Today, the Church remembers the witnessing of Saint Stephen, the first of the Church’s martyrs. The cruelty of his death is recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, as is how he died, transforming the violence that took his life into an occasion to give witness to an authority greater than those fallen powers who would rule us by fear and threats. Fr. Steve Grunow writes that the Church remembers Saint Stephen today is no accident. Strip away the sentimentality that obscures the story of Christ’s Nativity, and one realizes that Christ came into this world, and from the first instant he showed his infant face, he was opposed. Recall yesterday’s excerpt from the magnificent prologue to the Gospel of John, which testifies that Christ came to his own (us) and his own (again, that means us) “knew him not.” But worse than this, we refused him. And many still do. The Holy Child came ready for this fight, and the world was willing to fight him. However, the world discovered that it was outmatched, and the fallen powers of this world turned against those whom the Holy Child loves. Unable to no longer harm the Body of his human nature, the world strikes at his Body, the Church. Therefore, when the Church remembers its martyrs, like Saint Stephen, it is not merely out of concern that the faithful become conversant in the details of Church history. Instead, it is to keep us honest not only about the past but also about the present. It has never been easy to be a Christian, and being a Christian has always been counter-cultural. If lived authentically, it is lived in defiance against the fallen powers of the world. This means that, like our Savior, we have to be ready. We have to learn the strategy he used to defeat the fallen powers of this world and how he claimed victory when it seemed that these fallen powers could not be defeated. We must learn his strategy enacted in the witness of Saint Stephen and all the Church’s martyrs, past and present- lest, in our opposition to the powers of this world, we become just like them.