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A homily on Matthew 14:1–12: Rooted in Truth: A Homily on Conscience (2-8-25)

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 A reflection on Matthew 14:1-12:  John the Baptist’s fearless conscience, drawing wisdom from the desert tree and calling us to live with inner truth in our daily lives ( 2-8-25)

Praise be to Jesus Christ 

There is a kind of tree found in the desert. During storms, its branches may bend, and even the sand around it may shift. But its roots go so deep into the ground that it never gets uprooted. Some call it the tree that listens to the wind but obeys the earth. It is not tall, but it stands firm. It teaches us that if your roots are deep, you don’t fear the storm.

John the Baptist was like that tree. His roots were deep in truth. He listened to the voice of God, not the noise of people. He stood firm even when the wind of fear, power, and death blew against him. In today’s Gospel, Matthew 14:1–12, we hear how John lost his life. Not because he did something wrong. But because he would not stay quiet about what was right. His conscience was not for sale and it could not be bribed, twisted, or shut down.

Herod had many things: power, soldiers, a palace, and control over others. But one thing he did not have was a pure conscience and peace. The Gospel says he was afraid. Why?  It was because deep inside, his conscience kept speaking against himself. He had silenced John’s voice, but he could not silence the truth, or the restless voice within.  That is the strange thing about a guilty conscience. It follows you, it speaks in the dark and it makes a king tremble in his own palace.

John had no sword, no protection, no voice of support from the crowd, but he had a clean conscience and that was his strength. Like the prophets before him, Nathan who pointed out King David’s sin, Elijah who faced down Ahab, John also stood before power with nothing but the truth.

There is a powerful quote by Cardinal Newman. He once said, “Conscience is the aboriginal Vicar of Christ.” That means conscience is where God speaks first, quietly, within. If that voice is alive in us, we don’t need to fear the loud voices outside.

Even in our own homes, our religious life, and our daily dealings, we have choices to make. Do we keep our conscience clean? Do we speak with honesty and live with truth? Or do we cover things up for comfort or fear? A clean conscience may cost us something, but a dirty conscience costs us everything.

Saint Thomas More, just before he was martyred, said, “I die the king’s good servant, but God’s first.” That is a conscience rooted in truth. He lost everything in the eyes of the world, but he kept his soul and continues to inspire us.

Like the desert tree, we may not be loud or tall. But if we are rooted in Christ and in His teachings, we cannot be moved. We may bend, but we will not break. So let us choose the peace that comes from a clean heart and the courage that comes from standing with God.

Lord, help me to listen to my conscience  always 

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God Bless…

 

 

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