August 4, 2008
Heroic Faith
by Sarah Jennings, Crosswalk.com Family Editor
Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? … No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. Romans 8: 35, 37
Whenever I feel far from God, I
like to read about Christian heroes that came before me to glean some
insights and inspiration. So I googled Christian Saints, and discovered that
August 9th is the feast day of German philosopher Edith Stein – also known by
her religious name, Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. I decided to “get to know”
this modern Christian convert a little better, and I’m glad I did – it wasn’t a
boring read. Here’s a brief summary of her life.
Born in 1891 on the feast of Yom Kippur
(the Jewish day of Atonement), she was the 11th child to join her
orthodox Jewish family. But she abandoned her Jewish spirituality as a teenager
in favor of intellectual atheism. Lacking faith, but gifted with a brilliant mind,
she was one of the first women admitted to a German University where she spent
many years studying philosophy under respected scholar, Edmund Husserl.
Her quest for truth through
philosophy did not allow her to stay an atheist for long, though, and she began
to look to religion again. In 1921, after befriending several devout Protestant
Christians and reading the autobiography of a Catholic nun, Stein realized all
the answers she sought could be found in Christ. She was baptized that year at age 29.
Her life after conversion continued
to be one of scholarly endeavors. She used her sharp mind to champion the
dignity of women through her writings and teaching, promoting a form of feminism
quite different from what most of us would call “feminism” today. Her writings
reveal a woman who treasured the unique differences between the sexes and who
felt the “maternal gifts” were central to womanhood. But in spite of her love for
motherhood, she never married or had biological children although one could
argue she became a sort of spiritual “mother” to many.
Stein might have spent the rest of
her life studying and teaching, but the darkness brewing in
Deprived of her public life, the unmarried Stein
took this opportunity to become a Carmelite nun (the same order as St.
Therese).
Sadly, her love for the Cross and contemplations on Christ’s
suffering would prove both necessary and prophetic.
The Nazi’s retaliated by rounding
up all Christians of Jewish descent for deportation to
Edith Stein’s dramatic story is a reminder to me of God’s power and
grace, of the amazing
things God can accomplish through those who love Him – even someone who spent
her early adult years devoid of faith.
Edith Stein is also a reminder to me of how simple the Christian life really is, no matter how famous or how obscure we are. She sums up the purpose of our days beautifully in a quote I stumbled across while surfing on the web:
“To suffer and to be happy although suffering, to have one's
feet on the earth, to walk on the dirty and rough paths of this earth and yet
to be enthroned with Christ at the Father's right hand, to laugh and cry with
the children of this world and ceaselessly sing the praises of God with the
choirs of angels -- this is the life of the Christian until the morning of
eternity breaks forth.”
Intersecting Faith & Life: Are you facing a challenge in your
life right now? Take heart in knowing that absolutely nothing can separate you
from the love of God, and that many believers have walked the road before you
and found victory in Christ.
Further Reading