Tuesday, 12/26/17
On the Feast of St. Stephen I always like to say a word for the men who stoned him. Sure, they did a terrible thing, but their religious convictions made them feel they were doing the right thing.
St. Luke, in his “Act
of the Apostles” identified Stephen’s killers as “members of the so-called
Synagogue of Freedmen.” He went on to say they were Cyrenians, Alexandrians,
and people from Cilicia and Asia.
Let’s look at the way
their synagogue came about. Rome had a way for preventing rebellion from the
Jews scattered around all of the Mediterranean’s ports. Rome rounded up five
young Jews from each place, confining them as hostage in Rome for five years.
The threat of executing those boys kept the people at home from rebelling.
The boys chosen as
hostages were not very religious to begin with, but after being confined for
their beliefs, they usually began taking their being Jewish seriously. Many of
them became so religious that when their five years were up, instead of
returning to their homes, they settled in Jerusalem to take part in the temple
worship. They formed their own “Synagogue of the Roman Freedmen.”
They had come to
believe that being religious meant observing kosher and not eating pork. They
were angered by Stephen who was telling people that observing kosher wasn’t all
that important.
Of course it was wrong
for them to stone Stephen, but God, knowing their good intentions, might have
forgiven them.
One thing that
inclines us to be understanding towards them is the fact that their was a young
man watching over the coats they took off to throw better. That young man who
was encouraging them was Saul, the future St. Paul.
The case of Saul and
those young men should warn us against hating people for views they cling to in
all honesty.
No comments:
Post a Comment