It is all about perspective, isn’t it…

Posted by Terry Nelson on Feb 21st, 2008

 

Respectful evangelization.

Fr. Blake has a lovely post of two wonderful women and the Holy Name of Jesus.  I’ll let Father tell the story:

I was wandering along the street yesterday and saw two elderly sisters with a gang of young lads. Theresa was patting one of them on the shoulder and evidently praising him and telling the rest how splendid he was, he looked highly embarrassed, his friends a little bemused. Eventually they walked on looking back at the sisters with a bit of perplexity.

“What was going on there,” I asked when I caught up with them, Maureen, said, “Theresa was just praising that young lad for standing up for his faith, by wearing a “Jesus Rocks” belt”. It had the legend in studs around it. “Yes, she was saying how good it was that a young man was willing to proclaim the Holy Name amongst his friends and to the world.”

“That’s right, Father, I said that as he was proud of proclaiming the Holy Name he ought to think about a vocation to the priesthood”, said Theresa. - Fr. Ray Blake 

Father also tells of a woman who handed out rosary leaflets to all the people she ran into wearing rosaries, as David Beckham is modeling in the photo.  It is even more about love and respect, isn’t it.   (That wasn’t a question.)

Priests who blog…

I don’t read that many, but I must say, the very best blogs on the Internet are written by priests.  Here are my top ten favorites - the ones I check out regularly:

1) Fr. Zulsdorf

2) Fr. Ray Blake

3) Don Marco

4) Fr. Tim Finigan

5) Fr. Erik Richsteig

6) Fr. Dwight Longenecker

7) Fr. Valencheck

8/ Fr. Welzbacher

9) Fr. Schofield

10) Fr. Fox

Holy $%*@!

Posted by Terry Nelson on Oct 29th, 2007

Just what we need, more Catholic blogs!

Cardinal Ruini said that religious should start to blog in an effort to correct misinformation about Jesus on the web:

“The 76-year-old prelate admitted, “I don’t understand the Internet, but especially young religious ought to enter blogs and correct the opinions of the youth, showing them the true Jesus.”” - Zenit 

Actually, that isn’t a bad idea - if well educated and devout religious start to blog, Catholics may not be wasting so much of their time surfing the blogosphere and ending up with so many crazy ideas…

However, does the Cardinal realize what a distraction from the spiritual life blogging can be?  How it can remove a religious from community life?  Or what an idol the Internet can become? 

Look how it has ruined my life! 

La Virgen de Montserrat

Posted by Terry Nelson on Aug 17th, 2007

Our Lady of Montserrat.

Michael Brown, of Spirit Daily has a decent post on the “holy mountain”  of Montserrat, Spain and the ancient sanctuary dedicated to Our Lady.  St Ignatius of Loyola went there as a pilgrim shortly after his conversion.  This ancient image of Our Lady is also the prototype for images of Our Lady of Wisdom.

Montserrat Grases

The shrine of Montserrat brings to mind the Servant of God, Montserrat Grases.   A vivascious young woman and member of Opus Dei,  whose cause for canonization is underway.

“After graduating from high school, she continued her studies at the Barcelona Women’s Professional School. In 1957 she felt that the Lord was calling her to follow a way of sanctification in ordinary life in Opus Dei; so after seeking appropriate counsel, she asked for admission to Opus Dei as a numerary. 

In her struggle to reach holiness, Montse always stood out for her love for the Sacred Humanity of Christ, her Eucharistic piety, her devotion to the Blessed Virgin, her deep humility and her effort to serve others. 

She knew how to find God in the loving fulfillment of her work and study duties, in the small things of each day.” - Opus Dei

Montserrat eventually developed a painful bone cancer in her leg and died.  Her life exemplifies the ordinary, hidden sanctity which characterizes many of the members of Opus Dei who live quiet, ordinary lives in the world.  

Continuity

Posted by Terry Nelson on Aug 3rd, 2007

 

Letter and Spirit.

This is the title of a book by Dr. Scott Hahn on the liturgy and the Bible.  He also has a series by the same name on EWTN.  Some people may have the impression I do not like Dr. Hahn or feel he is too Protestant.  This is not true.  I have great respect for him and his writing, and especially his obvious devotion to the Catholic Church.  As an academic, his writings convey that which he teaches to those of us not fortunate enough to participate in his classes.  His conversion to the Catholic Church is the completion of his faith journey thus far, and he has brought wonderful gifts to the Church.

The readings at Mass.

I have been influenced by Dr. Hahn’s work as I meditated the readings at Mass, from Exodus and Leviticus this past week.  Scott Hahn reminds us that these passages contain the seminal foundation of Roman Catholic liturgy.  This is clearly seen in Tuesday’s reading from Exodus concerning the behavior of the Israelites when Moses entered the meeting tent - which is a liturgical act.  Although in this instance, it is more akin to the Byzantine liturgy when the priest enters through the iconostasis into the Holy of Holies.

Today’s reading from Leviticus outlines the feasts established by the Lord himself, required of the Israelites, and indeed observed by Jesus himself while he lived amongst us.  The Church maintained the observance of these traditions in the liturgical cycle of the Church year.  The Church did not make up the Sunday observance, nor our holy days of obligation, although they may have a different character or spirit in the New Dispensation.  Nevertheless, this tradition has come down to us from the time of Moses.

It always amazes me that those Protestant denominations who have no sacraments other than Baptism, no liturgy, nor liturgical calendar, yet claim to be so intensely Bible-based, criticize the Roman Catholic Church for it’s liturgical life which has been clearly mandated by God.  I’m convinced this is what Scott Hahn’s teaching and ministry is all about - helping Catholics, as well as Protestants, recognize the Truth of the Roman Catholic Church; it’s continuity with the Old Covenant and the fullfillment of the New Covenant.

The duty of Evangelization.

Posted by Terry Nelson on Jul 12th, 2007

 

Evangelization

The Holy Father recently stated that evangelization is the duty of every Catholic, echoing Pope John Paul II’s commission for the Church in this “New Springtime”.  Of course, this is not a new obligation since every Catholic receives this mission at Baptism, and throughout history the saints have been examples of evangelization for us.  When the Holy Father says it is our duty, it sounds like another obligation to fulfill.  (Catholics have a lot of obligations.)  Perhaps it would sound better to me if he said, “It is every Catholic’s vocation to evangelize.”  In other words - that is what the Gospel calls us to do.  (I’m not presuming here to tell the Holy Father what to say.)

Although today, we often think of vocation in the same sense we regard careers.  Sometimes people look at a vocation to priesthood, religious life, or ministry as a career or lifestyle choice.  This attitude misses the point however.  I’m convinced one reason vocations were lost, or experienced a drought in decades past, is due - in part - to this misunderstanding.  In our affluent society, with so many choices and options available to us, one can choose a career, while along the way, one often changes one’s career path.  Vocation, God’s call, doesn’t change - as the rich young man in the Gospel, we can say yes, or we can say no.  Vocation is not a career choice, it is a response to God’s call.

The vocation to holiness.

As I said, the example of the saints through out the ages demonstrates both the meaning of vocation and evangelization in rather remarkable ways.  Many founders of religious orders were already pious and devout before they even thought of religious life.  They usually were not street preachers or pamphleteer evangelists, they weren’t writing books about their conversion - they were just ordinary, virtuous Catholics, practicing their faith.

Many were moved by charity and compassion to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, care for the sick, etc..  Some recognised they needed to live amongst the poor to do this more effectively.  Eventually others joined them, and oftentimes, a community was formed and organized into a religious congregation.  So essentially, these men and women were not looking for a career, or the nicest religious order, they were responding to God’s mandate to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, bury the dead, cure the sick, cleanse the lepers, and so on.

The witness of the works of mercy.

When Jesus sent the disciples out two by two to evangelize, these men were told to announce ‘the Kingdom of heaven is at hand’.  Catholics do that by the witness of their lives, their devotion to God, the Church, and the sacraments; by their mere presence in the workplace, in school, wherever they happen to be - just as the saints have done over the centuries.  In ancient Rome the Christians were noted, not by what they wore and what they said, but how they acted, how they lived, and the joy they radiated, which made the faith attractive.

In today’s Gospel, Christ also instructs the disciples to “Cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, drive out demons.”  How often do we see this occurring today in modern evangelization?  Just yesterday I was anointed, and instead of feeling better, I felt worse.  Was something lacking in the sacrament, or in the priest who administered it?  Certainly not.  Despite the fact I was not visibly cured, Father was nevertheless fulfilling his mission - his vocation to “cure the sick”.

The burden is light.

We know that many of the great saints cured the sick, raised the dead, cleansed the lepers, etc., yet so did all of the religious of nursing orders throughout the centuries.  Likewise, through their particular apostolates, various congregations of religious consistently exercised themselves in the practice of the beatitudes while quietly fulfilling the duties Jesus imposed upon the disciples’s in today’s Gospel - especially through the evangelical counsels.  Just so, laity have fulfilled this mission as well - think of the many lay saints JPII beatified and canonized.  Why did he do this?  To give us concrete, imitable examples of what evangelization means for laity and religious alike in our times. 

Jesus says to us, “Come to me, take my yoke upon you, for I am meek and humble of heart, my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”  Pope Benedict set the tone for his pontificate through his encyclical Deus Caritas Est, teaching us that it is love upon which the foundation of evangelization rests.  It was the love of Christ, preferred to everything else, that compelled the saints in the work of evangelization.  I think it is probable that many of the saints did not set off to exercise the beatitudes, rather charity compelled them to express their devotion to Christ through these works.

Discernment and vocation.

Which brings me back to the vocation thing.  So many young people exhaust themselves in their search for the right religious order, or seminary - often traveling the country and visiting every house they can.  (I know what it is like - that ‘been there done that’ thing.)   I now call it the “Goldilocks syndrome” - ‘this order is too big’, ‘this order is too difficult’, ‘this seminary is too liberal’,  ‘I want Eucharistic adoration’, and so on.  I’m not discounting the discernment process or the need to assess one’s suitability for a particular group, but I think people can get stuck in a sort of hamster wheel about the whole process.

I don’t believe vocation can be reduced to a career choice, or simply a lifestyle choice in the conventional sense of the word.  Fundamentally, it is a realization, or actualization of the grace we received at baptism, expressed in and through our response to the call to evangelization.  My sense is, that on the deepest level, the discernment process ought to be less focused upon the religious institution or structure, and more focused upon the attraction of one’s heart.  For example, a young man may be attracted to the celebration of Mass or the sacraments, which may indicate a call to the priesthood.

A response of love.

Just so, a man or woman may feel the desire to care for the sick, clothe the naked, feed the hungry, or instruct the ignorant, and if they feel attracted to religious life, it is probably a good indicator of what order to look for.    Having said that, I think vocation is something realized within ourselves, like falling in love, it happens.  We know ourselves to be called to holiness, no matter what our state in life, and the duty of evangelization flows from that, in many diverse expressions.  I’m convinced it is in and through this living out our essential vocation that the call to consecrate one’s life more deeply emerges.

I think vocation is above all a response to God’s call, (normally) discerned in the ordinary circumstances of one’s life, expressed in the direction a soul feels attracted in the practice of one’s faith, exercised in charity.  Just as the married couple realize the vocation of matrimony, so the soul desiring a deeper consecration of self, realizes a vocation to the religious or priestly life.  It is not simply a lifestyle or career choice.

   

JoseMaria Escriva

Posted by Terry Nelson on Jul 3rd, 2007

Evangelization. 

Cathy of Recovering Dissident Catholic has a post which relates well to the topic of Evangelization.  Her thoughts reminded me of St. JoseMaria Escriva’s famous homily “Passionately Loving the World”.  Here is a snippet from that homily:

“You must understand now, more clearly, that God is calling you to serve Him in and from the ordinary, material and secular activities of human life. He waits for us every day, in the laboratory, in the operating theatre, in the army barracks, in the university chair, in the factory, in the workshop, in the fields, in the home and in all the immense panorama of work. Understand this well: there is something holy, something divine, hidden in the most ordinary situations, and it is up to each one of you to discover it.

I often said to the university students and workers who were with me in the thirties that they had to know how to “materialise” their spiritual life. I wanted to keep them from the temptation, so common then and now, of living a kind of double life. On one side, an interior life, a life of relation with God; and on the other, a separate and distinct professional, social and family life, full of small earthly realities.

No! We cannot lead a double life if we want to be Christians. There is just one life, made of flesh and spirit. And it is this life which has to become, in both soul and body, holy and filled with God. We discover the invisible God in the most visible and material things.” - St. JoseMaria Escriva

The teachings of St. JoseMaria seem to me to be complimentary to those of St. Therese of Lisieux and her “little way” - a sort of practical expression perhaps.  At any rate - they are extremely compatible.

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