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St. Anthony of Padua: Actions Speak Louder than Words

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St. Anthony of Padua Reminds Us, Actions Speak Louder Than Words

The Saints are examples to emulate as well as intercessors to assist us in responding to our own vocation. They are companions on the journey; men and women like us who responded to God's invitation to become like Jesus. They pray for us because we are joined with them in the eternal communion of love. They put legs on the Gospel, showing us what holiness looks like. However, if we stop there, we miss the mark. Missing the mark is the translation of the Hebrew word often translated sin in the Old Testament. We are called to become saints, by rejecting sin and living for Jesus Christ. 

Highlights

By Deacon Keith Fournier
Catholic Online (https://www.catholic.org)
6/13/2016 (8 years ago)

Published in U.S.

Keywords: St Anthony, Anthony of Padua, saints, Catholic, holiness, Deacon Keith Fournier

CHESAPEAKE, VA (Catholic Online) -On June 13th we commemorate the memorial of Anthony of Padua, Priest and Doctor, in the Roman Liturgical Calendar. In our Gospel (Mt. 5:20-26) we hear Jesus speak with great bluntness and power, "I tell you, unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the Kingdom of heaven."
The passage immediately follows Matthews's account of the beatitudes (Mt. 5:1-19). The verses before our Gospel text contain these words of the Lord,
"You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything, but is thrown out and trampled underfoot.  You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hidden. No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven. Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come not to abolish but to fulfill."

The gospel message is not only about the shortcomings of the particular scribes and Pharisees, but an invitation to consider our own response to call of the Lord. How are we doing? Are we living what we profess? In its dogmatic constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium, the Second Vatican Council affirmed the teaching of Jesus Christ, the witness of the saints, and the consistent teaching of Church Councils throughout the ages - that holiness of life is the vocation of every member of the Church. We are all called to Christian perfection, "all the faithful, whatever their condition or state, are called by the Lord, each in his own way, to that perfect holiness whereby the Father Himself is perfect" (Lumen Gentium, Light to the Nations, 11).

The Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us "All Christians in any state or walk of life are called to the fullness of Christian life and to the perfection of charity. All are called to holiness: "Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect." (CCC #2013)

Christians are saved from sin, death and separation from God, through Jesus Christ.  But we are saved for a new way of living. We are called to holiness and righteousness. We can live differently because we live our lives Jesus Christ. We can love differently, because we are made capable, by our free cooperation with grace, to love with His Love. The character of Jesus Christ is formed in us as we cooperate with His grace. The chapter of Matthews Gospel ends with this admonition of Jesus, "So be perfect, just as your heavenly Father is perfect." ( Matthew 5: 48)

This admonition from Jesus is repeated in other Gospel accounts and developed in the New Testament Epistles. Our question should not be "is it possible?" Rather, it should be "HOW is it possible?"  How do we respond? Perhaps our problem with responding is that we confuse the meaning of the word, "perfect".

Filtering this word through our linguistic limitations, we may come up with a false translation and, as a result, not even attempt to respond to the admonition.   However, Jesus has saved us from sin and death - and saved us for a new way of living. We can tend to focus on what we are saved from and forget what we are saved for. We do not yet comprehend who we are to become in Him.

In Greek, the word often translated perfect is telios. It refers to something being completed, brought to its full purpose, potential and intended end and vocation. For example, in the world of objects, a hammer is telios or perfect when it is hammering a nail. In our Western minds, we can limit this word "perfect" and thereby fail to grasp its promise and potential. We think of it mathematically rather than relationally. We fail to understand it is a work in process.

The God who is Love fashioned us in His Image. We are made to love as He loves. In Jesus Christ, we are now being capacitated - to use a term frequently used by the early father and Bishop Ireneaus of Lyons - meaning made capable - by the grace of Christ's Redemption - of loving with God's love. "God is love, and he who abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him" (1 Jn 4:16). Notice that the concept of being "perfected' is also applied to Jesus by the author of the New Testament Letter to the Hebrews in chapter 5 verses 8-9:

"Although he was a Son, he learned obedience through what he suffered; and being made perfect he became the source of eternal salvation to all who obey him." Jesus was made perfect through what He suffered? Yet, Jesus was without sin. How then was He perfected?

He came into the world to redeem it, to transform us by a life, and a death, and a Resurrection of perfect love. He fulfilled His purpose when He presided over the new creation from the Altar of that Cross and robbed death of its victory by bursting forth from a tomb - which could not contain the power of Divine Love.

We live in Him now as we live our lives in the heart of the Church, for the sake of the world. The Church is not so much a Some-Thing as a Some-One. We are being made perfect, holy, righteous as we cooperate with His continual invitations to conversion by living our lives in the Communion of His Body on earth. We are thus capacitated to love as He loved - as we receive His grace through prayer, listening to and obeying His Word and receiving the the Sacraments, and freely cooperate.

When we follow Jesus Christ, a dynamic process happens within us, an ever deepening conversion and transformation. The Holy Spirit is at work in us, transforming us, restoring His Image and forming His likeness within each of us. .

We "participate in the Divine Nature" as the Apostle Peter tells us. (2 Peter 1:4). We are perfected in charity -  by grace and through faith. Every Christian, no matter what our state in life or particular vocation, is called to this holiness. God's Divine Life, and its dynamic work within us, is meant change us into the new men and women that Jesus Christ has made it possible for us to become.

We walk this way of holiness by living in His Body, in His Church, of which we are members.The Church is the seed of the kingdom, making the kingdom present in a world waiting to be born. Only when the King returns will the Kingdom be fully established.

Then, the entire creation be reconstituted by love, made perfect, and handed back to the Father as a gift of love. However, the Church is a sign, a sacrament of that Kingdom. We are seeds of that kingdom, scattered into the world as into a furrow. We are called to become saints, refashioned through cooperation with grace.

The Saints are given to us as examples to emulate as well as intercessors to assist us in responding to our vocation. They are companions on the journey; men and women like us who responded to God's invitation to become like Jesus. They pray for us because we are joined with them in the eternal communion of love. They put legs on the Gospel, showing us what holiness looks like. However, if we stop there, we miss the mark. Missing the mark is the translation of the Hebrew word often translated "sin" in the Old Testament. We are called to become saints, by rejecting sin and living for Jesus Christ.

St Anthony of Padua was born in Portugal at the end of the twelfth century. Through a somewhat circuitous route he eventually responded to the voice of the Lord and became a Franciscan friar and a fabulous preacher.

He lived only to the age of thirty six but his life changed history.

His witness continues in our midst and his writings point the way to the source of his own holiness, a living, vibrant relationship with Jesus Christ, lived in the heart of the Church for the sake of the world. The office of Readings from the Liturgy of the Hours on this Feast gives us an excerpt from one of his powerful sermons entitled Actions speak louder than words:

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A sermon by St Anthony of Padua

The man who is filled with the Holy Spirit speaks in different languages. These different languages are different ways of witnessing to Christ, such as humility, poverty, patience and obedience; we speak in those languages when we reveal in ourselves these virtues to others. Actions speak louder than words; let your words teach and your actions speak.

We are full of words but empty of actions, and therefore are cursed by the Lord, since he himself cursed the fig tree when he found no fruit but only leaves. Gregory says: "A law is laid upon the preacher to practice what he preaches." It is useless for a man to flaunt his knowledge of the law if he undermines its teaching by his actions.

But the apostles spoke as the Spirit gave them the gift of speech. Happy the man whose words issue from the Holy Spirit and not from himself! For some men speak as their own character dictates, but steal the words of others and present them as their own and claim the credit for them. The Lord refers to such men and others like them in Jeremiah:

So, then, I have a quarrel with the prophets that steal my words from each other. I have a quarrel with the prophets, says the Lord, who have only to move their tongues to utter oracles. I have a quarrel with the prophets who make prophecies out of lying dreams, who recount them and lead my people astray with their lies and their pretensions. I certainly never sent them or commissioned them, and they serve no good purpose for this people, says the Lord.

We should speak, then, as the Holy Spirit gives us the gift of speech. Our humble and sincere request to the Spirit for ourselves should be that we may bring the day of Pentecost to fulfillment, insofar as he infuses us with his grace, by using our bodily senses in a perfect manner and by keeping the commandments. Likewise we shall request that we may be filled with a keen sense of sorrow and with fiery tongues for confessing the faith, so that our deserved reward may be to stand in the blazing splendor of the saints and to look upon the triune God.

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Deacon Keith A. Fournier is Founder and Chairman of Common Good Foundation and Common Good Alliance. A married Roman Catholic Deacon of the Diocese of Richmond, Virginia, he and his wife Laurine have five grown children and seven grandchildren. He is a human rights lawyer and public policy advocate who served as the first and founding Executive Director of the American Center for Law and Justice in the nineteen nineties and has long been active at the intersection of faith and culture. He is a senior contributing writer to The Stream.

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