Today we celebrate the feast of
Saint Boniface, who was an English Benedictine monk is He devoted his life to
the evangelization of the Germanic tribes.
When he made his first missionary journey to Germany in 719 at the request
of Pope Gregory II, Boniface found that his work was cut out for him.
Literally.
The Germanic tribes worshiped gods of Norse Mythology: Odin and Thor and the like. Boniface learned of a giant oak
tree where the Pagans gathered to offer false worship to the God Thor. Boniface began chopping down the tree. The local militia gathered, but Boniface
continued chopping. The pagans waited
for him to be struck dead by their gods for his sacrilege. When the tree fell and nothing happened to
him, the pagans were converted. This is
why his stained glass windows and statues often contain a tree stump and
Boniface holding an axe.
Boniface
opposed the false worship of his age and won converts to Christ. He did so, at great risk to his mortal
life.
In a letter
written to a Benedictine abbess, Saint Boniface wrote: “Let us stand fast in
what is right and prepare our souls for trial…let us be neither dogs that do
not bark, nor silent onlookers, nor paid servants who run away before the
wolf.”
During this
Year of Faith we are to reflect quite deeply upon our role in the spread of the
Gospel. We cannot be silent onlookers,
while we watch the false gods of modernity rise up around us. False gods are being worshiped by our family
members who do not come to Church. We may
fail at bringing them back to the Church, but as Mother Theresa said, “God
doesn't ask that we succeed in everything, but that we are faithful.” And faithfulness involves working for the
spread of the Gospel.
Boniface was
a man of tremendous courage. While he
was preparing converts for Confirmation in territory that was still hostile to
Christianity, he and 53 companions were massacred. He was 80 years old when he was martyred. We’re never too old to witness.
One
writer wrote, “St. Boniface had it all: natural brilliance, formidable powers
of persuasion, and unstoppable energy and resolve. He could have had a great career and high
status in society, but this saintly man wanted something very different:
nothing for himself and everything for Christ and His Church.”
As we prayed
in the opening prayer: “may the Martyr Saint Boniface, be our advocate that we
may firmly hold the faith he taught with his lips and sealed in his blood and
confidently profess it by our deeds” for the glory of God and salvation of
souls.
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