Thursday, October 17, 2024

Homily for Memorial of St. Ignatius of Antioch

Homily for the Memorial of
St. Ignatius of Antioch

Oct. 17, 2024
Collect
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

“The glorious passion of St. Ignatius of Antioch … brought him eternal splendor” (Collect).


The splendor that Christ bestowed upon Ignatius follows from his total self-giving to Christ.  Why he had to be transported to Rome instead of being executed in Antioch, I don’t know.  But being in Rome meant his faith received greater exposure, greater splendor.

Ignatius feared that some Christians in the capital might use their influence to obtain his release.  He pleaded with them not to do so:  “show me no untimely kindness,” he wrote.  He saw his passage to God thru his coming martyrdom in the arena.  He saw that by being devoured by wild beasts he would become Christ’s pure bread; he was wheat to be ground by their teeth.  He asked Roman believers, “Pray to Christ for me that the animals will be the means of making me a sacrificial victim for God.”[1]

We also are Christ’s wheat being ground into fine flour for pure bread—not by lions or tigers but by daily life.  Have you ever thought of your life as a grind?

In days past, lesson plans, papers to be graded, department meetings, and parent conferences were a grind.  Now we may be ground down by pain, depression, people who complain, someone who tells the same stories over and over, thoughts of mortality, or guilt for our sins.

Ignatius embraced his beasts, so to say.  May his example and his prayers help us to embrace our daily lives and offer them as sacrifices to Christ.



[1] Letter to the Romans, LOH 4:1490.

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