God is king of all the earth. We probably all agree with this statement that we hear in the refrain of our psalm today, but how do we make God the king of our lives? The saints answer that question in different ways in the reality of their lives. Tomorrow, May 12, is the feast day of one of my favorite saints from the Camino of Santiago de Compostela. His name is Santo Domingo de la Calzada. He was a hermit who was born in the province of La Rioja in northern Spain in the 1019; La Rioja is an important wine producing region of the country. As a young man, he was turned down when he applied to be a Benedictine monk, but eventually he was ordained a priest. He spent a great deal of his time improving conditions for the pilgrims: planting trees, cultivating the earth, and building a paved causeway that served as an alternate route to the traditional Roman causeway between the important cities of Logroño and Burgos. The town he founded that is named after him, Santo Domingo de la Calzada, is an important stop along the Way of St James even today. His church became a cathedral where his remains are buried in its crypt. Because of the civil work projects he started, he is the patron saint of civil engineers in Spain. A couple of years ago, while hiking along the Camino, I attended mass in the Cathedral of Santo Domingo de la Calzada on a Sunday with a group of pilgrims. In the middle of mass, a rooster which is housed in a cage in the cathedral based upon an old legend about Santo Domingo, crowed several time, which is supposed to bring all pilgrims who hear his crow good luck. In his place and time, Santo Domingo de la Calzada listened to the calling that God sent him in order to bring his Gospel to the pilgrims on the Camino. And more than 900 years after his death, pilgrims honor him and efforts to help pilgrims reach the Cathedral of St James. May all of us hear the way that God is calling out to us today.
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