead to nobody’s greater glory.
In Jesus’ great “high priestly” prayer from which we hear today in John’s
Gospel, our Lord is especially concerned with both God’s and his Apostles’
glory. Jesus prays to God the Father, “I have given them the glory you gave me…
I wish that where I am they may also be with me, that they may see my glory
that you gave me.”
Of what kind of glory is Jesus speaking? Our glory and our giving glory
to God depend first and foremost on one thing: Our unity. And so Jesus prays
for his Apostles; for us: “That they may be one, as we are one.” How often do
we pause to think and to pray over the beauty and the significance of this
prayer? What would our unity look like? Perhaps our unity might show itself as
greater unity among Christians, or maybe unity would mean a greater striving
for the virtues listed in our first reading, from 2 Timothy: “Pursue
righteousness, faith, love, and peace”…
In 2 Timothy, unity that gives glory to God is shown through patience
and gentleness, even (or maybe especially) with people in error and sin. “Be
gentle with everyone,” 2 Timothy says, “able to teach, tolerant, correcting
opponents with kindness.” In religious communities like the Basilians, we may
refer to the kind of gentle, kind, and sometimes tolerant approach to error as “fraternal
correction.” Too swift or too harsh, and correction may drive people away, making
them less likely to be convinced of their error or even sin. Too permissive or
slow an approach to correction may encourage the error. Neither approach forms
consciences; neither approach contributes to our glory or to recognizing God’s
glory. And is the line between these two false approaches not perhaps finer
than we realize?
St. Irenaeus, whom we remember today, is not often remembered as a
patient, gentle, or kind corrector of the errors of his day. One of his most
famous writings is the Treatise Against
Heresies. But Irenaeus did have a gentle, kind, and even tolerant side.
Within his Treatise Against Heresies,
Irenaeus encourages a cautious approach against heresy as against lesser errors.
He says that now “we receive a certain portion of [God’s] Spirit” and are “little
by little” made “accustomed to receive and bear God.”
This “little by little” approach resembles that of 2 Timothy and of
Jesus himself. Irenaeus also says in Against
Heresies that “the glory of God is the human person fully alive.” To become
“fully alive”; to be perfected for heaven, takes us a lifetime. If we follow Jesus,
2 Timothy, and St. Irenaeus, it would seem that our journey to being “fully
alive”; to meeting the fullness of God’s glory in our unity, is a journey taken
“little by little.”
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