Scripture scholars estimate that Matthew’s Gospel was written approximately 50
years after Christ’s death and resurrection, which means that the Gospel was
both written and heard in the context of the experiences of the Early Church,
in the context of the persecutions and struggles they went through. By
stating that Jesus was sending out the disciples like sheep amongst wolves, he
knew the opposition, cunning, and challenges that they would face in
proclaiming the Gospel to the world. The
disciples in the Early Church were people of peace and reconciliation,
renouncing violence and retribution, that is why they were like lambs amongst wolves. There
were some to whom the Gospel was proclaimed that wanted to destroy the
disciples, seeing them as a threat to their own activities and ambitions.
Like
me, probably most of you when you were in high school read Nathaniel
Hawthorne’s novel The Scarlet Letter that was set in the American
colonies of New England. I remember us discussing the themes of sin,
guilt, and repentance in connect with the novel with my high school American
literature class, as well as learning about the Puritan view of life that was
such a big influence in the American colonies. A
year after that novel was published, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s daughter Rose was
born, in the year 1851. She
grew up both in Massachusetts and in England, where her father served as US
counsel. She married when she was a young lady, but her
marriage was not a happy one: her husband struggled with alcoholism and with
holding down a job, and she lost her only child when he was 5 years old. Yet,
she and her husband converted to Catholicism when they were traveling in
Italy. It was her Catholic faith that brought
her courage and strength. She separated
from her husband and devoted her life to carrying for those with incurable
cancer, patients who were treated as if they were lepers in America in the late
19th century. After
her husband’s death in 1898, Rose Hawthorne became a Dominican sister. She established the Dominican Congregation of
St Rose of Lima, known as the Servants from Relief for Incurable Cancer. They established a center for cancer patients
in New York. Rose Hawthorne become
Mother Mary Alphonsa. She served as a
Dominican sister until her death in 1926. The
Dominican priest who is defending Rose Hawthorne’s case for beatification
stated that even thought she was a lady of culture, education, and social
status, she lived amongst the poor and established a home for them where they
could live in dignity, cleanliness, and comfort. She and her religious sisters were the
servants to their cancer patients, showing them care, love, and concern. Rose
Hawthorne’s biography is entitled Sorrow Built a Bridge. Out of our pain and sorrows, we can find our
calling as disciples of Christ just as Rose Hawthorne did. That is our mission.
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