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Refinemos La Perspectiva De La Iglesia Apr 2026

To refine our perspective is not to abandon the truth, but to polish the mirror through which we see that truth. It is to move from a telescope that scrutinizes distant sinners to a microscope that examines our own pride, and finally to a wide-angle lens that takes in the full image of God already at work in the world.

Lord, give us new eyes. Not to see less, but to see more of You in the places we have refused to look. Amen. refinemos la perspectiva de la iglesia

Here are three ways we must refine our view: Pope Francis famously said he sees the Church as a "field hospital after battle." The old perspective builds walls to keep the wounded out. The refined perspective rushes toward the moans. We stop asking, "Are you clean enough to enter?" and start asking, "Where does it hurt?" Grace is not a reward for the healthy; it is bread for the dying. 2. From Vertical Verdict to Horizontal Embrace We have been obsessed with who is "in" and who is "out." Our perspective was vertical—looking down from a moral high ground. To refine it means to lower our gaze. Jesus did not look down from a balcony; He knelt in the dust. When we see people horizontally—eye to eye, wound to wound—we stop seeing projects or problems. We see siblings. 3. From Certainty to Wonder The unrefined perspective confuses dogma with arrogance. It demands answers before questions. But refinement introduces holy wonder. We realize that our theology is a map, not the territory. A refined Church says, "Here is what I believe with my whole heart… and here is where I am still mysteriously silent." This humility does not weaken our witness; it makes it credible. To refine our perspective is not to abandon

Let us refine our perspective not by lowering the standard of love, but by raising the volume of mercy. Let us see our building not as a sanctuary from the world, but as a launchpad into it. Let us see the skeptic not as an enemy to defeat, but as a story to honor. Not to see less, but to see more

When we refine the lens, the image of Christ—blurry under layers of tradition and fear—finally comes into focus. And He looks less like a judge and more like a servant.

For too long, the Church has looked at the world through a single, fixed lens: one of judgment, fear, or withdrawal. We have seen culture as a battlefield rather than a mission field. We have seen the outsider as a threat rather than a neighbor. But a static lens cannot capture a moving God.