A sermon by Blessed Pope Paul VI
The glory of the martyrs - a sign of rebirth |
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The
African martyrs add another page to the martyrology – the Church’s roll
of honour – an occasion both of mourning and of joy. This is a page
worthy in every way to be added to the annals of that Africa of earlier
which we, living in this era and being men of little faith, never
expected to be repeated.
In earlier times there occurred those famous deeds, so
moving to the spirit, of the martyrs of Scilli, of Carthage, and of
that “white robed army” of Utica commemorated by Saint Augustine and
Prudentius; of the martyrs of Egypt so highly praised by Saint John
Chrysostom, and of the martyrs of the Vandal persecution. Who would have
thought that in our days we should have witnessed events as heroic and
glorious?
Saints Charles Lwanga |
Who could have predicted to the famous African
confessors and martyrs such as Cyprian, Felicity, Perpetua and – the
greatest of all – Augustine, that we would one day add names so dear to
us as Charles Lwanga and Matthias Mulumba Kalemba and their 20
companions? Nor must we forget those members of the Anglican Church who
also died for the name of Christ.
These African martyrs herald the dawn of a new age. If
only the mind of man might be directed not toward persecutions and
religious conflicts but toward a rebirth of Christianity and
civilisation!
Africa has been washed by the blood of these latest
martyrs, the first of this new age (and, God willing, let them be the
last, although such a holocaust is precious indeed). Africa is reborn
free and independent.
The infamous crime by which these young men were put
to death was so unspeakable and so expressive of the times. It shows us
clearly that a new people needs a moral foundation, needs new spiritual
customs firmly planted, to be handed down to posterity. Symbolically,
this crime also reveals that a simple and rough way of life – enriched
by many fine human qualities yet enslaved by its own weakness and
corruption – must give way to a more civilised life wherein the higher
expressions of the mind and better social conditions prevail.
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