Guillaume Leclercq was born in France in 1745, the son of a wealthy wine merchant. His father wanted him to enter the family business but Guillaume followed his calling to religious life and at 21 he became a novice of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, an order of teachers founded by St. John Baptist de La Salle. He took the religious name Solomon, and taught mathematics, served as the director of novices, and also as the secretary to the superior general of the order. During the French Revolution's Reign of Terror, Brother Solomon was arrested and imprisoned in a Carmelite monastery which had been turned into a prison. On September 2nd, 1792, he and 189 other religious were martyred by swords in the monastery garden.
CHALLENGE
During the French Revolution, the options for clergy were to sign an oath of allegiance allowing the government to regulate religious affairs and live, or refuse the oath and risk death. Today, read Mark 8:34-38 and reflect on how St. Solomon Leclercq and the approximately 1300 others killed in the September Masscres lived that Gospel message.