13th SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME A
WHY THE MARTYRS
MATTER
Around the world, we hear stories
of persecution of Christians. Faced with death or threats to life, they are
forced to make painful decisions regarding their faith in Jesus.
Christians died in the bombing of
a church in Egypt on Palm Sunday this year. Shortly after, a group of pilgrims
on the way to visiting a church were stopped by terrorists, looted of valuables
and were forced to renounce their religion. One by one, these pilgrims that
included children, refused to give up their faith. And one by one too, they
fell dead on the ground. In the
Philippines, a priest and his parishioners were among the first hostages taken
by terrorists in the city of Marawi. Until now, nothing has been heard about their
fate.
Jesus tells us in today’s gospel
(Mt. 10: 37-42) that serious challenges to faith, if not outright persecution,
will definitely come. One day we will find ourselves making a choice: “Do you
love your family more than Me? Do you love your work more than Me? Do you love
your money more than Me? Do you love your ambitions and dreams more than Me?
Are you going to carry your cross or abandon it?”
Thank God, for many of us, daily
decisions do not include death because of our faith. Unlike others who suffer
persecution, we are free from direct attacks on faith. But still, there are
real challenges we have to face, and these involve the choices we make each day
that directly put to question our priorities, loyalty and allegiance to the
Lord. In the face of these choices, do we uphold our personal taste, our
attachments to the world or our preference for lifestyes contrary to God’s holy
will?
In seemingly small and harmless
choices, sadly, we usually fail. How easily Catholics leave their faith behind
when they hear other doctrines from sects and cults. How convenient it is to
agree with politicians but to question the shepherds of our souls. When
suffering looms above us, we make room for compromise rather than live by the
Word of God.
The martyrs, those who
courageously fought for their faith, are important because they remind us of
the gospel truth: he who seeks life will lose it. He who loses life for me,
will find it.
We may not share the dramatic
plight of the martyrs past and present. But do we at least share their
conviction?