Faith, Courage, and Compassion: Standing Together Against Oppression and For the Marginalized

Hello, beloved friends and family of Saint Francis Parish and Outreach! I hope this finds you well and ready to step into another week together, rooted in prayer, action, and love. I’m grateful to share a few reflections with you as we look at our Sunday readings. The passages this week, 2 Maccabees 7:1-2,9-14, 2 Thessalonians 2:16-3:5, and Luke 20:27-38, are powerful guides for us as followers of Christ, especially in today’s world where standing up for what’s right and caring for those on the margins is so needed. Let’s look at these scriptures and see how they invite us into deeper faith, even as we face injustice and oppression in our communities and beyond.

Scripture Reflection: Courage in Faith (2 Maccabees 7:1-2, 9-14)

The story from 2 Maccabees is one of those passages that grabs you by the heart. It tells of seven brothers and their mother who are arrested and tortured for refusing to break the laws of their faith. The courage they show is nothing short of inspiring. As the text says, “One of them, speaking for the others, said, ‘What do you intend to ask and learn from us? For we are ready to die rather than transgress the laws of our fathers.’” (2 Maccabees 7:2, ESV)

This is a gritty kind of faith, a faith that says, “Even if things get tough, even if the powers in charge try to force us down the wrong path, we’re not giving in.” Their story reminds us that courage isn’t about the absence of fear, but about standing strong for what we believe, especially when it costs us something. In our time, when voices of hate and systems of oppression try to silence or punish those who stand with the marginalized, this passage calls us to “be ready to die rather than transgress the laws of our fathers,” and, for us, the law of love that Jesus gives.

Scripture Reflection: Encouragement and Steadfastness (2 Thessalonians 2:16-3:5)

Paul’s letter to the Thessalonians is, in many ways, a love letter to a community under pressure. He writes, “Now may our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God our Father, who loved us and gave us eternal comfort and good hope through grace, comfort your hearts and establish them in every good work and word.” (2 Thessalonians 2:16-17, ESV)

Paul knows that faith isn’t always a walk in the park. It can be exhausting to do the right thing, especially when the world around us feels hostile or indifferent. But God’s grace is real, and it is enough. Paul prays for protection from “wicked and evil men, for not all have faith” (3:2, ESV), and encourages us to stay steadfast, to keep doing “every good work and word.” So, when we feel worn down by the endless need in our city or frustrated that the powers-that-be don’t seem to care about the suffering of the poor, we can take heart. God is with us, encouraging and strengthening us to keep going, together.

Scripture Reflection: Hope in the Resurrection (Luke 20:27-38)

In Luke’s Gospel, Jesus is asked one of those “gotcha” questions by the Sadducees, who don’t even believe in the resurrection. They bring up a complicated scenario about marriage in heaven, hoping to trip Jesus up. But Jesus answers, “He is not God of the dead, but of the living, for all live to him.” (Luke 20:38, ESV)

The heart of Jesus’ answer isn’t about legal technicalities; it’s about God’s promise of life. The resurrection changes everything. It means that injustice and oppression do not have the last word. The God who brings life out of death is still at work, and so our hope is not naïve, it is grounded in the reality of Christ’s victory. When we stand up for justice and care for the least of these, we’re living out the hope that God is with the living, and that love, not death, has the final say.

Standing Against Fascism: Resisting Oppression Together

I know “fascism” can seem like a big, dramatic word, but let’s be honest, whenever any system or person tries to crush others, silence the vulnerable, or use fear to keep people in line, we see the same dark spirit at work. Scripture shows us that God stands with the oppressed, not the oppressors. The courage of the Maccabean martyrs, the encouragement Paul gives to his persecuted community, and the hope Jesus proclaims, these are all forms of holy resistance. As a parish, we are called to challenge any form of dehumanization or injustice, whether it shows up in the laws of our land, the ways we treat each other, or the biases we quietly carry in our hearts.

Standing Up for the Marginalized: Our Parish Mission and Practical Steps

It’s not enough to talk about justice; we must do it. Our mission at Saint Francis isn’t just to worship together, but to make sure our love spills over into action. Jesus didn’t say, “Blessed are those who think about the poor.” He said, “Blessed are the poor.” So, how do we make that real? Here are a few simple but powerful ways:

  • Show up for those who are being pushed to the margins. This could mean volunteering with an outreach pantry, calling for fair treatment for immigrants, or standing in solidarity with anyone who is being bullied, ignored, or hurt.
  • Speak up when you see injustice. Sometimes it’s scary, but silence is never neutral, it sides with the oppressor. Whether in conversations with friends or in the voting booth, let your faith guide your voice.
  • Pray for courage. The kind of love Jesus calls us to isn’t always easy, but we don’t do it alone. Ask God to fill you with the same Spirit that inspired the saints and prophets before us.

Personal Stories: How Our Community Lives These Values

I’ve seen you all living out these values in amazing ways. When we collected blankets for the homeless in Augusta, when parishioners stood with those fighting against kings, when we made space for hard conversations about race, gender, sexuality, and inequality, these are acts of courage. They might seem small, but they matter. Each time we choose compassion over comfort, or justice over convenience, we are following the example of the Maccabean family, the perseverance of the early church, and the hope of Jesus himself.

Conclusion: A Call to Action, Hope, and Unity

As we go into this week, let’s remember that standing up for justice and supporting the marginalized aren’t just “extras” in our faith, they are the heart of the Gospel. Our scriptures remind us that God’s love is fierce, and God’s courage is contagious. So, let’s encourage each other to keep showing up, speaking out, and loving boldly. We are not alone. We are part of something greater than ourselves, a community rooted in faith, hope, and love.

May the God of the living fill us with comfort, courage, and conviction as we journey together. Let’s keep being the hands and feet of Christ, right here in Augusta and beyond.

Pax et Bonum!

Bishop Greer

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