Pope: Being a martyr is not something of the past. Christians are still being persecuted

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06/02/2015
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In his Friday morning Mass, Pope Francis talked about martydrom. He said being a martyr is not something of the past. Even today, he said, there are still men, women and children who are killed because of their Christian faith. 

POPE FRANCIS
'I think of our martyrs. Martyrs of our time. All the men, women and children who are persecuted, hated and forced out of their homes. They are tortured. They are massacred. This is not something of the past. It's still happening today.â? 

The victims, he added are often targets of a corrupted authority that hates Jesus and His message. 

SUMMARY OF POPE'S HOMILY:
(Source: Vatican Radio) 

'The Pope was reflecting on the life and death of John the Baptist, inspired by the Gospel of St. Mark. Referring to him as 'John the Great�, the Pope said his life is a parable for the many, many Christians whose blood is spilled today because they proclaim a God whom many people hate.

Pope Francis noted that John the Baptist 'never betrayed his vocation', he was 'conscious that his duty was only to proclaim' that the Messiah 'was close at hand'.  John the Baptist was aware that he was 'only a voice,' because 'the Word was Someone else' and he 'ends his life like the Lord, with martyrdomâ?.

John victim of a corrupt king

Pope Francis went on to say that when he ends up in prison at the hands of Herod Antipas,  'the greatest man born of woman' becomes 'small, so very smallâ?.  Firstly he is struck by a dark night of the soul, when he doubts that Jesus is the One for whom he prepared the way. Then again, when he meets his end, ordered by a king both fascinated and puzzled by John. An end that gave the Pope pause for thought:

'In the end, after this purification, after this ongoing slide into nothingness, this path towards the total annihilation of Jesus, his life ends. That perplexed king becomes capable of making a decision, but not because his heart was converted, but because the wine gave him courage. And so John ends his life under the authority of a mediocre, drunk and corrupt king, at the whim of a dancer and the vindictive hatred of an adulteress. That's how the the Great Man ends his life, the greatest man born of woman�.

Christians hated today

The Pope said : 'When I read this passage I confess I get emotional' and I always think of 'two things': 'First, I think of our martyrs, the martyrs of our times, men, women, children who are being persecuted, hated, driven out of their homes, tortured, massacred. And this is not a thing of the past: this is happening right now. Our martyrs, who are meeting their end under the authority of corrupt people who hate Jesus Christ. It would do us good to think of our martyrs. Today we remember Paolo Miki but that happened in 1600. Think of our present-day ones!  Of 2015 '.

No one can 'buy' their life

The Pope  said 'this abasement of John the Great, this ongoing slide into nothingness makes me think that all of us are on this road and we are traveling towards the land, where we will all end up. This makes me think of myself: I too will meet my end. We all will. No one can 'buy' their life.  All of us, willingly or unwillingly, are traveling on the road of the existential annihilation of life, and this, at least to me, makes me pray that this annihilation is as similar as possible to that of Jesus Christ, to his annihilation'.

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