God sees even what people do—for the youth … It is very easy to judge people, to recognize someone as bad, as unworthy. It is very easy to look down on someone because we consider ourselves better, holier, or more religious. In fact, attitudes are also criticized by Jesus in today’s Gospel.
The year is 1907. Klodzko. A young girl, Mária, gave birth to an illegitimate child. She named him Gerard. The girl is extremely brave. Mária heard disparaging remarks more than once. She felt unspeakably alone. She avoided public places for fear of being scorned. His son was his whole world, his whole strength. Hope. When Gerard was little, a neighbor stopped him in the street and said, “You will be nothing. You are the fruit of sin…” Gerard was too young to understand. When he returned home, he asked, “Mom, what does it mean that I am the fruit of sin?” The woman hugged the child and said, “All people are the fruit of God’s love. Everyone! Without exception. My little Gerard is also the fruit of God’s love. Love is the hardest of all the arts in the world. But it is the only right way. Remember! Love people. Love them despite everything…”
Years passed, and the boy developed. The people around him, consciously or unconsciously, tried to make him a second-class person. It was difficult for him to love people, but he knew and felt that his mother loved him, and he trusted her words to love above all else. He felt in his heart that God was calling him to the priesthood. He enrolled in a seminary in Wrocław. And then the terrible blow—Father Rector, a very good-hearted person, tells him that according to the then Code of Canon Law, candidates of non-marital origin cannot even be admitted to the seminary. That, according to the Law, he is actually of illegitimate origin. And then a broken Gerard asked: “According to the Law, yes. And according to God and you, Father Rector?” The rector decided to give him a chance.
Before the ordination, the Rector wrote a letter to Rome requesting that Gerard be ordained. The Apostolic See gave its consent. After his ordination, he was sent to the parish of Czermna near Kudlow Zdroj. They quickly recognized him as a sacrificial priest. The year 1933 came. Hitler came to power. Priest Gerard was banned from meeting young people. In 1939, in one sermon, he said: “He who tears faith in Christ from the hearts of the youth is a criminal”. A few hours later, he was arrested and put in prison in Kłodzko. They beat him, tortured him, and humiliated him. In prison, he wrote: “They took everything from me, all my rank, my health, but they didn’t take the fact that I’m a child of God and that I’m His priest, no one will take that away from me.” He was taken to the Dachau concentration camp. There he wrote, “The Lord God put me here as a shepherd, because the sheep are here, that’s why I’m here. It’s not by chance that I’m here. The shepherd does not leave the lost sheep in the camp”. He died of hunger and exhaustion in 1942.
And it might seem that with the end of his life, his mission has ended. We might have the impression that evil has managed to sanctify the 35-year-old priest. And yet no. During the resettlement of the civilian population from Silesia to Germany, several German mercenaries enter the house of a young woman. They want to throw her out to take up residence and resettle her in the depths of Germany. But before that, they intend to hurt her, rape her, and humiliate her. And suddenly, one of the soldiers stops, looks at the wall in amazement, and asks, “Where did you get that picture?” Frightened, she replies: “That’s our chaplain, Priest Gerard”. The German, clearly excited, says: “I saw him in the Dachau camp. I have never met such a man, such a man of such faith and such love…” Telling his colleagues to let the girl go, he takes a picture from the wall and gives it to the girl, saying, “Take it, let it guard you”. He pushes the image into the girl’s hands and says, “The good shepherd does not abandon his sheep even after death. Pack your things and run quickly from the flock.” 14. IX. In 2010, Pope Benedict XVI proclaimed priest Gerhard Hirschfelder blessed.
This is the true story of a boy who was despised by others, like the Pharisees in today’s Gospel. And Jesus looks at it completely differently. His vision penetrates a person to the bone; he sees what is best hidden in the heart. And actually, that boy very realistically puts the Gospel teaching of Jesus into his life: “I want mercy rather than sacrifice.” Mercy was a defining characteristic of his life and ministry as a priest. Mercy permeated everything he did. And that counted most with God.
Lord Jesus shows once again that there are no lost people for God, that there are no less important people for God. Everyone, even the smallest, invisible one, has a wonderful value to Him. That value is determined by the rank we have received from God as His children. And that rank is independent of us. She is simply in us. God always recognizes his child in us. And the second thing that determines our rank is mercy, because God wants mercy rather than sacrifice. And that mercy is already our role, which the Lord God has entrusted to us for the rest of our lives. Some nice people sometimes can’t deal with a kind of weakness, a kind of sin that brings them down again and again and makes them dirty. And suffering for that sin, they immediately do some act of mercy. The Church gives us several such deeds for the soul and the body. A few vitamins to get your fill of. That is a nice and wise attitude. After the fall, immediately perform some act of mercy, because God wants mercy rather than sacrifice.
God has inscribed in us an amazing dignity independent of how others see us. Let us add mercy to that rank, because God prefers mercy to sacrifice…
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