St. Lawrence
Fr. Philip Neri Powell, OP
St. Dominic Church, NOLA
My
father and grandfather decided that our family of six needed
tomatoes. So, we planted 100 seedlings. They decided that we needed
some purple-hull peas. So, we planted three acres of peas. We needed
watermelons. Sixty or so we planted. And so on with corn, butter
beans, okra, bell peppers, cucumbers, squash. You name it and we had
metric tons of it. . .for six of us. We sowed generously and
reaped bountifully! My father and grandfather insisted that we
weren't going overboard. They insisted that all this planting and
weeding and watering and harvesting was absolutely necessary.
However, when I went off to college and my younger brother got
married – that is, when the unpaid labor got scarce – the gardens
and orchards disappeared. Apparently, my brother and I were eating
enough homegrown vegetables to feed Grant's Army! Of course, I'm
grateful for the time spent bent over a garden hoe. Every preacher
needs a story for his homilies. For years, when I was a teenager, my
family sowed generously and reaped bountifully! I saw firsthand that
nothing grows without a seed being planted. And that seed must die.
Martyrs
bear witness to the faith. They plant the seed of truth in the hearts
and minds of those to whom they witness. Their deaths for the faith
spark that seed. Their blood giving it life and nutrition. But not
all martyrs die bloody deaths. The ones we celebrate as saints in the
Church did – like St. Lawrence. The vast majority of martyrs –
like you and me – probably won't die for the faith even when we die
in the faith. Our witness, our martyrdom will be less grand, more
ordinary. We seeds of witness we sow are the ordinary seeds of
everyday acts of mercy and love. Small handfuls of forgiveness,
comfort, kindness. Even tiny little moments of fraternal correction
or refusing to deny the truth. Standing up for the faith when doing
so imperils friendships or our jobs. Risking social embarrassment or
our popularity in the neighborhood. God will take the smallest
witness and grow it into a harvest of faith. Think about how you will
bear witness out there today. What will you say or do that plants a
seed, a seed that could grow into a disciple of Christ? Die to
yourself in humility and receive the courage of heart to speak the
name of Jesus. Die to yourself in humility and be Christ for another.
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