Evangelical Reflections - Wednesday of the 2nd Week of Lent - March 3, 2021

Wednesday of the 2nd week of Lent
Today is the feast of St. Katherine Drexel and fun fact: she has a connection with Belmont Abbey only 25 minutes from us.
St. Katherine was born into a wealthy family and she used her inheritance money to found a new religious order of sisters- Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament. Her work was focused on serving African Americans and Native Americans in the 1800s.
When Belmont Abbey was building their basilica, they needed more money and they asked St. Katherine for help. She gave them the money, on the condition that they had pews for African Americans (even in churches, segregation was enforced at this time). Abbot Leo Haid also despised racism and worked against it and he had no problem agreeing to St. Katherine’s condition.
In a time when our country, especially this past year, has seen so much of the hurt and pain of racism, we should pray and ask St. Katherine for her intercession, that all hearts may see each person, regardless of race or skin color, as a beloved child of God. And we should actively work to end racism, wherever we may see it, as it goes against everything we believe about God and humanity.
I was blessed to graduate from Belmont Abbey College and I was at the basilica at least once if not more times per week during my 4 years there. One of the things that I love is in the narthex of the basilica on the right hand side when you walk in, there is a baptismal font that is huge and made out of stone. The stone used to be used as an auction block to sell slaves on the land that Belmont Abbey now sits. The stone, transformed into a baptismal font, has a plaque that reads:
“Upon this rock, men once were sold into slavery. Now upon this rock, through the waters of baptism, men become free children of God".
St. Katherine Drexel, intercede for us that the darkness of racism may be dispelled from our hearts, from our country and from our world.
Help us to work as tirelessly as you did in bringing and showing the dignity of every human person. Amen.
Come sometime today (6:30 pm Mass tonight) and visit her image in the left transept.