Deal W. Hudson: Evangelical Catholicism is Nothing New!
In other words, an evangelical is someone who looks for and takes the opportunity to talk to others about the Christian faith in terms of morality, salvation, and final judgement
Although it is a positive sign that George Weigel has published a book extolling the need for Evangelical Catholicism, the fact is that this movement has been evident for nearly a half century. Indeed, most of the new growth in the Church in these fifty states can be traced to various apostolates that have combined into a virtual coalition of Catholics who speak of their faith with a zeal markedly different from mainstream practicing Catholics.
WASHINGTON, DC (Catholic Online) - Although it's a positive sign that George Weigel has published a book extolling the need for Evangelical Catholicism, the fact is that this movement has been evident for nearly a half century. Indeed, most of the new growth in the Church in these fifty states can be traced to various apostolates that have combined into a virtual coalition of Catholics who speak of their faith with a zeal markedly different from mainstream practicing Catholics.
What I refer to as a virtual coalition owes its existence primarily to the leadership of John Cardinal O'Connor and John Paul II; the Catholic pro-life movement; Catholic homeschoolers; the success of EWTN, led by Mother Angelica since 1981; Ignatius Press, founded by Rev. Joseph Fessio S.J., in 1978; the philanthropy of Tom Monaghan, founder of Domino's Pizza; and the vitality of colleges like Christendom, founded in 1977 by Warren H. Carroll; Franciscan University, since 1978 under Rev. Mike Scanlan, TOR; and St. Thomas Aquinas, founded in 1968 by Dr. Ronald McArthur.
These successes were presaged and encouraged by a large cast of characters and institutions: the founding of the University of Dallas (1956); the creation of Catholics United for the Faith in 1968 by L. Lyman Stebbins; the influence of The Wanderer, Triumph, and the National Catholic Register; as well as the leadership of Catholic intellectuals, charismatics, and evangelicals like L. Brent Bozell, Bishop Fulton Sheen, Rev. Paul Marx, Dr. John Willke, Phyllis Schlafly, Paul Weyrich, Patrick Frawley, Prof. Frederick Wilhelmsen, Prof. Dietrich von Hildebrand, Ralph Martin, and Deacon Keith Fournier, among others.
Deacon Fournier, in fact, published a book in l990 entitled Evangelical Catholics, urging Catholics to embrace a form of "Christian Cooperation to penetrate the Darkness with the Light of the Gospel." He used the term Evangelical Catholic to a mixed reaction. He suggested the adjective should characterize all Christians who had a living relationship with the Lord who is the Evangel, the Good News. They should desire to share that living faith in the Lord with others. However, he told me that in spite of their being evangelical Catholics at the time, many of them rejected the use of the term. Perhaps Weigel's book will help to make the notion of Catholics being "evangelical" more widely accepted. We can only hope so because until now, and I say this from experience, being evangelical is one thing, calling yourself one is quite another.
The term "evangelical," of course, has a generic theological meaning derived from Scripture, but it's the meaning attached to the figure of TV evangelists with well-worn Bibles raised aloft that has made Catholics wary of the word. The four gospel writers are known as the "Four Evangelists" based on the Greek term euangelion and the Latin Evangelium, both meaning one who brings, or literally proclaims, "good news."
But the issue at the heart of an Evangelical Catholic movement is not about whether Catholics believe their faith is "good news." Of course they do! The issue is their willingness, or lack of willingness, to share it. Those of us who have belonged at one time or another to a brand of Evangelical Protestantism know first hand that the disposition to share the faith, to witness, is considered an explicit obligation within that community. In other words, an evangelical is someone who looks for and takes the opportunity to talk to others about the Christian faith in terms of morality, salvation, and final judgement.
What makes witnessing so important to the evangelical is that the "good news" is not merely a "better" way to live, to view the world, to understand politics, but rather demarcates those who live knowing the Truth about human existence and those who do not. Even more, knowing the Truth through faith unites a person with God in such a way that it bestows the power of Grace in this life and opens the gates to eternal happiness in heaven.
Even a casual observer of Catholic behavior will conclude that these attitudes, if held by Catholics, are rarely manifested in evangelical fashion. Prayer rallies, community Bible studies, literature dissemination, and personally challenging the unchurched and the unbeliever with the option of belief and worship are not habits of mainstream Catholics.
The average Catholic parish does nothing to welcome visitors, much less go to any length to check the spiritual ...
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In my parish, St Luke's near Vancouver, Canada, we are the only parish in the diocese to institute an evangelization program. This has been approved by the Archbishop, and is being monitored to aid other parishes on the effectiveness in not only bringing back fallen away Catholics, but to truly reach out to the community a witness to the redemptive work of our Lord.
Included are programs designed with the sole purpose of witnessing to the Good News.
Follow up is the key and offering invitations to Mass, prayer meetings, healing services and social events has been very effective to not only gain but retain those coming to or back to His Church
God bless
Matthew 28:17-20 My wife and I changed parishes three years ago. It was not for any bad reason We still love the people at our old parish. Our new parish is alive and evangelize and reach out. The old one had the attitude that we have done it all and can rest on our laurels . It was not the pastors fault. Both teach the same message. It does not matter how old you are or young it is not what you did yesterday. What does God want you to do today?
The manner in which the sacrament of confirmation is done today is terrible. No one can argue that those who are being confirmed are actually making a committment. For the vast majority of them, that's the last time you see them until it's time to get married.
We are not building disciples. And I think that a majority of the problems our church faces today is because of that simple fact. We have strayed so far from what real christianity is that we are left to fight about what person you are voting for and the whole morass of moralism that isn't saving anyone, let alone drawing anyone closer to Christ.
Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven,* but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven. Many will say to me on that day,o ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name? Did we not drive out demons in your name? Did we not do mighty deeds in your name? Then I will declare to them solemnly, ‘I never knew you.* Depart from me, you evildoers.
Seems to me that the first critical step of a life with Christ is completely missed. I wonder how many people sitting in the pew know Jesus? I wonder how many of those who believe they are "true" Catholics really know him?
Some very honest words, having the courage to try seeing and expressing objective reality as it is and has been vis-a-vis some of these above mentionned matters. One Jesuit in Asia (but from Europe) once told me that one reason the world was a mess was that Christians weren't meditating, contemplating, enough. I don't remember if he specifically used the word 'meditating' or 'contemplating', therefore I must mention this for I wish to not mislead any readers on this website. While I don't know if this is true, it seems too much compartmentalization still takes place (and I first point the finger to myself) between listening to, understanding, then living to higher degrees properly aligned with and rooted in truth. The struggle perhaps never ends, but I think both 'discursive' and 'non-discursive' forms of prayer ought to be applied more harmoniously. I think too many, after having in reality followed their own will, then end up unwittingly using discursive prayer as a sort of fuel to give them the energy to get to their defined ends. And after that, how many place the stamp of "God's will" on their projects when in truth little to no discernment of God's will with pure motive in heart may have been present? I am simply putting forth whatever is coming to me, after reading this article, for the purposes of what hopefully contributes to the greater good as properly defined.
Paul-Emile Leray