Don’t be afraid to evangelize!

As I posted yesterday, I recently received my ordered copy of The New Evangelization and You: Be Not Afraid by Greg Willits. Over the last two evenings, I was able to do a quick read-through and develop some initial impressions.

The New Evangelization should be the priority of every Catholic. Each and every one of us should be seeking to evangelize our family, friends, neighbors, coworkers, and even those you might bump into once in a blue moon. In short, it should be our goal for everyone to enter the Catholic Church and come to know Christ.

If this sounds overwhelming, that’s because it is. In fact, I would venture that one of the major reasons why more Catholics don’t seek to share their faith is because they don’t know where to start. Of course, the #1 reason is likely due to fear: fear of rejection by family and friends, fear of mocking and insults, fear of being seen as a Holy Roller and Jesus Freak. Second to that, only barely, is the feeling that Catholics don’t know the faith well enough to share.

Greg answers all these objections and more within this short book (149 pages, 5 of which are footnotes). His writing is very simple and easy to read, yet challenging and instructive. If you’ve heard Greg on Sirius radio or the podcasts he’s done with his wife, Jennifer, you know the sense of humor that comes naturally to him. That humor comes out in the book (even right at the beginning in the Introduction which includes a debate between him and his wife over reading the Introduction of books).

A major aspect of this book is to challenge and encourage Catholics to seriously think about their faith and discover ways to both learn about, live and share that faith. Those familiar with NewEvangelizers.com, a non-profit run by Greg and Jennifer dedicated to the New Evangelization, will recognize immediately the major theme in the book: Catholics need to “know the faith, live the faith, and share the faith.” Greg challenges Catholics to not think of evangelization as a three-step process: first I’m going to learn all I can about the faith, then I will use that knowledge to live the faith, finally, once those two are in the bag, I will share the faith. Instead, Greg states that all three need to be done at once. You can’t know the faith without living it. You can’t live the faith without sharing it. You can’t share the faith without knowing it. All three work together.

Obviously, reading the book over two evenings means that I gave it a very light reading, and Greg’s writing style works with that style of reading. This does not mean that the book does not go much deeper than that. In fact, it’s worth reading twice: once for the quick overview, then going slower and entering into a much deeper study and reflection on the material, especially on the series of questions given at the end of each chapter. There are also prayers at the end of each chapter which focus on various aspects of the New Evangelization, and ask God for the grace to grow in that aspect.

This isn’t just a theoretical work, but chalk full of practical suggestions and examples. Every chapter features a short article on a figure or group involved in the day-to-day work of the New Evangelzation. Those featured include Lisa Hendey, Jason Elizondo and Austin Catholic New Media, Sarah Reinhard and more — including a number I was not familiar with, but will make the effort to discover their work.

The most practical chapter would have to be Chapter 10, which is called “A Year of New Evangelizing”. This chapter contains a list of 52 ways we can know the faith, 52 ways we can live the faith and 52 ways we can share the faith. Some of them are simple: listen to Catholic radio, invite your priest over for dinner (which I whole-heartedly endorse), get a holy card of your favorite saint and pin or tape it up in your office or cubicle. Some are more difficult: study Theology of the Body, help out at a local homeless shelter, make a video about why you love being Catholic and share online. Each item on these lists are practical, concrete ways that every Catholic can “know the faith, live the faith, and share the faith.”

Greg reminds us that we are all called to evangelization. This is not just for the “professional Catholics” (priests, bishops, religious, and lay people who work for the Church), but each and every one of us received this commission to evangelize when we received the Sacrament of Baptism. As members of the Body of Christ, we are called and sent to show Christ to the world and lead others to Him.

If you’re looking for a simple instruction manual on how to “do” the New Evangelization, Greg has written it. Parishes and individuals should pick up this resource to read, study, and implement it in their communities and families. I know I plan on giving it a far deeper study and reflection.

Judging a book by its cover

Anyone who likes to read should be familiar with the old saying “Never judge a book by its cover”. Well, contrary to that old maxim, I’m going to do just that. I’ve recently received the newly-published book The New Evangelization and You: Be Not Afraid by Greg Willits. I haven’t even cracked the cover, yet know it’s going to be worth reading due to the qualifications of its author.

If I were to make a list of people in the Catholic world of those would be best qualified to write a book on the New Evangelization, Greg Willits would be high on that list. Greg and his wife Jennifer have spent many years involved in various aspects of evangelization, especially using the new forms of media available over the Internet. From the Rosary Army to podcasting to That Catholic Show to broadcasting on Sirius Radio’s Catholic Channel and now running the New Evangelizers website, Greg and Jennifer have lots of experience in many aspects of the New Evangelization. In fact, Greg and Jennifer just mentioned in their most recent The Catholics Next Door podcast that they have been running the Rosary Army for 10 years. It’s obvious that the New Evangelization is a passion for them.

So, with that background, it’s clear that this is a book worth reading. Time to stop looking at the cover, and start learning about the New Evangelization from one of the masters.

Homily for Corpus Christi

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Are we being good stewards with the Catholic Faith?

The word “stewardship” seems to have become the new buzzword in the Catholic Church. You almost can’t do anything in the Church without hearing about the need to be good stewards, and what Catholic hasn’t had the “Three T’s” drilled into their head (in case you’ve never heard of the Three T’s, they’re Time, Talent, and Treasure).
I don’t want to denigrate the stewardship work being done in the Church. it is necessary for us to be good stewards of he Church, to use our time and talent to build up the Church physically and spiritually, and to use our treasure to fund the temporal needs of the Church. In the discussion of stewardship, I think one aspect is missing: being stewards of the Catholic Faith that has been passed on to us.
Today’s Gospel reading is from the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 21, the parable of the wicked tenants. Focusing on the Gospel, the reflection in the Magnificat Lenten Companion says that “we must be the kind of disciples who are careful stewards of creation and careful stewards of our lives.” As part of being stewards of our lives, are we doing everything we can to be careful stewards of the Catholic Faith? The chief priests and elders were not good stewards of the Jewish Faith, and thus were being criticized by Our Lord.
As Christians, we can fall into the same trap, and I would argue that we have over the past 50 years or so. I’m not going to point fingers and put blame on this person or that idea, but I will say that we haven’t been good stewards of the Catholic Faith. Look at the state of the Church today: a great many Catholics don’t know the basic elements of the Faith, and many don’t even bother to go to Church once a week. At least two generations of Catholics have basically no understanding of what it means to be Catholic. A large number of priests, religious, and laity have erroneous and contrary beliefs to the Truths revealed by Christ, and a number of prominent Catholic laity and religious cause public scandal by repeatedly opposing the bishops and the teachings of the Church. We must seek to do better.
If we wish to be good stewards of the Catholic Faith, we must not focus on how things went wrong and start assigning blame. Understanding what happened in the past is good for the purposes of avoiding the same errors in the future, but it’s all too easy to fall into the “blame game” while trying to justify our actions (or lack thereof). Instead, we need to dedicate ourselves to the task of stewardship. We need to make every effort to learn the Catholic Faith, and to allow the teachings of Christ to influence all areas of our lives. We also need to make every effort to spread the teachings to the next generations of Catholics who don’t know the Faith, to those who are weak in their practice of the Faith, and to those who have not heard the Gospel.
Being a good steward of the Catholic Faith is not an easy task. There will be pushback and arguments. Friendships may be broken, and families divided. We live in a culture that has all but abandoned its Christian roots. If we’re to recover our Faith and bring the world to Christ, we have to be willing to go through that suffering, offering it up in union with the suffering of Our Lord on the Cross. After all, Our Lord didn’t say being a steward would be easy, just that those who are faithful would be rewarded.