HOW DO YOU TAKE THE MEASURE OF A MAN ?

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There are many ways to take the measure of a man besides weighing him on a scale and measuring his height in feet and inches.

Here are a few other ways:

Is he a man of his word?

Does he do good and avoid evil?

Is he generous in word and deed, in giving of himself and of his wealth?

Is he capable of loving and of being loved?

Does he promote the common good or his own selfish ends?

Is he both a producer and a consumer or is he only a consumer?

Does he work to protect freedom or does he simply enjoy it?

Does his life reveal that he has a clear understanding of the meaning and purpose of life?

There are many more ways!

Here are some thoughts of Father George W. Rutler on the subject:

– Abyssum

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King Henry VIII was 6’4” tall, although height did not give him moral stature, nor did he grow in moral greatness as he increased from the 180-pound weight of his youth to the 320 pounds he took to the grave. His marital history is summed up in the schoolboy’s rhyme: “divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived.” Actually, two of his wives survived him: Anne of Cleves and Catherine Parr. Though he did not set the standard for domestic bliss, he did set some standards for measurements. He proclaimed that the yard unit be the distance from his nose to the tip of his hand and that a foot be the size of his own foot. The noble French, by nature rational, introduced a precise metric system in 1791, but also by disposition contrary, they guillotined one of its inventors, Antoine Lavoisier.

The Office of Weights and Measures is unique in Washington, D.C. for its reliability. But in moral matters, the standards in our society are chaotic and even delusional. It was one thing for a king to decree a physical standard by the length of his arm; it is another thing for a state legislature to decree that a husband may have a husband.  The human soul’s free will may choose between right and wrong, but it cannot declare wrong to be right. Protagoras of Thrace proposed that “man is the measure of all things.” A few centuries later, Paul of Tarsus proclaimed that the moral standard must be “the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ” (Ephesians 4:13).

Lavoisier said of the metric system “Never has anything more grand and simple, more coherent in all its parts, issued from the hand of man.” But the hand of man can only measure the hand of man. Only Christ can measure the life of man. “Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and the measure you give will be the measure you get” (Matthew 7:1-2).

“Black Friday” following Thanksgiving Day has become an orgy of wrong judgment, with people waiting in long lines to enter shopping centers and trample each other for bargains on gadgets. This year at the same time in Moscow, almost 350,000 people lined up each day to gaze upon a relic of cloth said to have been worn by the Mother of the Incarnate Word. The contrast was striking between empty souls in the mall and hungry souls in the cathedral. St. Augustine rejoiced that his Judge was severe in measuring souls and merciful in saving them: “I have read in Plato and Caesar sayings that are wise and very beautiful, but I have never read in either of them, ‘Come unto me all you who labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest.’ ”

– Father George W. Rutler

About abyssum

I am a retired Roman Catholic Bishop, Bishop Emeritus of Corpus Christi, Texas
This entry was posted in JESUS CHRIST, MAN, MORAL RELATIVISM, SANCTITY and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.

1 Response to HOW DO YOU TAKE THE MEASURE OF A MAN ?

  1. Curt Stoller says:

    Father Rutler is such a wise and able writer! The Catholic Church is blessed to have his witness. As an older man I have found that those who have most impressed me as men of character were individuals possessed of profound humility. There are many forms of false humility that are just disguises for passive-aggressive pride. But when you know a person who is deeply conscious of being a creature and a miserable sinner in need of God’s grace . . . such a person seems to possess an essential element of character.

    I once met a Jewish rabbi was was in the process of converting to Roman Catholicism. I remember asking him: What do you think was the most important thing that Jesus added to Jewish morality and spirituality?” He said: “the absolutely necessity for humility.”

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