Oct 1, 2012
October brings days ripe with modern history for the Church. In this month we will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council and the 20th anniversary of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Its days also mark the start of the Year of Faith. It seems appropriate, therefore, that a column for Catholic men should present thoughts, past and present, for all men to consider for the year ahead.
In his 2011 apostolic letter, Porta Fidei, Pope Benedict XVI spoke of a “task that every believer must make his own” in the upcoming Year of Faith; mainly, to “rediscover the content of the faith that is professed, celebrated, lived and prayed” and to “reflect on the act of faith” (9). The Holy Father challenged all Catholics to ask in the year ahead what forms the faith can take in their lives. He called for reflection about the extraordinary dimensions that faith can make and add to the ordinariness of our lives.
How can the Catholic man do this for the year ahead?
One way is to appreciate Mass for the first time or more fully, for it is in the Eucharist that we encounter Christ personally – man-to-Man. For the year ahead, he can attune his ears to the Holy Spirit speaking to his station in life through liturgical readings. United in a single voice that pronounces one creed in many languages around the world, he can discover with others the authentic joy in professing “one holy, catholic, and apostolic Church”. He can celebrate, as part of the Body of Christ, millennia of traditions and teachings rich in faith, rooted in hope, and radiating in love.