Today we celebrate the martyrdoms of two of the greatest human
beings who have ever lived: St. Peter and St. Paul. Their martyrdoms were heroic and holy. Peter was killed very near to where St. Peter’s
Basilica is in the Vatican which was then a Roman Circus named after the Roman
Emperors Caligula and Nero. As his
executioners were preparing to crucify him, Peter gave them one last dying wish,
which delighted the sadistic executioners.
He asked to be crucified upside down, even though that would multiply
his sufferings greatly. He didn’t
consider himself worthy to be crucified in the same manner as our Lord 34 years
before outside the gates of Jerusalem.
At the end of St. John’s Gospel, is the story where the Lord
asks Peter three times, “Peter, do you love me”, then tend my sheep, feed my
sheep. The Lord then says, “Amen, amen,
I say to you, when you were younger, you used to dress yourself and go where
you wanted; but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands.” And Peter did stretch out his hands on a
cross because he loved the Lord more than anything else. And now Peter is with the Lord forever in
heaven.
St. Paul was slain for Christ, also in Rome, legend says, on
the same day as St. Peter. Because Paul
was a Roman citizen, the law said he could not be crucified. So he was dragged out the south gate of Rome
and was decapitated at a place called Aquae Salviae.
Imprisoned in Rome, before his death, he wrote the letter we
heard today in our second reading, a letter to his spiritual son, Timothy, in
which he said, “I am about to be poured out like a libation; the time of my departure
is near”, but I have fought the good fight. When the threat of martyrdom drew
near, he was able to say, in all honesty, “I have kept the faith.”
Both Peter and Paul teach us that Christ is not just worth
living for, he is worth dying for. The
Lord Jesus who gave his life for them, was worthy of giving their life for
him.
Where they started out was dramatically different from where
they ended. Peter, the fisherman from Galilee who became the prince of the
apostles, and Paul who carried the Gospel to the ends of the known world, who
first persecuted Christians. God shines through the human weakness of Peter and
Paul.
We remember them today, and seek their intercession, that we
too may love the Lord to the end, that we might be poured out for him, that we
may keep the faith, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.
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