From the final exhortation of Andrew Kim Taegon, priest and martyr
My brothers and sisters, my dearest friends, think again and again on
this: God has ruled over all things in
heaven and on earth from the
beginning of time; then reflect on why and for what purpose he chose
each one of us to be created in his own image and likeness. In this
world of perils and hardship if we did not recognize the Lord as our
Creator, there would be no benefit either in being born or in our
continued existence. We have come into the world by God’s grace; by that
same grace we have received baptism, entrance into the Church, and the
honor of being called Christians. Yet what good will this do us if we
are Christians in name alone and not in fact? We would have come into
the world for nothing, we would have entered the Church for nothing, and
we would have betrayed even God and his grace. It would be better never
to have been born than to receive the grace of God and then to sin
against him.
Look at the farmer who cultivates his rice fields. In season he
plows, then fertilizes the earth; never counting the cost, he labors
under the sun to nurture the seed he has planted. When harvest time
comes and the rice crop is abundant, forgetting his labor and sweat, he
rejoices with an exultant heart. But if the crop is sparse and there is
nothing but straw and husks, the farmer broods over his toil and sweat
and turns his back on that field with a disgust that is all the greater
the harder he has toiled.
The Lord is like a farmer and we are the field of rice that he
fertilizes with his grace and by the mystery of the incarnation and the
redemption irrigates with his blood, in order that we will grow and
reach maturity. When harvest time comes, the day of judgment, those who
have grown to maturity in the grace of God will find the joy of adopted
children in the kingdom of heaven; those who have not grown to maturity
will become God’s enemies and, even though they were once his children,
they will be punished according to their deeds for all eternity.
Dearest brothers and sisters: when he was in the world, the Lord
Jesus bore countless sorrows and by his own passion and death founded
his Church; now he gives it increase through the sufferings of his
faithful. No matter how fiercely the powers of this world oppress and
oppose the Church, they will never bring it down. Ever since his
ascension and from the time of the apostles to the present, the Lord
Jesus has made his Church grow even in the midst of tribulations.
For the last fifty or sixty years, ever since the coming of the
Church to our own land of Korea, the faithful have suffered persecution
over and over again. Persecution still rages and as a result many who
are friends in the household of the faith, myself among them, have been
thrown into prison and like you are experiencing severe distress.
Because we have become the one Body, should not our hearts be grieved
for the members who are suffering? Because of the human ties that bind
us, should we not feel deeply the pain of our separation?
But, as the Scriptures say, God numbers the very hairs of our head
and in his all-embracing providence he has care over us all.
Persecution, therefore, can only be regarded as the command of the Lord
or as a prize he gives or as a punishment he permits.
Hold fast, then, to the will of God and with all your heart fight the
good fight under the leadership of Jesus; conquer again the diabolical
power of this world that Christ has already vanquished.
I beg you not to fail in your love for one another, but to support
one another and to stand fast until the Lord mercifully delivers us from
our trials.
There are twenty of us in this place and by God’s grace we are so far
all well. If any of us is executed, I ask you not to forget our
families. I have many things to say, yet how can pen and paper capture
what I feel? I end this letter. As we are all near the final ordeal, I
urge you to remain steadfast in faith, so that at last we will all reach
heaven and there rejoice together. I embrace you all in love.
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
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