Homily for October 19th, 2018: Luke 12:1-7.
Twice in this
short gospel reading Jesus tells his friends: “Do not be afraid.” These reassuring
words do not promise that the Lord’s disciples will be spared suffering. Jesus
promises something quite different: that he will be with us in every
suffering.
We celebrate
today a man whose life bears witness to fulfillment of this promise: Ignatius
of Antioch, in modern day Syria .
Thought to have been a convert, he was for forty years the third bishop of that
local Church. Arrested in about 105 B.C. by the Roman authorities for the crime
of worshiping the God of Jesus Christ, rather than the Emperor of Rome, he was
sent there, in chains and under guard, on a ship, sentenced to be thrown to
lions in the arena for the amusement of the spectators.
News of his arrest
spread quickly through Christian communities on the ship’s route. Clergy and
numerous faithful came to welcome Ignatius at each port of call, seeking the
blessing of a man on the way to martyrdom. Others journeyed by land to Rome for the same
purpose. During the voyage Ignatius wrote letters, still preserved, to four
local Churches encouraging them to remain steadfast in faith. More than once he
expressed his concern that well intentioned fellow believers in high places in Rome might intervene to
prevent the fate that awaited him. “I fear your charity,” Ignatius wrote. “I
shall never have another such opportunity of attaining unto my Lord. … Allow me
to be the food of wild beasts through whom I may attain unto God. I am God’s
grain and I am to be ground by the teeth of wild beasts that I may be found the
pure bread if Christ.” Ignatius died in the arena at Rome in about 107 A.D.
None of us are
likely to blood martyrs to Jesus Christ. Every one of us, however, is called to be a martyr to him in the
original sense of the word – martyros, which
in Greek means simply “witness.” We
ask God in this Mass for guidance and strength to bear witness to him in daily
life, as we pray:
“St. Ignatius, pray for us.”
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