Friday, February 13, 2026

 

Friday of the Fifth Week in Ordinary Time

(I Kings 11:29-32.12:19; Mark 7:31-37)

Most people credit Abraham Lincoln for ending slavery in the United States.  He is rightly seen as the great emancipator of African slaves.  However, more important than that feat, which was not accomplished until after his assassination, was Lincoln’s saving the country from division.  Lincoln himself saw the preservation of the Union as essential.  He wrote in a famous letter published in the New York Times during the Civil War: “My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery.”  Lincoln knew that the end of slavery was inevitable.  He also knew that it would come about more easily and completely with the Union intact.  Unions of people and states allow dialogue, which fosters understanding, which brings about the give and take of compromise.  For this reason, the breakup of the Kingdom of Israel signified in today’s first reading is tragic. 

The union of the northern tribes and southern tribes was never easy.  It was accomplished by David, a strongman with an impressive faith in God as well as political shrewdness.  Its coming apart with David’s grandsons led to strategic weakness vis-à-vis the other nations of the region.  The gradual corruption of the leaders of both northern and southern kingdoms contributed to the downfalls of the kingdoms and the exiles of their peoples.

Our Catholic Church today is threatened by calls and acts of separation on both the right and the left.  The proverbial “man in the middle” is Pope Leo.  His mandate is not only to keep the Church together while seeking reunification with Orthodox churches and Protestant ecclesial communities.  He must accomplish these feats without betraying the apostolic tradition.  We can assist his efforts by prayer and also by developing restraint in judgment of others and by reaching out in honest dialogue with those who disagree with us.

No comments: