Many Christians, and in particular many Catholics, have a
reputation of avoiding “evangelization” – the process of sharing the faith with
others. Perhaps it has several reasons. It might be related to fear: we are
afraid of rejection, being thought a fool, or failing. We might feel
unprepared: what if the person asks a question we do not know how to answer, or
perhaps worse, where do we go from the initial positive response. Perhaps the largest is a certain amount of
spiritual apathy. We are too accustomed to relativism – that truth is adaptable
and subjective to the person, that the person decides what is true “for them” –
think of the term “self-identify”, for example. This view of the truth rejects
that there is any “always and everywhere” truth, one that is objective and not
dependent on a person’s ability to grasp it. If all things are relative or
subjective, which ironically is presented as an objectively-held truth, then
the other persons’ beliefs or un-beliefs are as valid as our own.
But there is something profoundly different about
Christianity. We believe that God loved humanity so much that the Father sent
His Son to redeem us, and this Son, Jesus Christ, tells us Himself that He is
the only way to the Father. Even in the Parables of the Lost that we heard
proclaimed last weekend, it is God who ‘finds’ us – not us finding God or
creating our own way to Him. In the end, what we have in Christianity is not a
set of principals and procedures, rules and regulations – it is about being
‘found’ by the Lord, and being in relationship with Him.
If that is all true, then we know that we cannot be
apathetic about evangelization. We come to understand that in Christ alone are
we saved from sin and given the promise of eternity with God. We are asked by
Jesus Christ to go to all nations, sharing the Good News of what He has done
for us. We are not selling information but providing a relationship by introducing
them to a Person. We invite them to deepen that relationship through the
Sacraments and Church. We do so because we love the Lord (and perfect love
drives out fear). We must ask ourselves, what kind of friend, either of the
Lord or the other person, would we ultimately be if we did not wish to help
them find each other?
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