Pope Francis: Cultural colonization ends in
persecution
(Vatican Radio) Cultural and ideological colonization does
not tolerate differences and makes everything the same, resulting in the
persecution even of believers. Those were Pope Francis’ reflections in his
homily morning Mass at Casa Santa Marta, which centered on the martyrdom of
Eleazar, narrated in the book of Maccabees from the First Reading (Maccabees 6:
18-31).
The Pope noted that there are three main types of
persecution: a purely religious persecution; a “mixed” persecution that has
both religious and political motivations, like the Thirty Years War or the St.
Bartholomew’s Day Massacre”; and a kind of cultural persecution, when a new
culture comes in wanting “to make everything new and to make a clean break with
everything: the cultures, the laws and the religions of a people.” It is this
last type of persecution that led to the martyrdom of Eleazar.
The account of this persecution began in the reading from
Monday’s liturgy. Some of the Jewish people, seeing the power and the
magnificent beauty of Antiochus Ephiphanes (a Greek king of the Seleucid
Empire), wanted to make an alliance with him. They wanted to be up-to-date and
modern, and so they approached the king and asked him to allow them “to
introduce the pagan institutions of other nations” among their own people. Not
necessarily the ideas or gods of those nations, the Pope noted, but the
institutions. In this way, this people brought in a new culture, “new
institutions” in order to make a clean break with everything: their “culture,
religion, law.” This modernizing, this renewal of everything, the Pope
emphasized, is a true ideological colonization that wanted to impose on the
people of Israel “this unique practice,” according to which everything was done
in a particular way, and there was no freedom for other things. Some people
accepted it because it seemed good to be like the others; and so the traditions
were left aside, and the people begin to live in a different way.
But to defend the “true traditions” of the people, a
resistance rose up, like that of Eleazar, who was very dignified, and respected
by all. The book of Maccabees, the Pope said, tells the story of these martyrs,
these heroes. A persecution born of ideological colonization always proceeds in
the same way: destroying, attempting to make everyone the same. Such
persecutions are incapable of tolerating differences.
The key word highlighted by the Pope, beginning with
Monday’s reading is “perverse root” – that is Antiochus Epifanes: the root that
came to introduce into the people of God, “with power,” these new, pagan,
worldly” customs:
“And this is the path of cultural colonization that ends
up persecuting believers too. But we do not have to go too far to see some
examples: we think of the genocides of the last century, which was a new
cultural thing: [Trying to make] everyone equal; [so that] there is no place
for differences, there is no place for others, there is no place for God. It is
the perverse root. Faced with this cultural colonization, which arises from the
perversity of an ideological root, Eleazar himself has become [a contrary]
root.
In fact, Eleazar dies thinking of the young people, leaving
them a noble example. “He gives [his] life; for love of God and of the law he
is made a root for the future.” So, in the face of that perverse root that
produces this ideological and cultural colonization, “there is this other root
that gives [his] life for the future to grow.”
What had come from the kingdom of Antioch was a novelty. But
not all new things are bad, the Pope said: just think of the Gospel of Jesus,
which was a novelty. When it comes to novelties, the Pope said, one has to be
able to make distinctions:
“There is a need to discern ‘the new things’: Is this new
thing from the Lord, does it come from the Holy Spirit, is it rooted in God? Or
does this newness come from a perverse root? But before, [for example] yes, it
was a sin to kill children; but today it is not a problem, it is a perverse
novelty. Yesterday, the differences were clear, as God made it, creation was
respected; but today [people say] we are a little modern... you act... you
understand ... things are not so different ... and things are mixed together.”
The “new things” of God, on the other hand, never
makes “a negotiation” but grows and looks at the future:
“Ideological and cultural colonizations only look to the
present; they deny the past, and do not look to the future. They live in the
moment, not in time, and so they can’t promise us anything. And with this
attitude of making everyone equal and cancelling out differences, they commit,
they make an particularly ugly blasphemy against God the Creator. Every time a
cultural and ideological colonization comes along, it sins against God the
Creator because it wants to change Creation as it was made by Him. And against
this fact that has occurred so often in history, there is only one medicine:
bearing witness; that is, martyrdom.
Eleazar, in fact, gives the witness by giving his life,
considering the inheritance he will leave by his example: “I have lived thus.
Yes, I dialogue with those who think otherwise, but my testimony is thus,
according to the law of God.” Eleazar does not think about leaving behind money
or anything of that kind, but looks to the future, “the legacy of his
testimony,” to that testimony that would be “a promise of fruitfulness for the
young.” It becomes, therefore, a root to give life to others. And the Pope
concludes with the hope that that example “will help us in moments of confusion
in the face of the cultural and spiritual colonization that is being proposed
to us.”
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