Dear Friends in Christ,
Last week in my homily, I mentioned a wonderful film entitled, “A Hidden Life.” If you haven’t seen it, I encourage you to watch it. The life of Franz Jägerstätter is a compelling witness to all of us on how to remain faithful to the truth despite the external pressures that surround us. There is one dialogue from the film that keeps coming back to me. As I mentioned last week, Jägerstätter is speaking with a man painting the church ceiling and the painter says, “We create admirers, we do not create followers. Christ’s life is a demand. We don’t want to be reminded of it. I paint their comfortable Christ with a halo on his head; someday I’ll paint the true Christ.”
Blessed Franz Jägerstätter was taken away from his family and imprisoned for his refusal to fight for the Nazis. He suffered physical pains, but also the interior pain of knowing his wife, mother, and daughters were suffering too. Ultimately, he was executed by the Nazis. He followed Christ. He entered into the Passion and Death of the Lord. He suffered for the Faith. He suffered for the Truth.
Most of us will never experience that kind of sacrifice, but we are all, nonetheless, called to follow Christ. We are called not merely to be “admirers” of Jesus, but rather to be His followers. To stand firm in the Truth can be costly. Standing firm in Faith is not being obstinate, prideful, or unloving. Franz Jägerstätter was accused of all of those things. By a beautiful grace, however, he was able to remain confident in the Truth. While the world around him was either embracing, accepting, or simply ignoring lies and evil, Franz Jägerstätter embraced the Cross. Many people attempted to lure him away from the Truth by promising him freedom, a return to his family, and the saving of his life. He clung to the Cross as his only hope.
Franz Jägerstätter described an inner feeling he had that basically said, “I do not want to do what is wrong.” In so many ways, that feeling is quite innocent, quite childlike. It’s the kind of feeling that comes naturally to a child. I remember when I was a child, even if I chose the wrong thing at times, I possessed a very clear understanding of the difference between good and evil. As we grow older, if we are not careful, that clarity can lessen within us. The more we compromise with sin and falsehood, the more difficult it can be to hear the Truth; the more difficult it can be to live the Truth.
The re-watching of “A Hidden Life” makes me wonder about how affected I am by the fog of war, the fog that arises in the human heart as a result of compromise with sin. It makes me desire to beg the Lord for that grace of becoming ever more child-like; the grace to see immediately the stark contrast between good and evil and to choose the good; the grace to remain always faithful to that child-like desire never to do what is wrong.
Most of us cannot imagine being imprisoned or executed for our Faith. But, we can probably all imagine–and perhaps, experience–the more subtle forms of pressure to hide our Faith or to make compromises with falsehoods. What can we do to prepare for those moments? One thing we can do is simply to ask the Lord to make us child-like in our Faith. If we can remain child-like and faithful to what is good and true in all the small ways, then when the more difficult situations arise, we will be better prepared to trust in the Cross. We will be better prepared to follow Christ.
Another thing we can do is to help and encourage one another to carry the Cross. The world teaches us to flee the Cross and this actually makes our burdens heavier. It weighs us down with guilt, regret, and the heavy burden of sin. The true friend helps the sinner, the tempted, the oppressed, the sorrowful etc. to carry the Cross. The true friend stands at our side and walks with us toward freedom, and the face of the friend awakens in us confidence in God’s Mercy. The companion that Christ places at our side assures us that Christ’s yoke is easy and his burden is light.
Your Brother in Christ,
Fr. David Barnes
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