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Thecla and Your Role in History
User's Guide to Sunday
BY Tom and April Hoopes
September 13-19, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/4/09 at 12:24 PM
Sept. 20 is
the 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time.
Family
Sept. 23 is the memorial of St.
Thecla â special to our family because a daughter took Thecla as her
confirmation name.
Thecla was an avid reader of
philosophy when (so the story goes) St. Paul the Apostle came to preach the
Gospel in Iconium. Thecla was smitten with love for Jesus. Theclaâs pagan
parents werenât.
They were particularly irked that
Thecla broke off her engagement. Her fiancĂ©, Thamyris, was even more irked â
and denounced Thecla to a judge.
Legend has it that he ordered her to
be burned to death, but a storm from heaven put the fire out. She was then
thrown to the lions, who only purred and lay down beside her like kittens.
Sufficiently spooked, the judge set her free.
She is often pictured with the lions
laying by her side â a good reminder that, for Christians, the fierce forces of
the world donât disappear, but when we face them with God, they lose a great deal
of their ferocity.
Papal
Sept. 22 is the first day of autumn,
and in autumn, our minds turn to school, football â and ghosts.
On page 186 of Peter Seewaldâs Pope
Benedict XVI: An Intimate Portrait (Ignatius Press, 2008), Seewald
quotes Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger reminiscing about two of those three things
from his Munich school days, when he had to rebuild the seminary he studied in.
It shows what the Pope had to go through to get an education â and reveals his
human side, too:
âWe pounded and carried stones, and
in the autumn of forty-nine we were able to move in, into a side wing with no
roof. We climbed up a ladder into our accommodations, and by way of this ladder
we could also get into the uninhabitable part of the building. And we made full
use of this opportunity to frighten the âservantsâ by âhauntingâ them at night.
They of course complained fearfully about the ghost.â
Readings
Wisdom 2:17-20, Psalm 54:3-8, James
3:16-4:3, Mark 9:30-37
Our Take
Todayâs Gospel is one of those where
itâs easy to feel superior to the apostles. Jesus catches them arguing about
who is greater, and he puts a child in their midst, exhorting them to be like
the child.
Itâs true: We donât often argue with
each other about who is greater. But perhaps this is because weâre less
straightforward and less honest than the apostles. A brief examination of
conscience will reveal that weâre not all that different from the apostles
after all. We may not ever say weâre greater â but how many of our decisions
are driven by the desire to make that point, all the same?
We argue that weâre greater in ways
small and large. In conversations, we tell tales of our encounters with people
we feel qualified to ridicule, and make subtle but meaningful references to the
shortcomings of others. In our thoughts, we reinterpret almost everything that
happens to us as a triumph of âme,â the indomitable hero.
Itâs at this point that Christ wants
to put a child in our midst and asks us to be more like him.
Itâs not that children are
invariably humble. Children have their egos, too. But children start from, and
live in, a position of secondary importance.
A child lives where he lives because
his parents chose to live there. If his parents choose to move, he moves. He
goes to the school he goes to because his parents decided to put him there. He
comes home at a time arranged by his parents, and he eats food according to the
choices his parents offer him.
Itâs
this position that Christ wants us to take in relation to him. A child is not
the protagonist of his own story yet; heâs a bit part in the story of someone
else â his parents. We arenât ultimately the protagonist of our own story, either.
The story we are in stars Christ and his saving action for his people. If weâre
very blessed, he will give us a walk-on role in that story, as he did for
Thecla, who didnât even get a mention in the New Testament.
Christ himself became a model of how
we are to consider our part in the story. The first reading â from Isaiah,
prophesying about the Suffering Servant â shows how Jesus planned from the
beginning to be reviled, tortured and put to the test.
The second reading sums up the
lesson. âWhere jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there is disorder and every
foul practice,â says the Letter of St. James. âBut the wisdom from above is
first of all pure, then peaceable, gentle, compliant, full of mercy and good
fruits, without inconstancy or insincerity.Â
And the fruit of righteousness is sown in peace for those who cultivate
peace.â
Itâs a freeing lesson to learn. It
saves a lot of argument about who is the greatest.
Tom
and April Hoopes live in Atchison, Kansas,
where Tom is writer in residence at
Benedictine College.
They are former editorial directors of Faith
& Family magazine.
Tom was executive
editor
of the Register.
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