At a conference on faith and evangelization, Archbishop Charles J.
Chaput of Philadelphia told participants that sanctity is the single
necessity in a person's life.
“The only thing that matters is to be a saint. That’s what we need to
be. That’s what we need to become,” he said at the Nov. 16 Catholic Life
Congress in Philadelphia.
Archbishop Chaput began his talk, titled “Renewing the Church and Her
Mission in a 'Year of Faith,'” by discussing the nature of faith. He
said the Nicene Creed, recited at every Sunday Mass, is the “framework
and fundamental profession” of Catholic belief.
“The less we understand the words of the Creed and revere the meaning
behind them, the farther away we drift from our Catholic identity – and
the more confused we become about who we really are as Christians.”
The archbishop discussed the importance of personal integrity, and the
role of Sunday Mass in forming our lives throughout the rest of the
week.
“We need to give our hearts to what we hear and what we say in our
public worship. Otherwise, little by little, we become dishonest.”
Faith, he told his listeners, “is confidence in things unseen based on
the word of someone we know and love – in this case, God...only a living
encounter and a living relationship with Jesus Christ make faith
sustainable.”
Archbishop Chaput then reflected on the present state of the Catholic Church in America, painting a stark picture.
“More than 70 million Americans describe themselves as Catholics. But
for all practical purposes, they’re no different from everybody else in
their views, their appetites and their behaviors.”
This state, he said, was part of the “legacy” left by the baby boomer generation “to the Church in the United States.”
“In a sense, our political and economic power, our addictions to comfort, consumption and entertainment, have made us stupid.”
In response to that state of affairs, Archbishop Chaput urged every one
to repentance and to conversion. In the face of a Catholic population
indistinguishable from the general public, he proposed a sort of
examination of conscience.
“So we need to ask ourselves: What do I want my life to mean? If I
claim to be a Catholic, can I prove it with the patterns of my life?
When do I pray? How often do I seek out the Sacrament of Penance? What
am I doing for the poor? How am I serving the needy? Do I really know
Jesus Christ?”
“Who am I leading to the Church? How many young people have I asked to
consider a vocation? How much time do I spend sharing about God with my
spouse, my children and my friends? How well and how often do I listen
for God’s will in my own life?”
From there, the archbishop reflected on what we need to become, and took Saint Thomas More as an example.
More was an English lawyer and statesman, and chancellor of England
under Henry VIII. His Catholic faith made him oppose Henry's divorce and
re-marriage, and separation of the Church of England from the Catholic
Church. His integrity led him to be martyred in 1535.
Archbishop Chaput gave his audience a “homework assignment” over
Thanksgiving break. He asked that people watch – “with your family” –
the 1966 film on St. Thomas More called “A Man for All Seasons”
He said that “above all, More was a man of profound Catholic faith and
practice. He lived what he claimed to believe. He had his priorities in
right order. He was a husband and a father first.”
The archbishop then said that More is an example for all Catholics.
“We’re all called to martyrdom. That’s what the word martyr means: It’s
the Greek word for “witness.” We may or may not ever suffer personally
for our love of Jesus Christ. But we’re all called to be witnesses.”
Archbishop Chaput concluded his talk by emphasizing that becoming a
saint, like St. Thomas More, is the one thing necessary in everyone's
life.