The
Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe
Dear brothers and sisters,
In his recent address to the annual
General Assembly of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, His
Eminence Daniel Cardinal DiNardo, Archbishop of Galveston-Houston and President
of the U.S.C.C.B., reflected on the life of Blessed Stanley Rother, about whom I preached a few weeks ago. Cardinal DiNardo said:
Let Blessed Stanley Rother be our inspiration. As Father Stanley
stayed despite the imminent threat of persecution and death in order that he
may continue to preach the Gospel of Love, so too should we, as a church, be
united in proclaiming Christ’s love for humanity. How much more so then in this
time when Christians around the world are persecuted in unheard of numbers. On
the Solemnity of Christ the King, I ask that the entire Church in the United
States come together in a special way for a Day of Prayer for Persecuted
Christians, to express our solidarity with those who are suffering.[1]
Today is that day, and, what is
more, the Bishops of these United States of America have called us to a
“Solidarity in Suffering” with our persecuted brothers and sisters by observing
a “Week of Awareness” beginning today and concluding on Saturday, December 2nd.
His
Holiness Pope Francis frequently reminds us, as he did a few months ago, that “today
there are more Christian martyrs than in ancient times, than in the early day
times of the church.”[2] A few years ago, he
expressed the same reality:
In 2,000 years, a
vast host of men and women have sacrificed their lives to remain faithful to
Jesus Christ and his Gospel. And today, in many parts of the world, there are
many, many — more than in the first centuries — so many martyrs, who give up
their lives for Christ, who are brought to death because they do not deny Jesus
Christ. This is our Church. Today we have more martyrs than in the first
centuries![3]
In
this Age of Martyrs, their situation is stark and desperate, and so Pope
Francis often calls them to our attention. We cannot ignore them! We cannot
forget them!
Pope
Francis summarized the circumstances in which many disciples of Jesus currently
find themselves today. The Holy Father said:
Let
us also think … about our many brothers and sisters today who cannot pray
together because they are persecuted for it, who cannot have the book of the
Gospels or a Bible because they are persecuted for it. Let us think about these
brothers and sisters who cannot go to Mass because it is prohibited. How many
times a priest secretly comes among them pretending to be at table having tea,
and he secretly celebrates the Mass. This is happening today.[4]
How
often do we think about them? How often do we pray for them? How often do we
unite our sufferings, difficulties, and frustrations to the Cross of Christ for
them?
Sadly,
it seems most of us – myself included at times – are far too willing to simply
go along pretending all is well in the world. We convince ourselves that a long
line at the post office or the grocery store, that an inconsiderate clerk or a
rude customer, that a slow driver or a grumpy child makes the day terrible. If
we are honest, however, and take a step back to gain a bit of perspective, the
struggles of our daily living are as nothing compared to what so many others
endure out of love for Jesus. We can sit down in a coffee shop and pray with
our friends; they cannot. We can go to a park to read the Bible; they cannot.
We can come to the Holy Mass without fear for our safety; they cannot.
As
Pope Francis reminded us the day after Christmas last year, these faithful men,
women, and children, “in spite of the trials and dangers … courageously witness
their belonging to Christ and live the Gospel by committing themselves in favor
of the least, of the most neglected, doing good to all without distinction; in
this way they witness to charity in truth.”[5] And for it they suffer
greatly, even to the point of death, and they do so willingly and gladly. The
example of their public witness to the faith should give us all reason to
pause. Having made their adherence to Christ, they live under the recognition
that Jesus Christ is the King of the Universe and that allegiance to him requires
that lives look different from the world around us.
Our
brothers and sisters who suffer because of their faith render fitting service
to the Divine Majesty and proclaim his praise unceasingly by the manner in
which they live.[6]
They know that the one who “spread[s] the table before [them] in the sight of
[their] foes” is the same one who will “judge between one sheep and another,
between rams and goats” (Psalm 23:3; Ezekiel 34:17). They know that everything
is to subjected to Jesus and so they willingly place everything at his service
and hold nothing back from him (cf. I Corinthians 15:27). They do so because
they long to hear him say to them, “Come, you who are blessed by my Father.
Inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world” (Matthew 25:34). What keeps us from subjecting our lives and everything we have to
Jesus? What keeps us from letting him reign over every aspect of our existence?
Too
often do we listen to the false promises of this world and accept the
deceptions of the Father of Lies who seeks to cloud our vision. Saint Augustine recognized this tendency of
our fallen nature when he said:
Rain and fog, the
errors of this world; a great darkness arising from human lusts, a think fog
covering the earth. And it is difficult for the sheep not to go astray in this
fog. But the shepherd does not desert them. He seeks them, his piercing gaze
penetrates the fog, the thick darkness of the clouds does not prevent him.[7]
If
we are not to get lost in this fog, we must place ourselves under the yoke of
him who suffered and died for us, of him who is Risen from the dead and longs
to dispel the darkness of our night. This is what the persecuted Christians
have done. They have seen the radiant beauty of the Lord’s face and have not taken
their eyes off him. They follow this wise advice of Saint Augustine: “Let
Christ shine in your heart, who lights the lamp of our minds with the love of
God and neighbor; and you will not fear any evils, since he is with you.”[8]
We
will soon enter into the great season of Advent in which Holy Mother Church
calls us to prepare to meet the Lord Jesus when he comes in his glory to judge
the living and the dead. On that great day, he will say to some, “Come, you who
are blessed by my Father. Inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world.” To others, he will say, “Depart from me, you
accursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels” (Matthew 25:41). Which will he say to me? Which will he say to you?
If
we wish to hear him call us to himself, we must be prepared to meet him. We
must not hide from, but allow him to find us. We must allow him to bind up our
wounds and to heal our sickness through the Sacrament of Penance in which we
confess our sins and receive his mercy (cf. Ezekiel 34:16). We must allow the
Good Shepherd and King of the Universe to us upon his shoulders; we cannot
resist him, but must instead yield to the power of his love. Only by subjecting
ourselves to him and allowing him to reign over us will come to “dwell in the
house of the Lord for years to
come” (Psalm 23:6).
Today,
then, and throughout this week, let us bring an important question to prayer
again and again: “[A]m I ready to carry the Cross like Jesus? To endure
persecution in order to bear witness to Jesus like our many brothers and
sisters today who are humiliated and persecuted? Considering this will do us
all good.”[9]
May
the Lord, when he comes, find us prepared and ready to stand before him. May he
let the radiance of his face shine upon us and bring us into his kingdom “of righteousness,
peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit” (Romans 14:17). Amen.
[1] Daniel Cardinal DiNardo,
Presidential Address to the 2017 General Assembly of the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops, 13 November 2017, 3.
[2] Pope Francis, Homily, 27 May 2017.
[3] Ibid., Angelus Address,
23 June 2013.
[4] Ibid., Daily Meditation,
4 March 2014.
[5] Ibid., Angelus Address, 26
December 2016.
[6] Cf. Roman Missal, Collect for
the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe.
[7] Saint Augustine of Hippo, Sermon 46.23.
[8] Ibid., Sermon 366.5. In
Craig A. Blaising, Carmen S. Hardin, and Thomas C. Oden, et al, eds., Ancient
Christian Commentary on Scripture, Old Testament Vol. VII: Psalms 1-50 (Downers
Grove, Illinois: Inter Varsity Press, 2008), 179.
[9] Pope Francis, Daily Meditation, 4 March 2014.
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