Felix of Nola, who died around the year 260 AD, is the saint we celebrate today. He was a priest in Nola, Italy near the city of Naples. He sold off his possessions to give his resources to the poor, but was arrested and tortured for his Christian faith during the persecutions of the Roman emperor. He became well known through the writings of St Paulinus of Nola. We often do not know a lot about the martyrs of the early Church, but in a time when many Christians suffered persecution, their example of faith of how they gave up their lives for Christ spoke very profoundly to the Christians of that era.
These past few days, we’ve been hearing the story of Samuel, of how his mother Hannah came to the Lord in her shame and in her agony of being barren, of his mother's promise of her son to serve the Lord for his entire life if God would give her the gift of a son. We now see Samuel as a boy in his service to the Lord as an apprentice to the priest Eli. God calls out to Samuel twice in the silence of the night, but both Eli and Samuel are not able to recognize the presence of the Lord with them. On the third call, Samuel is able to answer to the Lord’s call, telling the Lord that he is his servant and that he is indeed listening. The Lord consecrates Samuel as his specially chosen prophet who is able to transmit the Lord’s word to the people.
We receive God’s call in in different ways. Sometimes we want to hear the word of the Lord in the same way Samuel heard it, calling out to us in the silence of the night. More often, we hear God’s word in the silence of our hearts. Yet, we can easily mistake God’s call for something else. Through the people in our lives and through our experiences, God is calling us to his love and to his service. He is calling us to come close to him.