Friday, November 21, 2008

Speaking of Christians today he said, “Our true problem is not being a minority, but rather having voluntarily become marginal, irrelevant, because of our lack of courage, so that we will be left alone, because of our mediocrity.” “For Christians,” Cardinal Rylko added, “the moment has arrived to free themselves from a false inferiority complex … to be valiant witnesses of Christ.” This is, he said, the “hour of the laity,” to take on their “responsibility in the diverse fields of public life, from politics to the promotion of life and family, from work to the economy, from education to the formation of youth.” He warned, however, that such faithfulness would come at a personal cost. “Whoever wants to live and act according to the Gospel of Christ has to pay a price, even in the highly liberal societies of the West,” he said.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Yes. I think I read or heard another priest talk about the new martyrdom of money (or something to that effect.) Basically, the laity may have to put their jobs on the line in order to do what is right. For example, a pharmacist who refuses to dispense abortion pills, a teacher who refuses to teach something contrary to church teaching, etc. Right now the bishops just issued the statement that they would close Catholic hospitals if congress approves a highly controversial law that would force hospitals to allow abortions. I am so proud of the bishops for standing up like that. I hope that the new administration will be smart enough to know not to go through with that law...