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The Gospel in the Digital Age: Cardinal Dolan on America's New Mission Territories

The whole Church is! Our parishes are! Culture is! The world is!

No longer can we coast on the former fame, clout, buildings, numbers, size, money, and accomplishments of the past.  As a matter of fact, all of this may have dulled us into taking our faith for granted. No more!  We are missionaries.  And, it starts inside.  As Greg Erlandson concludes, "Without a conversion of heart, starting with ourselves, we may never truly address the heart of the current crisis."

Cardinal Dolan

Cardinal Dolan

NEW YORK, NY (Gospel in the Digital Age) - As you are probably aware, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia is going through a very rough time.  Those good people, our family members in the "Household of the Faith," and their brave archbishop, Charles Chaput, deserve our love and prayers.

In his courageous and inspired efforts to bring hope and renewal to that Church in crisis, Archbishop Chaput recently made a statement that stopped me cold:  "The Archdiocese of Philadelphia . . . is now really a mission territory.''

Yes, I had to read it twice, too.

Uganda a mission territory?  Sure . . .

Peru a mission territory?  Yes . . .

Alaska a mission territory?  Okay . . .

But Philadelphia?  Come on now!  That archdiocese in a way was the model of a robust, intact, cohesive Catholic infrastructure!  Parishes, schools, apostolates, ministries galore!  A huge Catholic population, with cardinals as past archbishops, vocations abounding, close to a million-and-a-half Catholics proud of and fervent in their faith, right?

What do you mean a mission territory?  Is Archbishop Chaput bluffing?

No!  I'm afraid he's right on target.

And, guess what?  Our beloved Archdiocese of New York  is also mission territory!

True, thank God, we sure do not face the tsunami of current problems Philadelphia does.  Our financial picture is tight but solvent, our Catholic population actually growing, and extensive layoffs, shut-down of parishes, schools, and services, hardly anticipated.

But, we are a mission territory, too.  Every diocese is.  And every committed Catholic is a missionary.

This is at the heart of what Blessed John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI call the New Evangelization.

I was raised - - as were most of you - - to think of the missions as "way far away" - - and, to be sure, we can never forget our sacred duty to the foreign missions.

In fact, when wonderful Sisters of Mercy from Drogheda, Ireland, came to my home parish, Holy Infant, in Ballwin, Missouri, fifty-five years ago, we smiled when they humbly called themselves "missionaries."

Couldn't be, we chuckled:  we've been Catholic for generations; we've got a parish church and school; the Catholic Church is strong, proud, growing, standing tall!  We're not Africa!  We're not mission territory!

Yes we were!  Yes we are!  The sisters were right!  Archbishop Chaput is correct!  Blessed John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI are on target!

Maybe, we have gotten way too smug.  We have taken our Catholic faith for granted.  As Archbishop Chaput observed, the big problem is a dullness that has "seeped into church life, and the cynicism and resentment that naturally follow it . . .These problems kill a Christian love . . . they choke off a real life of faith."

As my friend Greg Erlandson commented in Our Sunday Visitor, the archbishop's sobering point was echoed by the President of the Catholic University of America, John Garvey, in his recent splendid address to us bishops.  What we've got, according to Mr. Garvey and paraphrased by Mr. Erlandson, is a societal crisis of faith.  "More and more residents of the Western World [you and me!]  are simply wandering away from their faith, which means that what is happening in Philadelphia is but a microcosm of a much more disturbing erosion."

Have I depressed you yet?  I sure hope not!

Have I awakened you and challenged you!  I sure hope so.

Because, guess where we're at:  We're with the apostles on Pentecost Sunday as we embrace the New Evangelization.

No more taking our Catholic faith for granted!

No more relaxing in the great things the church has accomplished in the past!

Cynicism is replaced by confidence . . .

Hand-wringing by hand-folding . . .

Dullness by dare . . .

Waiting for people to come back replaced by going out to get them . . .

Presuming that people know the richness of their Catholic faith replaced by a realistic admission that they do not . . .

From taking the Church for granted as a "big corporation," to a tender care for a Church as small and fragile as a tiny mustard seed Jesus spoke about. . .

Keeping our faith to ourselves to letting it shine to others!

This is the New Evangelization!

The Archdiocese of New York is a mission territory!

The whole Church is!  Our parishes are!  Culture is!  The world is!

You and I are missionaries!

No longer can we coast on the former fame, clout, buildings, numbers, size, money, and accomplishments of the past.  As a matter of fact, all of this may have dulled us into taking our faith for granted.

No more!  We are missionaries.  And, it starts inside.  As Greg Erlandson concludes, "Without a conversion of heart, starting with ourselves, we may never truly address the heart of the current crisis."

I don't know about you, but I need the Year of Faith starting in October.

And I need the synod on the New Evangelization  in Rome this fall.


- - -

Archbishop Timothy Dolans' reflections on Catholic faith, life and mission

Keywords: Archbishop Chaput, Archdiocese of New York, Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Missionaries, New Evangelization, Our Sunday Visitor, Year of Faith, Cardinal Dolan

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1 - 3 of 3 Comments

  1. Theresa H
    9 months ago

    What Cardinal Dolan said is no surprise! It is the same as Bl Pope JP II and, after him, Pope Benedict XVI has been calling for: the "New Evangelization" of those of us who say we are "Catholic." Why? Because many, if not most of us don't know what Jesus commissioned "Peter" and the apostles together with him AND their successors after them, to "teach all nations...until the end of time." It's not so much that they have not been teaching--as that we have refused to listen....Remember the outcry against Pope Paul VI after he wrote "Humanae Vitae?"--THAT was the beginning of our downfall! And how many Catholics today have familiarized themselves with the "Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC), Second Vatican Edition?" The CCC is the "teaching" of the Successor of Peter and the Bishops united with him. We have no excuse; blaming the Bishops is no excuse for ignorance. The CCC has been available from the local Catholic Bookstore and Online. The modern, hedonistic, secular "culture" in which we live has become the anti-thesis of everything a Christian should be standing for--but we have, in large measure, succumbed to this fake "trinity!" Yet, for those who care enough and want to know, those who "seek...will find" the "teaching"--in the CCC!

  2. John Constantine
    10 months ago

    Tony, not to be mean spirited, but your comment shows your lack of of biblcal study and or Catholic teachings on this subject. "love the sinner hate the sin." We all have the capactiy to sin, for example, as a male I see many beautiful women and I say to myself, 'wow I sure would like to have sex with her." I committed a sin of thought and I ask God to forgive me, and I pray that that women has a good day and has a husband who loves her. Now if I follow her, get more pictures in my mind, go home and masterbate I have committed a serious sin. My point is this, while thoughts come into our mind doesn;'t mean we have the liberty to go beyond that point. We turn more faithfully to prayer and trust in "The light of the World".
    If you were an announced homosexual in those early days you would have been stoned. You have to get into the mind set of the time period you are talking about Jesus preached love and forgivness, but at the same time you have to follow his teaching, not committing the same sin or and over again. A man's young wife is in a car accident and is paralized from the neckdown and has slight brain damage does he have the right to go out and satisfy his sexual desires, or does he faithfuly care for his wife and trust in the Lord? Tony, no one said being a Christian was going to be easy. Please study your faith more and be the person God planned for you to be. P.S. I'm not one to throw a stone for fear it might bounce off the wall and hit me between the eyes. God love you and keep you, and please pray for me as I will pray for you. At the end times God will ratify what choices we have made in life.

  3. Tony Adams
    10 months ago

    It's not a "crisis of faith" as much as it is a crisis of leadership. Tim Dolan is right to think about the apostles enlivened by Pentecost, but when they went forth to evangelize, they didn't treat gay people and women as second class recipients of grace. When men like Dolan and Chaput finally stop fending off the Holy Spirit by clinging to a lesser idea of the Catholic Church, they will have no problem winning back the souls they have offended.

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