Several years ago I used to attend a daily Mass said by a priest who had
an affinity to the Saints. He always made their stories and
accomplishments so meaningful so I thought I'd share some of my notes
here. I kept copious notes in case I was ever called upon creating a
liturgical celebration based on the person of interest. Today, of
course, we have the internet.
January 20th is the optional
memorial day of St. Fabian and St. Sebastian. Both were martyrs and
persecuted for simply being Christian. Fabian holds the honor of being
elected Pope but was not even a priest at the time of his election.
Sebastian was a soldier who comforted the people he was about to kill.
When the emperor found out that Sebastian was a Christian, he was
ordered to be killed by a bowmen firing squad. There are many famous
paintings of Sebastian with a dozen or so arrows sticking out of him.
That isn't all he is famous for. He survived his execution and after
being nursed to health, he confronted the emperor yet again and of
course, was executed again. Sebastian is the patron saint of athletes.
It
must have taken tremendous courage to be a Christian in a time when
they were hated. Even today we're no stranger to hate. The Nazi's
hated the Jews, Lebanon hates Israel, the Puritans who escaped Europe
from religious persecution came to North America only to persecute
people who were not pure like them, European settlers hated the Native
Americans because the Native Americans resented being forced off their
land so they had the nerve to fight back. Other classes and groups of
people we loved to hate in recent history: blacks, gays, women, Irish,
Mexicans, English, French, Muslim, Japanese, rich people and even poor
people.
In my town a business was going to build two halfway
houses for people newly released from prison with arrest records.
Everyone thought it was a noble idea and the purchase of the property
was approved in a non-residential area. Then someone found out that the
people living there could include the dreaded sex offender. As word
spread like wildfire the next town hall meeting was filled to capacity
by people protesting this halfway house rumored to be full of registered
sex offenders. All permissions were rescinded. What is amazing is
that when people thought these buildings would house drug dealers, gang
members, burglars, robbers, wife beaters, drunk drivers, drug users,
murderers and animal abusers, nobody had a problem with it because
everyone deserves a second chance. But, if a 19 year old high school
senior who had sex with his 16 year old high school sweetheart might
move in - he is a child molester and rapist and nobody saw anything
wrong with ostracizing him and everyone else along with him. Even
though the halfway house was for anyone arrested, not just the good
criminals like murderers, armed robbers and drug dealers.
When
Charlie Hebdo was attacked by terrorists, the West united with rallies
and protests reciting the phrase "Je suis Charlie." The West saw this
as a statement in support for freedom of speech while the Islamic
religion saw the rallies as an affront to the Prophet Muhammad. Neither
party is wrong because of their cultural differences but it shouldn't
be that difficult for either party to say they're sorry; maybe it is.
It
is good to remember Fabian and Sebastian and their persecution. Both
fought and peacefully stood up for what they believed. Did they have to
die for it? Must history repeat itself?
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Showing posts with label persecution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label persecution. Show all posts
Thursday, January 29, 2015
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