Homily for February 8th, 2018: St. Josephine
Bakhita.
St Josephine
Bakhita, the saint whom the Church commemorates today, was born in about 1869 –
she herself did not know the precise date -- to a wealthy family in Darfur, the
capitol of Sudan in southern
Africa . At age nine she was kidnapped and sold
and re-sold in the slave market in Darfur .
Beaten and flogged by her masters so often that she had 144 scars on her body,
she came finally into the possession of the Italian consul in the Sudan .
A kind man, he took Josephine with him when he returned to Italy in 1885. Here is some of what
Pope Benedict XVI wrote about her in his 2009 encyclical “Saved by Hope.”
“Up to that time she had known only
masters who despised and maltreated her, or at best considered her a useful
slave. Now, however, she heard that there is another Master, the Lord of all
lords, and that this Lord is good, goodness in person. She came to know that
this Lord even knew her, that he had created herCthat he actually loved her. She was
loved by none other than the supreme Master, before whom all other masters are
themselves no more than lowly servants. She was known and loved and she was
awaited. What is more, this master had himself been flogged and now he was
waiting for her ‘at the Father's right hand’. Now she had ‘hope’ Cno longer simply the modest hope of
finding masters who would be less cruel, but the great hope: ‘I am definitively
loved and whatever happens to meCI am awaited by this Love. And so my
life is good.’@
In January
1890 Josephine was baptized, and on the same day given confirmation and First
Communion by the Patriarch of Venice, later the Pope, St.
Pius X. In 1893 she entered an order of religious Sisters, with whom she lived
until her death in 1947. When she was old and bent, a bishop visiting her
convent asked her what she did. “I do the same as you,” she replied.
Astonished, the bishop asked her, “What’s that?” “Your Excellency,” she
replied, “we both want and do the same thing: God’s will.”
Revered by all who knew her because
of her gentleness, calming voice, and ever present smile, she was declared a
saint by Pope St. John Paul in 2000. Asked once, "What would you do, if
you were to meet your captors?" Josephine responded: "If I were to
meet those who kidnapped me, and even those who tortured me, I would kneel and
kiss their hands. For, if these things had not happened, I would not have been
a Christian and a religious today.” Because the Church has declared her a
saint, we can pray: “St. Josephine Bakhita, Pray for us.”
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