Tuesday, February 2, 2010

three good articles

This week I read three really inspiring articles that I thought I would share. They are worth printing out and reading/reflecting on prayerfully. I was really impacted by all three, but especially by the second one by Chaput. I believe all three are definitely part of what the “Spirit is saying to the churches.”
Cardinal Offers New Style for Priest-Lay Teamwork
Laity Council President Indicates Dangers for Both Sides
Cardinal Stanislaw Rylko

Archbishop Chaput to Congress on Priests and Laity
"The Prince of This World and the Evangelization of Culture"
Archbishop Charles Chaput

On Francis of Assisi
"The Secret of True Happiness: To Become Saints"
Pope Benedict XVI
What struck you in the reading of these articles? How do they encourage or challenge you to live out your Christian faith?

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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

the 'movements' in the Church

This article is a great look into Pope Benedict's view of the "new movements" as "gifts to the Church." E.g., organic realities like the charismatic renewal and other initiatives of the Holy Spirit that spring up from men and women touched by the Spirit of God. ChristLife certainly sees itself in this vein of the Church, though, of course, we are recognized as an apostolate of the Church - our beginnings were very organic and a response to the founders being touched by the Holy Spirit...

Pope Calls Movements Gifts to the Church

Lauds Cardinal Cordes for Helping Them Grow

VATICAN CITY, DEC. 22, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI is praising a cardinal who welcomed the inspiration of new movements in the Church, and is highlighting the positive contribution they have made.

The Pope affirmed this in a letter he sent last week for the 75th birthday of Cardinal Josef Cordes, president of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum.

"I no longer remember when we first met," the Pontiff said, as he recalled a long history of friendship with the cardinal, including a shared membership in the German bishops' conference before both were called to serve in the Roman Curia.

"With courage and creativity at the beginning of your work in Rome you opened up new roads to lead young people to Christ," the Holy Father affirmed. "You also made a contribution to the genesis and the growth of the World Youth Days."

He underlined the prelate's "pastoral involvement" and "commitment to the movements" in his role in the Pontifical Council for the Laity.

"The charismatic movement, Communion and Liberation and the Neocatechumenal Way have many reasons to be grateful to you," the Pope said.

"While at the beginning the organizers and planners in the Church had many reservations in regard to the movements," Benedict XVI stated, "you immediately sensed the life that burst forth from them -- the power of the Holy Spirit that gives new paths and in unpredictable ways keeps the Church young."

Integration

He continued: "You recognized the pentecostal character of these movements and you worked passionately so that they would be welcomed by the Church's pastors.

"Certainly, with respect to organization and planning, there were often good reasons to be scandalized as they brought new and unforeseen elements that could not always be integrated easily into the existing organizational structures."

The Pontiff acknowledged the cardinal's ability to see that what is "organic is more important than what is organized."

He affirmed the prelate's vision that "here were men who were deeply touched by the spirit of God and that in such a way there grew new forms of authentic Christian life and authentic ways of being Church."

The Holy Father continued: "Of course, these movements needed to be ordered to and brought within the totality; they needed to learn to recognize their limits and to become part of the communitarian reality of the Church in her proper constitution together with the Pope and the bishops.

"Thus they need a guide and purification to be able to reach the form of their true maturity."

"They, nevertheless, are gifts to be grateful for," Benedict XVI said. "It is no longer possible to think of the life of the Church of our time without including these gifts of God within it."

--- --- ---
read the full text of the letter for more details.

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

New evangelization needs faithful priests, Pope says

I stumbled upon this from the Catholic News Service today:

Well-prepared priests essential for new evangelization, pope says


CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (CNS) -- Without well-prepared priests, "the new evangelization" of society will be just a slogan, Pope Benedict XVI said. "Today we see a need for each priest to be a witness of the infinite mercy of God with a life completely conquered by Christ and for them to learn this from the very first years of their preparation in the seminary," the pope said ... Archbishop Edwin F. O'Brien of Baltimore was seated in the front row. Pope Benedict said the training of seminarians and priests is crucial for ensuring that "the new evangelization is not just an attractive slogan, but that it becomes a reality." A priesthood candidate's time in the seminary, he said, must be like the time the disciples spent alone with Jesus after being called to follow him and before being sent out to preach the Gospel.

For the full text of the talk, click here.

The new evangelization involves everyone, regardless of their vocation. But, as the pope says, the witness of holy priests is critical. Which also means that an important part of our mission in the new evangelization must be to pray for and offer support to priests and seminarians. How many of us were influenced by the priests in our lives - in good or bad ways?

(On a side note, does anybody remember the name of the organization of lay people whose mission is to support priests and seminarians?)


So take some time today to thank the Lord for holy priests, pray for more men to answer the call to live "a life completely conquered by Christ" and ask the Lord to guide your parish priest. Also, check out the
ordination class of 2009, and pray for them - their stories are pretty amazing testimonies to God's persistence, grace and love.

For example:

“People would be surprised to know that I once said at the age of 26 after mass one day, ‘why would anyone ever want to become a priest?’ This was a period in my life where faith, a prayer life with God, etc. were not ‘on the radar’. […] The Lord (thanks be to God) revealed the ‘why’ to me and for that I will be eternally grateful.”
Father David Kuttner
Diocese of Spokane


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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Charity in Truth and Evangelization

Today, Pope Benedict XVI released his third encyclical letter, the highly-anticipated Charity in Truth, which is concerned with the global economy, human progress and Catholic social teaching, such as the preferential option for the poor and the sanctity of life.

Of course, though, since all truth is rooted in the Person of Jesus Christ, and God is Love, evangelization and the need for Christ is part of the encyclical too. The pope writes (recalling Pope Paul VI's encyclical Populorum Progressio):
...authentic human development concerns the whole of the person in every single dimension[16]. Without the perspective of eternal life, human progress in this world is denied breathing-space. Enclosed within history, it runs the risk of being reduced to the mere accumulation of wealth; humanity thus loses the courage to be at the service of higher goods, at the service of the great and disinterested initiatives called forth by universal charity.

That's the great challenge for our era. The mentality that "whoever dies with the most toys wins" can be rampant and pervasive in a consumerist culture--which pretty much directly contradicts Matthew 6:19-20:
Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and decay destroy, and thieves break in and steal. But store up treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor decay destroys, nor thieves break in and steal.


Pope Benedict XVI continues:
Moreover, such development requires a transcendent vision of the person, it needs God: without him, development is either denied, or entrusted exclusively to man, who falls into the trap of thinking he can bring about his own salvation, and ends up promoting a dehumanized form of development. Only through an encounter with God are we able to see in the other something more than just another creature[17], to recognize the divine image in the other, thus truly coming to discover him or her and to mature in a love that “becomes concern and care for the other.”[18]

I think right now, with the shaky economy affecting millions of people, that God is hearing a few more prayers and I hope, at least, that more people are realizing their own dependance on God. Me, as a recent graduate enjoying my internship while simultaneously job-hunting, I'm becoming quite aware of how much I need Him to find me a job. :-)

I also really like that the pope points out here that we can only truly see others if we see them through the love of God. Otherwise, they can easily become mere creatures--rather than those made in the image of God--or, even worse, burdens on society.

Most specifically to evangelization, the pope writes:
The Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi, for its part, is very closely linked with development, given that, in Paul VI's words, “evangelization would not be complete if it did not take account of the unceasing interplay of the Gospel and of man's concrete life, both personal and social.”[30] “Between evangelization and human advancement — development and liberation — there are in fact profound links”[31]...Testimony to Christ's charity, through works of justice, peace and development, is part and parcel of evangelization, because Jesus Christ, who loves us, is concerned with the whole person. These important teachings form the basis for the missionary aspect[32] of the Church's social doctrine, which is an essential element of evangelization[33].

I think this part highlights one of the great things about Catholic evangelization historically--it shows concern for both body and soul, temporal matters and eternal. As St. Peter Claver (missionary to African-American slaves) put it, "We must speak to them with our hands by giving, before we try to speak to them with our lips."

However, this can also be one of our greatest temptations and downfalls in the evangelization: to assume that we don't have to preach the gospel with words (think about that St. Francis of Assisi quote). Of course feeding the poor is essential--it's one of the seven corporal works of mercy.

But the poor also hunger for the Bread of Life and thirst for the Living Water. We would be making a huge and tragic mistake if we didn't tell them about Jesus, too.

May our hunger for the Eucharist lead us to identify with all those who hunger for Truth and Love and give us courage to share "the reason for our hope" (1 Peter 3:15) with them.

Thanks, Pope Benedict, for yet another great encyclical.


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Monday, July 6, 2009

"The best way to evangelize..."

Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver gave a talk June 26 at the National Catholic Bible Conference in Denver, CO on the role of Scripture in the renewal of both ourselves and the wider culture. It's a fantastic talk and I would recommend reading the whole thing, especially if you've ever wondered about the Catholic Church's thoughts on the Bible.

My favorite part is the following:
The best way to evangelize is to burn, like St. Francis did, for the love of God; and to sustain that kind of zeal you need constant contact with the fire of God's Word.
It's so true, isn't it? Few people become Christians because they are taught Christian doctrine. Millions have become Christian because they met a Christian who loved God so much that it spilled over into love for other people.

When love for God is strong, so is the desire to know Him more fully. That's where a zeal for His Word comes in. As St. Augustine put it, "Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ."

The archbishop also pointed out that if we want to see renewal and change in the world, it must begin within ourselves.
It's tempting to see the moral problems of the wider culture and want to begin there, outside ourselves, focused on others. But all authentic reform begins within our own hearts.
I know how hard it is to begin there. With all the problems we're facing right now, as a country, as a culture, as a Church, it's easy sometimes to point the finger, instead of recognizing that my own sins and failings are partly to blame. Mea culpa. I really appreciate the archbishop's reminder that if I want a holier culture, I need to cooperate with the grace God is giving me for my sanctification.

Finally, the archbishop also quoted a statement from Vatican II on the Scriptures, which bears repeating:
The Church has always venerated the divine Scriptures just as she venerates the body of the Lord, since, especially in the sacred liturgy, she unceasingly receives and offers to the faithful the bread of the life from the table both of God's word and of Christ's body. (Dei Verbum, 21).
Sometimes, as Catholics, I think we get so focused on the awesomeness of the Eucharist that we can forget how great the Bible is. As this excerpt shows, the Church wants us to uphold both as our "bread of the life."

Pope Benedict XVI, then Cardinal Ratzinger, also wrote about this tendency, as the archbishop noted:
The fact that God's words, something that God has said and is saying to us, are accessible in the world is truly the most exciting news I can imagine at all. [But] we are too dulled through everyday use to grasp the awesomeness of this statement. (A New Song for the Lord, 169).
May God grant us a passion for His Word and a love for the people who need to hear it.

How has the Lord spoken to you through the Scriptures lately? What are you doing to deepen your zeal for God's Word?

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Friday, May 29, 2009

"the Church" and "the mission"

The Pope is calling upon "the Church" to have a "change of mentality" about its identity. Two days ago at a conference in Rome he said, "There is still a tendency to unilaterally identify the Church with the hierarchy, forgetting the common responsibility, the common mission" of all the baptized. He continued, "In Christ, we become really the People of God," which, he affirmed, means everyone, "from the Pope to the last child." More on this at ZENIT. A brief video reporting on the conference can be seen below:



Unfortunately its seems that the "clergy" - "laity" divide that reached a height in previous generations (known as clericalism) - still maintains a hold on mentality of much of the Church (both clergy and laity alike).

Post Vatican II there was a shift upon emphasizing the laity - but the Church was a bit confused about how to do this and what to do - and there was a movement to highlight "laity" in pastoral ministry (lay participation in the apostolate of the hierarchy) - which tended to liberalize certain essential truths about the ministerial priesthood - rather than emphasize the "apostolate of the laity" - which is the laity's commitment to evangelization.

Two important articles on this:
  • What Should the Laity be Doing?
    This article, excerpted from Russell Shaw's book Catholic Laity in the Mission of the Church, discusses various ineffective attempts in incorporating the laity into the Church's mission and offers valuable insight into how laity can revitalize the Church in the future.

  • What is the lay apostolate?
    This brief article explains what the lay apostolate is and why it is essential to the new evangelization. Following the article are several useful links on the apostolate.
What has your experience been? What do you like about what the Pope is saying? What challenges you?

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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

snow & the Pope on YouTube!

Well, it's a "snow day" for many on the eastern seaboard. We only have an inch or so right now, but for the mid-atlantic and southern folk, that's a blizzard for us :) Though, thanks to the web and phone, many of us can telecommute - including me!

So, the latest Catholic news is that the Pope is on YouTube! Well, you might of figured that. But the big news is that there is now a Vatican YouTube channel with everything available in four languages!

Upon release of this new Vatican YouTube channel, the Pope gave an excellent message on using media for the advance of the Gospel:

It falls, in particular, to young people, who have an almost spontaneous affinity for the new means of communication, to take on the responsibility for the evangelization of this "digital continent".

Be sure to announce the Gospel to your contemporaries with enthusiasm. You know their fears and their hopes, their aspirations and their disappointments: the greatest gift you can give to them is to share with them the "Good News" of a God who became man, who suffered, died and rose again to save all people.

Human hearts are yearning for a world where love endures, where gifts are shared, where unity is built, where freedom finds meaning in truth, and where identity is found in respectful communion. Our faith can respond to these expectations: may you become its heralds! The Pope accompanies you with his prayers and his blessing.

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

My Exceeding Joy!

Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, & Happy Epiphany! Wow, what a wonderful time of year. I love it. My Christmas tree is still up in my house. Ally and I are holding strong till this weekend when the Christmas season according to the Church is up.

Christmas break! Well, my wife and I did a bunch of awesome things over the break, family visits, roadtrip to Philly (to see this awesome painting of the Annunciation), and the annual Jesus Retreat. This retreat, ever first or second weekend in January, for young adults is a really awesome time of renewal in faith and a great way to jumpstart the new year!

Carol evangelization! Another thing over the Christmas holiday was a caroling expedition we did with some students and leaders from our UMBC Discovering Christ work. We went in my neighborhood in Catonsville... And besides being freezing cold due to the mid-20s temp plus 20 mph wind, we brought lots of joy that night to many people... It struck me, as we were seeing "joy to the world!" which so profoundly announces the real reason for Christmas, that we weren't just singing to show others are superb voices (ha!), but really praying our words of joy about Jesus would find "good soil" in the hearts of the listeners.

So that was a blast.

-snip-

So, joy has been a personal theme. Not to mention, the main tag line Scripture from the Jesus Retreat was, Psalm 43:4,

"Then I will go to the altar of God, to God, my exceeding joy."

Next, I found myself singing a line from "I Have Found," a Kim Walker song, from a new excellent worship CD, Here is My Song:

"I have found a peace that plows on through the storm, I have found a joy, that jumps over sadness, I have found a love, that lights up every room, I have found... I've found You!"

Beautiful! Wow! Isn't this the heart of evangelization? Sharing our joy?

Then yesterday, I picked up a Word Among Us Press magazine showing their newest titles for Winter/Spring 2008 and on the front cover is a new book by Pope Benedict: The Joy of Knowing Christ. From the description of the book:

"Knowing that there is a God who is good, who knows us, who is near to us-this is truly the gospel, the good news that brings us joy. And the Holy Father is the bearer of good news in these fifty-five reflections on passages from the gospels."

Finally today, I read the Pope Christmas address to the Roman Curia (the group of cardinals and priests that help the Pope out in his role as the "successor of Peter").

"The Holy Spirit gives us joy. And he is joy. Joy is the gift in which all the other gifts are included. It is the expression of happiness, of being in harmony with ourselves, that which can only come from being in harmony with God and with his creation. It belongs to the nature of joy to be radiant, it must communicate itself. The missionary spirit of the Church is none other than the impulse to communicate the joy which has been given."

So, pretty cool that "joy" has been popping up so much. Thank you Holy Spirit! We love you!

Have you encountered this theme in your life or relationship with God recently? How has your joy affected others in moving forward the Gospel? What about the joy of others?

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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Advent!

A hearty "happy Advent!" to you. I hope it's treating you well so far... I have an excellent video I want to share with this blog. It's 2-3 minutes long and is a video called Advent Conspiracy which overviews a movement of churches and individuals trying to make a difference this Christmas for those less fortunate AND gives a great perspective on gift-giving - a must see before YOUR shopping spree :)

Can't play the above video? Watch it on GodTube.

Well, what did you think of the video? I think the idea is great... to "give Presence" this Christmas. Please share your thoughts on the comments below :)

-snip-

Finally, a word from Pope Benedict on Advent that connects to the above video (he gave this address yesterday in Rome):

Brothers and sisters, it is the time of Advent. In the language of the Church the word Advent has two meanings: presence and expectation.

Presence: The light is present, Christ is the new Adam, he is with us and in our midst. The light already shines and we must open the eyes of the heart to see the light and to enter the river of light. Above all to be grateful for the fact that God himself has entered history as new source of goodness.

But Advent also means expectation: The dark night of evil is still strong. And that is why we pray in Advent with the ancient people of God: "Rorate caeli desuper." And we pray with insistence: Come Jesus; come, give force to light and goodness; come where falsehood, ignorance of God, violence and injustice dominate; come, Lord Jesus, give force to the good of the world and help us to be bearers of your light, agents of peace, witnesses of truth. Come Lord Jesus!

How will you carry His Presence into your environments this advent and Christmas?

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Monday, July 14, 2008

Receive the Power!

“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you will be my witnesses...to the ends of the Earth.” -Acts 1:8

This years World Youth Day marks Pope Benedict's first visit to Austrailia. This year's theme is a new penecost and outpouring of the power of the Holy Spirit! World Youth day is expected to attract more than 125,000 international visitors. Attending will be musicians such as Matt Maher, Hillsong United, and Human Rythmns. In an article by Zenit News Agency The Holy Father Pope Benedict XVI explains that Jesus is the answer for everything and the reason for World Youth Day is to have a relationship with Him and proclaim Him when you go home. An excerpt from the article is below:

"Where can young people find the answers to their questions about the existence of God and the injustices they see in the world? In Christ", says Benedict XVI.

The Pope said this in a video-message taped ahead of his trip to Australia, dated July 4, to the people of the nation and the young pilgrims who will take part in World Youth Day. The video was released today in Australia.

The 23rd International World Youth Day, to be held in Sydney from July 15 to 20, has as its theme "You Will Receive Power When the Holy Spirit Has Come Upon You, and You Will Be My Witnesses."
"How much the world needs a renewed outpouring of the Holy Spirit," the Pontiff said. "There are still many who have not heard the Good News of Jesus Christ, while many others, for whatever reason, have not recognized in this Good News the saving truth that alone can satisfy the deepest longings of their hearts."

The Holy Father said that he firmly believes the youth to be the "instruments of that renewal, communicating to their peers the joy they have experienced through knowing and following Christ, and sharing with others the love that the Spirit pours into their hearts, so that they too will be filled with hope and with thanksgiving for all the good things they have received from our heavenly Father."

Benedict XVI continued: "Many young people today lack hope. They are perplexed by the questions that present themselves ever more urgently in a confusing world, and they are often uncertain which way to turn for answers. They see poverty and injustice and they long to find solutions.

"They are challenged by the arguments of those who deny the existence of God and they wonder how to respond. They see great damage done to the natural environment through human greed and they struggle to find ways to live in greater harmony with nature and with one another."

The Pope asked, "Where can we look for answers?"

"The Spirit points us toward the way that leads to life, to love and to truth," he stated. "The Spirit points us toward Jesus Christ."

Quoting St. Augustine, the Pontiff affirmed, "If you wish to remain young, seek Christ."

"In him we find the answers that we are seeking," he continued, "we find the goals that are truly worth living for, we find the strength to pursue the path that will bring about a better world. Our hearts find no rest until they rest in the Lord, as St. Augustine says at the beginning of the Confessions, the famous account of his own youth.

"My prayer is that the hearts of the young people who gather in Sydney for the celebration of World Youth Day will truly find rest in the Lord, and that they will be filled with joy and fervor for spreading the Good News among their friends, their families, and all whom they meet."

Please pray for everyone attending World Youth Day 2008 that they would be filled with the Holy Spirit and have the zeal and courage to spread Jesus' love to the world!

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Pope: Evangelization Is "Urgent and Necessary"

Great article from Zenit news. (The bold emphasis below is my own)

*********

Pope: Evangelization Is "Urgent and Necessary"
Affirms Missionary Nature of Church

VATICAN CITY, MAY 18, 2008 (Zenit.org ).- The evangelizing mission of the Church remains "urgent and necessary," Benedict XVI told members of the general assembly of the Pontifical Missionary Works.

The Pope received in audience members of the assembly Saturday, during which he reaffirmed that “the whole Church is missionary by nature” and that “mission regards all Christians.”

The Pontiff explained that the must be attentive to the demands of proclaiming with frankness and courage the truth that saves. “This apostolic commitment is a duty and an indefeasible right, the proper expression of religious liberty, that has its corresponding ethic-social and ethic-political dimensions.”

The Holy Father then invited every local Church to collaborate with other Churches, becoming the interpreter of a “mission of communion.”

“Against the seeds of disunity among men,” Benedict XVI said, “that everyday experience shows to be so rooted in humanity because of sin, the local Church opposes the generative force of the unity of the Body of Christ.”

Mission is a duty about which one must say ‘Woe to me if I do not evangelize’ (1 Corinthians 9:16),” the Pope added, citing the words of the Apostle Paul, who personally experienced that “redemption and mission are acts of love,” because “those who proclaim the Gospel participate in the charity of Christ.”

It is love that must move us to proclaim to all men with frankness and courage the truth that saves,” he explained. "A love that must radiate everywhere and reach the heart of every man. Indeed, men await Christ.”

******

Comments? your thoughts?

I love the last line, its so true, "indeed, men await Christ." If I don't believe that, then I feel like I'm imposing my beliefs on someone... But if I do know it, I realize that I give away Christ who is that which all men hunger for, though many don't know it - to be Him.

To grow in how to "proclaim to all men with frankness and courage the truth that saves" checkout our Sharing Christ program and our podcasts.

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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Cardinal: God Sending Eager Evangelizers

Below is a wonderful story from ZENIT news.

******

Calls Movements and Groups an Answer to Church's Needs

By Jesús Colina

VATICAN CITY, MAY 12, 2008 (Zenit).- New movements and ecclesial realities are part of God's answer to the Church's need for a new evangelization, says Cardinal Paul Cordes.

The cardinal, who is president of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum, affirmed this Sunday when he took possession of his titular see, San Lorenzo in Piscibus, home of the San Lorenzo Center, which Pope John Paul II established 25 years ago as a center to welcome youth to Rome.

When still a vice president of the Pontifical Council for Laity, Bishop Cordes was entrusted with founding the center.

And now as a cardinal, the prelate said he considers himself committed in a particular way to the new evangelization. The red hat, he affirmed, is about more than just participating in conclaves for the election of a new pope.

Cardinal Cordes said he chose Pentecost to take possession of the titular see because the feast is an invitation to the new evangelization, since "the fire, the flame of the Spirit of God wants to set others ablaze."But, "where are the missionaries?" the cardinal asked. And he answered that God already considered years ago that the Church would have a need for evangelization.

"Since the middle of the last century, he has brought men and women in movements and new [ecclesial] realities to awaken in the Church enthusiasm for evangelization," the prelate contended. "He has given them the grace to speak in a fascinated and fascinating way about Jesus Christ, to enthuse people about the following of Christ, to find in Jesus of Nazareth -- just as he is proclaimed by the Church -- the center of their very existences and the fount of a plentiful life."

"These groups are not new walls between consecrated and laypeople, between mission in the Church and mission in the world," Cardinal Cordes continued. "This is not about canceling the diversity of ministries and responsibilities: They seek to awaken in every state of life a love for Christ, our brother and Lord, since from him alone comes salvation and joy."

"Despite aggressive secularization, which wants to bring all of us to the idolatry of the 'I,' they keep Christ as the star that guides their activities," he said. "It's not that they are 'more perfect' Christians. They are Christians like all of us. But they are special since God has prepared them better for the decisive challenge of today: the new evangelization."


*****

We at ChristLife have benefited greatly from the “new movements and ecclesial realities.” In fact, sometimes, we feel like we are part of an emerging new movement of Catholics committed to following with our whole hearts Jesus and proclaiming the person of Jesus Christ to all the world. Yet “this movement” has no formal name or boundaries. It brings together bishops, priests, religious orders, lay movements, organizations, and individual lay Christians of all denominations – all with a burning heart to reveal to this world, Emmanuel, God is with us “in the face of Jesus of Nazareth” (Pope Benedict).

In fact I was at my sister’s graduation at Mount Saint Mary’s University on Pentecost Sunday – and Baltimore’s Archbishop O’Brien gave the commencement address (read Archbishop’s recent letter of encouragement to ChristLife) . And I was expecting – you know – the usual stuff about “go out and serve the world” and “be a leader” and “make a difference.” Well, he did talk about those things, but at a critical moment during the address, as he was recalling the Pope’s recent visit to the US, he said-

Who am I? What is my purpose? How can I realize my potential?

These are searching questions, rooted in every heart since Adam and Eve. But they are so rarely asked, much less answered by your contemporaries. Truth demands an answer. Faith answers, Jesus Christ. Benedict XVI again to the youth at Dunwoodie, New York:

…truth is not an imposition. Nor is it simply a set of rules. It is a discovery of the One who never fails us; the One whom we can always trust… ultimately truth is a person: Jesus Christ.

Bicentennial graduates: Have you discovered or perhaps re-discovered Jesus Christ here? And will you share that discovery with others as you depart with your Mountain memories? Do you believe that he is the only ultimate measure of the truly human being? Do you find in him, in his life, his preaching, his example the model of true leadership?

What an encouragement! Read the entire commencement address.

This whole theme of focusing on the centrality of the person of Jesus – is one of the hallmarks of Pope Benedict XVI. He is constantly calling Christians and all people to friendship with Jesus Christ. From the summative and final sentence of the Foreword to his latest book, Jesus of Nazareth, he writes-

“it struck me as the most urgent priority to present the figure and message of Jesus in his public ministry, and so to help foster the growth of a living relationship with him” (xxiv).

And if you didn’t catch any of his message while he was here in the US recently, listen to the first few minutes of the “Pope Podcast” below – we have an awesome clip of him talking about the centrality of Jesus. Always good to hear. Come Lord Jesus!

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Friday, May 9, 2008

The Pope Podcast!

Well, we've now done 45 podcasts at ChristLife! Its really amazing how many we've done - how many different people we've interviewed. This podcast is a first though. It is the first to have audio of the Pope speaking!

So, the top three reasons to listen to this podcast are-
  1. A clip of the Pope speaking at Yankee stadium
  2. A song by Matt Maher
  3. Testimonies from our young adult Following Christ course at UMBC
Listen in!

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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

U.S. Papal Visit 2008!

What an incredible gift of hope for our nation to experience the presence of our Holy Father! I had the honor of attending the Papal Mass in New York on April 20th. It was an inexpressible blessing to experience the Mass with Pope Benedict XVI, gathered in unity with so many Catholics to receive Christ through His vicar on earth! As a young adult, it is so impacting to have such a humble, wise and joyful Shepherd who so deeply loves the youth! Below is an excerpt from Pope Benedict XVI's homily in New York last Sunday:

Real freedom, then, is God’s gracious gift, the fruit of conversion to his truth, the truth which makes us free (cf. Jn 8:32). And this freedom in truth brings in its wake a new and liberating way of seeing reality. When we put on "the mind of Christ" (cf. Phil 2:5), new horizons open before us! In the light of faith, within the communion of the Church, we also find the inspiration and strength to become a leaven of the Gospel in the world. We become the light of the world, the salt of the earth (cf. Mt 5:13-14), entrusted with the "apostolate" of making our own lives, and the world in which we live, conform ever more fully to God’s saving plan. This magnificent vision of a world being transformed by the liberating truth of the Gospel is reflected in the description of the Church found in today’s second reading. The Apostle tells us that Christ, risen from the dead, is the keystone of a great temple which is even now rising in the Spirit. And we, the members of his body, through Baptism have become "living stones" in that temple, sharing in the life of God by grace, blessed with the freedom of the sons of God, and empowered to offer spiritual sacrifices pleasing to him (cf. 1 Pet 2:5). And what is this offering which we are called to make, if not to direct our every thought, word and action to the truth of the Gospel and to harness all our energies in the service of God’s Kingdom? Only in this way can we build with God, on the one foundation which is Christ (cf. 1 Cor 3:11). Only in this way can we build something that will truly endure. Only in this way can our lives find ultimate meaning and bear lasting fruit.
The final segment of Pope Benedict's homily was directed toward young people of America! His words are so encouraging and challenging - I hope that myself and the young people of America can truly give our hearts to Jesus and apply the words of our Holy Father to our personal lives. The closing of His homily is below:

Yesterday, not far from here, I was moved by the joy, the hope and the generous love of Christ which I saw on the faces of the many young people assembled in Dunwoodie. They are the Church’s future, and they deserve all the prayer and support that you can give them. And so I wish to close by adding a special word of encouragement to them. My dear young friends, like the seven men, "filled with the Spirit and wisdom" whom the Apostles charged with care for the young Church, may you step forward and take up the responsibility which your faith in Christ sets before you! May you find the courage to proclaim Christ, "the same, yesterday, and today and for ever" and the unchanging truths which have their foundation in him (cf. Gaudium et Spes, 10; Heb 13:8). These are the truths that set us free! They are the truths which alone can guarantee respect for the inalienable dignity and rights of each man, woman and child in our world -- including the most defenseless of all human beings, the unborn child in the mother’s womb. In a world where, as Pope John Paul II, speaking in this very place, reminded us, Lazarus continues to stand at our door (Homily at Yankee Stadium, October 2, 1979, No. 7), let your faith and love bear rich fruit in outreach to the poor, the needy and those without a voice. Young men and women of America, I urge you: open your hearts to the Lord’s call to follow him in the priesthood and the religious life. Can there be any greater mark of love than this: to follow in the footsteps of Christ, who was willing to lay down his life for his friends (cf. Jn 15:13)? In today’s Gospel, the Lord promises his disciples that they will perform works even greater than his (cf. Jn 14:12). Dear friends, only God in his providence knows what works his grace has yet to bring forth in your lives and in the life of the Church in the United States. Yet Christ’s promise fills us with sure hope. Let us now join our prayers to his, as living stones in that spiritual temple which is his one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. Let us lift our eyes to him, for even now he is preparing for us a place in his Father’s house. And empowered by his Holy Spirit, let us work with renewed zeal for the spread of his Kingdom. "Happy are you who believe!" (cf. 1 Pet 2:7). Let us turn to Jesus! He alone is the way that leads to eternal happiness, the truth who satisfies the deepest longings of every heart, and the life who brings ever new joy and hope, to us and to our world. Amen.

To get more information about Pope Benedict's visit to the United States go to Zenit News.

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Monday, April 14, 2008

Pope B16's visit to the US, get the nets ready!


This week, Pope Benedict will begin his apostolic trip to the United States with celebrations and various meetings in Washington, D.C and New York City.

The theme of his visit is, Christ our Hope. And Pope Benedict's conviction is that Jesus alone can bring humanity hope.

Whenever there have been Apostolic visits, they have been times of extraordinary grace and conversion. This visit will be a time when thousands upon thousands of people will be provoked to curiosity about Jesus Christ and his Church. A window of opportunity will be presented to us. Are we prepared to respond? Are you ready to put down the nets(Luke 5)?

I would like to encourage each of us to continue praying for Pope Benedict's mission and for personal opportunities to share with others! This visit is Apostolic. The Lord is sending the Holy Father to proclaim Jesus! And as disciples of the Lord we are entrusted with helping those who are asking questions, who are moved in their hearts with the questions of life, to serve them in knowing the reason for our hope, Jesus Christ.

May the Lord Jesus bring many to new life in him, and to a place of welcome and support in our parishes.

Be Pre-prayered and ready to help others to come to know the love of God we know in Jesus our Lord!

Lord God, we ask you to bless Pope Benedict's apostolic journey to the US. May it be a time of renewed hope and life changing encounter with you, for millions. And may we your people be ready to answer peoples questions. Give us opportunities to share your love with others. In Jesus' holy name and in the power of your Spirit we pray, Amen!

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Thursday, April 3, 2008

Search engine worth knowing about

If you have a question about the faith and you are sick of spending extra time rummaging through secular search engines to find what you are looking for, try this new Catholic search engine called "Faith Knowledge". This site was developed by Peter Berners-Lee, who is a freelance consultant in theology, science and technology. It has five categories to search within: Bible, Catechism, Councils, Popes, and Summa. You can type in a search word or phrase and specify the category to find specific, authoritative documents on Catholic teaching and scripture.

Below is a picture of Peter who developed this site:

This is a great resource to take advantage of! Thank you Peter for working so diligently to make this available to the public.

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

God is doing a mighty work among Muslims!

Muslims need to hear the good news of Jesus, our LORD and Savior!

Jesus wants all people to know the forgiveness of sins and the power of the Holy Spirit to give us new life in the loving embrace of God the Father! And the Holy Spirit is working among Muslim people in a very revolutionary way, to bring them to the knowledge of the love of God the Father through the death and resurrection of Jesus, the Son of God! It is a fact! One that we should pay attention to and pray for!

I am including two excellent articles that appeared within days of one another. Take the time to read and pray about both! The first is a letter from a Muslim journalist who was baptized by Pope Benedict at the Easter Vigil. The letter is courageous and inspiring. It should provoke us to an eagerness to share the love of Christ with our Muslim friends. The second article is by Chuck Colson, which highlights the significant numbers of Muslims who are converting to Christianity.

I would also encourage you to listen to ChristLife’s podcast with a Muslim convert to Christ, who shares some practical advice for sharing Christ with Muslims.

Magdi Allam’s conversion to Christ and the Catholic Church
Pope Benedict joyfully baptized seven people from five countries: Italy, Cameroon, China, the United States and Peru, during Saturday’s Easter Vigil Mass.

Among those being baptized was Magdi Allam, a well known journalist who is deputy director of Corriere della Sera, one of Italy’s largest and oldest newspapers. Allam who was originally from Egypt, has lived in Italy for almost 35 years. More significant for many is the fact that Mr. Allam converted from Islam.

Explaining what led the Pope to administer baptism to the journalist, Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said, “For the Catholic Church, every person who asks to receive baptism after a deep personal search, a completely free choice and adequate preparation, has the right to receive it.”

The day Mr. Allam became a Catholic was the most beautiful day of his life, according to the Muslim journalist who received the sacraments of initiation by Benedict XVI at Saturday's Easter Vigil Mass. Here is a translation of Magdi Allam’s account of his conversion to Catholicism.

* * *
Dear Friends,

I am particularly happy to share with you my immense joy for this Easter of Resurrection that has brought me the gift of the Christian faith. I gladly propose the letter that I sent to the director of the Corriere della Sera, Paolo Mieli, in which I tell the story of the interior journey that brought me to the choice of conversion to Catholicism. This is the complete version of the letter, which was published by the Corriere della Sera only in part.

Dear Director,
That which I am about to relate to you concerns my choice of religious faith and personal life in which I do not wish to involve in any way the Corriere della Sera, which it has been an honor to be a part of as deputy director “ad personam” since 2003. I write you thus as protagonist of the event, as private citizen.

Yesterday evening I converted to the Christian Catholic religion, renouncing my previous Islamic faith. Thus, I finally saw the light, by divine grace -- the healthy fruit of a long, matured gestation, lived in suffering and joy, together with intimate reflection and conscious and manifest expression. I am especially grateful to his holiness Pope Benedict XVI, who imparted the sacraments of Christian initiation to me, baptism, confirmation and Eucharist, in the Basilica of St. Peter’s during the course of the solemn celebration of the Easter Vigil. And I took the simplest and most explicit Christian name: “Cristiano.” Since yesterday evening therefore my name is Magdi Crisitano Allam.

For me it is the most beautiful day of [my] life. To acquire the gift of the Christian faith during the commemoration of Christ’s resurrection by the hand of the Holy Father is, for a believer, an incomparable and inestimable privilege. At almost 56 […], it is a historical, exceptional and unforgettable event, which marks a radical and definitive turn with respect to the past. The miracle of Christ’s resurrection reverberated through my soul, liberating it from the darkness in which the preaching of hatred and intolerance in the face of the “different,” uncritically condemned as “enemy,” were privileged over love and respect of “neighbor,” who is always, an in every case, “person”; thus, as my mind was freed from the obscurantism of an ideology that legitimates lies and deception, violent death that leads to murder and suicide, the blind submission to tyranny, I was able to adhere to the authentic religion of truth, of life and of freedom.

On my first Easter as a Christian I not only discovered Jesus, I discovered for the first time the face of the true and only God, who is the God of faith and reason. My conversion to Catholicism is the touching down of a gradual and profound interior meditation from which I could not pull myself away, given that for five years I have been confined to a life under guard, with permanent surveillance at home and a police escort for my every movement, because of death threats and death sentences from Islamic extremists and terrorists, both those in and outside of Italy.

I had to ask myself about the attitude of those who publicly declared fatwas, Islamic juridical verdicts, against me -- I who was a Muslim -- as an “enemy of Islam,” “hypocrite because he is a Coptic Christian who pretends to be a Muslim to do damage to Islam,” “liar and vilifier of Islam,” legitimating my death sentence in this way. I asked myself how it was possible that those who, like me, sincerely and boldly called for a “moderate Islam,” assuming the responsibility of exposing themselves in the first person in denouncing Islamic extremism and terrorism, ended up being sentenced to death in the name of Islam on the basis of the Quran. I was forced to see that, beyond the contingency of the phenomenon of Islamic extremism and terrorism that has appeared on a global level, the root of evil is inherent in an Islam that is physiologically violent and historically conflictive.

At the same time providence brought me to meet practicing Catholics of good will who, in virtue of their witness and friendship, gradually became a point of reference in regard to the certainty of truth and the solidity of values. [Here Mr. Allam sites many Catholics who were witnesses to him. See full article for their names.]

But undoubtedly the most extraordinary and important encounter in my decision to convert was that with Pope Benedict XVI, whom I admired and defended as a Muslim for his mastery in setting down the indissoluble link between faith and reason as a basis for authentic religion and human civilization, and to whom I fully adhere as a Christian to inspire me with new light in the fulfillment of the mission God has reserved for me.

Mine was a journey that began when at four years old, my mother Safeya -- a believing and practicing Muslim -- in the first in the series of “fortuitous events” that would prove to be not at all the product of chance but rather an integral part of a divine destiny to which all of us have been assigned -- entrusted me to the loving care of Sister Lavinia of the Comboni Missionary Sisters, convinced of the goodness of the education that would be imparted by the Catholic and Italian religious, who had come to Cairo, the city of my birth, to witness to their Christian faith through a work aimed at the common good. I thus began an experience of life in boarding school, followed by the Salesians of the Institute of Don Bosco in junior high and high school, which transmitted to me not only the science of knowledge but above all the awareness of values.

It is thanks to members of Catholic religious orders that I acquired a profoundly and essentially an ethical conception of life, in which the person created in the image and likeness of God is called to undertake a mission that inserts itself in the framework of a universal and eternal design directed toward the interior resurrection of individuals on this earth and the whole of humanity on the day of judgment, which is founded on faith in God and the primacy of values, which is based on the sense of individual responsibility and on the sense of duty toward the collective. It is in virtue of a Christian education and of the sharing of the experience of life with Catholic religious that I cultivated a profound faith in the transcendent dimension and also sought the certainty of truth in absolute and universal values.

There was a time when my mother’s loving presence and religious zeal brought me closer to Islam, which I occasionally practiced at a cultural level and in which I believed at a spiritual level according to an interpretation that at the time -- it was the 1970s -- summarily corresponded to a faith respectful of persons and tolerant toward the neighbor, in a context -- that of the Nasser regime -- in which the secular principle of the separation of the religious sphere and the secular sphere prevailed.

My father Muhammad was completely secular and agreed with the opinion of the majority of Egyptians who took the West as a model in regard to individual freedom, social customs and cultural and artistic fashions, even if the political totalitarianism of Nasser and the bellicose ideology of Pan-Arabism that aimed at the physical elimination of Israel unfortunately led to disaster for Egypt and opened the way to the resumption of Pan-Islamism, to the ascent of Islamic extremists to power and the explosion of globalized Islamic terrorism.
The long years at school allowed me to know Catholicism well and up close and the women and men who dedicated their life to serve God in the womb of the Church. Already then I read the Bible and the Gospels and I was especially fascinated by the human and divine figure of Jesus. I had a way to attend Holy Mass and it also happened, only once, that I went to the altar to receive communion. It was a gesture that evidently signaled my attraction to Christianity and my desire to feel a part of the Catholic religious community.
Then, on my arrival in Italy at the beginning of the 1970s between the rivers of student revolts and the difficulties of integration, I went through a period of atheism understood as a faith, which nevertheless was also founded on absolute and universal values. I was never indifferent to the presence of God even if only now I feel that the God of love, of faith and reason reconciles himself completely with the patrimony of values that are rooted in me.
Dear Director, you asked me whether I fear for my life, in the awareness that conversion to Christianity will certainly procure for me yet another, and much more grave, death sentence for apostasy. You are perfectly right. I know what I am headed for but I face my destiny with my head held high, standing upright and with the interior solidity of one who has the certainty of his faith. And I will be more so after the courageous and historical gesture of the Pope, who, as soon has he knew of my desire, immediately agreed to personally impart the Christian sacraments of initiation to me. His Holiness has sent an explicit and revolutionary message to a Church that until now has been too prudent in the conversion of Muslims, abstaining from proselytizing in majority Muslim countries and keeping quiet about the reality of converts in Christian countries. Out of fear. The fear of not being able to protect converts in the face of their being condemned to death for apostasy and fear of reprisals against Christians living in Islamic countries. Well, today Benedict XVI, with his witness, tells us that we must overcome fear and not be afraid to affirm the truth of Jesus even with Muslims.

For my part, I say that it is time to put an end to the abuse and the violence of Muslims who do not respect the freedom of religious choice. In Italy there are thousands of converts to Islam who live their new faith in peace. But there are also thousands of Muslim converts to Christianity who are forced to hide their faith out of fear of being assassinated by Islamic extremists who lurk among us. By one of those “fortuitous events” that evoke the discreet hand of the Lord, the first article that I wrote for the Corriere on Sept. 3, 2003 was entitled “The new Catacombs of Islamic Converts.” It was an investigation of recent Muslim converts to Christianity in Italy who decry their profound spiritual and human solitude in the face of absconding state institutions that do not protect them and the silence of the Church itself. Well, I hope that the Pope’s historical gesture and my testimony will lead to the conviction that the moment has come to leave the darkness of the catacombs and to publicly declare their desire to be fully themselves. If in Italy, in our home, the cradle of Catholicism, we are not prepared to guarantee complete religious freedom to everyone, how can we ever be credible when we denounce the violation of this freedom elsewhere in the world? I pray to God that on this special Easter he give the gift of the resurrection of the spirit to all the faithful in Christ who have until now been subjugated by fear. Happy Easter to everyone.

Dear friends, let us go forward on the way of truth, of life and of freedom with my best wishes for every success and good thing.

Magdi Allam

'They Want Jesus Instead' - Why Muslims Convert

In church yesterday, as you celebrated Easter, did you notice anything or anyone unusual?
In churches all over the world, there were millions of people celebrating the resurrection of Christ, who were not there just a few years ago because they were worshipping in a mosque instead.

It is thrilling evidence that God is doing a mighty work among Muslims.

According to the website Islam Watch, in Russia, some two million ethnic Muslims converted to Christianity last year. Ten thousand French Muslims converted, as did 35,000 Turkish Muslims. In India, approximately 10,000 people abandoned Islam for Christianity.

In his book Epicenter, author Joel Rosenberg details amazing stories of Muslims converting to Christianity. In Algeria, the birthplace of St. Augustine, more than 80,000 Muslims have turned to Christ in recent years. This, despite the stiff opposition from Islamic clerics who have passed laws banning evangelism.

In Morocco, newspaper articles openly worry that 25,000 to 40,000 Muslims have become followers of Christ in recent years.

The stories are even more amazing in the heart of the Middle East. In 1996, the Egyptian Bible Society sold just 3,000 video copies of the JESUS film. In the year 2000, they sold an incredible 600,000 copies.

In Sudan, as many as five million Muslims have accepted Christ since the early 1990s, despite horrific persecution of Christians by the Sudanese government. What is behind the mass conversions? According to a Sudanese evangelical leader, "People have seen real Islam, and they want Jesus instead."

In Iraq, "More than 5,000 Muslim converts to Christianity have been identified since the end of major combat operations," says Islam Watch. And just a few days ago, the first-ever Roman Catholic church was consecrated in Qatar, a Sunni Muslim state where the Wahhabi brand of Islam is practiced. This was the first time Christians in Qatar have been allowed to practice their faith openly. Ten thousand people attended the opening mass.

These conversions have not escaped the notice of Islamic leaders. In 2001, Sheik Ahmad Al Qatanni, a leading Saudi cleric, delivered the disturbing news on Al-Jazeera: Every day, he said, "16,000 Muslims convert to Christianity . . . every year, that is six million Muslims becoming Christians . . . A tragedy has happened." It is possible the sheik was inflating high numbers to incite a reaction against Christianity. But clearly, something is happening.

How thrilling to learn that so many Muslims have been set free from the chains of their sins˜just as you and I have˜by the power of Christ's blood! We must pray for these new brothers and sisters; many are being violently persecuted for their new-found faith.
These millions of conversions give us one more reason to rejoice this Easter season. Yes, we may be in a great clash of civilizations; battling Islamic-extremists who threaten to kill us. And the future may at times look bleak. But never despair: God is on His throne, bringing people into His kingdom from the very heart of Islam.

In Closing:

At this time when we rejoice in our Lord’s victory over sin and death, may we pray for the Muslim people and ask the Holy Spirit to give us opportunities to share the good news of our Lord’s mercy and grace with them!

"Lord Jesus, we praise and thank you for your cross and resurrection. We thank you that you are the Savior of the world. We pray for our Muslim friends to come to know the love of the Father and life changing power of your Holy Spirit as they turn to you to receive grace and mercy that you freely give to all who ask. And we thank you for the joy of allowing us to know you and make you known to all! Amen, Alleluia!"

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Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Reaching Young People for Jesus!

"The need to proclaim Christ boldly and courageously is a continuing priority for the Church; indeed it is a solemn duty laid upon her by Christ who enjoined the Apostles to 'go out to the whole world, proclaim the Good News to all creation.'" -Pope Benedict XVI, December 2007

Many young people do not know the basic Gospel message of Jesus Christ - either they have never heard it or it has never hit home in their personal lives. It is the duty as laid out for us by our Pope to share the gift we have received with everyone we encounter. Jesus said if we trust in Him and spread his message he is able to do "far more than we could ever ask or imagine, according to His power at work within us" (Ephesians 3:20).

He is the same God of the Gospels, he can perform the same healing and miracles in and through His people as He did then - but we have to ask in faith! I went on a nine month Catholic evangelization trip around the US with NET ministries. I traveled on a team with 10 other young adults (ages 18-30) in a huge van with destinations to Churches and schools to perform retreats for high and middle schoolers. During that time I was able to see God work in ways I never thought possible, in my own life and the lives of the people I was ministering to.

I specifically remember one instance that may seem trivial but God worked in such an amazing way that I will never forget it. I was giving a talk on a retreat and I was nervous because I had just come back from a two day trip home for my friend's funeral, so I felt like I had nothing to give at that point. After my talk one of the high school girls asked if she could talk to me, she didn't know why but while I was talking she had this feeling that she could trust me and should share some things that were on her heart. She told me about how her father had died and she just wanted to know there was a father figure who loved her. After experiencing the loss of a friend my heart went out to her and we cried and prayed together for almost the rest of the retreat. When I left she thanked me, and I asked for what, and she said "for being there".

It's amazing how small situations can greatly impact our lives and the lives of people around us if we are just open to the healing power of Christ! A friend of mine, Danielle, shares in ChristLife's newest podcast about God's healing power in her brothers life. Also on this podcast is an interview with Mark Berchem and Christopher Kraker, the Director and Associate Director of NET ministries, and a news story about a man who was raised from the dead by the power of prayer! To listen to this podcast click here, or press play below:


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Monday, January 28, 2008

What's the good news?

Yesterday Pope Benedict gave a wonderful address on the "good news" to thousands gathered in St. Peter's Square in Rome prior to a mid-day prayer of the Church called the Angelus.

Dear Brothers and Sisters!

In today's liturgy the evangelist Matthew, who will accompany us though this whole liturgical year, presents the beginning of Jesus' public mission. It essentially consists in the preaching of the kingdom of God and in the healing of the sick, to demonstrate that this kingdom has drawn near, indeed, it is already in our midst.

Jesus begins his preaching in Galilee, the region in which he grew up, a "marginal" territory in comparison to the center of the Jewish nation, which is Judea, and in it, Jerusalem. But the prophet Isaiah had already announced that this land, assigned to the tribes of Zebulun and Naphtali, would have a glorious future: The people immersed in darkness would see a great light (cf. Isaiah 8:23-9:1), the light of Christ and his Gospel (cf. Matthew 4:12-16).

The term "gospel" in Jesus' time was used by the Roman emperor's for their proclamations. Independently of the content, they were defined as "good news," that is, proclamations of salvation, because the emperor was considered the lord of the world and each of his edicts a portent of good. The application of this term to Jesus' preaching had a very critical meaning, as if to say: God, not the emperor, is the Lord of the world, and the true Gospel is that of Jesus Christ.


The "good news" that Jesus proclaims is summarized in these words: "The kingdom of God," or the kingdom of heaven, "is near" (Matthew 4:17; Mark 1:15). What does this expression mean? It certainly does not mean an earthly kingdom limited by space and time, but it proclaims that it is God who rules, that God is Lord and his lordship is present -- actual -- it is being realized.


The novelty of Christ's message is that in him God has drawn near, he already reigns in our midst, as the miracles and the healings that he accomplishes show. God reigns in the world through his Son made man, and with the force of the Holy Spirit, who is called "the finger of God" (cf. Luke 11:20). Where Jesus comes, the Creator Spirit brings life and men are cured of diseases of body and spirit. The lordship of God is thus manifested in the total healing of man. With this Jesus wants to reveal the countenance of the true God, the God who is near, full of mercy for every human being; the God who makes a gift to us of life in abundance, of his own life. The kingdom of God is for this reason life that affirms itself over death, the light of the truth that scatters the darkness of ignorance and falsehood.

Let us pray to Mary Most Holy that she obtain for the Church the same passion for the kingdom of God that animated the mission of Jesus Christ: passion for God, for his lordship of life and of love; passion for man, encountered in truth to give him the most precious treasure; the love of God, his Creator and Father.

These are some really great words we need to hear often, especially from Pope Benedict. "Jesus' lordship" over all things is not just a "religious" title or phrase - but an active reality in the lives of those who are his disciples and can say with reverence and awe "Lord" (Hebrew=Adonai). And having a "lord" is super when this lord comes in the power of love, the power to heal, to save, and to serve. Thank you Lord Jesus!

For a wonderful testimony of Jesus' lordship read an article we have by the current papal preacher, Fr. Cantalamessa called Jesus is Lord.

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Singing Rocks (literally)

You know when you are walking down the street or maybe just sitting at your desk at work and you just have to hum a little tune or sing a song. If you are anything like me - when you're happy either a dance or song comes out of it - it is just natural - i mean, just look at endzone dances.

Well yesterday I was sitting outside at Capitol City Brewing Company, a restaurant at the Inner Harbor with some friends after our victorious volleyball games and I just had to sing. Now my singing wasn't the result of winning our volleyball games or the good food and company, I had been like this since much earlier in the day.

So what was it? Jesus of course! I had spent the afternoon watching the movie "The Nativity" with my grandmother and was so overwhelmed by the love of our God and Savior that for the rest of the day I just wanted to worship Him with my whole being and, of course, sing. Do you ever experience this? You are so overwhelmed with the love of the Father that you just want to shout, dance, or sing, but because it is socially unacceptable at times you keep quiet? Well don't! How else will people know that God's love is real and very personal if you don't show it at all?

I remember when I was younger, one of my brothers would not stop singing worship songs and I was so annoyed and very rudely told him to stop. His response was the same as Jesus' to the Pharisees, "I tell you...if they keep quiet the stones will cry out" (Luke 19:40). So of course that didn't make the situation any better for me. But he is right! We should be publicly rejoicing in the Lord, especially in response to His great love for us. Our Pope, Benedict XVI is completely on board with our Lord's desire for us to proclaim him as he appeals to young adults in his recent address "All the Churches for all the world", to proclaim Christ. Hopefully I'll keep this in mind and continue to proclaim the good works of the Lord everyday whether in song or just with my life.

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Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Jesus of Nazareth

Well I have begun to read the Pope's new book "Jesus of Nazareth." The book came out in English on my birthday, May 15 - and so two different sets of people decided to both get me the book (so I had two given to me ... but one is being re-gifted to someone else).

Anyway, I've only read the first chapter - but I have found it thus far a very good read. My main point in blogging is to point out the whole theme of the book, which the Pope lays out in the introduction-

“This book is… my personal search ‘for the face of the Lord.’"

And in sharing his personal search with us - beyond just dry doctrine etc. - he is really evangelizing. And it reminded me that - beyond all my own knowledge of Catholic stuff and biblical stuff - all of that is secondary to my own "personal search" and "personal experience" of the truths of our faith (see the quote from Pope Paul VI at the top of the blog).

This doesn't come natural to us Catholics a lot of times; however, thanks to the good work of Dave and Dianne here at ChristLife, we have some resources to help us to articulate our faith to others in a more personal way. For more on this, see our course Sharing Christ.

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Thursday, April 26, 2007

Evangelizing and Weakness

I'm a personal fan of Pope Benedict XVI... he is an inspiring 80yr old. I don't know how he does it... must be something about the Holy Spirit.

A few weeks ago at the Easter Vigil he prayed an inspiring prayer at the end of his homily-

“Lord, show us that love is stronger than hatred, that love is stronger than death. Descend into the darkness and the abyss of our modern age, and take by the hand those who await you. Bring them to the light! In my own dark nights, be with me to bring me forth! Help me, help all of us, to descend with you into the darkness of all those people who are still waiting for you, who out of the depths cry unto you! Help us to bring them your light! Help us to say the "yes" of love, the love that makes us descend with you and, in so doing, also to rise with you. Amen.”

The lesson I learned from this passionate prayer - was that we all (including those of us who evangelize) of us fall short and we all have "dark nights," but it is precisely in our weakness that St. Paul says Christ is strong...

I helped lead a high school retreat for the People of God Catholic Community in Nanticoke, PA a few weeks back - and we played a Christian "dating game" to teach the kids a lesson. The bachelor asked three girls all sorts of normal dating game questions (to find out who would be the best Christian among them to date) ... and the girls responded in the character of three stereotypical Christian personalities... the Colgate Christian (always smiling - thinks Christianity is synonymous with being jolly all the time), the Chameleon Christian (changes their character to suit the people they are around), and the Super Spiritual Christian (who couldn't really answer the questions - because she was so busy praying the Rosary and reading the Bible simultaneously!).

The kids loved it and the bachelor too - who ended up choosing the "Colgate Christian" ... but found that he should of chose none of them at the end.

Do you find yourself acting like a "Colgate Christian" sometimes?

What about the Pope's prayer resonates in your heart the most?

When has Christ used you precisely in your weakness to lift up others?

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