Tuesday, May 27, 2014

What’s So New About the New Evangelization?


It was on May 8, addressing those present for his Mass in the Vatican’s St. Martha guesthouse, Pope Francis began by returning to the day’s first reading, taken from the Acts of the Apostles, in which an angel speaks to the apostle Phillip and tells him to walk along a desert road, on which he meets an eunuch, whom he baptizes.

Referring to the importance of being docile when we evangelize, the Pope explained, “He, Philip, obeys; he’s docile and accepts the calling from the Lord. Certainly, he left behind many things that he ought to have done, because the apostles in that period were very busy evangelizing,” he noted; however, “he leaves everything and sets off.”
“This makes us see that, without this docility or meekness before the voice of God, nobody can evangelize; nobody can announce Jesus Christ: At the very most, he will be announcing himself.”

Bringing to mind another important element in evangelizing, Pope Francis drew attention to how Philip used dialogue when announcing the Gospel, stating “You can’t evangelize without dialogue. It’s impossible.”
“You must begin from where the person who is to be evangelized comes from,” he observed, noting that “this is so important.”
 “Spend time with that person because that person is who God wants you to evangelize” he said, adding that “it’s more important to give him or her the news about Jesus,” but we must give it to them “according to who he or she is, not how he or she should be - how he or she is right now.”

Continuing, Pope Francis encouraged attendees to think about three “moments of evangelization,” naming them as “the docility to evangelize, to do what God is requesting; secondly, a dialogue with the people — but during this dialogue, you begin from where these people come from.”

“And, thirdly, trusting in grace. So many times, we people of the Church are a factory to create obstacles, so people can’t arrive at grace,” the Pope concluded, praying, “May the Lord help us to understand this.”

The following day, Fr. Thomas Dailey, O.S.F.S., spoke to the Adult Formation Spring Workshop sponsored by the Philadelphia archdiocesan Office for the New Evangelization at St. Thomas of Villanova Parish in Rosemont, PA.

He called for broadening the presence of faith and religion on the Internet, notably through parish websites and social media.

“The future is already here,” said Father Dailey, a De Sales University professor and current John Cardinal Foley Chair of Homiletics and Social Communications at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary. “Social media is no longer optional.”

Radio required 38 years to attain 50 million listeners. The Internet needed just four years to gain 50 million viewers.

Amazon’s suggestion bar, shown every time someone views a book or one of thousands of other products, makes people consider buying more, which they often do. The experience changes the way they think, Father Dailey suggested.

The world, he said, is wired whether we like it or not. He also entertained bringing these principles to the faith forum and questioned how to apply Catholic values to the Internet.

“Knowledge is no longer in here,” said Father Dailey, pointing to himself. “It’s out there, all around us. It’s in the cloud.”

The Internet brings up the dilemma of absence versus presence, Father Dailey noted. A person can occupy space in close proximity to others but remain consumed in digital media while maintaining connectedness to a wide variety of people, friends and information. This individual is present to the digital sphere but absent to the world around him or her.

Father Dailey also emphasized the ubiquity of the Internet. The medium is always available and not something an individual turns on and off.

He emphasized that the way the church speaks and teaches needs to change with the times because the Internet is now the dominant media platform.

“The Internet is not just a gadget, gimmick or tool,” Father Dailey said. “It’s a world.”


News sources: The Boston Pilot, May 16; National Catholic Register, May 8.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Our Favorite Catholic Websites






Besides GSCC.net, of course. Some you will find familiar, some might be new to you, but all are examples the New Methods called for by Pope St. John Paul II for the New Evangelization.




   Bearing the tag line, “Catholic Traditions In The Modern World,” uCatholic.com is an all-in-one, well written, well curated and technologically up-to-date site. The left-side nav and the horizontal nav hold identical links. Saint of the Day feature is always beautifully illustrated and well written. A great source for the Daily Readings, too, if you prefer them without annotations. The @uCatholic Twitter feed is always on the left of every page. A great feature is daily selections from the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

Catholicnews.com offers news briefs, top stories, media reviews, global Catholic Events – this is a very professional news service modeled on the secular classics such as Reuters or Associated Press. The CNS Blog is particularly notable for its “on-the-scene” reporting including videos. That’s where you can catch the videos of Sicilian nun Sr. Cristina Scuccia rockin’ the house on “the Voice.” But, seriously, CNS is fully self-sustaining financially although founded by the USCCB in 1927 and holds a rich history of journalistic professionalism unmatched in the Catholic world.


 The-American-Catholic.com. More of a blog than a full-fledged website, but notable nonetheless. This Little Vatican Apostolate features more video links on its front page than most media websites, religious or secular – little seen video from around the world. Perhaps its best feature: dozens of links to sites and Catholic blogs you’ve never heard of and other Catholic sites.




 Bigpulpit.com is probably the leading aggregator of Catholic blog headlines and links out there. Just scrolling down the page led me to hundreds of interesting headlines linking to blogs with equally interesting names. Bigpulpit also links to relevant and better-known Catholic Media, not just blogs. OSV and NCRegister, for example. Eastern churches news sites and blogs are even featured here.



The blogging home of the beloved and famous The Anchoress (Elizabeth Scalia), Patheos.com/Catholic attracts a superb level of writing quality to its pages. Thoughtful, sober, erudite, diverse and always grounded in our Faith. Ms. Scalia has recruited and attracted great talent around her. A sample blog post title is “What Would Screwtape Sayre Harvard Black Mass?” Highly recommended.





Even though the URL is Catholic.com, the header at the top of the page says “Catholic Answers.” It’s the home of a broad range of Catholic media – a magazine, radio show on EWTN, a small speakers’ bureau, a forum with over 400,000 members, an online Catholic encyclopedia and, of course, a blog. Catholic Answers is one of the nation’s largest lay-run apostolates of Catholic apologetics and evangelization.




One of this writer’s daily favorites, USCCB.org is a great starting point for news, publications from the USCCB, formation features and two very important areas – the Daily Readings easily reached with one click from the home page, right-hand side and Books of the Bible, also easily accessed from the home page. Every chapter of every book of the Bible can be reached from a single front page, usccb.org/bible/books-of-the-bible. Highly recommended.



This Week’s Evangelization Challenge 
Explore the Internet! Seek out faith-filled Catholic online sources (there are thousands). Discover one of your own to share with friends, family or your small church community.


What Does the Church Say?
“The use of media is now essential in evangelization and catechesis. Indeed, ‘The Church would feel guilty before the Lord if she did not utilize these powerful means that human skill is daily rendering more perfect.’”

– Pontifical Council for Social Communications, Aetatis Novae


We want to hear from you.
Recommend other websites, blogs or smart phone apps you think we should review and feature – either by commenting at the end of this post or at GSCC.net/Home/Evangelization

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Read a Good (Evangelizing Catholic) Book Lately?








Rebuilt: The Story of a Catholic Parish

Change isn’t easy and neither is church. But change is what parishioners and their leaders must do if they want their churches to thrive. Faced with the challenge of reviving a dying and disengaged suburban Baltimore parish, Father Michael White and lay associate Tim Corcoran examine their experiences of transforming a community of churchgoers into congregants focused on the mission Jesus gave us: growing disciples.



 




The Way of Trust and Love: A Retreat Guided by St. Thérèse of Lisieux by Br. Jacques Philippe. From the bestselling author of Interior Freedom, his 2012 book shows us St. Thérèse of Lisieux sought a new way to Heaven: “a little way that is quite straight, quite short: a completely new little way.” Blessed with personal limitations that might have discouraged another, Thérèse believed God would not have given her a desire for holiness if He did not intend for her to achieve it.






Forming Intentional Disciples by Sherry Weddell. Weddell begins her book by quickly and systematically outlining the problem that the Church faces today.

· Only 30 percent of Americans who were raised Catholic are still practicing (p. 24).

· 10 percent of all adults in America are ex-Catholics (p. 25).

· 79 percent of those who have dropped the name "Catholic" and claim no religious affiliation of any kind, have done so by age 23  (p. 33).

· In the early 21st century, among Americans raised Catholic, becoming Protestant is the best guarantee of stable church attendance as an adult (p. 35).

· The majority of adult Catholics are not even certain that a personal relationship with God is possible (p. 46)

· Mass attendance is always lower than, and goes up and down with, the percentage of those who are certain that it is possible to have a personal relationship with God (p. 44).



The Joy of the Gospel by Pope Francis.

VATICAN CITY (Catholic Online) - It will take your breath away in its evangelical fervor, spiritual insight, beauty, profound theology and depth of insight. Officially released [in 2013], the first Apostolic Exhortation written by Pope Francis is entitled Evangelii Gaudium, The Joy of the Gospel and it will send shockwaves of the Holy Spirit when its impact is fully experienced.








The Four Signs of a Dynamic Catholic: How Engaging 1% of Catholics Could Change the World by Matthew Kelly. If you walk into any Catholic church today and look around, you will discover that some people are highly engaged, others are disengaged, and the majority are somewhere in between. What key things did... Mother Theresa, Francis of Assisi, John Paul II, Catherine of Siena and Ignatius of Loyola all have in COMMON? THEY ALL PRACTICED THE FOUR SIGNS!






Evangelizing Challenge This Week

Form a Catholic Book Club among your Men’s or Women’s club friends, your CRHP class, your RCIA class or “Coming Home” group.



Some comments came from  Kevin Cotter of FOCUS Blog, GoodReads.com,the Vatican Press Office  and Antionette Thomas.