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Romero's resurrection
"I have often been threatened with death," Archbishop Oscar Romero told a Guatemalan reporter two weeks before his assassination, 30 years ago on March 24, 1980. "If they kill me, I shall arise in the Salvadoran people. If the threats come to be fulfilled, from this moment I offer my blood to God for the redemption and resurrection of El Salvador. Let my blood be a seed of freedom and the sign that hope will soon be reality."
Oscar Romero gave his life in the hope that peace and justice would one day become a reality. He lives on now in all those who carry on the nonviolent struggle for justice and peace. A beautiful new photo book and biography, Oscar Romero and the Communion of Saints, by Scott Wright, shows us what a holy life he lived, and just how much he gave.
Romero spent his years up until 1977 as a typical quiet, pious, conservative cleric. Indeed, as bishop, he sided with the greedy landlords, important power brokers, and violent death squads. When he became archbishop, the Jesuits at the Univeristy of Central America in San Salvador were crushed. They immediately wrote him off -- all but one, Rutilio Grande, who reached out to Romero in the weeks after his installation and urged him to learn from the poor and speak on their behalf.
Grande himself was a giant for social justice. He organized the rural poor in Aguilares, and paid for it with his life on March 12, 1977. Standing over Grande's dead body that night, Romero was transformed into one of the world's great champions for the poor and oppressed. From then on, he stood with the poor, and denounced every act of violence, injustice and war. He became a fiery prophet of justice and peace, "the voice of the voiceless," and in Jon Sobrino's words, "a new Jeremiah." For me, Romero was a stunning sign of God's active presence in the world, a living symbol of the struggle for justice and what the church could be.
The day after Grande's death, Romero preached a sermon that stunned El Salvador. With the force of Martin Luther King, Jr., Romero defended Grande, demanded social and economic justice for the poor, and called everyone to take up Grande's prophetic work. To protest the government's participation in the murders, Romero closed the parish school for three days and cancelled all Masses in the country the following week, except for one special Mass in the cathedral.
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That act alone would have put Romero in the annals of history. Imagine if every Mass in the United States but one had been canceled in protest after the death of Dr. King! Over a hundred thousand people attended the cathedral Mass that Sunday and heard Romero's bold call for justice, disarmament and peace. Grande's life and death bore good fruit in the heart and soul of Romero. Suddenly, the nation had a towering figure in its midst.
Within months, priests, catechists and church workers were regularly targeted and assassinated, so Romero spoke out even more forcefully. He even criticized the president, which no Salvadoran bishop had ever done before, and few in the hemisphere ever did. As the U.S.-backed government death squads attacked villages and churches and massacred campesinos, Romero's truth-telling became a veritable subversive campaign of nonviolent civil disobedience.
Soon Romero was greeted with applause everywhere he went. Thousands wrote to him regularly, telling their stories, thanking him for his prophetic voice and sharing their new found courage. His Sunday homilies were broadcast nationwide on live radio. The country came to a standstill as he spoke. Everyone listened, even the death squads.
As Romero's stature grew and his leadership for justice and peace deepened, his simple faith and pious devotion remained steady, and gave him a foundation from which he could take on the forces of death. To protest the government's silence in the face of recent massacres, he refused to attend the inauguration of the new Salvadoran president. The church, he announced, is "not to be measured by the government's support but rather by its own authenticity, its evangelical spirit of prayer, trust, sincerity and justice, its opposition to abuses." While he embodied the prophetic role of the church, he also modeled that spirit of prayer, trust and sincerity in his everyday life.
As the arrests, torture, disappearances and murders continued, Romero made two radical decisions that were unprecedented. First, on Easter Monday 1978, he opened the seminary in downtown San Salvador to welcome any and all displaced victims of violence. Hundreds of homeless, hungry and brutalized people moved into the seminary, transforming the quiet religious retreat into a crowded, noisy shelter, make-shift hospital, and playground. (I remember helping out there for a few days in 1985, and trying to imagine what a similar Gospel action would look like in the United States. We have never experienced such an action by our church leaders.)
Next, he halted construction on the new cathedral in San Salvador. When the war is over, the hungry are fed, and the children are educated, then we can resume building our cathedral, he said. Both historic moves stunned the other bishops, cast judgment on the Salvadoran government, and lifted the peoples' spirits.
Meanwhile, Romero's preaching reached biblical heights. "Like a voice crying in the desert," he said, "we must continually say No to violence and Yes to peace." His August 1978 pastoral letter outlined the evils of "institutional violence" and repression, and advocated "the power of nonviolence that today has conspicuous students and followers." He wrote: "The counsel of the Gospel to turn the other cheek to an unjust aggressor, far from being passive or cowardly, shows great moral force that leaves the aggressor morally overcome and humiliated. The Christian always prefers peace to war."
Romero lived in a sparse, three-room hermitage on the grounds of a hospital run by a community of nuns. During his busy days, he traveled the country, met with hundreds of poor Salvadorans, presided at Mass, and met with local community leaders. He assisted everyone he could. Later, he said that one of his primary duties as archbishop had become not just challenging the U.S.-backed government and its death squads, but claiming the dead bodies of their victims, including priests, nuns and catechists.
On one of my visits, a Salvadoran told me how Romero would drive out to city garbage dumps to look among the trash for the discarded, tortured victims of the death squads on behalf of grieving relatives. "These days I walk the roads gathering up dead friends, listening to widows and orphans, and trying to spread hope," he said.
In particular, Romero took time every day to speak with dozens of people threatened by government death squads. People lined up at his office to ask for help and protection, to complain about harassment and death threats, and to find some support and guidance in their time of grief and struggle. Romero received and listened to everyone. His compassionate ear fueled his prophetic voice.
By late 1979 and early 1980, his Sunday sermons issued his strongest calls yet for conversion to justice and an end to the massacres. "To those who bear in their hands or in their conscience, the burden of bloodshed, of outrages, of the victimized, innocent or guilty, but still victimized in their human dignity, I say: Be converted. You cannot find God on the path of torture. God is found on the way of justice, conversion and truth."
When President Jimmy Carter announced in February 1980 that he was going to increase U.S. military aid to El Salvador by millions of dollars a day, Romero was shocked. He wrote a long public letter to Carter, asking the United States to cancel all military aid. Carter ignored Romero's plea, and sent the aid. (Between 1980 and 1992, the U.S. spent $6 billion to kill 75,000 poor Salvadorans.)
In the weeks afterwards, the killings increased. So did the death threats against Romero. He made a private retreat, prepared for his death, discovered an even deeper peace, and mounted the pulpit. During his March 23, 1980, Sunday sermon, Romero let loose and issued one of the greatest appeals for peace and disarmament in church history:
"I would like to make an appeal in a special way to the men of the army, to the police, to those in the barracks. Brothers, you are part of our own people. You kill your own campesino brothers and sisters. And before an order to kill that a man may give, the law of God must prevail that says: Thou shalt not kill! No soldier is obliged to obey an order against the law of God. No one has to fulfill an immoral law. It is time to recover your consciences and to obey your consciences rather than the orders of sin. The church, defender of the rights of God, of the law of God, of human dignity, the dignity of the person, cannot remain silent before such abomination. We want the government to take seriously that reforms are worth nothing when they come about stained with so much blood. In the name of God, and in the name of this suffering people whose laments rise to heaven each day more tumultuously, I beg you, I ask you, I order you in the name of God: Stop the repression!"
The next day, March 24, 1980, Romero presided over a small evening Mass in the chapel of the hospital compound where he lived, in honor of a beloved woman who had died a year before. He read from John's Gospel: "Unless the grain of wheat falls to the earth and dies, it remains only a grain. But if it dies, it bears much fruit "(12:23-26). Then he preached about the need to give our lives for others as Christ did. Just as he concluded, he was shot in the heart by a man standing in the back of the church. He fell behind the altar and collapsed at the foot of a huge crucifix depicting a bloody and bruised Christ. Romero's vestments, and the floor around him, were covered in blood. He gasped for breath and died in minutes.
I remember exactly where I was when I heard the news -- in my fraternity room at Duke University. I had just turned on the TV to watch the evening news. Only the month before, I had decided to apply to the Jesuits, to try to spend my life following Jesus. The shocking report of the death of this brave archbishop stunned me, inspired me and encouraged me to go through with my decision. Later that night, a peace vigil and prayer service was held on campus. My friend Paul Farmer, living next door to me, marks his conversion from that event. (Farmer would become a doctor and teacher at Harvard University and founder of Partners In Health, an international health and social justice organization.) Both of us were touched and changed by Romero's gift.
Romero's funeral became the largest demonstration in Salvadoran history, some say in the history of Latin America. The government was so afraid of the grieving people that they threw bombs into the crowd and opened fire, killing some 30 people and injuring hundreds more. The Mass of Resurrection was never completed and Romero was hastily buried.
Just recently, I learned from one of his biographies that Pope John Paul II had decided to remove Romero as Archbishop of San Salvador. In fact, he signed the removal order on the morning of March 24. In some ways, I'm grateful that Romero never lived to hear that dreadful news. His martyrdom became a spiritual explosion that continues to transform the church and the world.
Today, we remember Oscar Romero as a saint and a martyr, as a champion of the poor and prophet of justice. He calls us to live in solidarity with the poor and oppressed, to think with them, feel with them, walk with them, listen to them, serve them, stand with them, become one with them, and even die with them. In that preferential solidarity, he summons us to carry on his prophetic pursuit of justice and disarmament.
Thirty years later, as the wars and poverty continue, Romero's conversion, death and resurrection push us to a deeper conversion on behalf of the world's poor, especially to side with the latest victims of U.S. warmaking. His prophetic example challenges us to speak out as never before, and so to denounce Obama's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; our assassination training camps and execution chambers; our prisons and torture centers, such as Guantanamo; our corporate greed and unjust system; and our lack of funding for food, clothing, education, jobs, housing and true universal healthcare. Romero named war and poverty as sinful, idolatrous, and demonic; we need to do the same with the same faith, force and determination.
During one of the first anniversaries of Romero's death, Salvadorans distributed posters with a black and white photo of Romero and a caption that read, "We Want More Bishops Like Romero!" I sure wish we had more bishops and priests like Romero today. We certainly have one -- our own hero, Bishop Thomas Gumbleton. But I think Romero sets a new standard, which should be heralded and taught around the world. Not only should he be canonized and widely honored, he should be studied and taught as the model priest and bishop, the model Catholic and Christian.
I know we cannot wait for that day to come, for the conversion of others. We need to be converted ourselves and carry on Romero's prophetic work. That's the best way to remember St. Oscar Romero -- to do what we can, serve those in need, advocate for justice, speak up for peace, and follow the nonviolent Jesus. In that way, Romero rises in us, Christ rises in us, God's reign is welcomed and our resurrection is assured.
******
John's booklet, "Oscar Romero and the Nonviolent Struggle for Justice" is available from www.paxchristiusa.org. To contribute to Catholic Relief Services' "Fr. John Dear Haiti Fund," go to: http://donate.crs.org/goto/fatherjohn. John will lead a retreat, "The Gospel According to John," April 30-May 2, near Stroudsburg, PA, see www.kirkridge.org; and"Gandhi, King, Day and Merton," at Ghost Ranch Center, Abiquiu, NM, see www.ghostranch.org. John's latest book, Daniel Berrigan: Essential Writings (Orbis), along with other recent books, A Persistent Peace and Put Down Your Sword, as well as Patricia Normile's John Dear On Peace, are available from www.amazon.com. For further information, or to schedule a lecture, go to www.johndear.org.







Thank you for this
Thank you for this remarkable piece. This speaks to the real need of people, and also to the divisions of how to comprehend 'Service'. Very sad. At the same time :
'Not only should he be canonized and widely honored, he should be studied and taught as the model priest and bishop, the model Catholic and Christian.'
it depicts the immediately setting-in separation: canonized, honored, studied, taught... All well and good, but humanity does that, under different headings, at different times, for different reasons--as much in need of inner, personal redemption as ever.
But thank you for shining light on this consecrated soul. It shines out.
Johanna Sayre
I never felt much attracted
I never felt much attracted to Latin America, having worked in the Middle East and Asia most of my career, but in 1980 I was at home for a few months. Oscar Romero was assassinated on my birthday that year. Since that time I've felt an inescapable connection with Romero, and made it a point to learn about his life and his conversion and why he was assassinated. I love it that the hierarchy in Latin America, in cahoots with the government against the people, thought that Romero was the same, a safe defender of life as it should be, and of the church in its rightful position of secular power throughout the continent. Rome felt the same and made him a bishop and then Archbishop. After Romero's conversion, however, it seems Pope John Paul II spent a lot of time trying to convert him back during his ad limina visits to Rome, and then reprimanding him for stirring things up, and finally deciding to remove him from his office. That's quite a step to take under any circumstances. Must have been the nervousness about communist-resembling liberation theology. Dangerous to let the poor think they have any rights. They might get wrong ideas.
I haven't known a lot about the lives of most of the new saints that Pope John Paul II canonized so many of, but it seems obvious that Romero is the kind of person that should be recognized in that way, as a model for all Christians, for love and courage and integrity and simplicity, and for living the Good News. I wonder if JPII would ever have gotten around to seeing him as saint material. He managed to avoid it for 25 years, although people around the world knew about Romero and his martyrdom. Even if you thought he was dangerous for the Church in Latin America, it's hard not to see that he was following the Way, living the life Christians have always thought was true greatness. He is widely considered already a saint. He's certainly one of my heroes.
I believe that John Paul II
I believe that John Paul II showed great insight in some areas matched only by an amazing blindness in other areas and a warmth contrasted by a coldness. Yet, we seem to have a need to see people thur a black or white lens, either all good or all bad.
It is interesting to note
It is interesting to note that the whole of Oscar Romero's reign as archbishop and of his battles over US support of the repressive Salvatoran government occured during the administration of Jimmy Carter and not at all during the administration of the dreaded Ronald Reagan. The message here, I think, is that if anybody expects really signficant change from the Democrats, they are in for a huge disappointment. As President Hugo Chavez has said about our current US administration: "Obama is a big improvement over Bush, but he is still the leader of the Empire." To which I respond: "Amen".
Are you at all aware that
Are you at all aware that Romero dies in 1980? And what years was Reagan president? How foolish of you. Your blindness comes from your need to push a political agenda, even at the expense of what most people recognize as a holy man. In your next prayers, you may want to consider asking for Romero's forgiveness: it would make for a true Lenten lesson in humility.
By the way, Reagan was president from 1981 to 1989.
What a man! Imagine if all
What a man!
Imagine if all our Bishops and priests were like him!
When the church and its leaders see Christ's vision as St. Oscar Romero did, that will bring about the days of real conversion.
You, too, are and have been, a leader in this conversion.
God Bless.
Concetta
Sorry, not a saint yet. Far
Sorry, not a saint yet. Far too many questions relating to his embrace of "liberation theology" and its attempt to baptize Marxist philosophy (a contradiction in terms and an impossibility).
Perhaps someday Archbishop Romero will be seen as a saint of the Church, provided we can answer those very serious questions that persist so many years after his death.
Clint, YOUR brand of church
Clint,
YOUR brand of church will never be able to canonize an Oscar Romero.
http://www.zenit.org/rssenglish-28167
http://fssca.net/romero/sainthood07.html
http://www.southsidepride.com/2005/05/articles/opinionromero.html
Mr. McKee, there is no
Mr. McKee, there is no "brand" of Church, neither mine, nor yours. The Church does not belong to me, nor to you. The Church belongs completely and totally to Christ Jesus.
Read Matthew 25 Sounds rather
Read Matthew 25
Sounds rather Marxist to me.
Reads like Liberation
Clint your brand of church is
Clint your brand of church is on the side of dictators, oligarchs, aristocrats, & profit-driven capitalists who look at your church as a whore. You're a counter-witness to the prophetic character of Jesus' message of the coming of God's reign/kingdom (read: integral salvation/liberation), indeed good news for the poor/oppressed and bad news for you and the rich/powerful. You may not be a heretic in your medieval/monarchical church but your basic orientation and attitude towards the poor and their defenders (like the God of the Scriptures and Archbishop Romero) borders on the anti-Kingdom, anti-Christ. I hate your church that dances to the tune of the powers-that-be. May St. Oscar intercede for your genuine conversion.
We are blessed and baptized
We are blessed and baptized into the Church which requires of each one according to their gifts, and gives to each one according to their needs (whom does that sound like).
Which feeds the hungry, heals the sick, receives strangers at the gate, with sanctuary, shelters the homeless,
which works for peace,
with justice and health care for all
frère charles du désert OSB OBLAT (Congrégation de Subiaco)
all this false and irresponsible talk about Karl Marx is what got this Saint of the Americas martyred, and it is reprehensible to see it now.
kindly Clint consult upon
kindly Clint consult upon this most tragic anniversary the Reverend Father Jon Sobrino SJ's analyses of the life and mission of the venerable and Reverend Servant of God Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero, whom he personally knew.
Obviously your theological sensibilities dissent from the Vatican's own discernment in this case, and I pray you yet convert to Roman Catholicism, even now.
I further suggest you read the Shepherd's Diary and the direct writings and homilies of this blessed Servant of God, including Voice of the Voiceless. Orbis Books publishes several very valuable texts in this field of pastoral theology.
See also the brilliant martyr, the Reverend Father Ignacio Ellacuria, who so faithfully advised this Servant of God, martyr for our Faith.
Clint echoes the killers and
Clint echoes the killers and their oligarchical imperialist owners in repeating this hollow chant " Far too many questions relating to his embrace of "liberation theology" and its attempt to baptize Marxist philosophy (a contradiction in terms and an impossibility). Perhaps someday Archbishop Romero will be seen as a saint of the Church, provided we can answer those very serious questions that persist so many years after his death."
It is slogans such as this which brought about his martyrdom and Clint continues this now, to his peril.
Liberation Theology is the future of our Church, and is strongly present in the recent Papal encyclical and social letters and exhortations.
Read them.
Monsenor Romero, Servant of God, pray for us, now so lost as to echo your murderers.
Clint writes: " Far too many
Clint writes: " Far too many questions relating to his embrace of "liberation theology" and its attempt to baptize Marxist philosophy (a contradiction in terms and an impossibility). Perhaps someday Archbishop Romero will be seen as a saint of the Church, provided we can answer those very serious questions that persist so many years after his death."
This comment of Clint is a ratification, an approbation, a rationalization and the selfsame justification of our martyred Monsenor's killers, he who is deemed so quickly by the Vatican our Servant of God.
Clint dissentingly deems otherwise, with the secular eyes of man.
Clint's comment here (" Far
Clint's comment here (" Far too many questions relating to his embrace of "liberation theology" and its attempt to baptize Marxist philosophy (a contradiction in terms and an impossibility). Perhaps someday Archbishop Romero will be seen as a saint of the Church, provided we can answer those very serious questions that persist so many years after his death.") signifies a radical rupture with the Communion of Saints in which we who still pray the Apostle's Creed place our belief, and a significant dissent from Rome.
Forgive me, Father, for this good and holy Archbishop made the ultimate sacrifice as a Voice for the Voiceless and the least I can do upon this tragic anniversary is to raise my own feeble mew for he who now lies silent yet now still intercedes for us.
What a blessing this was for
What a blessing this was for me, Fr. Dear. I'm showing the movie Romero as part of a film series at my church on March 26. You gave me so many more talking points than I had before. Thanks so much.
and I took another dent in my
and I took another dent in my book budget for this remarkable work
I would be most pleased and
I would be most pleased and honored to donate to your book fund, Frere Charles. May I?
While deeply surprised to
While deeply surprised to find such support here, as I always strive for the obnoxious, I would be most pleased and honored to find you have added to your own library the works of the Servant of God Monsenor Romero, and the new book from the reverend Sister Joan Chittister OSB entitled Uncommon Gratitude: Alleluia for All That Is and that you read them very closely.
A powerful performance by
A powerful performance by Raul Julia:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJjgx0YZ6dg
http://www.amazon.com/Romero-Raul-Julia/dp/B00004W203
http://beemp3.com/download.php?file=428656&song=Movie+Speech%3A+Romero+-...
I believe that one day el
I believe that one day el monsenor will be canonized. It will take some time though. In so many ways he was very ahead of his confreres. This is the first time I have heard of JPII's plans to remove him from his Archbishopric. Not only would this fly in the face of how he historically dealt with his pastors throughout all of his papacy but it also contradicts the many stories of the relationship between el monsenor and the pope. One only has to read his diario personal to understand the great love and obedience that el monsenor had towards Rome and the papacy. This culminates in the famous story of how JPII demanded to be led to the tomb of Msr. Romero in the cathedral to kneel on the bare floor and pray before it.
Please do not turn him into a poster boy for left-leaning causes only. He was concerned with oppression wherever it came from. If he were alive today, he would still be speaking out against war, it is true. But the great oppression in El Salvador and throughout Latin America is no longer from the gringo imperialistas... In El Salvador the citizens live in fear of the "mara", the gangs and drug traffickers. They kill more innocent people than the wars did. The bishops of Latin America still fight against the values developed western countries, only now it is to keep their abortion agenda out of their countries that want nothing to do with them. The Alternative Bolivariana is a great oppressive force of evil in Latin America; taking away basic human rights and freedoms from the people...
Honor this great St. Oscar Romero... but please dont turn him into some North American doctorate from a liberal, worldly, Catholic university, whose agendas certainly are not those of the poor... even though they try and impose them on the poor.
I was at a Pax Christi
I was at a Pax Christi retreat in Houston about ten years ago. Da Berrigan was the keynote speaker, and he re-told the story of Oscar Romero. He finshed with this thought:
"The lesson for us to learn from the life of Oscar Romero is this: never stop praying for the conversion of your bishops."
as long and as wearisome a
as long and as wearisome a prayer discipline, a true devotion, as apparently fruitless, this may be, especially in this late day
Remembering Oscar Romero on
Remembering Oscar Romero on the 30th anniversary of his death is an invitation to call up his spirit to rise up. This week in my region (Asia-Pacific) there has been the efforts of the Red Shirts in Thailand for electoral reform and amazing non violent protests; and the acquittal of the New Zealand Ploughshare actions. This season of Lent is an invitation to be schooled by the prophets of our time and of the past from Micah through to Romero and to respond to the call to live justly, love tenderly and to walk humbly with God ... this is the Jesus way, emulated by Romero (and many others) and led them both to death and resurrection: the story of passion that we will all walk in these coming days towards Easter
On this eve of his martyrdom
On this eve of his martyrdom I pray this great, venerable and holy Servant of God pray for us even now, a voice in heaven for those of us still without voice, who now at least have the hope of health care, if not justice and peace.
Let us read his works which remain with us, and those of his companions the Reverend Father Ignacio Ellacuria, the Reverend Father Jon Sobrino, and the rest, and let us grow strong, fortified to fight even now with the violence of Love, for peace and for justice for all, that the Reign of God blossoms amongst us.
an interesting very recent
an interesting very recent addition to his Wikipedia page:
The Daily Show episode on March 17, 2010 showed clips from the Texas State Board of Education in which "a panel of experts" recommended including Romero in the state's history books, but an amendment proposed by Patricia Hardy to exclude Romero was passed on March 10, 2010. The clip of Ms. Hardy shows her arguing against including Romero because "I guarantee you most of you did not know who Oscar Romero was" and "I just happen to think it's not [important]".
Are these the same folks who censor Cesar Chavez out of their history books?
Do we see any pattern here?
We must NEVER
We must NEVER forget:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RWfk_6BhQyQ&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8sHNKvGm7g&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bD_UWbq4i2E&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjAOpV_UtKc&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGmNE3rjWyo&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIESmM4sha4&feature=related
Pie Jesu, Domine,
Dona eis requiem sempiternam!
http://www.boosey.com/cr/sample_detail/Karl-Jenkins-Pie-Jesu-Requiem/11973
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yV5COv_KOFM
SUBITO SANTO!
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