Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Father Augustus Tolton

Before the end of Black History Month, I wanted to write something about a saint whose acquaintance I've made only in the last few years, but who has been very close to me in my prayer of late: Servant of God Augustus Tolton.
There are a number of African-Americans whose Causes of Canonization are open and progressing at the moment, two of whom were born as slaves. The other is Julia Greeley, who tirelessly helped the poor, often in secret, in Denver, Colorado.
Father Augustus Tolton, though, was a public figure even in his own time, for a very obvious reason: he was the first publicly-recognized African-American Catholic priest in the US.
Tolton was born into slavery in Missouri only six years before the outbreak of the Civil War. His parents were devout Catholics, who had not only married in the Church, but also ensured their children were baptized as well. Their life, though, was certainly one of suffering, and even as a young child Tolton was forced to work in the fields with the other slaves.
As the Civil War neared its end, Tolton's father ran away to join the Union Army and free his wife and children, dying shortly thereafter. Left alone, Mother Tolton (as she was known in her later years) took her three children and traveled north to Illinois and the border town of Quincy. There, life on the plantation quickly turned into life on the assembly line of a cigar factory.
Still, freedom brought with it opportunity, and Mother Tolton was determined to ensure her son's Catholic education. Her first attempt at entering her son in school, however, proved an unmitigated disaster, as white parents threatened the priests and nuns running the school and Augustus himself was viciously mistreated by his fellow children.
This changed, however, when Augustus and his mother were befriended by Father Peter McGirr, an Irish Franciscan. Taking the young boy under his wing, Father McGirr ensured not only his entrance into his parish's school, but his good treatment by the other children and congregants. Finally in a welcoming environment, Augustus thrived; in later years, he would look back longingly on his days at St. Peter's School, where he studied, served Mass with Father Peter, and gradually grew in faith and trust of God.
As time passed, Father McGirr become more and more impressed by this young man's intelligence and piety, and finally made the fateful decision to discuss with Augustus the possibility of a vocation to the priesthood. Almost from this moment, Augustus' heart was absolutely set on this goal; and he never faltered in his pursuit of it, regardless of the obstacles set in his path, or the sacrifices it would require.
Father McGirr and the other priests and sisters who knew Augustus all helped to train and tutor him in everything necessary for his priestly studies; but when Augustus applied for seminary, he was rejected in turn by each seminary in America. Their reason, for the most part, was simple fear: this was the time of the great Nativist movements, when anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic sentiment was dominant all over America, and seminaries and Churches had been targeted and burned by mobs. A Catholic seminary was bad enough; a Catholic seminary with an African-American seminarian, though, was sure to become a prime target for threats, violence, and worse. Even through the mid-20th century, in fact, the "Spectre of the Negro Priest" was to remain a major focus of Southern Protestant Anti-Catholic fears and resentment.
Still, this was hardly an act of courage or faith on the part of America's Catholic seminaries; and it left Augustus with almost no recourse in pursuing his vocation. Still, he and Father Peter did not give up hope, but redoubled Augustus' education and spiritual preparation, waiting for the Will of God to reveal itself. In the end, their faith was more than rewarded: for after many years and many setbacks, Augustus Tolton was selected to attend seminary and study in Rome itself. Then and now, this was a privilege reserved for the very best and most promising prospects.
So this young former slave and factory worker, who had never before strayed beyond the plantation in Missouri and the industrial town of Quincy, Illinois, sailed away to Europe, to Rome and the Seminary of the Congregation De Propaganda Fidei ("For the Propagation of the Faith"). This Seminary trained missionary priests, to be sent everywhere in the world where the Church was spreading and priests were in short supply. Here, amidst the splendor of the Eternal City, Augustus found himself studying side-by-side with people of every race and ethnicity and nation. In the evenings, for recreation, he would sing to brothers from all over the world the Negro Spirituals his mother had taught him as a child.
In the end, after six years of intensive study and discernment, he was ordained on April 24, 1886 in the Church of St. John Lateran, the Cathedral Church of Rome and the universal Catholic Church. Days later, he celebrated his first Mass as a priest in St. Peter's Basilica.
As a child, Father Tolton had toiled in the fields as a slave; now, in persona Christi, he offered Sacrifice at the Altar of the Church of the Prince of the Apostles, with a Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church as his Altar Server.
Still, along with the splendor of his Ordination came the promise of a very close conformity to the Sacrifice he offered. All through his seminary education, Tolton had expected that he would be sent as a missionary to Africa, where his skin color would be an advantage, not a liability; he had consequently spent a great deal of time learning the languages and cultures of the peoples among whom he expected to labor. On the day before his Ordination, however, his superior informed him there had been a change of plans; he would instead be sent back to the United States of America, to his own diocese and hometown.
The Italian Cardinal who made this decision reportedly announced it to his colleagues with the immortal words: 'America has been called the most enlightened nation in the world. We shall see whether it deserves that honor. If the United States has never before seen a black priest, it must see one now.'
This was certainly a momentous step for the Church in America--and a heavy burden for any man to bear. Augustus would hardly have been human if he had not regarded this news with trepidation, if not outright fear. Life in America had been, and would continue to be, a cruel Cross of suffering and prejudice and degradation: a Cross that would ultimately claim his life. Fittingly, the day he was given this news was Good Friday, the day of Christ's own Crucifixion.
Still, whatever his feelings, Father Tolton did not hesitate in agreeing to dedicate the rest of his life to ministering to his African-American brothers and sisters in the land of their exile and suffering. On his return trip, he toured the great Catholic shrines of Europe, celebrating Mass on altars that had seen many centuries of pilgrims and saints. At his request, though, the first Mass he celebrated in America was for the poor African-American Catholics of the Church of St. Benedict the Moor in New York.
And so Father Tolton returned to Quincy in honor, to the place where he had grown up and labored and suffered many things. Now, though, he was a public figure, looked to and admired by people all across America. Although there had been priests before him of "mixed" African-American descent, none had spoken publicly of their ancestry or been widely recognized as such. Father Tolton, though, was known and talked about in every corner of his country. When the Bishops of the United States gathered in Baltimore for their Convocation, secular and Protestant observers were shocked to see on the altar, alongside the high dignitaries of the Church, an African-American dressed in the vestments of a priest; and his example and words were crucial in inspiring many other African-American men in aiming for, and attaining, the same goal.
Still, all this purported fame occupied little of Father Tolton's attention; for he was engaged in the exhausting, overwhelming task of ministering to his poor and oppressed flock. His first efforts at establishing an African-American parish in Quincy ended in failure due to the bitter opposition of a fellow priest, a German, who was driven not only by prejudice but also by jealousy at Father Tolton's "poaching" of his white parishioners. Throughout his career, Father Tolton was noted for the brilliance and fervor of his preaching, as well as for the beautiful singing voice with which he chanted the Mass; and these qualities, along with his obvious piety, frequently drew to him far more than just African-American Catholics.
Still, Father Tolton's heart was set on ministering to his own people, and, stymied once again by prejudice, he accepted an offer from the Archdiocese of Chicago to establish a parish to care for the African-American population of that great city, many of whom had emigrated there following the Civil War and now lived lives of desperate poverty and oppression. During his eight years of ministry, Father Tolton's tireless and thankless efforts brought his parish from meeting in the basement of another parish, to a storefront Church, to planning and building a monumental Church of their own, St. Monica's, named for the African mother of St. Augustine.
Still, the task which he had set for himself was nothing if not overwhelming. As Pastor of Saint Monica's, Father Tolton presided over a congregation of the very poorest of the poor, subjected to the harshest material conditions and the cruelest prejudice and exclusion. For the good of these children of his, Father Tolton's time and energy was ceaselessly taken up with not only celebrating the Sacraments (saying Mass daily, marrying his congregants, baptizing their children, visiting the sick and the dying at home to Anoint and console them), but also teaching religious education classes, organizing and leading guilds and other fellowships, and doing everything in his power to provide for the terrible material needs of his people. These efforts took him constantly far from St. Monica's, into all the slums and tenements where his children lived. Through all this, though, he continued to have one very consoling companion: his mother, who served as his housekeeper, sacristan, and constant source of help and support. Another support, too, he had with him always: his faith in the Crucified Christ, expressed in the love with which he cared for his people and the fervor with which he preached and celebrated Mass and prayed privately with his mother every day in their tiny apartment.
These heroic efforts, though, took their toll. After only thirteen years as a priest, in his early forties, Tolton seemed an old man, forced from sheer fatigue to deliver his homilies seated rather than standing. In all these years, he had had no worldly success to speak of, and precious little rest.
Still, rest was not to be long in coming. At the age of 43, travelling to a retreat with his fellow priests, Father Tolton was overcome by the heat wave sweeping Chicago at the time, and collapsed in agony.
This father and teacher, a true image of Christ in his Priesthood and his love, had consumed himself entirely, body and soul, for the sake of his people, poured himself out utterly, like water, for the God he served. He reigns now, in and with the Crucified and Risen Christ, over all the world and the whole human race.
Serve Dei Auguste Tolton, ora pro nobis!

Friday, February 23, 2018

Lenten Meditation #2: The Coronation of the King

"The soldiers led him away into the courtyard, that is, the praetorium, and they called together the whole cohort. And they clad him in purple, and weaving together a crown of thorns, they set it upon him: and they began to salute him: 'Hail, King of the Jews!' And they were striking his head with a reed, and spitting on him, and falling on their knees they were worshiping him." (Mark 15:15-19)

Jesus Christ is king of the universe not because he is God, but because he is man. Inasmuch as he is God, Christ exists entirely apart from creation, neither needing it nor existing in any relationship with it commensurate to his nature. To God, creation is nothing--or rather, less than nothing. No created thing can in any way either add to or take away from what he is in himself.

God, to be sure, is the cause and end of creation, who created it and directs it according to his will, and in this sense he may be compared to a king. Still, in the fullest and most proper sense, the king is not the one who creates the people, nor even merely the one who directs it, but the one who represents it, who embodies it in himself. A king is a single human person who stands for all the other human persons that make up a people--in his one body and soul, he reflects and embodies and effects the unity of all the other human persons like him. A king, then, is not king by virtue of his unlikeness to his subjects, but by virtue of his likeness. No angel could be king of a nation of men, nor any man of a nation of bees.

In the truest sense, then, God is King of Creation in and through Christ, not in his divinity, but in his humanity. It is as created that God rules over the created; it is as created that Christ reflects and embodies and effects the unity of all creation in himself.  It is as man that Christ becomes King of Creation--but it is as God that he freely shares his own divine life with his subjects, raising them above nature, and uniting them with the eternal, perfect Divinity that is his birthright and inheritance. In and through Christ, the uncreated God is made King of Creation, and the created is made divine.

Like all human kingships, Christ's came into being in time and space and history, the realm of the created. Christ was born the heir of creation, but he had still to enter into his kingdom, to be anointed and crowned, to take his seat upon his throne.

Christ was born the Son of David; he was anointed with the Holy Spirit at his Baptism; but it was only in his Passion that he assumed his kingship in its fullness. It was in his Passion that Christ took on himself the rule of humanity and of creation, through his perfect sharing in its sins and wounds and sufferings and, finally, in the death that is the lot of all men and all creation. It was in his Passion that he received the emblems of his rule.

The Coronation of Christ, the King of the Universe, took place, then, in the Praetorium of the Roman guard, on a Friday in spring in Jerusalem. It was one of the many anonymous soldiers tasked with execution duty who clad the King in his royal garments, another who set on his head the Crown of all Creation, another who gave him his Scepter; and this whole cohort of soldiers and torturers were the very first to pay homage to the newly crowned King of time and space and matter.

This, then, is how the King of Creation was crowned, worshiped, recognized--as the lowest of all things, the mocked and despised and condemned. These are the infallible signs and means of his power: the Crown of Creation, a garland of thorns, twined in gleeful malice and forced onto his head, piercing it in place after place, drenching itself in his blood--the Scepter of Omnipotent Power, a reed hastily snatched up, beating his face again and again until unrecognizable. This is the true and fitting homage given to the Eternal King at his Coronation: utter mockery, unrestrained laughter, the contempt reserved only for that which is most hateful and most despised and overlooked and forgotten.

This, then, is the right by which Christ rules over all things: not that he is the strongest or the most beautiful, or the most recognized or admired or loved or trusted, but that he is the lowest and most shameful, weakest and most despised and forgotten and abused and mocked of all men. This is the right by which God would rule over us.

What gifts, then, would you offer to the King? Money, power, riches? All these are already his, and would have adorned him if he wished it. He did not wish it; he chose instead thorns and a reed and a soldier's cloak. Beautiful words, praises, the honor of your acknowledgment of him as Lord or God? Christ was crowned and worshiped by the utterly indifferent, who hated him--and you think he has need of your acknowledgment?

Christ valued the sincere mockery and contempt of the soldiers more than your proud and self-serving recognition. Whether you choose to acknowledge him or not, he remains King, and you, like the soldiers, will worship him in the end, willing or unwilling.

Christ was crowned in this way to show that there was only one thing that he truly desired, only one gift that you or any other human person or any other creature could truly offer him: yourself.

God became King of Creation not to gain gold or riches or honors or praises or the acknowledgment of men, but to save souls. For this reason, he took on himself all the mockery and shame and hatred and indifference of mankind, for this reason he made himself the lowest and least of all: so that in this way he might win the love of those who are weak and lowly, mocked and ashamed and hated, prideful and indifferent and condemned and sinners. You and I are all these things, and more; but for this reason, we ought to trust in God all the more.

Approach, therefore, the Throne of the King, the Cross. Recognize that God lowered himself to nothingness, to your nothingness, and even lower, so that you might love him. Recognize that for your sake God set himself beneath your feet, made himself powerless and despised and forgotten, so that you might remember him, and weep for your sins. Give him the only homage he desires: repentance from your sins, obedience to his commandments, trust in his love. Give him the only gift he desires: yourself.

It is only when you have given him yourself in its entirety, body and heart and mind and soul, ignorance and weakness and shame and sin, the utter nothingness of your created self, in total trust and abandonment and love, that his kingship will be truly fulfilled: for the true king reigns, not for his own benefit, but for the good of his subjects. For the eternal good of us, who are his subjects, the man Jesus was mocked and tortured and died in agony. For this reason he is, and always shall be, our Lord and King, and the King of all Creation. Let us worship him!

Prayer:

Lord Jesus Christ, King of Creation, you humbled yourself to be crowned and worshiped by sinners in indifference and hatred and mockery; grant that by your omnipotent power we might so humble ourselves as to worthily and sincerely offer our whole selves to you, and so receive the rewards of your eternal Kingdom.

Amen.

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Lenten Meditation #1: "Then they spat in his face."

"Then they spat in his face." (Matthew 26:67)

There is a sacramental quality to the body that is unbreakable. We are complex creatures, with complex intentions and thoughts and willings, borne of our hearts and minds and souls--and we naturally express these things physically, through our bodies. There is nothing of our bodies, no action or feature or quality, that does not bear a meaning beyond the physical, that does not communicate. The most perfunctory hug is still as a gesture of affection: the touch of a stranger's handshake--a kiss on the cheek--the movement of a muscle in the face--all have their own proper meanings.

So let us consider, for a moment, what is expressed by the spittle on the face of Christ. Christ Jesus became man in order to inaugurate a system of Sacraments, or rather in order to be the one, eternal Sacrament of the love and mercy of God. His every gesture, his every word, indeed his entire being as man, spiritual and physical, was a communication, an expression, of the eternal Word and his love for each man and woman and child. All that he communicated, and all that he received, through the physical, through his body, was communicated and received also by God.

Thus the enormous significance of all that was done to Christ in his Passion, all that was done to and for Christ throughout his life. Christ came to earth to communicate his love physically, through the Sacraments of his body and life and actions--he also came to earth to suffer, in himself, all the sin and disorder and suffering of man. In this suffering, too, he worked out our salvation not only in soul, but in body as well. In his Passion, the sufferings of Christ's soul were signified and expressed and effected by the sufferings of his body. All that was done to the body of Christ by man was done also to the soul of Christ, and hence to God--all that has been done against God was suffered by Christ in his soul, effected and expressed in his body.

Christ did not merely suffer the sins of those who crucified him, or of his contemporaries--he suffered the sins and wounds and sufferings of each and every man who has ever existed or ever will exist, including each of us. He bore our sins in his soul and in and through his body, through all that he gave and received in the body. That which a few men did to Christ in his Passion, then, truly signified and expressed and effected that which has been done to Christ by us all. When Christ received the blows of the soldiers, in them he recognized and suffered the blows of us all.

Think, then, of the action of spitting in the face of Christ. This is, it would seem, a fairly universal gesture--one whose meaning and import strikes us immediately, across cultures and times and places. It is the physical embodiment of contempt.

Contempt, or despising, is not a sin that we think of, perhaps, very often. To define it, though, we have merely to look to the physical gesture, the physical sacrament, which very well both effects and reveals what it signifies.

When we spit, we cast out of our bodies, out of ourselves, something which we regard as superfluous, unnecessary, or even hateful to us. Our spit to us is both valueless and distasteful, not something we prefer to think of at all, a matter for disgust--and so we cast it from ourselves, usually without thought, into places equally valueless and disgusting.

When we spit upon another, then, we treat that person as an appropriate receptacle for our spitting, our casting out of what is valueless and distasteful. Our act of spitting is not intended to hurt, to cause pain, or even to harm. It is intended, rather, to humiliate, to lower, to disregard.

To spit in someone's face expresses this basic reality even more intensely. The face is the part of the body that shows forth the person, the unique, relational being, more clearly and more inescapably than any other. We both express and receive love through the face; when we recognize the face of someone we know, we recognize not merely a body or a mind, but something unique, irreplaceable, valuable, loved and loving, a you to our I. It is in the face we appear as we are, beings defined by relation, existing from and for love. To spit in someone's face, then, is to treat as valueless and disgusting not merely the body qua physical, but the person itself, the unique, relational being capable of love, with a name, a mind, a heart, a soul. It is to degrade and lower and crush not merely some person, but this person, you. I see your face--and I spit in it.

Imagine, then, spitting in the face of Christ. Here is the face of God, the face that embodies and makes effectual his love for each and every person, including you. Imagine the sorrow in his eyes as your spittle strikes the face of God. Imagine your spittle resting on that face, slimy and repulsive, dripping slowly down, in his eyes, his hair, his beard, covering up his features, obscuring, mocking, defiling.

You have taken that face, that love, and treated it as valueless, disgusting, as nothing. You have even taken pleasure in doing so--taken pleasure in the power, the superiority, the indifference, by which you so lowered, so degraded, God himself. You have seen yourself as you spat in the face of God, and have taken delight in what you saw.

Perhaps you think you have not done this, that you have not spit in the face of God, or in the face of any other man. You are mistaken.

We spit in the face of Christ, in the first place, each and every time we willingly despise another human person--whenever we treat another as valueless, disgusting, beneath us, whenever we choose to lower, to humiliate, to disregard. "That which you do the least of these, you do to me": strangers, waiters, sexual objects, political opponents, anonymous Internet trolls. In each and every person whose irreplaceable personhood, name, heart, soul, whom Christ loves and for whom he died, we have not acknowledged, we have despised and spat upon the face of Christ.

We spit in the face of Christ, likewise, when we treat his love for us, expressed in the Church and the Sacraments and in so many other things, as something valueless or distasteful or indifferent. It is difficult to accept the love of God, which requires us to submit ourselves to others, to deny our desires and inclinations and thoughts, and to accept and receive something far beyond our own knowledge or control. Far easier, then, to despise Christ and his Incarnation, and the means he uses to show us his love. Whether that is the teachings of the Church, or one's fellow Christian, or the Sacraments in which Christ offers himself to us, the blow is no less severe. It is most cruel of all when we reject and disregard Christ in the Eucharist, the most perfect sign of God's love, receiving him into our bodies without acknowledging him or giving ourselves to him or desiring to be obedient to him in all things, or perhaps not bothering to receive him at all.

I invite you, then, to contemplate once again the image of Christ, with your spittle on his face. He willingly bears our contempt, our indifference, for the sake of his love. He allows us to despise him and disregard him and humiliate him and lower him, and he takes on himself all those situations in which we ourselves have been despised and disregarded. This is the measure of God's love, that he permits us to treat him, in comparison to whom we are nothing and can have no value at all, as valueless, as nothing. He chooses to love us, although he does not need us, and he allows us to despise him, although we cannot exist apart from him.

This is the extent of God's love for us, and the effectual sign of its omnipotence in regard to us. All that Christ asks of us is that we acknowledge that love, and accept it, that we permit him to love us and save us from our sins. He has willingly borne, and will willingly bear, all in us that is most distasteful and disgusting and shameful, and he will give us in return his own immortal and incorruptable life. He bears our spittle in his face, and gives to us his own flesh and blood. Let us receive him, then, worthily, and love him in our neighbor.

Prayer:

Lord Jesus Christ, as in your Passion you willingly bore the spittle of our indifference and contempt, so grant us both to acknowledge and accept your great love for us and for all mankind, so that trusting in you and following you in all things, we may both love and honor you in all persons, and faithfully obey you in all things.

Amen.

Friday, February 9, 2018

Saint Josephine Bakhita

I love Saint Josephine Bakhita, and the story I find most affecting among the very many of her life is that of her death. After decades living as a free woman and a nun, respected and revered as a teacher and a living saint by those around her, the coming of old age and death meant a terrible and lonely return. On her deathbed, reduced physically, delirious in her last agony, she relived the long years of her enslavement and abuse, crying aloud in chains and scourgings and other indignities. She had been kidnapped at the age of seven, after a happy but brief childhood, and then abused so badly she forgot her own name, so that she was left only with that given by her tormentors, Bakhita, "lucky"; later, freed by the nuns of Canossa, she had received at her baptism a new name of her own choosing, Josephine, for Saint Joseph. Now, though, she was nameless again, an abused child deprived of dignity and identity, a slave utterly in the power of those for whom she was nothing and less than nothing. Over and over again, she cried out to her nurse, begging her to loosen the chains.
Still, even after this last, terrible trial, she awoke one last time, to find herself safe, beyond the power of her captors, and surrounded by those who knew and loved her. When told it was Saturday, the day of Mary, she spoke what were to prove her last words: "Yes, I am so happy: Our Lady...Our Lady!"
Not long after, she awoke again, from a long, dark dream, to find herself safe, far beyond every power and throne and dominion, and face to face with the One who knew and loved her truly, who for her had been bound and scourged and crucified. She is still awake today.
Saint Josephine Bakhita, pray for us.