Wisdom
7:7-11; Hebrews 4:12-13; Mark 10:17-30
Today's gospel story might
cause different responses from us, depending on our socioeconomic status. For
some the story might be encouraging. It might explain the difficulty they have
in dealing with wealthy people regarding many issues of Christian social
teaching. For some it might be discouraging for although they have lived justly
more and more is demanded of them and their wealth. It seems as with the
election campaigns taking place at this time; this story contains some very important
lessons for all of us.
One of those lessons is
very obvious, Jesus does not force the wealthy man to give away what he has,
Jesus invites him to make this choice freely.
It does not seem that
most of us are called to such radical sacrifice, but this story asks us to
think seriously about our stewardship of money and material possessions. It is
difficult for many of us today to resist our consumer culture generating
perpetual needs for more and newer possessions. It is more difficult for many
of us to part with our possessions easily, and even if we do quite often we
still want to have much control in regard to its usage.
I wonder what are the results of our Total Stewardship Drive will be?
But sometimes it is not
only money and our possessions that we are asked by God to share, to sacrifice
but also our time, our desires, our dreams, our lives. Today I would like to
talk to you about two saints who did
exactly that. I am mentioning two of
them at the same time for I will not have a chance to do it in November when I
will be gone to Nepal.
Isaac
Jogues, was born in France on January 15, 1607 and died being only 39 year
old. He was the fifth of nine children and was born in a prosperous family that
included notaries, lawyers, apothecaries, and merchants. Instead of choosing
any of those professions he became a
Jesuit and at the age of 29 on April 8, 1636 sailed to the New World as a
missionary. He proclaimed the gospel to the Hurons who were constantly warred
upon by the Iroquis. On August 2, 1642 his missionary party was captured and
taken as prisoners into Mohawk territory where they were subjected to tortures:
floggings, bites, mutilations, strippings, forced marches, and insults. This is
how Isaac describes what happened to him at that time as decided to become a
prisoner with the others:
“I was
watching this disaster from a place very favorable for concealing me from the
sight of the enemy, being able to hide myself in thickets and among very tall
and dense reeds; but this thought could never enter my mind. ‘Could I, indeed,’
I said to myself, ‘abandon our French and leave those good Neophytes and those
poor Catechumens, without giving them the help which the Church of my God has
entrusted to me?’ Flight seemed horrible to me; ‘It must be,’ I said in my
heart, ‘that my body suffer the fire of earth, in order to deliver those poor
souls from the flames of Hell; it must die a transient death, in order to
procure for them an eternal life.’ My conclusion being reached without great
opposition from my feelings, I called the one of the Hiroquois who had remained
to guard the prisoners.”
During his 13 months of captivity an old Iroquis woman had adopted
Isaac and he became her servant. Isaac had been so weakened by blows and
hardships that the only work he could do was gathering wood
Finally Isacc escaped. He was 36 year old and
so changed that when he reached the Jesuit house, his superiors were unable to
recognize him.
Despite the torment
which he suffered from the hands of the Iroquois he asked his superiors to send
him back to the New World to evangelize them.
The earthly life of
Issac came to the end when he was 39. He was tomahawked and beheaded by the
Mohawks.
Saint Isaac Jogues is a patron
saint of North America.
Francesca Xavier Cabrini was born on the same day
I was, July 15th, but in the year 1850 in Italy, not Poland, and died at the
age of 67. Francesca was the tenth of eleven brothers and
sisters, only four of whom survived beyond adolescence. Small and weak as a
child, born two months premature, she remained in delicate health all her life.
Her
parents’ strong faith was transmitted to her by word and example. Her father
would read to the family from the Annals of the Propagation of the Faith,
telling stories of the great missionaries. The stories of the missions in China
made a particularly strong impression on Francesca and at an early age, she
desired to travel there as a missionary.
Francseca
applied to several religious orders to
be a missionary but because of her health she was not admitted to any of them.
When
she was 27 year old she took religious vows of being consecrated to God, added
to her name Xavier to honor the Jesuit saint, Francis Xavier, and finally at
the age of 30 she herself established a
religious order of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
At
that time Italian immigrants faced many hardships in the United States. They
worked at the most menial labor and experienced discrimination. Uprooted,
without pastoral care, they were as strangers in their own church and the
systematic targets of Protestant proselytism. Despite all, the great majority
of Italians maintained an eagerness to return again to their Catholic faith and
devotions. Seeking the help of religious women, Bishop Scalabrini asked Mother
Cabrini to go to New York to work with the Italian immigrants. She hesitated
because she planned to go to the Orient to evangelize. But bishop was
persistent and showed her a letter from Archbishop Corrigan of New York,
formally inviting the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart to establish a house
there.
Mother Cabrini sought an audience with Pope Leo XIII and posed her missionary
dilemma to him; his response was: “Not to the East, but to the West.”
Exchanging her dreams of going to China for the reality of going to New York,
she embarked with six of her Missionary Sisters almost immediately for New
York.
Upon
arrival, she learned that Archbishop Corrigan did not expect her so soon. When
they first met, he suggested that she return to Italy. She refused, saying that
the Pope had sent her. She and her companions spent the first night in a dingy
tenement in the heart of the Italian ghetto. They could not sleep and stayed
awake, tired, yet peacefully engaged in prayer. Afterwards, the Sisters of
Charity gave them hospitality and guided their first steps through the city.
In a new world, another culture,
without contacts, not knowing the language, Mother Cabrini set out to establish
her mission beginning with an orphanage for Italian children and a free school
in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, where the poorest Italians lived.
In 35 years of her life, including 28 years
living in America, Frances Xavier Cabrini founded 6 institutions for the poor,
the abandoned, the uneducated and the sick, and organized schools and adult education
classes for formation in the Catholic Faith.
She died of malaria in Chicago in 1917, and is
the first United States Citizen to be canonized.
Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini is the patron saint
of: hospital administrators, immigrants, and impossible causes.
But
what is it what God is calling you to do?