Thursday, August 8, 2024

Memorial of Saint Dominic, priest

(Jeremiah 31:31-34; Matthew 16:13-23)

A few months ago someone wrote on public media that she knew little about St. Dominic, the founder of the Order of Preachers, the “Dominicans”.   Not only she but many others have hardly heard of St. Dominic.  But almost everybody has heard about St. Francis, Dominic’s contemporary and founder of the Order of Friars Minor, the “Franciscans”.   It is only reasonable because the life of Dominic was hardly as spectacular as that of Francis.  Dominic never took off his clothes in public, as Francis did, to protest his father’s dislike for him becoming a vowed religious.  Nor did Dominic debate the Sultan of Egypt or initiate the custom of a creche to celebrate Christmas.  Dominic was only a Spanish priest with a dream to evangelize the world and the organizational ability to do so.

Dominic’s dream was born when he met members of the Albigensian religious sect in southern France.  These men and women were scandalized by the dissolute lives of many clerics.  Their outrage made them think that most things spiritual were good and most things material were bad.  They left behind belief in the sacraments and the authority of the bishops.  Feeling pity that they abandoned the sure road to eternal life, Dominic desired to establish a clerical order to preach to them the goodness of creation.  With the pope’s approval, he sent out the band of men he had gathered not only to France but also to other parts of Europe.  In time the Dominican movement reached the corners of the earth preaching that the Son of God became human to save men and women from death because of their sins.

It is said that St. Dominic lives in each of his friars so that if one praises a friar, the praise rebounds to Dominic.  A Dominican who distinguished himself in colonial Latin America was Antonio de Montesinos.  He arrived in what is now the Dominican Republic along with a handful of other friars around 1510.  These friars noted how the colonists were mistreating the indigenous population working in their plantations.  They discussed how to respond and elected Antonio de Montesinos to preach a sermon defending the indigenous.  On December 21, 1511, Fr. Antonio climbed the to the pulpit of the Dominican church in the city of Santo Domingo and chastised the Spanish for their abuse.  “Are these not men,” Montesinos preached. “Are they not human beings like you?  Are you not obliged to love them like yourselves?”

Today we should raise the same questions about the unborn.  Both fetuses forming in their mothers’ wombs and embryos frozen in laboratories possess human composition and should be treated with respect and care. Dominicans in name of their founder St. Dominic have united with popes, bishops, and people of goodwill to denounce abortion and the freezing of embryos.  For them all human life is sacred because God took on human flesh in Jesus Christ.

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