Saturday, October 5, 2013

Bulletin Column: Quotable popeables

HCSS Bulletin Column, 10/5-6/13.

Friends,
Last week, we received wonderful news: Bl. Pope John XXIII and Bl. Pope John Paul II will be canonized next year on April 27th, the Feast of Divine Mercy.  This news especially moved me, as that is the day after my anticipated ordination to the priesthood, the day on which I will preside for the first time at Mass.  In a particular way, this news renewed my eagerness to ask these two great Popes to keep me in their prayers as I prepare to serve the people of God as a priest.  Their gifts to the Church were (and continue to be) immeasurable, but each of them has contributed a quote that I often pray with and has proved a means by which the charity of Christ has urged me on to persevere in the Christian life and my ministry.

On his election as Supreme Pontiff, John XXIII had this to say to the crowds waiting in St. Peter’s Square: “The secret of everything is to let yourself be carried by God, and so carry others to Him.”  God carries us!  And the more I have stopped trying to row my own boat, the more peace I have found carried by God’s saving action as revealed in Jesus Christ.  That being carried is not a way of evading the rest of the world, though.  Lived fully, it is a beacon on a hill.  John XXIII has helped me make that my aim: to be so open about my dependence on God that others see that and fall in love not with me, but with Him.

The quote I have turned to time and again from John Paul II is from one of his social encyclicals (Sollicitudo Rei Socialis).  At one point in this document, he talks of his desire to spread the virtue of solidarity throughout the world, defining it thus: “a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good; that is to say the good of all and of each individual, because we are all really responsible for all.”  I can’t count the times when I’ve felt too tired to act on an impulse to help someone in need, when God has carried me to a place where I can be of service and I’ve wanted to rest elsewhere, on my own terms.  Many times, John Paul II’s words have rung in my ears, “we are all really responsible for all,” and through them God has overcome my sloth and drawn charity out of me.

Today is Respect Life Sunday.  What this Sunday should call from us is a deep practice of solidarity with each human person.  The greatest threats to life occur when we view an other not as neighbor but as nuisance, not as someone to be carried to God, but as an obstacle to be eliminated.  John Paul II coined the term “culture of death” (in his encyclical Evangelium Vitae) for the sad pattern we observe that “a life which would require greater acceptance, love, and care is considered useless... and is therefore rejected.”  God never rejects.  How can we make God’s acceptance, love and care present to a waiting world?


Deacon Adam Booth, C.S.C.

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