T
TedDC
Guest
That sounds a bit like - dare I say it? - the all-purpose battle cry of this forum: moral relativism!This is a very good point.
The problem with the argument against St. Thomas is that we’re forgetting that he was a martyr. The Church recognizes this fact. A person is canonized for having lived a life of extraordinary virtue. When you look at St. Thomas More, how much more extraordinary can you get. The man chooses to take his chance with execution rather than compromise his faith.
Someone mentioned miracles after death. The miracles are not necessary for canonization. They are the part of the process that the popes can dispense with. However, we keep them in the process, because they serve a purpose. They confirm what the Church has concluded about the perosn. That being said, we know of at least three saints where there was no beatification and no required miracles. All of this was waved: Francis of Assisi, Clare of Assisi and Anthony of Padua. Francis’ canonization was based on the pope’s personal knowledge of the man. They had been very good friends for many years. They important piece is the extraordinary life of virtue.
If we look at More’s life very closely, this was a man of prayer, penance, poverty, uncompromising faith, absolute obedience to the Church, and a man of courage. Whatever his crimes against heretics may have been have to be looked at in the context of the time and the Church in which he lived, not our time. If you take saints out of their historical context, they cease to be the people they are. One has to ask, “Did More act contrary to conscience and moral law?” The answer is, “No.”
The moral law has not changed. We do not advocate the execution of people for heresy. However, we do not condone heresy either. In that time period, it was believed that the only protection against heresy was execution. The use of the death penalty as a last resort continues to be part of our moral law. Notice, “last resort”.
Today, we have other means to combat heresy. In addition, heresy today does not pose physical threats. At that time, the battle between Catholics and heretics was often war. These people went after each other with violence. I have always tried to understand it by looking at the Muslim world. In many Muslim societies, heresy is often confronted with imprisonment or even death. I do not not condone it. That’s not my point. My point is that this was the mindset of the Western world in which Thomas More lived. Protestants and Catholics believed that the other was a heretic and a threat to the stability of society. Their fears drove their reactions and actions. In this context, one can understand the actions of both sides. They were terrified of each other. I would like to think that we, as a society, have matured over the centuries.
Take away the histeria of the time period and what have you left when you look at Thomas More? A man of great faith, a deep life of prayer, faithful to the Holy See, generous with the poor, a man who lived a penitential life, an individual who was a good father and model husband, and a martyr. That certainly worthy of public veneration and imitation.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()