Homily for the Feast of St. Stephen
Dec. 26, 2024
Acts 6: 8-10; 7:
54-59
Collect
Christian Brothers,
St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.
The Stoning of St. Stephen (Adam Elsheimer)
“Stephen, filled with grace and power, was
working great wonders and signs among the people” (Acts 6: 8).
The whole story of St. Stephen—the little
that Acts tells us of his life and death—is the story of a man who imitated
Jesus. He’s a man of grace and power; he
works signs and wonders. Acts doesn’t
give us details except in a long speech that recaps the history of Israel and
ends with Stephen’s calling the Sanhedrin “stiff-necked” (7:51) and murderers
of “the Righteous One,” viz., Jesus (7:52)—a powerful speech that wasn’t
designed to win friends and influence people positively, but did echo some of
the charges that Jesus aimed at the scribes and Pharisees.
Then Stephen dies commending his spirit to
Jesus (7:9) as Jesus had commended his spirit to his Father (Luke 23:46). I don’t think it’s coincidental that Luke is
the author of both of those commendations.
Our passage today ends without the last verse
of Stephen’s story: “Then he fell to his
knees and cried out in a loud voice, ‘Lord, do not hold this sin against them’”
(7:60). Again, it’s only Luke who
records that Jesus prayed that his judges and executioners be forgiven (23:34).
Altho today’s reading omits that line, the
collect cites it: Stephen was “a man who
knew how to pray even for his persecutors.”
(Those who designed the missal and who designed the lectionary followed
Jesus’ advice not to let the left hand know what the right hand was doing [Matt
6:3]). Stephen’s prayer for his killers
cues our prayer “that we may imitate what we worship and so learn to love even
our enemies”; we worship our Lord Jesus in the Eucharist and pray that we may
imitate him even as Stephen did.
It’s a challenge to overlook slights and
other harms done to us. It’s a challenge
even to be patient and kind, to bite our tongues instead of giving a sharp
response or making a cutting comment. If
we can be patient, kind, gentle, that will be evidence of God’s grace and the
power of the Holy Spirit, evidence that we are placing our lives in God’s
hands.
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