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Take Courage(November 7, 2004)
When I was in Guadalajara for the Eucharistic Congress, I had the opportunity to visit the Museum of Mexican Martyrs. It gives the life stories of twenty-five men killed when a hostile Mexican government attempted to neutralize the Catholic Church. Two of the martyrs particularly caught my attention. One was a middle aged priest named Cristóbal Magallanes Jara. The other, Agustín Caloca Cortés, was recently ordained. Government soldiers arrested them and told them they would be put to death within a few days. However, the soldiers informed them that they could escape execution by publicly renouncing their faith. On the morning of their execution the younger priest saw the firing squad preparing the rifles. He began to have second thoughts that perhaps he did want to die so young. The older priest said to him, “Animo. Take courage. Soon we will be together in heaven.”
On May 25, 1927, Fr. Cristobal and Fr. Agustin did die together. They were also canonized together by Pope John Paul in the year 2000. St. Cristóbal Magallanes and St. Agustín Caloca are saints for the new millennium. We need their example of courage and surrender to God’s will. We need to look at our lives in light of eternity. Soon we will be together in heaven.
Some people consider this viewpoint to be defeatist: That instead of trying to make things better here on earth we will spend all our time thinking about heaven. But, you know, ironically, those who think about heaven are often the ones who do the greatest good for their fellow human beings here on earth. In our country, the most effective hospitals, schools, homes for the outcast were built by people like St. Frances Cabrini – a religious sister who lived each day in the hope of eternal life.
During the month of November the Church directs our attention to the four last things: death, judgment, heaven and hell. This meditation helps us to live for God and for the good of others. Today, for example, we see the magnificent witness of the seven brothers who accepted torture and death rather than betray their faith. Jesus tells us that those who have died – such as Abraham, Isaac and Jacob – are now alive in God.
These thoughts should inspire us to be good Stewards of the gifts God has entrusted to us. It has been said that the only things we can take with us to the next life are the things we have given away. The great English evangelist, John Wesley, stated it starkly, “When I die if I leave behind me ten pounds...you and all mankind [may] bear witness against me, that I have lived and died a thief and a robber.” Wesley was echoing the words of early Christian writers such as St. John Chrisostom who said that after we have taken care of our needs – which are almost always less than we imagine them to be – everything else belongs to the poor. Wesley not only gave the poor his meager financial resources, but his seeming limitless energy and compassion. When he was in his seventies, Londoners still saw the gaunt man walking with food and bundles of clothes to take to the poor. John Wesley lived for heaven, but did enormous good for his fellow men here on earth.
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