Monday, August 9, 2021

( Optional) Memorial of Saint Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, virgin and martyr

(Deuteronomy 10:12-22; Matthew 17:22-27)

In today’s gospel Jesus proves himself to be an earnest Jew.  He might have avoided the Temple tax.  After all, he is a rabbi and rabbis sometimes do not pay the tax.  He is also the Son of God who should not be even asked for the tax.  But he is also a pious Jew who loves his people.  Rather than give scandal, he has the tax paid.

Today the Church honors a saint who was martyred because of her similar Jewish origin.  St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross became a Christian as an adult and then a Benedictine nun.  Living in a monastery in the Netherlands during World War, the Gestapo came to send her to Auschwitz with other Jews.  She did not resist but gave herself up.  She told her sister, who was with her, “Come; we are going for our people.” Like Jesus she loved her people so much that she was willing to die to show solidarity with them.

Christianity has been accused of giving root to anti-Semitism.  Pope Pius XI challenged that assertion the year before World War II broke.   “Spiritually,” he said, “we are Semites.”  He explained that our reference to Abraham in the liturgy and our union with Jesus make us common descendants of Abraham with all Jews. (He might have added Muslims as well.)  Jews are still persecuted for their faith.  We should stand in solidarity with them.