1 John 2:3-11 / Luke 2:22-35
On this fifth day in the octave of Christmas, the Church celebrates
the optional memorial of St. Thomas Becket, bishop and martyr.
He was
born in London and after studying in Paris, entered the service of
Archbishop of Canterbury, became Lord Chancellor under King Henry II in
1155, and in 1162 Archbishop of Canterbury.
He
went from being "a patron of play-actors and a follower of hounds" to
being a "shepherd of souls" as he absorbed himself in the duties of his
new office, defending the rights of the Church against king Henry II. This
prompted the king to exile him to France for six years.
After
returning
to his homeland he endured many trials, and agents of the king
travelled to Canterbury and fell upon the bishop while he was attending
evening prayer.
His
priests rushed to his aid and tried to bar the church door; Thomas
opened it himself with these words: The house of God will not be
defended like a fortress. I gladly face death for the Church of God.
Then to
the soldiers: I command it in the Name of God: No harm may be done to
any of mine. Thereupon he cast himself on his knees, commended his flock
and himself to God, to the Blessed Virgin Mary, to St. Denis and other
holy patrons of the Church, and with the same heroic courage with which
he had withstood the king's laws, he bowed his holy head to the
sacrilegious sword on December 29, 1170."
St. Thomas
Becket saw the light, the real light that was already shining, as the
1st reading puts it, and hence he was courageous in life as in death.
Like
Simeon in the gospel, St. Thomas Becket also saw the light, and it was a
light that shone in the darkness, a darkness of rejection and
persecution and trial and finally martyrdom.
St. Thomas
Becket became a beacon of light for the Church, so much so that in
1539, king Henry VIII ordered his remains to be burned, and that was
like 400 years after his death.
Yes,
darkness can never overcome or overpower the true light. May we see that
light, follow that light, be enlightened by that light and become
beacons of light.