St. Stephen, the first Deacon and the Church's first martyr for
Christ, whom St. Luke calls "a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost,"
was stoned to death by order of the Jewish Sanhedrin at Jerusalem, and
among those taking part was Saul of Tarsus, the future St. Paul.
Stephen's name means "crown," and he was the first disciple of Jesus to receive the martyr's crown. The apostles had found that they needed helpers to look after the care of the widows and the poor. So they ordained seven deacons, and Stephen is the 1st and most famous of these.
God worked many miracles through St. Stephen and he spoke with such wisdom and grace that many of his hearers became followers of Jesus. The enemies of the Church of Jesus were furious to see how successful Stephen's preaching was. At last, they laid a plot for him. They could not answer his wise argument, so they got men to lie about him, saying that he had spoken sinfully against God. St. Stephen faced that great assembly of enemies without fear. In fact, the Holy Bible says that his face looked like the face of an angel.
The saint spoke about Jesus, showing that He is the Savior, God had promised to send. He scolded his enemies for not having believed in Jesus. At that, they rose up in great anger and shouted at him. But Stephen looked up to Heaven and said that he saw the heavens opening and Jesus standing at the right hand of God.
His hearers plugged their ears and refused to listen to another word. They dragged St. Stephen outside the city of Jerusalem and stoned him to death. The saint prayed, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit!" Then he fell to his knees and begged God not to punish his enemies for killing him.
And TODAY ...
Professing the Christian Faith Demands the Heroism of the Martyrs
On
the day after the solemnity of Christmas, we celebrate today the feast
of St. Stephen, deacon and first martyr. At first glance, to join the
memory of the "protomartyr" and the birth of the Redeemer might seem
surprising because of the contrast between the peace and joy of
Bethlehem and the tragedy of St. Stephen, stoned in Jerusalem during the
first persecution against the nascent Church.
In reality, this
apparent opposition is surmounted if we analyze in greater depth the
mystery of Christmas. The Child Jesus, lying in the cave, is the
only-begotten Son of God who became man. He will save humanity by dying
on the cross.
Now we see Him in swaddling clothes in the manger;
after His crucifixion, He will again be wrapped in bandages and placed
in the sepulcher. It is no accident that the Christmas iconography
sometimes represents the divine newborn Child lying in a small
sarcophagus, to indicate that the Redeemer was born to die, He was born
to give His life in ransom for all.
St. Stephen was the first to
follow in the steps of Christ with martyrdom: like the divine Master, he
died forgiving and praying for his executioners (cf. Acts 7:60). During
the first four centuries of Christianity all the saints venerated by
the Church were martyrs.
They are a countless multitude, which the liturgy calls "the white army of martyrs," (martyrum candidatus exercitus).
Their death was not a reason for fear and sadness, but of spiritual
enthusiasm, which always gave rise to new Christians. For believers, the
day of death, and even more so, the day of martyrdom, is not the end of
everything, but rather the "passage" to immortal life, it is the day of
the final birth, the "dies natalis." Thus is understood the link that
exists between the "dies natalis" of Christ and the "dies natalis" of
St. Stephen. If Jesus had not been born on earth, men would not have
been able to be born for heaven. Precisely because Christ was born, we
are able to be "reborn."
Also Mary, who took the Redeemer in her
arms in Bethlehem, suffered an interior martyrdom. She shared His
Passion and had to take Him, once again, in her arms when they took Him
down from the cross. To this Mother, who felt the joy of the birth and
the anguish of the death of her divine Son, we entrust those who are
persecuted and those who are suffering, in different ways, for
witnessing and serving the Gospel.
With special spiritual
closeness, I am also thinking of the Catholics who maintain their
fidelity to the See of Peter without giving in to compromises, at times
even at the cost of grave sufferings. The whole Church admires their
example and prays that they will have the strength to persevere, knowing
that their tribulations are a source of victory, though for the moment
they might seem to be a failure.
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