If you wish to read the texts click here: 1 Corinthians 15:35-37.42-49; Lk 8:4-15
Fr
Thomas Sitjar and his six fellow Jesuits and four Jesuit brothers became the
Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War when they gave their lives for God in Gandia
and Valencia, Spain between August 19 and December 29, 1936.
Fr
Thomas Sitjar , the superior of the Gandia community was the first to die a
week after the 1936 civil war broke out. He was born on March 21, 1866 in Genoa
and entered the Jesuit novitiate at Veruela on July 21, 1880. He taught
philosophy for eight years at the diocesan seminary in Montevideo, Uraguay
after completing his philosophy at the Tortosa scholasticate. He again returned
to Tortosa for theology and was ordained in 1900. He taught metaphysics to
young Jesuits at Tortosa and later at Sarria for three years before he was appointed
superior for five years at the residence at Terragona. Subsequently he was
elevated to rector in Gandia in 1929.
When
the Spanish revolutionary government suppressed the Society of Jesus in 1932,
the Jesuits remained dispersed and lived in small apartments in the city. Fr
Sitjar was living with Br Peter Gelabert and had refused to move in with
friends, saying: “if they kill us, then it will be God’s will.” At 10.30 pm on
July 25, 1936, a terrible banging was heard on Fr Sitjar’s door. He answered
it, but only after Br Gelabert had escaped through a window. The captors pushed
and beat Fr Sitjar and tried to rip his cassock off when he could not walk as
quickly as them because of a bad leg. They then imprisoned him. The next day,
Br Gelabert, Fr Constantine Carbonell and Br Raymond Grimaltos who were
captured joined Fr Sitjar. The four Jesuits were allowed visitors and friends
who brought them mattresses for sleeping and food for meals.
On
August 17 and 18, they were taken before their accusers and were asked about
their political views and party affiliation, to which Fr Sitjar merely
answered: “We belong to God’s party.” Then on August 19, shortly after
midnight, Fr Sitjar was told he was being set free. But instead of releasing
him, he was taken together with two other gentlemen to the Albaida road near
Palma de Gandia and executed beneath an olive tree at about 3.00 am. Fr Sitjar
had a rosary in his hand when the bullet pierced his heart. He was seventy
years old.
The
text of today combines both the Parable of the Sower (8:5-8) and the allegory
(8:11-15) {in an allegory, every element in the story is given a meaning. So,
the seed is regarded as the word of God, those along the path are the ones who
hear, and then the devil comes and takes away the word from their hearts, so
that they may not believe and be saved, and so on}. Though it is true that the
Sower disappears from the scene after he is first mentioned, and the seed takes
centre stage, the parable is really one of contrast between the beginning and
the middle, and the end. Thus, the Sower (whom the end will affect) is still an
important figure in the parable. Since many have confused the allegory with the
Parable, the meaning of the parable may have been missed. In this reflection we
will focus on the Parable.
The
farmer would sow along “the path”, because according to research done on the
agricultural practices in Palestine at the time of Jesus, the practice was to
sow seeds first and then plough it into the ground. Sowing on “rocky ground” is
not surprising because the underlying limestone, thinly covered with soil,
barely showed above the surface until the ploughshare jarred against it. Sowing
among “thorns” is also understandable, because this too will be ploughed up.
Though the ploughing of the three kinds of soil above will be done, it will
result in a loss, because in none of them will the seed grow. It will seem that
seventy-five percent of the effort is lost. While most of the parable focuses
on “sowing”, in the last verse it is already “harvest time”. The abnormal,
exaggerated tripling, of the harvest’s yield (thirty, sixty, a hundredfold)
symbolises the overflowing of divine fullness., surpassing all human measure
and expectations (A tenfold harvest counted as a good harvest and a yield of
seven and a half as an average one).To human eyes much of the labour seems
futile and fruitless, resulting in repeated failure, but Jesus is full of
joyful confidence; he knows that God has made a beginning, bringing with it o
harvest of reward beyond all asking or conceiving. In spite of every failure
and opposition, from hopeless beginnings, God brings forth the triumphant end,
which he has promised.
1. Do I usually focus more on the reaping
than on the sowing? Do I focus more on the result than on the action? Do I
focus more on the future than on the present?
2. How do I react when most of my effort
seems to be in vain? Do I throw up my hands in despair? Do I give up? Do I get
despondent? Or do I carry on despite all odds? Do I continue to persevere? Do I
keep on keeping on?
3. How attached am I to the result of my
action? Can I plunge into the din of battle and leave my heart at the feet of
the Lord?
5. Do you sometimes act as the “General
Manager of the Universe”? Will you resign from that position today?
Thanks for the few questions posted at the end of this reflection. Truly , these needs to be meditated and answered. Thank you
ReplyDeleteBest Wishes
Mario
www.errolsj.com