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  • - I think a problem today, actually,

  • is that there's a hyper-stress on justice.

  • Now, in saying that, I'm not saying one negative thing

  • about justice in itself.

  • Justice means: "to render to each his due."

  • That's the classical definition.

  • Justice is one of the 'Four Cardinal Virtues,'

  • so it's one of the building blocks of 'The Good Life.'

  • So I'm completely in favor of justice.

  • But, if justice is not tempered by something like mercy

  • or forgiveness or nonviolence, here's the danger:

  • If we simply stress justice,

  • then I'm placing, as it were,

  • a sword in everyone's hand, and saying,

  • "You've all got a right to seek retribution

  • against those who've harmed you."

  • Hegel, the German philosopher, famously said that

  • "History is a slaughter bench,"

  • and it's true.

  • You look at history, it's the constant story

  • of warfare, and one group against another,

  • and deep hatreds and prejudices.

  • Well, if I look back at all of that awful history and say,

  • "Well, okay, now I've got this big sword in my hand

  • and I need retribution and justice,"

  • I'm not sure that's gonna get us someplace good.

  • I'm Bishop Robert Barron, one of the auxiliary bishops

  • of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

  • I'm also founder of Word on Fire Catholic Ministries.

  • I think Jesus' great public teaching is the teaching

  • about turning the other cheek, and the love of enemies.

  • But I also think it's a very misunderstood teaching.

  • 'If someone strikes you on the right cheek,

  • turn and give them the other.'

  • 'Resist, not evil.'

  • 'Do not answer violence with violence.'

  • That can sound like simple passivity in the presence of evil

  • or in the presence of injustice-

  • just let it go, just let it be.

  • That's not what Jesus is teaching.

  • Notice, please, he doesn't say, "Oh, run away, give in."

  • Nor does he say, "Well, haul off and punch him back."

  • No, turn the other cheek.

  • In other words, stand your ground and signal back to him

  • that you refuse to cooperate with the world he's living in.

  • By turning the other cheek,

  • you're saying, "I'm not gonna let you strike me

  • that way again."

  • So, it's meant to be a bold and courageous

  • standing of one's ground.

  • That line I've always loved from Gandhi, you know,

  • "An eye for an eye, yes, making the whole world blind."

  • That's what happens when you meet injustice with injustice,

  • you meet violence with violence.

  • But if you meet it in the way Jesus is recommending,

  • you act as a kind of mirror to the violent person,

  • so as to bring about, ultimately, conversion.

  • It's trying to put a wrench in the works of evil.

  • How do you take a wrench and put it in the works

  • of wickedness, but never in a way that destroys

  • the evil person?

  • It's meant to liberate.

  • That's what people like Martin Luther King saw very clearly.

  • Martin Luther King:

  • A man of justice, for sure.

  • You know, the arc of the moral universe is long,

  • but it bends towards justice.

  • He's a great prophet of justice.

  • But, I also say, thank God King

  • was also a Christian minister

  • who knew the relevant chapters in Matthew's gospel

  • that talk about nonviolence and forgiveness

  • and love of enemies.

  • Well, King took that teaching deeply within,

  • and I think that's what gave him extraordinary power.

  • He combined the concern for justice

  • with a concern for nonviolence and forgiveness.

  • How do you start walking this path?

  • The simplest act of love.

  • So love is not a feeling, love's an act of the will.

  • To love, Aquinas says, "Is to will the good of the other."

  • If I wake up and say, "Okay, the project today

  • is to see how thoroughly I can love."

  • From that perspective, the divine forgiveness

  • and mercy can flow into the world.

  • What does your life look like when you get that?

  • Not just intellectually, but you get it

  • at every level of your being.

  • It looks like nonviolence.

  • It looks like forgiveness.

  • And so, savoring justice as a beautiful virtue,

  • I want to make sure I temper it with mercy

  • and with forgiveness, which don't undermine justice,

  • but they go beyond justice.

- I think a problem today, actually,

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