St. Kyriake’s story reminds us that
the twelve disciples are not the only ones to whom the Lord has said “Follow
me…” They are not the only ones who have
left behind a conventional life in order to follow Jesus Christ in the ministry
of the Kingdom. How odd, then, that of
all the people who lived in those centuries long ago, we remember people like
Peter, Andrew, James, John, and Kyriake who abandoned the things of this world
in order to seek first God’s reign.
Christ said that “whoever desires to save his life will lose it and
whoever loses His life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it.” (Mk
8:34-35) They were hated and killed by
the powerful, but remained steadfast in their commitment to the One Who
conquered death and they now share in His glory. They were treated as the least by earthly
kingdoms, but now are they are among the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven.
The application to our lives is
clear. Though the particular path of
discipleship to which we are called is probably very different from that of the
Great Martyr Kyriake, we learn from her example that God will not abandon us
when we are steadfast in our commitment to Him.
It is through such unflinching commitment that we will become our true
selves in Christ. The Lord sustained her
through beatings that exhausted her tormentors, and through being suspended by
her hair for several hours while being burned with torches. The worse the torture, the more courageous
she seemed. How amazing for a young virgin girl from a privileged family who
had probably experienced little hardship previously.
We
all know of the kidnapping of the Orthodox bishops in Syria and of the killing,
torture, and persecutions that our brothers and sisters in Christ endure today
there and in so many other places. Of
course, people are murdered and abused for all kinds of reasons around the
world. No matter who the victim is,
these are terrible crimes. Even as we
pray for innocent victims and do what we can to help them, we must not allow
fear of anything or anyone to keep us from responding faithfully to the call
“Follow me” that our Savior brings to each of us. Faithfulness is not reserved only for those
who are called to give the ultimate sacrifice of physical martyrdom. Instead, their example should inspire us to
become free of whatever nets have entangled us and held us back from following
Jesus Christ as He calls us to follow Him here and now.
In order to that, of course, we have
to take our faith and our Lord seriously.
For example, if we do not get in the habit of attending to Him in prayer
on a daily basis, we won’t be able to hear Him say “Follow me” in our own
situation. If we do not practice some
kind of fasting or self-denial, we will probably be so addicted to our own
pleasures and desires that we will find it impossible to put Him before
ourselves. If we do not take Confession
and Communion on a regular basis with serious preparation, we will lack the
spiritual strength to persevere in following Him. We must embrace the basic spiritual
disciplines of the Christian life if we want to live faithfully, even in the
relative comfort and ease of our society.
Otherwise, we will become spiritually
lazy and morally weak, and without realizing it we will end up living according
to the dominant trends of our culture. Instead
of being good stewards of our resources and generous to the poor, we will
worship “the Almighty Dollar” and what it can buy. Instead of pursuing chastity, purity, and
fidelity, we will fall prey to hedonism and immorality. Instead of realizing
that our enemies and nuisances provide our greatest opportunities to love
Christ, we will turn away from Him by condemning them. In these and many other ways, we will really
come to believe that we simply have more important things to do than to take up
our crosses and obediently follow our Lord.
And in case all this sounds too
dramatic, think about the challenges that we face every day. It often doesn’t take much to inflame our
passions against another person, even someone whom we love. It doesn’t have to be a situation of life or
death in order to be a situation of great spiritual significance that shapes us
and others in decisive ways. Every act
of selfishness, dishonesty, thoughtlessness, or gossip weakens us in our
ability to hear and obey our Lord’s calling.
When we focus on the past or the future in ways that distract us from
the here and now, we overlook the only possibilities for the faithfulness that
currently exist. Just like daydreaming
keeps us from hearing what someone else is saying, giving our attention to
fantasies of any kind is dangerous because it draws us away from reality.
In many times and places, young
virgin girls like St. Kyriake have been thought to be unimportant and surely
not of any great significance spiritually or otherwise. But this young lady was able to stare down
emperors and endure torture because, as St. Paul wrote, she had put on Christ in baptism, in Whom
“there is neither Jew nor Greek…neither slave nor free…neither male nor female,
for you are all one in Christ Jesus. And
if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the
promise.” She had the dignity and power
of a true child of God, as one who inherited by grace the great blessing and
salvation fulfilled in our Savior.
Though it is hard to believe, the
same is true of each of us. Regardless
of any of the details of our lives, we are all invited—each and every one of
us—to manifest brightly the holiness of the Kingdom of God by responding to our
Lord’s calling to follow Him as His sons and daughters. Let’s not fool ourselves by saying that we
will wait to do so until there is some great crisis in the world or our own
lives. Now is the time to follow Him by
doing what we know we should be doing.
Now is the time to turn our backs on whatever separates us from
Him. Now is the time to follow the
mighty example of the Holy Great Martyr Kyriake in hearing and responding
faithfully to our Lord, for He calls us to follow the path trod by her and all
the saints into the glory of the heavenly Kingdom. The only question is how we will respond.
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