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Lay Witness
Outcome-Based
Spirituality
by Leon Suprenant
What
difference does Jesus Christ make in your life? This is the
make-or-break question we all have to ask ourselves. If faith
in Jesus Christ were a crime, would there be enough evidence
in our lives to convict us?
There are many ways to explain how our Christian faith must
inform each and every aspect of our lives. Scott Hahn suggests
that our faith must even affect the way we brush our teeth!
One of Curtis Martin's favorite lines from his Campus Crusade
days is, "If Christ isn't Lord of all, He isn't
Lord at all." During the last presidential campaign,
George W. Bush identified Jesus Christ as his favorite philosopher
because "He makes all the difference." Perhaps another
way of putting it is, "If Christ doesn't make all
the difference, He doesn't make any difference."
He isn't a part-time or situational Savior, a spiritual "resource"
we call upon only when it seems expedient.
Sometimes we have to get back to basics and consider the Lordship
of Christ over our entire lives. Our happiness depends on
our turning to Christ, hearing and obeying Him in and through
His Church, and allowing His Holy Spirit to make us saints-and
not merely "nice" or successful people. This is
how we experience the "abundant life" (Jn. 10:10)
Our Lord in His goodness and mercy desires to give us.
Instructions Not Included?
We hear all the time about classroom sex education programs
designed to impart detailed, graphic information to our children
about AIDS, contraceptive devices, homosexuality, and related
topics. One of the justifications typically given for such
unspeakably offensive programs is that "information is
power."
Surely there is some truth to that statement. We do have access
to more information than ever before, and this empowers us
to accomplish much more than past generations. What's the
problem?
It can be said that access to a loaded gun or an Indy car
is power. Yet, more is needed. If we tried to use these things
without adequate training and maturity, we'd likely hurt ourselves
or others. Similarly, our televisions are now able to pick
up dozens of channels, but they don't come with instructions
as to what programs we should watch.
Today, while today we're long on information and power, we're
short on formation and wisdom. We know more than ever about
trees, but as a people we're less equipped than ever to navigate
through the forest. We desperately need a compass.
Archbishop Chaput wrote a remarkable book entitled Living
the Catholic Faith in which he emphasizes that Jesus is
"the way, the truth, and the life" (Jn. 14:6), and
not merely "the way, the facts, and the database."
The Lord Jesus teaches us to use the things of this world
wisely and equips us to do so through growth in virtue and
grace. More to the point, our life in Christ makes all the
difference, and without Him everything else is raw data.
Bringing Faith to Life
Shortly before ascending to His Father, Jesus instructed His
apostles: "All authority in heaven and on earth has been
given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have
commanded you" (Mt. 28:18-20).
One of the many striking features of this passage is Jesus
clearly did not come to establish the "First Baptist
Church of Galilee," but rather His purpose was much more
ambitious in scope: He came to gather all peoples and nations
into one universal (i.e., "catholic") Church. And
in this Church, everyone is called to discipleship,
to follow Christ unreservedly. Truly a great fruit of the
Second Vatican Council has been the renewed emphasis on the
legitimate role of the laity-our call to holiness, to evangelization,
and to ordering secular society in accordance with God's will.
That's a tall order, and in this issue of Lay Witness
we're examining what the Church is asking of us today.
The "one thing needful" (Lk. 10:42), the most important
thing, is to know (and love and serve) Jesus Christ. Therefore,
prayer and the sacraments must permeate all that we're about
and not simply be something on a "to do" list that
we check off. In my own married life, there are routine times
each day that Maureen and are together, and on occasion we'll
schedule in advance a special date. Yet I do our marriage
a terrible disservice if my only conversation with Maureen
occurs during these compartmentalized time slots. Similarly,
our discipleship must be reflected in a simple, ongoing lifting
up of our hearts to Him throughout each day.
Another thing that I find striking about Matthew 28 is that
we as disciples are called to observe all that the Lord has
commanded. Interestingly, He says we should observe all
the commandments. He doesn't say we should merely "learn"
the commandments or observe only those commandments that work
for us. Again, is He the Lord of our lives or not? How many
Church teachings can we reject and still claim to be faithful
disciples? Rather than choose to go our own way, we should
echo the words of Simon Peter: "To whom shall we go?
You have the words of everlasting life" (Jn. 6:68).
Leaping to Action
Like St. Matthew's Gospel, the Mass ends with a commissioning,
as we're sent to bring the light of Christ to all the world.
We're not supposed to keep our faith to ourselves or under
a bushel basket, but instead it is given so we can give it
away. Faith, without words, without actions, is dead (cf.
Jas. 2:17). Such a faith is not making "all the difference."
As Archbishop Chaput says, it's not an accident that the book
of the Bible is called "Acts of the Apostles" and
not "Pious Sentiments of the Apostles" or "Good
Intentions of the Apostles." Our faith impels us to act
for, as Popes Paul VI and John Paul II have stressed, the
Church by her nature is missionary.
I used the following riddle to teach three of my daughters
recently. Three frogs are sitting on a log. Two of them decide
to jump into the water. How many are left on the log? The
answer, of course, is three, because there's a huge difference
between deciding to jump and actually jumping. Good actions
come from good intentions, but are not their necessary consequence.
Sometimes my daughters will very sincerely tell me they'll
clean their room or be attentive at Mass, but something is
lost in the execution. At that point, I tell them to be "wet
frogs," and they finally begin to put their good intentions
into action.
Jesus warns all His disciples, both through parables and explicit
exhortations, that one doesn't dabble in Christianity. If
we're truly with Him and His Church, we must jump off the
log and bear witness to Him in word and action.
Self Control
One management principle that has a significant application
to the spiritual life is distinguishing outcomes (which
are out of our control) from behaviors (which we can
control). Let me explain. Each day at the CUF office we hear
about scandals and abuses of authority as well as tragic stories
of loved ones leaving the Church and many other heartwrenching
concerns. Any Catholic with a pulse would want to do something
about these problems, but what?
We can't make scandals go away. We can't make a bishop or
priest address a particular problem in the Church. We can't
make our loved ones return to the fullness of the Catholic
faith. These are all desirable outcomes which through our
cooperation with grace we can influence, and our Information
Services department (1-800-MY-FAITH) provides invaluable assistance
in this regard. But in the end, these outcomes are largely
outside our direct control. What we can control-and what has,
in the long run, the greatest salutary effect-is our own response
to the call to holiness. Saints are not as glamorous as gunslingers,
but even Our Lord's recommendation for the really tough situations
are prayer and fasting (cf. Mk. 9:28-29), two of the more
powerful weapons wielded by those who really want to be of
service to the Church.
Imagine there's a mishap on an airplane, and the craft begins
losing cabin pressure. In the face of such a calamity, most
of us would want to be courageous, to do the right thing and
help as many of our fellow passengers as possible. Yet, if
we don't use our own air mask first, in a matter of seconds
we'll be of no use to anybody. We would be among the first
casualties.
That's why as lay people, as Christians with the mission of
bringing the Gospel to the world, the principal outcome with
which we must be concerned is the continual transformation
of our own hearts, allowing Christ to make all the difference
in our lives. If we seek first the face of Christ and the
life of holiness, then we're equipped to be His agents in
a troubled world.
Click here to view
past issues.
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From Our Founder
How different the holy Church would be this very day if, years ago, we had
been filled with a spirit of humility and compunction, of patience and ready
obedience, with the spirit of the Publican, who stood afar off, not
venturing to raise his eyes to heaven, but only saying, “Lord, be merciful
to me, a sinner” (Lk. 18:13). Or if, like St. Paul, we had begun by saying,
from the bottom of our hearts, “Lord, what would you have me do?” Or if,
like St. Catherine of Siena, we had been able to cry: “Thanks be to Thee,
Eternal Father! . . . I was sick and you gave me . . . a medicine against a
secret infirmity that I knew not of, in this precept that in no way can I
judge any rational creature, and particularly Thy servants, upon whom oft
times I, as one blind and sick with this infirmity, passed judgment under
the pretext of Thy honor and the salvation of souls.”
H. Lyman Stebbins
March 1987
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