Address at the Catholic Life Congress in Philadelphia
Nov. 17. 2012
BY ARCHBISHOP CHARLES CHAPUT
Language matters. It both expresses and shapes our thinking.
Vulgar language suggests a vulgar soul. Obviously, lots of exceptions exist. A peasant
can have a rough vocabulary and still lead a saintly life. And a political
leader can have a golden tongue and still be a complete liar. But, in general,
words are revealing. They have power because they have meaning. So we should
take care to understand and use them properly.
The words of the Nicene Creed are the defining statement of
Christian identity. They’re the glue of the Catholic community. Jews are Jews
by virtue of being born of a Jewish mother. But being a Christian has nothing to
do with blood or tribe or ethnicity or national origin. Christian identity
comes from the sacraments, sacred Scripture and the Creed. What we believe and
profess together to be true as Catholics is the foundation and
the cement of our unity.
Every word in the Creed was prayed over, argued over and
clarified by decades of struggle in the early Church. The words are precious
and uncompromising. They direct us toward God and set us apart from the world.
When people sometimes claim that Islam and Christianity have so much in common,
they need to read, or reread, the Creed. Catholics pray the Creed every Sunday
at Mass as the framework and fundamental profession of our faith. Devout
Muslims reject nearly every line of it.
Over a lifetime, a Catholic will recite the Nicene Creed or
the Apostles’ Creed thousands of times. But if we’re honest, we need to admit
that we often mumble the words without even thinking. That has consequences.
The less we understand the words of the Creed and revere the meaning behind them,
the farther away we drift from our Catholic identity and the more confused we
become about who we really are as Christians. We need to give our hearts to
what we hear and what we say in our public worship. Otherwise, little by
little, we become dishonest.
Here’s my purpose in saying all this. The theme we’re here
to talk about today is “Renewing the Church and Her Mission in a Year of Faith.”
Four of those words warrant some attention: renewing, Church, mission and
faith.
Let’s start with that first word: renewing. Over time even
the strongest marriage can wear down with hardship or fatigue. Couples renew
their vows to remember and reinforce their love for each other. The story of
the Church is much the same. History has shown again and again that, over time,
the life of the Church can become routine; then an afterthought; and then
stagnant and cynical, or worse. God sends us saints like Bernard of Clairvaux,
Francis of Assisi, Teresa of Avila and Catherine of Siena to change that: to
scrub the heart of the Church clean; in other words, to make her young again.
They rekindle the “fire upon the earth” (Luke 12:49) that Jesus intended all of
his disciples to be.
In our own day, we can see the same work of the Holy Spirit
in the Neo-Catechumenal Way ,
the Christian Life Movement, Walking with Purpose, ENDOW, the Fellowship of
Catholic University Students, and so many other new apostolic efforts. The new
ecclesial movements are a very important moment of grace for the Church,
including the Church in Philadelphia .
We shouldn’t fear them because this is exactly how the Franciscans and other religious
communities once began. We should welcome the zeal behind these new charisms
wholeheartedly, even as we test them. The Church is always in need of change
and reform, but change and reform that remain faithful to Jesus Christ and the
soul of Catholic teaching. Real renewal is organic, not destructive.
Let’s turn to the second word: Church. The Church is not a
“what,” but a “who;” not an “it,” but a “she.” Nobody can love the Church as an
institution any more than they can love General Motors or the IRS. The Church
has institutional forms because she needs to work in the legal and material
structures of the world. But the essence of the Church
is mother and teacher; guide and comforter; family and community of faith.
That’s how we need to think of her. And the Church is “his” Church, the bride
of Jesus Christ, not “our” Church in any sense that we own her or have
authority to rewrite her teachings.
The great third-century bishop St. Cyprian once said, “You
cannot have God for your Father if you do not have the Church for your mother.”
We should belong to the Church as her sons and daughters. The Church should live
in our hearts like our family does, and we should come together on Sunday to
love and reinforce each other as a family, to praise our Father and to share
the food he gives us in his Son. Our Sunday worship should be alive and full of
faith and celebrated with conviction and joy. Bricks and mortar are a dead
shell without a zeal for God and for the salvation of each other burning inside
the parish walls.
The third word is mission. Our mission, our purpose and task
as Christian disciples, is simple: “Make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19).
Jesus meant exactly what he said, and he meant those words of the Gospel for
all of us, including you and me. We need to bring Jesus Christ to the whole
world and the whole world to Jesus Christ. Our mission flows straight from the
inner life of the Trinity. God sent his Son. The Son
sends his Church. And the Church sends us.
Obviously, we can’t convert the world on our own. We’re not
called to succeed. Success is God’s business. Our business is trying, working together
and supporting each other as believers and always asking God’s help. God does
listen. He’ll handle the rest. But we do need to try. We need to be more than
just maintainers of old structures. We need to be
missionaries.
Fourth and finally, there’s that word faith. Faith is not an
emotion. It’s not a set of doctrines or ideas, though all these things play an
important part in the life of faith. Faith is confidence in things unseen based
on the word of someone we know and love, in this case God. Faith is a gift of
God. He chooses us. We can certainly ask for the gift of faith, and when it’s
offered, we can freely choose to accept it or not. But the initiative is God’s,
and only a living encounter and a living relationship with Jesus Christ make
faith sustainable.
Faith opens our eyes to God’s real reality. Because we see
with new eyes, we have reason to hope. And hope enables charity by allowing us
to put aside fear and to look beyond ourselves to the suffering and needs of other
people. History is shaped and life is advanced by people who believe in
something more important than themselves. So faith is the cornerstone of Christian
life because it enlarges us; it animates us; it’s restless. It
must be shared or it dies. It takes us outside ourselves and allows us to risk.
Now let’s go back to the three points I mentioned at the
start of this talk. The first point I want to talk about is where we are as a
Church and as individual Catholics, given the current environment of our
country. We need to know the facts of our pastoral terrain before we can renew
or achieve anything.
Some of you here today probably saw the movie from a few
years ago called Cinderella
Man. It’s based on a true story:
the story of Jimmy Braddock, the Irish Catholic boxer who came from nowhere to
win the 1935 world heavyweight championship. Out of work, injured and poor in
the middle of the Great Depression, Braddock never betrays his wife. He never
gives up on his duties as a father. He’s honest, humble, grateful, hardworking,
faithful to his friends, and he pays back every dime he receives in unemployment
assistance from the state. Most of all, Braddock accepts the pounding that life
gives him, both in and out of the ring. He endures it without bitterness. He
never quits. And, in the end, he does something almost miraculous: He wins the
title from the great champion Max Baer.
People who love this film love it for a reason, despite its
violence: In many ways, the character of Jimmy Braddock embodies the very best
of American virtue. The trouble is: Less and less of that virtue now seems to survive
in American life, except as a form of nostalgia. And nostalgia is just another
thread in the same cocoon of unreality that surrounds us 24 hours a day on our
TVs, in our theaters, in our mass marketing and on the Web.
In a sense, our political and economic power, our addictions
to comfort, consumption and entertainment, have made us stupid. David
McCullough, the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, said recently that we’ve become “historically
illiterate” as a nation. He told the story of a student at a prestigious
university who attended one of his lectures and thanked him afterward. Until
she heard him speak, she said, she had not known that all 13 of the original
American colonies were located on the East Coast.
The illiteracy goes beyond history and other academic
subjects. Notre Dame social researcher Christian Smith and his colleagues have
tracked in great detail the spiritual lives of today’s young adults and
teenagers. The results are sobering. So are the implications. The real religion
of vast numbers of American young people is a kind of fuzzy moral niceness,
with a generic, undemanding God on duty to make us happy whenever we need him.
It’s what Smith calls “moralistic therapeutic deism.” Or, to put it in the
words of a young woman from Maryland ,
“It’s just whatever makes you feel good about you.” As Smith observes: “It’s
not so much that Christianity in the United States is being secularized.
Rather more subtly, either Christianity is [degenerating] into a pathetic
version of itself or, more significantly, [it’s] actively being colonized and displaced”
by a very different religious faith.
This is the legacy — not the only part of it, but the
saddest part of it — that my generation, the boomer generation, has left to the
Church in the United States .
More than 70 million Americans describe themselves as Catholics. But for all
practical purposes, they’re no different from everybody else in their views,
their appetites and their behaviors. This isn’t what the Second Vatican Council
had in mind when it began its work 50 years ago. It’s not what Vatican II meant
by reform. And left to itself, our life as a Church is not going to get better.
It’s going to get worse. So if we want a real renewal of the Catholic faith in Philadelphia , in the United States and worldwide, it
needs to begin with us, right here and right now.
That leads me to my second point: what we need to do about
the pastoral realities we face. In calling for a Year of Faith, Pope Benedict
said that “the renewal of the Church is ... achieved through the witness
offered by the lives of believers.” That means all of us — clergy, religious
and lay. We all need repentance, and we all need conversion.
The clergy abuse crisis of the past decade has been a
terrible tragedy. It’s caused great suffering. It’s wounded many innocent victims.
It’s turned thousands of good people away from the Church. As a bishop, I regret
these things bitterly, and I apologize for them, especially to the victims, but
also to our people and priests. God will hold all of us
who are bishops to a hard accounting for the pain that has resulted. And I accept
that as a right judgment.
But if we’re honest — and there can be no real reform, no
real renewal, without honesty — we need to admit that the problems in American Catholic
life today are much wider and much deeper than any clergy scandal. And they’ve
been growing in our own hearts for decades. If young people are morally and
religiously ignorant by the millions, they
didn’t get that way on their own. We taught them. They learned from our indifference,
our complacency, our moral compromises, our self-absorption, our eagerness to
succeed, our vanity, our greed, our lack of Catholic conviction and zeal.
We made this moment together — clergy, religious and lay.
And God will only help us unmake the failures of the past and remake them into
a moment of renewal, if we choose now to serve God’s purposes together. If we really want new life in the archdiocese,
some of what we need to do is obvious.
We need to protect and educate our young people. We need to
impress on their hearts that salvation is not just a pious fiction, but a
matter of eternal consequence: a gift that cost God the life of his own Son.
Our Catholic schools are vital in this work. St. John Neumann founded our schools
150 years ago to protect the faith of our young people from Protestant pressure
in the classroom. But our same Catholic schools are even more important today
in a time of aggressive secularism, moral confusion and bitter criticism of the
Church.
We need to do much more to support the priests, deacons and
religious who minister so generously to our minority communities. Minorities
bring a huge transfusion of new life into the Church. We also need to help our
minority communities see that they too share God’s call to be missionaries. We
need to use our material resources far more wisely, and then we need to be accountable
for them. We need to be eager again to invite young men to the priesthood,
starting with parents who encourage their sons in the home. Nothing is more
heroic as a way of life than a priesthood lived with purity and zeal. And we
need
to form our young priests to be more than just maintainers and managers, but real
missionaries: new men for a new kind of mission field, with a hunger to bring
the whole world to Jesus Christ.
Finally, we need to build a new spirit of equality, candor
and friendship that weaves together every vocation in our Church. Priesthood,
the diaconate, religious life and the lay vocation: Each has a distinct and irreplaceable
importance. There are no “second class” Catholics and no “second class”
vocations. We need each other.
In a way, being together today in mid-November to talk about
the future of the Church is exactly the right time for our theme. November is
the month of All Saints and All Souls [Days]. It’s a time when the Church
invites us to reflect on our own mortality and the universal call to holiness
we all share. Life is short. Time is the one resource we can never replenish. Therefore,
time matters. So does what we do with it.
In the end, renewal in the Church is the work of God. But he
works through us. The privilege and the challenge belong to us, so we need to
ask ourselves: What do I want my life to mean? If I claim to be a Catholic, can
I prove it with the patterns of my life? When do I pray? How often do I seek
out the sacrament of penance? What am I doing for the poor? How am I serving
the needy? Do I really know Jesus Christ? Who am I leading to
the Church? How many young people have I asked to consider a vocation? How much
time do I spend sharing about God with my spouse, my children and my friends?
How well and how often do I listen for God’s will in my own life?
The Church has many good reasons why people should believe
in God, believe in Jesus Christ and believe in the beauty and urgency of her
own mission. But she has only one irrefutable argument for the truth of what she
teaches: the personal example of her saints. And that brings me to my third and
final point: who we need to be and who we need to become.
When we end our time together today, I have a homework
assignment for you. Sometime over the Thanksgiving weekend, I want you to rent
or buy or borrow a copy of the 1966 film about Sir Thomas More, A Man for All
Seasons. I want you to watch it with your family. Here’s why: More was one of
the most distinguished scholars of his time, a brilliant lawyer, a gifted diplomat
and a skilled political leader. Jonathan Swift, the great
Anglo-Irish writer, once described him as “a person of the greatest virtue this
kingdom [of England ]
ever produced.”
Above all, More was a man of profound Catholic faith and
practice. He lived what he claimed to believe. He had his priorities in right
order. He was a husband and a father first, a man who — in the words of Robert Bolt,
the author of the original play and the 1966 film — “adored and was adored by
his own large family.”
A Man for All Seasons won Oscars for both "Best
Picture" and "Best Actor," and it’s clearly one of the great
stories ever brought to the screen. But it captures only a small fraction of
the real man. In his daily life, Thomas More loved to laugh. He enjoyed life
and every one of its gifts. Erasmus, the great Dutch humanist scholar and a
friend of More and his family, described More as a man of “amiable joyousness
[and] simple dress ... born and framed for friendship ... easy of access to
all,” uninterested in ceremony and riches, humble, indifferent to food,
unimpressed by opinions of the crowd and never departing from common sense.
Despite the integrity of More’s character, and despite his
faithful service, Henry VIII martyred him in 1535. More refused to accept the
Tudor king’s illicit marriage to Anne Boleyn, and he refused to repudiate his fidelity
to the Holy See. In 1935, the Church declared Thomas More a saint. Today — half
a millennium after he died and a continent away — this one man’s faith still
moves us. That’s the power of sainthood; that’s the power of holiness.
Here’s the lesson I want to leave you with: We’re all called
to martyrdom. That’s what the word martyr means: It’s the Greek word for “witness.”
We may or may not ever suffer personally for our love of Jesus Christ, but
we’re all called to be witnesses. In proclaiming the Year of Faith, Benedict
XVI wrote:
“By faith, across the centuries, men and women of all ages,
whose names are written in the Book of Life ... have confessed the beauty of
following the Lord Jesus wherever they were called to bear witness to the fact
that they were Christian: in the family, in the workplace, in public life, in
the exercise of the charisms and ministries to which they were called.”
The only thing that matters is to be a saint. That’s what we
need to be. That’s what we need to become. And if we can serve God through the witness
of our lives by kindling that fire of holiness again in the heart of Philadelphia,
then God will make all things new: in our Church, in our families and in our
nation.
Archbishop Charles
Chaput, OFM Cap., is the archbishop of Philadelphia .
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