Daily Reflection January 21, 2019 |
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Praying Ordinary Time
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The Memorial that we universally observe today in the Catholic Church is an ancient celebration of the life of St. Agnes. As with many of the early Martyrs of the Roman Empire, there is little historical data and lots of myth that surrounds the life of a reputedly young woman who died violently because she refused marriage to a young pagan man who turned her in to the government for the crime of being a Christian. This apparently occurred late in the Third Century (c 280) when, in fact, there was a period of heightened persecution of Christians across the Roman Empire. The name Agnes is a Greek word that means “pure,” so it is certainly probable that whatever the child’s real name was, or whatever the actual circumstances of her short human life she is identified as a symbol of the Christian values of human dignity, chastity and faith in the Lordship of Jesus in the face of the cruelly licentious imperium of the Roman culture. Her name and the oral tradition about her have made her far more of a symbol than a person, but even today that can occur when the event of the killing becomes far more about values or beliefs than about the person or persons killed. Such teaching is New Wine in the old wine skins of racial or ethnic hatred, prejudice, infanticide, female subordination, abortion, enslavement of children or adults and a host of other violations of innate human dignity that Saint Agnes and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood with Jesus against, causing their violent deaths. We honor the radical new teaching of Jesus, as both of these heroic people did, when we lay our lives on the line against the “old” ways of DIS-valuing of human dignity that rages in the various circumstances of our day. To stand for Jesus’ teachings is to stand for justice for every person, for mercy and forgiveness of those who harm us, for human life from womb to tomb, and above all for love in the face of persecution and even death. To suffer and not to hate the persecutor, but to act with and for the dignity of every human person is the ultimate New Wine. Are WE new enough wineskins to carry such heady liquor without imploding? That might be a good meditation for Inauguration day . . . or St. Agnes Day . . . or Martin Luther King, Jr Day . . . or ANY day ! Taken from the same date in 2013. |
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