I imagine there has always been a serious
discernment issue concerning the role of us Christians in secular matters,
especially in the world of politics. In
everything we must be centered in Christ, who is the Author and the One Who
completes our faith, and we must not be trapped into focusing on power,
position, and prestige or looking to any political leader as a savior or
messiah in place of Christ. Only JESUS
CHRIST is our Savior. I have been reminded
that “salvation is through the Church” and not through politics. However, I
think that there is a difference between the role of the institutional
Church/hierarchy/clergy and our personal salvation and the role of the laity
within the Church called to act as a bridge between the Church and the secular
world not only to evangelize and help bring people to Christ and the Church but
also to do our part in impacting the world and seeking to right what is wrong,
especially in a nation like America where the government is “of the people, by
the people and for the people” and where citizens have the power to make a
difference.
The role of the institutional Church/hierarchy/clergy is to send missionaries into the mission field and to "equip the
saints" by providing us with teaching on the Church's perspective of what
is going on in the world, by facilitating our understanding of the Scriptures,
by presiding at Mass, giving us the Eucharist, hearing
our confessions and providing counsel when and where needed, and administering the
other sacraments. The pope and the bishops publicly declare the Church's
position on the issues.
We as Catholic Christian lay people are thus
equipped to go out into the world in our various professions and live the
Gospel and make a positive impact on the world.
I believe that it is essential that we Catholics
go to Mass, receive the sacraments, get married* and *lovingly and faithfully raise
children (*if we are called to marriage—some people, like myself, have been
called into the single vocation), fulfill the duties of our specific jobs, and take
care of our parents. Although it is very important to do all these things
well first and foremost, I do not believe that our role as lay people necessarily
ends in our homes, our schools, our workplaces, and our parishes. I believe that we are called to do more for
our country and for the world than to wait in our homes while people in the
world who have not come to Christ or nominal Christians who are not living
according to Gospel values continue to make the world worse and worse and we
all die and go to heaven while those whom "the Church" has not reached
goes to hell and the rest of the world goes to hell in a hand basket! If we are true Christians, the Gospel should
permeate every aspect of our lives, and as Christian lay people we are called
to permeate the various walks of life and the social and political climate of
our times with the values of the Gospel that we have heard and believed and
that are nurtured by worship, Word, and sacraments in the institutional Church.
We need the Church, of course! But we also
need to BE the Church and to pervade the world with the Gospel in every area of
life! Politics is one of many areas. The Church can teach us that
abortion is wrong, and Church organizations can minister to women in crisis
pregnancies and their babies.
But the Church doesn't change the laws--we need
people in government to change the laws. It is for the Christian
politician to end the funding of Planned Parenthood, to make laws restricting
and hopefully ending abortion, to discern how best to exercise compassion and
social justice to those who are poor and marginalized, and to discern how to
deal with the scourge of terrorism. The pope can tell a president,
"don't go to war", but it is the president who has to decide how to
protect our country from potential acts of terrorism--something that the pope
cannot do.
It is for the Christian filmmaker, producer,
director, actor, actress to decide not to make films or TV shows that glorify immodesty,
premarital sex and/or homosexual activity but to make and promote films and TV shows
that show how young people can be chaste and wait to have sex until they are
married, how married couples can meet the day-to-day challenges and trials that
can occur during their married life and remain faithful and devoted to each
other and have true joy rather than "the pleasures of sin for a
season" and to raise their children to be godly people who love and serve God
and people, and how a person struggling with same sex attraction can find
healing and live a chaste life that might have its ongoing struggle but can be
happy and fruitful. It is for the
Christian singer/songwriter/musician to write,
perform, and produce music for both the Church and the world that will
honor God and reflect Gospel values, whether it is music written for the
Church, contemporary Christian music, or secular music without specifically
religious content.
It is for the Christian doctor, nurse, and other
medical professional to insist that he/she will never perform or enable an
abortion, to counsel a woman carrying a child with Down syndrome that although this
child's life will present many challenges, he/she is still a valuable human
being who has potential to achieve more than he/she realizes--with the proper
help--and can be more of a blessing than she can ever imagine, to insist that a
patient with diminished brain function or in a coma be provided with nutrition
and hydration, and to affirm by word and actions the Church's teaching on the
sanctity of human life at all stages from conception through natural death.
It is for the Christian teacher or therapist in a
Catholic or other Christian school who can teach religion but also the Christian
teacher or therapist in a secular school who is not permitted to speak directly
about God, Jesus or religion to love the children he/she teaches, to affirm the
value of each child and his/her gifts, to teach sharing, caring, and other
Gospel (while not specifically “religious” in areas where this is not permitted) values by his/her love, word, and
example, and to wear his/her cross so that someday hopefully this child will
grow up and see a cross and make a connection between that cross, the teacher
who loved him/her and provided a beautiful example, and JESUS and the Church.
It is for the Christian working in the corporate
environment to demonstrate integrity, hard work, the value and dignity of every
human being above numbers and production, charity, good will, and joy in an atmosphere
that has become increasingly de-personalized and demoralizing.
We also need Christians who will report the news to
help us see what is happening in the world from a Christian perspective rather
than the liberal views of the secular media.
Obviously we are concerned about the salvation of
individual souls—especially of the souls the LORD has put in our care and those
who are dear to us-- but we must also be concerned about making a positive
impact on the world in our various professions (which, I realize, include areas more numerous than those to which I have referred in this blog), in our voting decisions, in
communicating with our political leaders, in supporting candidates who
represent our values, and by speaking out and writing in accordance with the
gifts and calling given to us by the Holy Spirit. The hierarchy and
clergy have their important function of bringing people into
the Church, helping individuals achieve salvation, nurturing us through
Mass and the sacraments, and communicating Church teaching, but for the
most part it is up to Christian lay people to take what we have received
and “go in peace to love and serve the LORD” by trying to save our broken
world. I would suggest that it is often through a lay person's
influence that a person not of our faith becomes interested in coming into
the Church.
I would also suggest that in addition to our
participation at Mass and in our individual ministries within our parishes, we lay
people need to be able to get together in a kind of "holy huddle" to pray and support each other in
our mission, whether it is in a prayer group, a Bible study, the lay expression
of a religious order, or a combination of these. The priests give us the
sacraments, which are essential for us to be nurtured, they preach
and teach us, which is essential for us to know how to apply the Gospel to life
(which is how I view the purpose of homilies), and they provide the
counsel we need, but they don't walk in our shoes, so we not only need the priests,
deacons and religious, (as essential as they are), but we lay people also need
each other.
As Christians IN the world but NOT OF the world, and
as lay Christians who “bridge the gap” between the Church and the secular
world, we are the ones who are best in the position to CHANGE THE WORLD!
May
the Holy Spirit quicken each one of us in our hearts and give each of us the
wisdom and courage to know and do what is ours to do to shine the light of
Christ into every corner of our world, especially here in America.
©
Copyright 2012 by Arlene B. Muller
I agree, and you've provided many good examples of how we, the lay people, can share our love of God with the world.
ReplyDeleteBesides our vocation in life the Spirit gives us the gifts that make us good at our jobs, our individual ministries (nursing, childcare, teaching, hospitality, understanding, knowledge, wisdom and so many others). It is in performing our "Ministries" that we choose either to reveal God to the world or hide our light under a bushel. It's our choice.
I pray that we all find some way to let our lights shine for all the world to see.
Thanks, Janet.
ReplyDeleteVery good, Arlene. We, as Christians, are called to transform the world to reflect that of Christ. If more Christians did as you describe, this world would be a far better place. We are all called as Catholic Christians to bear witness to the risen Christ, and to bring that risen Christ to a world that so desperately needs Him.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tom! Although there are many lay people doing a lot of good, I really think that more lay people need to become aware of the significance of our mission. In some ways there is a lack of awareness of the importance of our call outlined in the documents of Vatican II, and we are still "the sleeping giant". So many Catholic politicians have acted in opposition to Catholic teaching--although they have tried to promote social justice, they have also bought the lies of the world and promoted abortion and sexual immorality. In whatever we do and wherever we go, we are witnesses. But we need to have greater awareness and strive to be better witnesses, whether it is in small ways (as St. Therese taught) or in a larger arena, in whatever station of life to which God has called us. I'm trying to do what I can, and I hope this blog helps. We definitely need more help. Holy Spirit, guide us and empower us to be all that we should be and help our hierarchy and clergy to lead and inspire us.
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