An American Catholic
This morning I was reflecting on Independence Day, the state of our country, and what it means to be an American Catholic. America Magazine had a couple good articles – an editorial titled Independence Day and an article about David O'Brien titled American and Catholic. Elsewhere I read articles about the state of the union today – the war in Iraq, how other nations have a lower favorable opinion of us than they used to, how we spend so much money on the presidential race, and so on. They all make sense, and they left me with an impression that indeed our nation does have problems. But then, no one had a reasonable solution to offer, either.
Then I picked up a book that I had started reading a while ago, a book that my wife recommended: The Gift of Change, by Marianne Williamson. I had bookmarked a certain page, which I often do when I come across things that I want to revisit. So, I took a look at that particular page, and it pretty much hit home with how I am feeling about being an American Catholic. The quote is a bit long, but the context is needed:
This is an all-hands-on-deck kind of moment on earth. It's not OK to be stuck in the smallness of our narcissism when our greatness is so needed. It's time for each of us to face once and for all whatever demons have kept us chained to our neuroses and pain; to stand up for ourselves as a way of standing up for God; and to take our places in God's plan for the salvation of the world.
This is an exciting time and a critical one. It's not a time to be a lone ranger. It's a time, despite whatever our pain and heartbreak, to reach deep into ourselves and humbly towards each other. For there we will find God, and in God there is every answer we are looking for, every solution we so desperately seek, and every joy we might have come to think was gone and gone forever. This is the time, and we are the ones.
And why are we not already functioning at a higher level of mastery? What holds many of us back is not spiritual ignorance but spiritual laziness. We know many of the principles of higher consciousness; we're just too mentally and emotionally undisciplined to apply them universally. We apply forgiveness where it's easy, faith where it seems to make rational sense, and love where it's convenient. We're serious, but not really...
Now contrast that with the advocates of hate.
Do terrorists hate us just some of the time? Do they have a casual commitment to their cause? Do they take less than seriously the goal of full manifestation of their worldview? The only way we will triumph over hate is to become as deeply committed to love as some people are committed to hate, as deeply committed to expressing our love as some people are devoted to expressing their hate, as firm that love is our mission as some are that hate is theirs.
I don't believe we can separate our Catholic identity from our American identity. In fact I believe we're called to integrate them, and the starting point for that is love of God and love of neighbor. It's love that leads to liberty and justice for all. Love leads to good governance of the people, by the people and for the people. And in this crazy world of war, terrorism, immorality, crime, oppression and poverty, it is love that will make America great.



Recent Comments