Being Christian in a Hostile World
December 7th, 2008 at 09:10am Mark
Noonan
The horrific murder of Jews during
the Mumbai Massacre illustrates the continuing problem of murderous
anti-Semitism, but I think it necessary to also point out that day
by day, around the world,
Christians are suffering persecution for their
faith:
Samuel Masih was a simple street
cleaner. One day, while cleaning a garden in Lahore, the
twenty-seven-year-old Pakistani Catholic was accused of deliberately
piling garbage against the wall of a mosque. He was arrested and
thrown in jail, where he was repeatedly tortured for his faith.
While being treated for tuberculosis, which he contracted in prison,
a police constable decided to earn a place in Janna (Paradise) by
killing him with a brick-cutting hammer.
Thousands of miles away, on a
beautiful mid-August day, thirty-two-year-old Fr. Jesus Adrian
Sanchez was giving religious instruction at a school in the rural
area of Chaparral (Tolima), Colombia. An armed man burst into the
classroom, ordered him outside, and shot him dead.
Deep in the Brazilian rainforest, a
seventy-three-year-old Sister of Notre Dame, Dorothy Stang, was used
to living among people who wanted her dead. She had long been trying
to protect peasant laborers from exploitation by logging firms and
ranchers. One day, while walking to a meeting of poor farmers near
the town of Anapu in the western Brazilian state of Para, two armed
men intercepted her on the path. She knew what they were there to
do. Taking out her Bible, she began reading to them and, for a
precious few minutes, they listened before opening fire. Sr. Stang
was shot six times in the head, throat, and body.
These are only three of the more than
100 Catholics who bear the unique distinction of being the first
martyrs of the twenty-first century.
According to the Vaticans
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples, the official
martyrology contains the names of 132 Catholics who have died for
the faith since 2001. But this is not a complete list. Its 2005
report acknowledges that there are many more possible unknown
soldiers of the faith in remote corners of the planet whose deaths
may never be reported.
Dying for Christ seems almost surreal
to most Westerners. We live in a part of the world where
Christianity rarely makes the news unless it is to be mocked or
defamed. Otherwise, the media is strangely silent about modern
Christian martyrdom. Three things distinguish anti-Christian
persecution and discrimination around the world, said Denvers
Archbishop Charles Chaput to the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom. First, its ugly. Second, its growing. And third,
the mass media generally ignore or downplay its gravity.
And
that, also, doesnt seem to count the large number of Protestant
Christians who also suffer, and at times die, for their faith.
While anti-Christians in the West concentrate on the crimes of
Christians past (real and imagined),
the fact that Christians are dying
all the time merely for being Christian escapes notice. It
is also, as noted above, something outside our frame of reference -
we dont know what to do with such information. Young liberals in the
United States like to play at being rebels - tattood and pierced and
shouting obscenities, they think of themselves as being in the mold
of Thomas Jeffersonthe truth, of course, is that most of these
youngsters would instantly kneel if someone really put them to the
test of their convictions. A real rebel is someone who obeys the
laws and is, indeed, a model citizen - but one who will not
surrender on the crucial matters. For a martyr, you can take his
money, take his property, take his physical freedom and degrade him
in any manner you like - a true Christian will endure this with good
cheerbut the moment you try to make a
Christian abjure his faith, that is when the martyr kindly and
politely and with love in his heart, refuses.
Fools in the west also like to
think of Christians as being the weak - weak minded and weak willed
people who use God as a crutch to mask their own failures and
insecurities. The reality is
that it is the non-believers who are weak - weak in mind and weak in
will. Go tell the Christians of Darfur,
Iraq, Pakistan, Vietnam, China, North Korea, etc that they are weak
and you are strong, as you sit safe and secure in the United States.
In this Christmas season, we must
keep in mind those among us who dont break faith - be they the
soldier on patrol in Afghanistan or the humble missionary bringing a
bit of food to an unknown village in the backwaters of the world. It
is these people who refuse to be broken and who refuse to follow the
siren song of the modern world with its greed, cruelty, inanity and
moral flabbiness who keep our society going. One missionary working
among the poor of Liberia is worth 1,000 latte-sipping slackers
coordinating the next anti-globalization protest in terms of what
use they are to the world.
It is also important for those who
would try to make Christmas non-Christian - those who war upon
the deeply religious nature of Christmas - to understand what they
are trifling with. You are not just messing with a holiday, but
with the fundamental aspect of
a faith which still commands enough love and loyalty
to convince people that death is better than apostasy.
Were not mad that someone wants to tear down the Nativity scene -
were mad that
someone would have so little respect for those of faith that theyd
gratuitously insult the faithful in such a manner.
A little respect goes a long way -
and so the next time you run down your list of denigrations of
Christianity, perhaps you could also run down the list of those who
have died this year and in the past in service of God and their
fellow man through their faith.