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Lay Witness
A MILLENNIUM
REFLECTION:
WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A CATHOLIC
Pastoral Letter to the Clergy, Religious
and Laity of the Church of Pittsburgh
Most Reverend Donald W. Wuerl, STD
Bishop of Pittsburgh
INTRODUCTION
This Christmas we initiate the
Great Jubilee of our salvation. Jubilee 2000 is not just the
turning of the calendar and the passing of another year, decade,
century and millennium. It is a celebration of God’s grace.
Two millennia ago in Bethlehem of Judea, heaven and earth
met. On the first Christmas day God came among us in the person
of Jesus Christ, Emmanuel, God with us. No event in our human
experience should affect us more since no one has so changed
history and our lives as has the infant son of Mary who is
also the Son of God. It is therefore a time to reflect on
our personal relationship with Jesus of Nazareth who is also
Christ, the Lord of history.
We profess, as did Peter whom
Jesus called to be the rock on which he would build his Church,
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the Living God. This
jubilee year we are challenged to reflect on what it means
to be a member of Christ’s Church – his one, holy, catholic
and apostolic Church. For this reason I write to ask that
we consider what it means to call ourselves members of the
Catholic Church – "Catholics."
What makes a person Catholic?
Is it because someone is baptized in a Catholic Church? Is
it enough occasionally to attend Mass? Is the norm being registered
in a parish? Can it be simply because a person identifies
himself or herself as Catholic? Or should we look at how the
Church herself identifies her members, invites them into her
sacramental life and calls them to accept and to proclaim
in word and deed the living gospel of Jesus Christ?
At every baptism of a new member
into the body of Christ the celebrant proclaims "This
is our faith. This is the faith of the Church. We are proud
to profess it, in Christ Jesus our Lord." At every confirmation
after listening to those to be confirmed and the entire congregation
renew their baptismal promises, I make the same proclamation.
Two realities are clearly present
in that simple refrain: "This is our faith. . . . We
are proud to profess it, in Christ Jesus our Lord." First
is the recognition that we accept the creed and make our own
the proclamation of faith in God the Father, the Creator of
heaven and earth, in Jesus Christ his Son our Lord and Savior,
in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life and in one,
holy, catholic and apostolic Church. All of these articles
are woven together and form the fabric of our faith as Catholics.
The second aspect of our proclamation is that we are proud
of our faith and ready to accept its challenge. We are prepared
to undertake the divinely mandated works of love, justice
and peace to realize God’s presence among us, fulfilling the
prayer that Jesus taught: "Thy kingdom come!"
Jesus did not hesitate to identify
himself with his Church. To the disciples, as he sent them
to preach in his name, he said: "He who hears you hears
me, and he who rejects you rejects me" (Lk. 10.16). To
those who did deeds of charity for his little ones he proclaimed:
"As you did it for one of the least of my brethren, you
did it to me" (Mt. 25.24). Of Saint Paul, who had been
vigorously persecuting the Church before his own conversion,
Christ asked: "Why do you persecute me? . . . I am Jesus,
whom you are persecuting" (Acts 9.4-5). At the Last Supper
he spoke of the intense unity that makes him one with those
who are united by faith and love to him. "I am the vine,
you are the branches" (Jn. 15.5). The vine and branches
are one living reality. So it is also with Christ and his
Church.
CHRIST OUR SAVIOR
Jesus is the one great mediator
between God and the human race. The scriptures tell us that
God created everything and how the culmination of this work
of divine love recorded in the Book of Genesis is found in
the creation of man and woman. In the image and likeness of
God, we are created. The same book of sacred scripture recounts
our fall from friendship with God through sin. While never
abandoned by God, we found ourselves in need of reconciliation
with God. We were a people awaiting a redeemer.
The story of the coming of Christ
is foretold in the prophets and alluded to in the law. The
old covenant prepared the way for the new. When the fullness
of time came, God sent his Son, Jesus Christ, the Eternal
Word who became flesh and dwelt among us so that we might
recognize God's presence with us and God might redeem us through
the blood of his Son.
Freely Jesus laid down his life
to save us and to make us adopted children. Saint Paul writes
so beautifully in his letter to the Galatians: "But when
the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son, born of a
woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under
the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons. And because
you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our
hearts, crying ‘Abba! Father!’ So through God you are no longer
a slave but a son, and if a son then an heir" (Gal. 4.4-7).
Jesus gave his life as a ransom for us. It is for this reason
that we recognize that Jesus is the sole mediator between
God and man. Redemption, salvation and sonship were won for
us by our one mediator, Jesus Christ, that we might call God
our Father in the midst of the Church.
THE CHURCH AS BODY OF CHRIST
The work of redemption did not
end when Jesus returned in glory to his Father but continues
until the last day. "Behold I am with you always, to
the end of time" (Mt. 28.20). The start of a new millennium
makes us all the more conscious of Jesus’ continuing presence
in the Church that he established so that his work might go
on, the work of bridging the gap between God and mankind.
Thus the Church takes on the characteristics of its divine
founder and Lord. The Church is his body; Christ is the head
and we are the members. Membership in the Church is then membership
in Christ drawing life and truth from him. As members of the
Church, his body, we come to know Christ, to become one with
him, and to attain our salvation through him. Only in and
through the Church can we find that continuity with the experience
and teaching of the Apostles that verifies and authenticates
our own personal faith. In and through the Church we come
to encounter the living Lord not just as an historical reality
but also as a living person present to us sacramentally as
Brother and Savior.
The work of Jesus continues to
be the work of his Church. From the beginning, the apostles
and their successors, as well as all of the Christian faithful,
recognized that the Church enjoyed attributes that in their
ultimate manifestation are applicable only to Christ. Hence,
we call the Church "holy." God is holy, Jesus as
God's Son is holy. The Church is holy because her founder
and the animating force of her life – Christ and the Holy
Spirit – are holy.
Just as salvation and grace come
to us through Jesus, so do they continue to reach us through
his Church. That is why Christ founded his Church. We are
not just related individually and directly to God but also
as God’s family united with Christ. It is in and through Christ
present and manifest in his Church that we come to God. The
mediatorship of Jesus continues in the visible, sacramental
Church that we identify as the one, holy, catholic and apostolic
communion of saints.
In this we differ with those
who accept personal faith alone as the means of salvation.
To be a Catholic is to recognize the role of the Church, not
as incidental or secondary to salvation, but as the very means
created and given to us by Jesus so that his work, accomplished
in his death and resurrection, might be re-presented in our
day and applied to us.
SAD BUT REAL DIVISIONS
For us, the Church is the way
to Christ. The Church is our teacher and the avenue to his
saving grace. Sometimes we hear it said, "It really doesn't
matter what Church you belong to. Basically, they are all
the same." Occasionally, someone will cite ecumenical
cooperation as proof that adherence to the faith of the Church
and membership in the Church are not really important. That
simply is not true.
Ecumenism is the work of people
of good faith trying to restore something that Christ fully
intends – the unity of his Church. But it also recognizes
that this unity has suffered as the result of human weakness
and division.
True ecumenism for us is based
on our understanding of who we are and what it means to be
Catholic. The struggle to achieve full communion among all
who claim Christ as Lord places us face to face with issues
that divide us. They challenge us to reflect on them in a
way that recognizes the need for God's grace to accomplish
the healing of that wound which we in our limitations and
our sin have inflicted upon the unity of the body of Christ.
Today more than ever we need
to be in active dialogue with our brothers and sisters of
many different Christian faith traditions, to work with them
to build a better community. Since we share so much in common
and profess so much of the creed together, we should feel
confident enough about our own faith to be able to work and
pray with those who do not believe as we do. The Catholic
Church has many identifying qualities that we believe were
instituted by Christ when he established the Church. We need
to recognize them, be comfortable with them and be able to
explain them.
CHRIST PRESENT THROUGH THE SACRAMENTS
One of the reasons for the profound
allegiance and deep love that a Catholic has for the Church
is the recognition that the ecclesial community is more than
just a gathering of like-minded people. It is a divine and
human reality instituted by Christ to lead us to God. The
Church is the instrument that makes available to us the saving
grace won for us by Christ as he hung on the cross, died and
then gloriously rose from the dead as our savior.
The sacraments are one of the
most visible aspects of the Catholic Church. At every stage
of our lives the Church offers us an encounter with Christ
in a way that signifies and, at the same time, realizes the
personal contact with the Lord. As the Church herself matured,
she has come to reserve the word "sacrament" for
the seven graced actions instituted by Christ to accomplish
his new life-giving activity. Yet all are expressions of what
the Second Vatican Council calls "the sacrament"
-- the Church.
To understand what a sacrament
is, we need to recognize what a symbol is and the various
ways in which it can be used. Symbols and signs stand for
something not present. They point the way. A wedding ring,
for example, is a sign of marital love but it is not the love
itself. A lighted candle in church may indicate personal devotion
but it is not the devotion itself. A box of chocolates at
Mother’s Day may be a symbol of a child’s love for his or
her parent but it is not the love itself. Symbols serve a
purpose. They speak to us of something beyond the symbol itself.
A sacrament is a very special
kind of symbol or sign. What is unique about a sacrament is
that it not only points to what is beyond it but also actually
realizes what it symbolizes. In the sacrament of baptism,
for example, the water symbolizes the washing away of sin
and the restoration of new life, the dying with Christ and
rising to share in his resurrection. At the same time, it
also begins to accomplish what it expresses. Because sacraments
actually accomplish what they symbolize, they are unique signs.
Because they put us in contact with God in a way that God’s
grace touches us, they are holy signs.
The great sacrament, the Church,
is the home of the seven sacraments that continue visibly
to manifest and effect the saving work of Christ in the lives
of the faithful. The Church confirms that there are seven
sacraments instituted by our Lord Jesus Christ: baptism, confirmation,
Holy Eucharist, penance, the anointing of the sick, holy orders
and matrimony. In the sacraments the spiritual realm of Christ's
eternal kingdom intersects with our world and each of us.
The spiritual touches the material. The eternal intersects
with the temporal. The transcendent crosses paths with the
immanent.
BAPTISM
In baptism through the outpouring of water,
all sin – original and personal – is washed away. As the water
is poured over the person, the reality it symbolizes is actually
effected – it really comes to be. This is what makes a sacrament
unique. The divine power of God intersects with our human
condition at the moment when this visible, sensible activity
takes place as a vehicle of grace. Thus, a child or an adult
who is baptized is cleansed of whatever would separate them
from Christ. At the same time, the gift of new life transforms
the person in a way that we can claim to be children of God
who live now a life of grace.
CONFIRMATION
The second sacrament of initiation, confirmation,
continues the work of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. In
this sacrament we receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit in
a manner that empowers us to live out our Christian commitment.
In the Latin Church, the sacrament of confirmation has been
separated from the sacrament of baptism to allow for an extended
period of catechesis so that the individual receives intellectual
preparation and spiritual formation into Christian living
that is strengthened at an appropriate moment by the outpouring
of the gifts of the Holy Spirit that call us to be true witnesses
of the faith.
EUCHARIST
In the sacrament of the Eucharist, the very
death and resurrection of Christ are re-presented for us in
a way that allows us to enter the mystery of salvation. It
is for this reason that the sacrament is said to "re-present"
the paschal mystery. It is the faith of the Church that every
time the Eucharist is celebrated and the priest consecrates
the bread and wine making them the body and blood of Christ,
the holy sacrifice of Christ's death on the cross and his
resurrection to new life are re-presented for us – sacramentally
but truly in a way that we participate now in this sacred
action.
"I am the bread of life . . . I myself
am the living bread come down from heaven. If anyone eats
this bread he shall live forever; the bread I will give is
my flesh, for the life of the world" (Jn. 6.48-51). What
Jesus promised in his ministry was fulfilled at the Last Supper
the night before he died. "Taking bread and giving thanks
he broke it and gave it to them saying: ‘This is my body,
which will be given up for you. Do this in remembrance of
me . . . This cup is the new covenant in my blood, which will
be shed for you’" (Lk. 22.19-20).
To be a Catholic is to recognize
and accept this extraordinary mystery of redemption and to
realize our part in it. To receive Holy Communion is to manifest
one’s unity with the Church’s faith and solidarity with her
hierarchical structure. We approach the table of the Lord,
the altar of sacrifice, with a lively adherence to the mystery
unfolding around us and within us. Holy Communion is a sign
that we are one with Christ and his Church precisely as the
Church defines herself.
Our inability to share Communion
with those who are not Catholic – to take it from other tables
or to welcome others to our altars – is the sad result of
the present disunity of the Christian people. It is the honest
admission of a reality that, like a family’s dysfunction,
is not resolved by being denied. We recognize that all authentic
ecumenism is based on the truth that to receive Communion
is to profess one's belief and acceptance in what Communion
signifies – our participation in the Church's re-presentation
of the paschal mystery. It proclaims our faith in Christ’s
real presence and our acceptance of the sacramental ordering
of the Church through holy orders and apostolic succession.
The sad consequence of the divisions
that continue to plague those who profess faith in Jesus Christ
are real. We do not all share the same full faith. We do not
all accept the same realities. We do not even agree on the
number and meaning of the seven sacraments. Therefore, we
cannot make a public profession that we are one by receiving
Communion together.
SACRAMENTS OF HEALING
In the sacrament of reconciliation, our sins
are absolved. The priest, functioning in the person of Christ,
forgives sins in the name of and with the power of Christ.
In the anointing of the sick, it is Christ in the action of
the priest who heals and forgives. The Church believes and
confesses that among the seven sacraments one is especially
intended to strengthen those who are being tried by illness,
the anointing of the sick.
MARRIAGE
In the sacrament of marriage
we find the power of God at work in another way. What has
been a part of God's plan from the beginning – the union of
a couple in a covenant for lifelong support and procreation
of children – has been raised by Christ to the level of a
sacrament. The love that brings a woman and man together becomes
a channel of grace. The marriage bond that they form in the
exchange of vows becomes an instrument of God's salvific action
among us.
Marriage is viewed by the Church
as a sacrament at the service of the whole Church – the communion
of believers. Not only does the individual who receives the
sacrament together with his or her spouse benefit from this
outpouring of grace, but so too does the new reality they
create – a family – and through that family the community
and the Church.
HOLY ORDERS
Holy Orders are described in the Catechism
of the Catholic Church as the sacrament through which
the mission entrusted by Christ to his apostles continues
to be exercised in the Church until the end of time: thus
it is the sacrament of apostolic ministry. It includes three
degrees: episcopate, presbyterate and diaconate (1536). Catholic
doctrine, expressed in the liturgy, the Magisterium and the
constant practice of the Church, recognizes that there are
two degrees of ministerial participation in the priesthood
of Christ: the episcopacy and the presbyterate. The diaconate
is intended to help and serve them.
Given the importance of the ministerial
priesthood and the role it plays in the life of the Church,
I want to reflect on it with you specifically in the context
of this letter which focuses on our Catholic identity.
I WILL GIVE YOU SHEPHERDS AFTER MY OWN HEART
The priesthood is one of the
most visible elements of the Catholic Church. To be a Catholic
is to recognize the role of the priest as the anointed representative
of Christ in the midst of the Catholic faithful. To speak
of priesthood is to recognize as well the unique significance
of the Eucharist in the Church. Priesthood and the Eucharist
are intrinsically related. You cannot have one without the
other. On the first Holy Thursday on which he instituted the
sacrament of the Eucharist, Christ conferred priesthood on
the apostles: "Do this in remembrance of me."
The Catholic priesthood has a
unique identity that sets it apart from other forms of ministry.
To understand this distinct role, we must examine the two
sacraments that have among their many effects the power to
differentiate from others the person who receives the sacrament.
In the sacrament of baptism a
person is set apart from the world and becomes a member of
Christ's Church. As such the person shares in the mission
of the Church and is identified as a part of God's priestly
people. The first letter of Peter speaks of the baptized faithful
as "a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation,
God's own people" (1 Pet. 2.9).
The sacrament of orders differentiates
a member of the community to participate in Christ's mission
in a unique way; it makes the recipient an authentic, authoritative
representative of Christ as head of the Church. The priesthood
of the ordained is different and distinct from the common
priesthood of the faithful, which is conferred by baptism.
In explaining how the priest
can function as Christ, the Second Vatican Council's "Decree
on the Life and Ministry of Priests" speaks of the priesthood
as an identification with Christ on the most fundamental level.
In their reception of holy orders priests are "consecrated
to God in a new way" and become "living instruments
of Christ the eternal priest," so that they may be able
to "carry on through the ages his wonderful work, which
has with heavenly power reunited the whole society of men"
(12).
For a Catholic the office of
priesthood is esteemed because the priest is ordained to become
"another Christ" in the midst of God's people. The
priest's willingness to set aside everything else, including
marriage and a family of his own, is testimony to the importance
Catholics attach to the priesthood. Instituted by Christ to
continue his presence and work in the world, the sacrament
of holy orders remains a visible and powerful identification
marker for the Catholic Church in its capacity to make Christ
present in our lives.
This is the plan of God unfolding
in Christ. Priesthood is not an afterthought of the Christian
community but rather a response to the explicit will of Christ.
Because of this conviction the Church teaches that holy orders
do not take their origin from the community, as though it
were the community that "called" or "delegated."
The sacramental priesthood is truly a gift for this community
that comes from Christ himself from the very fullness of his
own priesthood.
Even when we recognize that an
individual priest may not live out fully his commitment and
can, like all of us, "fall from grace" we also realize
that Christ continues to work through his chosen, if imperfect,
instrument. Saint Paul speaks of bearing our treasures in
earthen vessels. (2 Cor. 4.7)
Our oneness with Jesus in the
Eucharistic liturgy is not the fruit of the preaching ability
of the priest, his graceful liturgical style or even his personal
holiness of life. All of these elements are important and
enrich the experience of the liturgy, but what takes place
on the altar is the action of Christ saving each one of us,
including the priest. We ask "Father" for absolution
in confession, for a blessing or for communion at Mass not
because he is the source of forgiveness, blessing or grace
but because he is the instrument through which Christ works.
The sacrament of holy orders
clearly underlines the hierarchical structure and unity of
the Catholic Church. The Church universal is found manifest
in dioceses all over the world. Bishops are to the local Church
– the diocesan Church – what the apostles were to the apostolic
Church. A bishop is selected by a process that involves the
Holy Spirit. As he teaches in communion with the pope and
bishops throughout the world he proclaims the true faith and
applies that teaching with authority – an authority not his
own but of the whole Church.
HE WHO HEARS YOU HEARS ME
Christ remains the teacher of
his people. He continues to free us from the despair of ignorance
and doubt, from the frightening fear that perhaps nothing
makes sense at all. "For this I was born, and for this
I have come into the world, to bear witness to the truth"
(Jn. 18.37).
Jesus continues to teach through
those whom he sends. During his lifetime he sent his disciples
to "every town and place where he himself was about to
come" (Lk. 10.1) to preach the word. When his days in
the flesh were completed, he sent the apostles forth in the
hour of his ascension, after which he would no longer be visible
to people in his humanity; he said that he would be with them
always in their teaching (cf. Mt. 28.20). When the apostles
"went forth and preached everywhere," Christ "worked
with them and confirmed the message by the signs that attended
it" (Mk. 16.20). Anyone who did not accept the word of
those he sent would be rejecting not mere people, but Christ
himself, whereas acceptance of their word would be acceptance
of Christ (cf. Lk. 10.16).
Of all the things then that identify
a Catholic, one of the most significant is the role of the
magisterium or teaching office of the Church and the spiritual
power of the Church in the person of the pope and the bishops
who teach with Christ’s authority to bind conscience.
How often do we hear people outside
and sometimes even inside the Church say, "Why should
I follow the teaching of the pope and the bishops when I have
my conscience to guide me?" Or more truculently, "Why
should the Church tell me what to do?"
Why? Because Christ did not leave
us as orphans. Once he returned to his Father it would be
up to those he had chosen and anointed in the Holy Spirit
to continue to teach everything that he had made known to
them and to proclaim it to the ends of the earth. As Christ
gathered a people to be his Church, so the apostles were to
continue the mission of bringing all men and women into this
one family. By Jesus’ will the apostles would speak in his
name and with his authority when they taught on matters of
faith and morals.
How else would Christ’s words,
their meaning and their application be passed on generation
after generation, century after century, once he was no longer
with us in the flesh, if there were not those who could articulate
his will with the assurance that they were guided by his Holy
Spirit?
Christ committed to the apostles
the task of preaching his word in his name, that is, authentically
– with his authority. He assured them of the assistance of
the Spirit who would guide them in speaking the truth (cf.
Jn. 14.16,26). He commanded them to teach his word to all
nations, binding the hearers to believing their words as the
words of God and he promised to be with them until the end
of time (cf. Mt. 28.20).
OUR HOLY FATHER
The most visible member of the
Church is its leader, Pope John Paul II, Bishop of Rome and
Universal Pastor of the Church. As successor to Saint Peter
and Vicar of Christ, the pope holds a unique place among the
bishops as their head. We have become familiar with the Pope’s
extraordinary efforts to be present to his flock – through
his worldwide travels and numerous letters, encyclicals and
apostolic exhortations by which he exercises his special teaching
ministry.
At every Mass we pray by name
for two people: our Holy Father, the pope, and the bishop
of the diocese. This is a reminder that we are all part of
one Church – one faith community. The shepherd of the universal
Church is the pope and the shepherd of a portion of that Church
called the diocese is the local bishop. Our prayers are both
a spiritual act of support for their ministry and a testimony
to our unity in faith.
LIVING DOCTRINE
The Church, however, does not hand on doctrine
in a static way. Ours is a living faith. While there is a
deposit of faith – a core of teaching that the Church and
specifically the bishops are charged to preserve and maintain
– there is also the obligation, under the guidance of the
Holy Spirit and with prayer and study, to arrive at a greater
understanding of the divine word and its application in each
age of grace.
Theologians and scholars help the Church to
grow in the full understanding and appreciation of truth.
They provide the Church with appropriate assistance in understanding
divine revelation which the Church’s bishops, its official
teachers, the successors of the apostles, impart with that
"sure gift of truth" (DV 8) which the apostolic
witnesses of faith receive.
INDEFECTIBILITY
Jesus guaranteed that his Church would not fall
into doctrinal error. The technical word for this gift is
indefectibility. God remains with his Church. The Holy Spirit
guides the bishops. Whatever they would proclaim with the
full force of their office and bind in conscience would not
be false teaching. The Church would never defect from the
revelation given us in Jesus Christ.
INFALLIBILITY
The gift of infallibility is for the whole Church.
The pope and bishops teach infallibly when they proclaim a
matter of faith or morals to be definitively held. The magisterium
(teaching office) may teach infallibly on any element in the
deposit of divine revelation which Christ has entrusted to
his Church. Theologians generally point out that infallibility
also extends to other truths not actually contained in revelation
but intimately associated with God's divine revelation. The
pope, as head of the Church, can exercise the infallible teaching
office in his own name.
Often forgotten is the infallibility in believing,
the unerring faith of the Church that is a gift of the Holy
Spirit who dwells in all of the faithful. This gift enlightens
the eyes of faith to recognize and obediently acknowledge
as certain and entirely reliable the word that God causes
to be spoken definitively in his Church. The two aspects of
infallibility, that of believing and that of teaching, are
intimately related.
WE HAVE COME TO BELIEVE THAT YOU HAVE
THE WORDS OF EVERLASTING LIFE
Obviously this letter does not address everything
there is to say about the Catholic Church and our Catholic
faith. An enormously rich resource for anyone wishing to know
more about the faith is the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
This complete and authentic compendium of the faith is
published with the authority of our Holy Father, Pope John
Paul II.
Another catechism you might find helpful when
teaching the faith to those who wish to explore more deeply
the teachings of the Church is The Teaching of Christ:
A Catholic Catechism for Adults. I had the privilege of
collaborating with others in composing this work which is
now cross-referenced with the Catechism of the Catholic
Church. For nearly twenty-five years, it has provided
a well documented, comprehensive presentation of Catholic
teaching rooted in sacred scripture and the teaching of the
Second Vatican Council.
We are all aware that there are a number of
Catholics who do not follow the teaching of the Church. This
is a cause of serious concern. At the same time we recognize
that many of us are struggling to adhere faithfully to the
teaching of Christ. Failure and sin are sad realities. Would
that we could all perfectly live out our Christian commitment
at all times. The call to conversion is a call we hear and
need to respond to every day.
Far more alarming is the announcement by a number
of people who claim to be Catholic that they do not accept
some of the Church’s teaching. There is a substantial distinction
between failure to live up to the teaching and outright rejection
of it. It is this latter area that we need to address.
At the heart of the issue is the authority of
the teaching office in the Church (the pope and bishops) to
bind in conscience when it comes to matters of faith and morals.
Unlike many other Christian faith communities, the Catholic
Church recognizes that Christ has empowered the apostles and
their successors to sustain the Church in the truth that Jesus
reveals to us. We are not as individuals free to interpret
God’s word according to our own understanding but rather we
are first God’s family, all members of a community, that strives
to walk according to God’s word as it is passed on and applied
to daily situations century after century within the context
of the Church. It is the teaching office in the Church that
provides each one of us continuity with the apostles and authenticates
the teaching that all of us claim is the way to salvation.
SECULAR CHALLENGE
Our culture is aggressively secular and is often
an environment hostile to Christian faith. In examining our
societal context today we can begin with the fact that the
social mores, particularly in large urban centers and reflected
in the means of social communications that reach the entire
country, are largely focused on the material world. Today
commentators often speak of a generation that has lost its
moral compass.
At the same time we see the disintegration of
the community and social structures that once supported religious
faith and encouraged family life. The heavy emphasis on the
individual and his or her rights has greatly eroded the concept
of the common good and its ability to call people to something
beyond themselves. When the individual is the starting point,
there is little tolerance for others as good in themselves.
They tend to be seen only insofar as they are "good for
me." We see this in society and in the law, for example,
when even another’s right to life falls victim to "my
right to privacy." This "mindset" impacts strongly
on the capacity of some to accept a teaching that is revealed
by God and not decided by democratic vote or to accept an
absolute moral imperative despite its inconvenience or unpopularity.
Sometimes the damage to faith is done more by
undermining it than by direct assault. Too often the case
is made that every opinion whether informed or not is as good
as any other. We are told that what really counts is freedom
of choice rather than what is chosen. It is asserted that
religious faith is so personal as to admit of no ecclesial
guidance let alone the expectation that faith could impact
our collective lives – society. In a word faith, religion
and religious conviction are marginalized by their reduction
to personal preference much as one chooses a long-distance
phone service or credit card – without any serious consequence
and subject to change as desired.
Our proclamation of the good news of Jesus Christ
and the teaching of his Church is met by "the American
mindset" that is more individual than communal, more
competitive than cooperative, and more self-serving than self-giving.
It is no wonder that some of our faithful feel uncomfortable
with a Church that identifies herself as a community that
comes from Christ and preexists the decision of its individual
members to bring it into being, a Church whose teaching binds
consciences and a Church that requires its members to form
community in order to praise God, and challenges them as readily
as it comforts them.
GUIDANCE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
When we reflect on the Church as God’s gift
to us to ensure Christ’s continuing presence in and through
us and when we reflect on the powerful gift of the Holy Spirit
to see that it is truly God’s way, not ours, that we follow
as we make our way through life, we realize that to be a Catholic
means to live in a specific way. God’s law is not a matter
of personal interpretation. It is rooted in our human nature,
confirmed in Christ’s revelation and articulated in the Church
which enjoys the guarantee of the Holy Spirit. For this reason
we look to the teaching office of the Church (magisterium)
for sure guidance in areas where we could easily be misled.
Hence we recognize the Church’s right, obligation, duty and
privilege of teaching with the authority of Christ on issues
as current as abortion, physician assisted suicide, racism,
human sexuality, genetic engineering, capital punishment,
the equitable distribution of the goods of the earth and our
obligations to the needy.
The teaching of Christ finds application today
in ways that involve the Catholic personally and in an organized
manner. Catholic healthcare institutions follow the ethical
and religious directives of the Church. Catholic cemeteries
care for the dead in anticipation of the resurrection. Catholic
Charities minister to all people in need. Catholic Relief
Services reaches beyond the borders of our nation to extend
the bounty of God’s goodness to us to suffering people in
every continent. Catholic educational institutions from kindergarten
through graduate school help us integrate the gospel into
our lives. All are expressions of what our Holy Father calls
solidarity.
THOUGHTS, WORDS AND DEEDS
Actions speak louder than words.
Even as youngsters we knew that we would very often be judged
by what we actually did rather than what we said we would
do. In the gospel Jesus raises the question about who really
did the will of the Father, the one who said he would and
did not or the one who said he would not and did (cf. Mt.
21.28-32). It is the person who does the will of God who will
be recognized as God’s follower. Catholic faith requires action
– deeds that conform to God’s will. It is not enough to say,
"I am a Catholic." Our actions must show our identity.
Just as there is a connection
between what we say and what we do, so there is a connection
between what we think and what we do. In his Sermon on the
Mount Jesus made it very clear that our attitudes and innermost
thoughts can be every bit as compromising of our spiritual
life as the things we do. This should not be surprising since,
as Christians, we are convinced that the real transformation
taking place within us is through the power of the Holy Spirit
and not just external to us in what we do.
By the grace of God we have been
freed from sin and have become a dwelling of the Holy Spirit.
It is that Spirit who urges us from within to take the actions
we do. This is all the more reason why there should be a conformity
between our innermost dispositions and what we actually do.
It was Jesus who pointed out to the disciples that it is not
what goes into a person – the following of the ritual rules
for eating – but what comes out of his or her heart that defiles
a person (cf. Mt. 15.11).
When we commit ourselves to Christ,
we give him our heart. We place ourselves in his hands and
ask the Lord to mold us and our desires, our vision, our mentality.
Our prayer is that we put on Christ -- that we have the attitude
of Christ (cf. Phil. 2.5). The ancient Latin maxim "sentire
cum Ecclesia" reflects what must be the attitude
of a Catholic – "to think with the Church."
Perhaps nowhere is Catholic identity
more realized than in the faith-filled acceptance of the Church’s
moral teaching as we make our way through this world. Life
is ultimately a pilgrimage to the Father. The length of our
individual pilgrimage varies but the goal is the same for
all of us – union with the Father. It is for this reason that
the Church offers us sure guidance that we can with confidence
accept.
MORAL ISSUES
We should not be surprised if
in our highly secular and materialistic culture other realities
are offered as the answer to the longings of the human heart.
Sometimes the good and the bad get so mixed together that
we need the guiding light of Christ’s wisdom to see our way.
God’s wisdom is echoed in the teaching of the Church.
"Is living together wrong
if the couple intend to get married?" "Why can’t
I have an abortion if this pregnancy is so inconvenient to
me and my future plans?" "Why should I not cheat
when everyone else does?" "What is wrong with telling
a lie if it helps me get ahead?" The answers to all these
and many similar questions come either from our faith or the
culture around us which looks elsewhere for its inspiration.
A Catholic recognizes that millennia of reflection on the
human condition under the guidance of the Holy Spirit allows
the Church to offer us sound and sure answers to life’s questions.
These answers may not always be popular but they are true.
They do lead us to God.
At the heart of a Catholic’s
response to the moral guidance of the Church is the faith
conviction that Jesus has not abandoned us to whatever current
of political correctness blows across society on any given
day. We live in the assurance that Jesus cares for us and
walks with us in the Church, our Mother and Teacher. We know
that our own personal response to the demanding moral issues
of our day can be too easily swayed by our own prejudices.
In searching for sure footing on our pilgrimage through life
we come to realize that, as Jesus told us, the voice of the
Church is Christ’s call to us.
There will always be as there
has been in the past a clash, a tension, between the way of
living that Christ offers us and the culture of any given
moment. In the recesses of every human heart there still lives
the unredeemed qualities of selfishness that are prepared
to reject Jesus, his way, his gospel and his vision of life.
A Catholic by definition is one who accepts Christ’s kingdom
and his way. We proclaim Jesus to be the way, the truth and
the light. While we may not always live up fully to each of
Christ’s challenges, we never want to be in the position of
rejecting the truth of what he says. To fail to measure up
to the truth is one thing, to reject the truth is entirely
another.
PRECEPTS OF THE CHURCH
Because the Catholic Church is
a distinct reality established by Christ as the means of salvation
for God’s people, there are precepts or laws that direct our
actions to ensure that we benefit as fully as possible from
God’s grace. The Catechism of the Catholic Church tells
us that the precepts of the Church are set in the context
of a moral life bound to and nourished by liturgical life.
"The obligatory character of these positive laws decreed
by the pastoral authorities is meant to guarantee to the faithful
the indispensable minimum in the spirit of prayer and moral
effort, in the growth in love of God and neighbor" (2041).
We find the list of precepts
of the Church in the Catechism (2042-2043). These laws
of the Church remind us that we are to attend Mass on Sundays
and holydays of obligation, confess our sins at least once
a year, receive Holy Communion at least during the Easter
season, observe the prescribed days of fast and abstinence
and provide for the material needs of the Church according
to our abilities.
ACTIVE MEMBERSHIP IN THE CHURCH
Every Catholic is called to be
an active member of the Church. This involves us as missionaries
and evangelists. We are challenged to live out our faith where
we work, live, recreate – among people with whom we come into
contact regularly or even on a casual basis. Our personal
faith is supposed to be a leaven that changes society, making
it more clearly a world of peace, justice, truth, kindness
and love. We do this not just as individuals but as members
of Christ’s family in the active process that our Holy Father
calls the "new evangelization."
Each one of us knows someone,
perhaps many, who have simply drifted away from the practice
of the faith. They might be members of our family, friends,
neighbors, co-workers, people we regularly meet and deal with
in all types of situations. To be a Catholic is to share the
joy of our faith with them by inviting them once again to
reconnect with their Church and with the life-giving sacraments.
What a wonderful goal we could
set for ourselves as we celebrate the Great Jubilee and enter
the next millennium – to invite back, beginning perhaps with
those closest to us, anyone who may have drifted away from
the faith. It is difficult to think of a greater Jubilee activity
for ourselves and gift for another than to ask someone who
should be an active member of our faith family to come back
to their spiritual home.
MARY, MOTHER OF JESUS, MOTHER OF GOD
One of the most ancient and wide
spread devotions in the life of the Church is prayer to Mary.
Why has there always been great love among the followers of
Jesus for his mother, Mary? Why from the very beginning of
Christianity has there been such deep devotion for Mary, the
mother of our Lord? Everywhere Christianity spread there are
signs of profound veneration of the mother of Jesus: chapels
and churches bearing Mary's name, prayers in which Mary's
name is invoked and generations of children bearing the name
Mary or some form of it. Devotion to Mary is a hallmark of
Catholic faith.
Mary is the model of what our
faith should be. Like us, Mary was a human being who had to
struggle to hear and accept God's word and to grasp the mysterious
ways in which God works. She did so with such consummate fidelity
that she is forever the example of what we mean by faith –
true, profound faith.
While we cannot equal Mary in
the wondrous mysteries in which she participated and in the
privileges she received, we can certainly emulate her faith
that says, although God's ways are mysterious and I do not
always understand the unfolding of God's plan and God's providential
order, nonetheless, if God calls I accept. If God challenges,
I respond. My faith and yours – the faith of believers – is
challenged to be the faith of Mary. She is the supreme model
of what it means to believe.
If we examine some of the titles
of Mary, we will discover that they are intimately connected
with the fact that as the mother of Jesus she is also at the
same time the Mother of God. These are her primary titles.
Since Jesus is truly God and truly man and Mary gave birth
to him, she gave birth to the person who combines the human
nature and the divine nature in one person. Hence the Church
does not hesitate to call Mary the Theotokos or "the
bearer of God."
When we turn to Mary as the mother
of Jesus, the Mother of God and our mother we do so in prayer.
We ask her to intercede for us with her divine Son. It is
to her that we bring our cares and sorrows, our hopes and
aspirations in the hope that she will bring them to her divine
child.
It is to our Blessed Mother that
we commend our efforts as we begin the Great Jubilee confident
that in her loving care she will stand with us as we petition
her divine Son for the grace to realize in our lives and in
the Church of Pittsburgh a vigorous and faithful realization
of his kingdom.
THY KINGDOM COME
Each bishop by tradition chooses
a motto to reflect the work of his episcopal ministry. When
I was appointed a bishop in 1985, I selected the words from
the Lord’s prayer, "Thy kingdom come," because they
seem to me to sum up the motivation for everything we do and
our longing to see it completed.
When we pray "Thy kingdom
come," we ask primarily for the complete fulfillment
of God’s plan when Christ comes again. But we also pray that
his kingdom may be made present now as richly as possible
in righteousness, peace and joy. "Thy kingdom come"
is the cry of every believer. It manifests the longing of
the whole Church and each one of us individually for Jesus.
The New Testament closes with this same longing, "Maranatha"
– Come Lord Jesus (Rev. 22.20).
In God’s plan, the fulfillment
of the work of Jesus and the completion of his kingdom have
been turned over to us – the faithful – his Church. Saint
Paul speaks of "completing what is lacking in the suffering
of Christ," (Col. 1.24) and "building up the body
of Christ" (Eph. 4.12). These texts refer to the potential
each of us has to manifest and participate in establishing
God’s kingdom of peace, justice, truth and love. As Catholics
we recognize that we stand firmly planted in this world yet
already reaching into the world to come to help make it more
manifest now. The fullness will only come in glory but the
signs of Christ’s love, his kingdom of peace and justice and
our brotherhood and sisterhood are already present here and
now.
We live not totally immersed
in this world. Our citizenship is elsewhere as Saint Paul
reminds us (cf. Phil. 3.20). It is in heaven. Part of our
perspective – the perspective of the Catholic Church – is
to try to see all things in the light of eternity. "What
does it profit a person if he gained the whole world and suffer
the loss of his soul?" How important is the individual
action I am about to take in the light of God’s law, Christ’s
love, and my hope of everlasting life?
A Catholic walks in the awareness
that we have here no lasting city. What we do to make this
a good and just society contributes to the manifestation of
God’s kingdom that will only come in the fullness of time.
Each of us with full heart can make our own the Lord’s Prayer
taught to us when the disciples asked him to teach us how
to pray: "Thy kingdom come!"
CONCLUSION
A Catholic is a follower of Christ.
The Catholic Church is made up of those who have placed their
faith in Christ – a deep personal faith that Jesus is the
living Lord of history and our Savior. A faithful Catholic
is one who has also recognized that Christ continues to live
in his new body the Church of which each of us is a part.
This is the reason for our loyalty to the Church even in difficult
and stressful times. A Catholic is one who recognizes Christ
in his Church as she teaches Jesus’ way to salvation.
It is with both hope and gratitude
that we claim the name Catholic. Our hope is that we can live
up to the wondrous challenge that Jesus places before us when
he calls us to intimate friendship with himself. Our gratitude
is for the grace that Jesus so freely bestows on each of us
to remain faithful to the call.
May the beginning of the new
millennium be for all of us a time of fervent hope and generous
love as we proudly renew our faith – the faith of the Church.
Faithfully in Christ,
Donald W. Wuerl
Bishop of Pittsburgh
December 8, 1999
Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Principal Patroness of the Diocese of Pittsburgh
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