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The Plan for Evangelize Me!

8/28/2019

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“In virtue of their baptism, all the members of the people of God have become missionary disciples.   All the baptized, whatever their position in the Church or their level of instruction in the faith, are agents of evangelization…”
Pope Francis
Evangelii Gaudium, 120




Evangelize Me! is a new apostolate that was formed to help Catholics learn how to become effective missionary disciples for Christ. Every Catholic is called to an intimate love relationship with Jesus that leads to a more abundant and vibrant life. As we each grow in our knowledge of the great truths and mysteries of the faith, and experience their practical applications in our every day lives, we need also to learn how to communicate those truths, both through our words, and the example of our lives.


How can Evangelize Me!  Help this to happen?
We seek to partner with parishes to provide dynamic, relevant classes, presentations, and events where folks can further encounter Christ, learn, and grow, and change.


We can provide:
            For local parishes in southern Maine: On-going classes that meet weekly.
Classes include:
Entering the Abundant Life
Introduction to the Scriptures
The Life and Writings of St. Paul
The Creed
The Sacraments
The Christian Life
Healthy Relationships


            For parishes further away:
Advent and Lenten Retreats 
Days of Reflection
Evangelization Training Workshops
Parish Missions


    All of these will be provided at no cost to the parish except the traveling expenses…
    We ask only that we be allowed to take up a freewill offering from those who desire to give.


Why are we offering it for free?
We need to remove any barrier we can that might prevent a parish from being able to receive these opportunities. We know that most parishes have small budgets and that some smaller parishes are struggling to simply pay their bills. For these parishes to survive and someday thrive, they need to be able to access these services at no cost.
How you can help the Church become a Church that evangelizes?


Pray!


Pope Benedict XVI said that every endeavor of the New Evangelization must be “drenched” in prayer.  Pope John Paul II told us in Salvific Doloris 27 that the most powerful prayer we have is the uniting of our suffering with Christ’s and the offering of it up to the Father for the redemption of others. He says,


 “It is suffering, more than anything else, which clears the way for the grace which transforms human souls. Suffering, more than anything else, makes present in the history of humanity the powers of the Redemption.” 


Offer your suffering and ask that our work would be effective for turning hearts towards the Lord, for changing lives, and that we would have strength and the Lord’s guidance as we begin this new work.




Support!


In order to be able to offer these quality, life-changing events at no charge to parishes in Maine, we need monthly supporters. Our immediate goal is to find 30 individuals or families willing to give $50 per month. This would enable us to have a minimum financial foundation to begin the work immediately. If you would please prayerfully consider a monthly gift of any amount, we would be eternally grateful!


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The battle is raging...

8/19/2019

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It seems that everywhere I turn lately there is another story of a well known christian leader who has fallen from the faith, is divorcing their long time spouse, or fallen into some gross moral failure. Signs of the times we live in. It could be easily discouraging for their brothers and sisters in faith if they do not understand these times. These times…this is the time of great battle. The days for the battle for the soul of the Church as it stands against the onslaught of the enemy to destroy it; pulling the western culture down to where the destruction of the church will be seen as a righteous act of ridding the world of those judgmental bigots. These are the times we live in, but we need not be afraid, because we were born for such a time as this. We were chosen for this battle. predestined, before time began, with the infinite wisdom and overflowing love of the Father, for this time.


With every battle, there are casualties; people deeply wounded from constant assault and temptation, may God give them healing and courage.


 With every battle there are those who turn coat to fulfill their flesh, for profit or for fear; may God have mercy on their souls. 


In every battle there are heroes. Saints, who rise in the power and joy and wisdom of the Spirit. Saints, who battle the hopelessness, and hatred and lies of the world to be free. Free to live and speak the truth in pure love regardless of the consequences. Free from fear and shame and ego and politics, fully surrendered to the Christ the Savior and Lord of time and eternity. They serve the God of Hope, the God of all comfort.In faith, rooted and grounded in the Father’s love for them as his children, that nothing can separate them from, they love radically and unconditionally and proclaim the Truth, who is the Son. They live in faith, knowing this life is just the prelude, the childhood, the preparation for sharing the eternal life of the familial love of the Trinity.


And so my dear friends, some of whom are suffering greatly, do not despair. Some of you are enduring great suffering to prepare you for the task God has created you for; a basic training of sorts so that you can be the warrior you need to be. Some of you feel like you are dying in this time but remember our Savior’s words….unless a grain of wheat dies…it is the divine economy of all of creation, physical and spiritual, that only in dying can life be brought forth. May God grant you faith in the resurrection, as impossible as it seems, so you can sustain hope in the hopeless situation you stand in.


The Church of Jesus Christ has suffered before, been attacked from within and without before, it has been despised and persecuted, indeed, some of the most powerful people and cultures of all of history has tried to destroy this Church. None has ever succeeded, none ever will. From our particular spot on the battlefield it may appear so at times, but the gates and powers of hell itself will not win. We serve the Lord who has destroyed principalities and powers, and sits over them in authority. He promises to use all things for the good if his beloved children. 


Rest in that love. Trust in that love. Love rules all, and it never fails.


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Exciting News!

5/30/2019

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Greetings!


I am writing with wonderful news! We are launching a nonprofit organization focused on evangelization and discipleship! The time is right; the need could not be greater. As we look around in our parishes, we see fewer and fewer young families. As we look at our families, we see fewer and fewer bothers and sisters, cousins, uncles and aunts who are practicing their faith. And as we look at our post-Christian, secularized culture, we see more and more people choosing to believe in nothing at all. Through all this, we recognize the tremendous need for the Gospel to be brought to people in a powerful, relevant, and practical way and for the faithful in our churches to be helped to both grow in their faith and to become ‘missionary disciples’.


This is why we are launching a new work. You might ask, how can a new organization help with such long term decline and huge social problems? This can be done by presenting the truth, beauty and goodness of our faith with clarity, love and authority, and by helping believers become missionary disciples who can turn around and do the same.


We will use, and teach, the model that Jesus used. He chose a relatively small number of people and spent a significant amount of time investing in their lives. He challenged their perspectives, taught them about the Kingdom of God, role-modeled life as a human being in relationship with the Father, and provided opportunities for them to practice evangelization. He walked them through it all. He taught them to proclaim the Gospel, in relevant ways, to every person and group of people that he could. And that is our plan.


Our focus will be on training and supporting ‘small group leaders’ to facilitate evangelization and discipleship of small groups of people. (Our next newsletter will expound on the vital role small groups can play in changing lives and hearts!) And we will look for and create as many opportunities to proclaim the amazing truth of God’s reality and love as we possibly can. 


I am writing today because I want to have as many people helping (and being helped) as possible. There is much work to be done and each and every one of us has a role, a piece of the work especially designed for us to do, that only we can do. 


Here is how you can help:


1. Please pray for us! Recognizing that we are engaged on the front front lines of spiritual warfare, we ask for your prayer support. We believe in the power of prayer, and Pope Benedict XVI has said that every New Evangelization effort should be “drenched” in prayer.


2. Spread the Word! Here are our links.


Website: www.evangelizeme.org
Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/c0522d942037/evangelizeme
Youtube Channel:  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTKTU9Jv31d9gNvkuHGEuDg






 3. Financial support! We need monthly supporters to establish a foundational budget to begin building the work. Even the smallest commitments are most appreciated. It all adds up.


http://www.evangelizeme.com/donate.html


Thank you.


I will keep you posted with our progress!


Don Smith
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Don's Conversion Story

5/10/2019

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Although I did not know it at the time, my conversion to the Catholic Church began in a congregational meeting in the winter of 1999. I had been pastoring a nondenominational charismatic fellowship for almost nine years. I had poured my heart and soul into it. We had gone through a building program and had a very successful Christian Twelve-Step outreach, which was apparently too successful in some people’s eyes. Our church was developing a reputation for being a place where addicts, alcoholics and the troubled went. I thought that was great, but some members of the congregation didn’t. Though I had been warned by a handful of faithful friends that something was coming, I guess I just couldn’t believe it was true, especially since none of the people who were upset had said a word to me about it. It was an ugly church split in-the-making and there was nothing I could do. But it was worse than a split in some ways; the new believers involved left as well as those who were disgruntled. If this was “church” they wanted no part in it.

​I remember the strong feeling I had that it was very wrong that there was not a higher authority involved. These divisive people would go off to be welcomed into other churches and never be held accountable for the damage and pain they had caused, or be encouraged to look at the issues in their own lives that caused them to behave that way. It was a feeling I had experienced often during my years of ministry as people came into our church and left again, as people started “new” churches in the area, and as I interacted with other pastors who clearly had no right to be involved in ministry. In fact, of the many pastors I had met I could only think of a few that were true shepherds to their people. Many were spiritual egomaniacs, determined to prove their worth by how big their churches were. Some were merely businessmen in clerical garb; success to them was bigger buildings, more programs and more exposure. There was something so wrong with the church. I became very disillusioned with it. Where was the church that the “gates of hell” could not prevail against? Where was the “body of Christ” described in the New Testament? It seemed obvious to me that we were missing something in our modern age that the early church had in the authority of its apostles and bishops.

​About a year later my wife and I moved on from that church and I took a chaplaincy position in a residential care facility for at-risk teens. It was a great position for me because it was all about pastoral care and teaching. There was no “church growth” pressure, no “church hoppers” to deal with, just pure ministry.

I decided I should try to find a church to be a part of in the new city we moved to. I began researching the histories of various denominations in order to know their roots and doctrinal distinctions. I found the same story repeated over and over again. A person would discover a “new” biblical truth that his or her church did not believe or at least didn’t preach. The person would then go off and start a new church. Inevitably, theirs was the “true” church, the “biblical” church, or the “New Testament” church and they were the “remnant” of God’s true followers; all others were “lukewarm” and compromised at best, down right evil and being used by Satan was more likely. In my new ministry position I had the opportunity to preach in many different churches, but none of them had the authority to declare that their interpretation of Christianity was the true one.  What kind of witness to the world could we ever be with so many denominations and anti-denominations?

In all this time I never considered the Catholic Church. Though I had been raised Catholic, I had quit attending as soon after I was confirmed. When my wife and I committed our lives to the Lord, it had been with a very anti-Catholic group. Though I was not as radically anti-Catholic as they were ( I believed  there were true Christians in the Catholic Church, they were just far and few between), I had been trained that the Church was full of error and manmade traditions and therefore it was not even on my radar screen when it came to finding a new church. But then again, I never did find a new church; none of them had any authority and I knew it.

​As part of my chaplaincy, I worked on nondenominational youth retreats to which I would bring some of my students. I developed a friendship there with another youth leader who was passionate, intelligent and real. She came to me at a planning event in the fall of 2003 and shared that she had become a Catholic. Nothing could have been more shocking. Why would a smart, passionate protestant ever become a Catholic? We had several long talks over the course of that fall retreat and I left with a pile of Catholic books to read. Thus began a long quest for the truth. One of the books was “A Biblical Defense of Catholicism" by David Armstrong.  I started reading it very skeptically but realized quickly that what was being discussed was not simply a different interpretation of the scriptures. I was led to ask some important questions. Who was to say which was right and which was wrong? Who was to say that I had the right interpretation?

The chapter on the Eucharist was very convincing. As a protestant, I had never understood John Chapter 6. It just didn’t make sense, even when I tried to spiritualize what he was saying. He pointed out how the Greek words John used strongly emphasized the physical eating that Jesus was talking about. When people became offended at this teaching of Jesus, he didn’t explain a spiritual principal he was trying to convey; instead he said, “Unless you “gnaw” or “chew” on my flesh you have no part of me.” I had never heard this before and found it disturbing. As I studied it on my own though, I became convinced. Then I began reading the Church Fathers. It was obvious they believed in a real Presence in the Eucharist. I became even more convinced, and I wondered, if the Catholic Church was right about this, what else might they be right about?

For the next three years I read and studied. I devoured the Catechism from cover to cover. I discovered that much of what I had thought the Church taught isn’t what it teaches at all. I thought they worshiped Mary, but they don’t; they honor and venerate her for the incredibly unique role she played in the life of our savior. I thought they believed they were saved by works, but learned that they believe men are saved by grace through faith working itself out in love. I read the Church Fathers and discovered that they were obviously Catholic in faith and practice. I began to research the particular Catholic doctrines that I had issues with; purgatory, the infallibility of the pope, and the stand against contraception. As I completed each study, I became more convinced. And somewhat overwhelmed. Sometimes as I completed a time of intense study I would end up withdrawing from the Lord and from the studies. I would avoid the whole thing for weeks at a time. I did not want to become a Catholic, even though I was becoming convinced that the Catholic Church was the true Church. I had spent years judging Catholics. I knew how I would be judged if I converted; I knew how some protestants would see me and talk about me. Pride was definitely in the way. But eventually, the truth conquered even that. I didn’t care anymore, I had to convert.

God was incredibly patient, merciful and gentle with me through this process. As I had studied, I had shared things with my wife, Hollis, and so when the time came for the decision she was ready to come with me into the Church. But then came the most difficult part of it all. It was time for me to surrender my protestant ordination. I had approached my employers and explained my situation and they said they would keep me on as a lay chaplain, so that was not a problem. The real problem was that my sense of identity, my purpose in life and my entire relationship with God was wrapped up in my service to him as a member of the clergy. I did not even begin to realize the depth of this until now.  In surrendering my ordination a part of me was dying, an important part of me; it actually felt like I was dying. It was much harder than I had anticipated. The turning point came when I was meeting with Fr. Paul, the priest who was guiding me through my conversion process. After sharing the painful experience I was going through, he said simply that I must “embrace the pain.” I must admit that at first I was angry with such seemingly ridiculous advice. But I realized somewhere deep inside that he was right. I had read enough of the saints’ writings and of the Catholic theology of suffering to know he was right. I embraced it and welcomed it, which transformed it from something that was separating me from the Lord to something that brought me into his comforting arms. I was finally ready.

In the fall of 2006, my wife and I enrolled in RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults). On Easter, 2007, we were welcomed into the Church. It had been an exciting, confusing and painful journey but we were finally in The Church. The Church that could authoritatively teach and deal with issues, the Church that had stood against the gates of hell for 2000 years, the Church that is unified under one apostolic authority - we were home. Our quest for the Truth had found its fulfillment.
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Thanksgiving Day

11/22/2018

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In these last few weeks I have taken major steps (at least for me, though they will probably seem quite simple and small to most) to launch, or maybe relaunch, Evangelize Me! My hope for Evangelize Me! is that I will find an outlet for the abundance of grace God has bestowed on me, the passion I have for people to know the reality of his love, the power of his Spirit, the depth of fulfillment available when you know his personal, passionate, cosmic plan for you. I want to proclaim the Good News to every soul who will listen! The need for this message to be proclaimed in a clear and relevant way is growing by the day as our postmodern society slips further into the morass of secular relativism. I am amazed at how many Catholics have no knowledge of their faith or the of scriptures; and that lack of knowledge leads to a lack of hope and peace and joy which is a tragic loss for God’s own children but an even greater loss to this world in which we are called to live lives of hope and peace and joy as a witness to the reality of God and his love! And so it is with a sense of urgency of late that I have totally revived my website, set up a series of Advent meditations, started a youtube channel, and began the process of starting a nonprofit.
​
Please pray that I can stay clear and focused because I am so easily discouraged. In these next few weeks I am hoping to blog and video the thoughts and presentations on the incarnation I am doing here in Maine and in Massachusetts. I would love to begin a weekly video on the Gospel readings so people can be better prepared for Mass on Sunday and find a greater experience of grace at Mass. Due to some generous gifts, I have been able to get some materials I need to do this. Maintaining discipline will be challenging because my life is already filled with family and friends, evangelism opportunities, parish responsibilities and the need to have fun and relax. Add to this that I am just learning how to video, edit and post things, and I have no idea how to even start a podcast and you can get a sense of what a challenge it will be! Oh, for more hours in a day! But I trust that if this is a work of His Spirit and is timed according to his will it will come to pass without any stress or fear because it is truly his work, not mine. And if I fail at this attempt, then it changes nothing of his love and plan for me, only that I will learn more deeply of it.

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Time for a new work.

11/16/2018

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For many years, I have wanted, with all my heart, to proclaim the profound and amazing truths of the Christian faith. I know that in this faith is the complete fulfillment of the deepest longings of every human heart; the desire to love and be loved in a heroic way, an overarching and eternal purpose for every life as a whole and for every little decision that gets made, the chance to make a difference in this world and for eternity, and to find the strength to hope and believe and battle to become the person I was truly created to be, which is the one I most deeply want to be. The Gospel not only calls to the deepest longings of our hearts but challenges us intellectually to meditate and understand profound mysteries that are beyond anything we could imagine. It calls us to peace and beauty and goodness. It is what this crazy world needs right now.

And so, with the encouragement of friends and family, I am endeavoring to make what I have to offer available on a larger scale. I want to teach and speak more, I want to do more small group evangelization and I want to try to create a digital platform  where others can be taught.

I entrust my hopes and plans to God. I make no pretense of knowing his plans and have no desire but to fulfill the passion he has put in my heart, to know him more deeply and to make him known. Please pray for me in this process, as I am easily distracted, overwhelmed and discouraged. Please pray that I am responsive to his lead and timing and that he will provide exactly what I need when I need it. Pray that God will bless this little work. The fields are truly "ripe unto harvest."
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New Year's Thoughts....

1/1/2016

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Thoughts for the New Year!


I am not much for New Year’s resolutions; I have tried and failed so many years that they are just not worth the effort for me. They can be counterproductive, even, because I get discouraged. But the beginning of a new year is an especially good time to reflect on how I am actually living my life, on what kind of person I am, and on what does need to change for me to move closer to becoming the unique person God created me to be, the one he died for, to set free to be able to become more like Him. In that context, I want to share this list of five principles that I came across some years ago. (I don’t know who originally wrote them, so I can’t give credit where credit is due. I wish I could; they have changed my life.) The principles are simple; they don’t involve me making outrageous promises to lose 30 pounds, to exercise regularly, or to pray the liturgy of the hours every day. They are just simple principles that I’m trying to learn to live by. The simplicity and balance of the precepts ring true to me, and help me embrace them. Here they are:


1.Trust in Jesus’s perfect victory. 


We read in 1st John 3, verse 8:  “The Son of God appeared for this purpose, that He might destroy the works of the devil.”  Jesus’s sacrifice on the cross, and His resurrection from the dead for the redemption of mankind (and indeed, all of creation!) was profoundly effective - more than we realize. We are surrounded by the works of the enemy and they are quite obvious. So the problem is that, well, Jesus’s victory is hidden. It is not obvious at all. But this hidden victory is more true, more real, more powerful and more eternal than any work of the enemy could ever be. We are assured that the gates of hell shall not prevail against us; we are promised that he shall complete the work he has begun in each of us; we can believe that he is for us and not against us. It is just plain true that he shall freely give us all that we need to continue and to conquer, and he has promised to use all things for our good. His victory has given Him the right to be perfectly in control of our lives and all our circumstances. He loves us, and he also loves those whom we love. We can trust him, all the way around, with everything that is precious to us.


2. Don’t be discouraged. 


Easier said than done, right? Especially for some of us! It is far too easy for us to see our weaknesses, and our sins - all the things that are wrong with us,  and with our loved ones, the Church and the whole world! Our faith shows us the ideals quite clearly -  in the saints, in the power of the Mass and sacraments - and yet what we often experience is so far from the ideal it is easy to come to believe that the ideal is just another impossible goal, a ‘New Year’s Resolution’ that is bound to fail. We are always needing to be reminded of the first point above, trust in Jesus’s victory, but we also need to be reminded that God is a God of process (for His own, incomprehensible reasons!) and that if everything was already perfect now, we’d already be in heaven. Personally, I am very goal-orientated. I desire that processes be short so I can reach the goal!  And many of us seek instant gratification so when the process is long it is far too easy for us to fall into frustrated despair. The truth is (ouch) that the real goal is not to get to the end of the process (that doesn’t even happen in this life) but to be fully engaged in the process. Which brings us to the next thought…


3. Draw close to Jesus. 


I have had some precious moments when the profound realities of our faith have been overwhelmingly clear: that the all powerful Being who created everything that exists, loves me, became a man, and then gave his very life for me; that this Being of pure love is everywhere present and always with me; that I live and move and have my very being in Love Itself, and most stunning of all, that he desires to share his life with me in an intimate relationship. Selah. I am becoming more and more aware that He wants me to walk in the reality of his loving presence and his care for me every moment of every day. He fervently desires me to have ears to hear the voice of His love that longingly speaks to me every moment of my day. A tall order…. for me, this means that I need to s l o w   d o w n.  I can take the time to read the scriptures; I can take the time meditate on the reality of His existence, and on the truths that he has purposefully made available to me; I can consciously and actively look for him in every moment, and in every circumstance, of every day.


4. Have close loving family and friends. 


I am an introvert (surprise!), and I naturally tend to withdraw and isolate myself regularly. This is especially true, and becomes unhealthy, when I find myself in pain, or I find myself discouraged. The truth is that God created us to be in relationship with other people, and we are actually most able to be peaceful when we spend a certain amount of time with those people who love us, and appreciate us. It takes effort, including the investment of time, to develop and maintain such supportive relationships. And it is particularly hard to let people love us when we feel like we truly are failures, rejects… But it is so often precisely through relationships like these that God chooses to reveal his love and support to us. In a blessed interdependence, it is often through others that he provides what we need. So I need to take the time, make the effort, and make room in my busy schedule for the people who I believe love me and are willing to support me.


5. Take care of yourself. 


Since I am an adult (contrary to what my wife sometimes thinks), I am responsible for myself. I am the one who must do whatever little things that I can that will remind me of my true value as a unique child of God. It is good for me to make time to do the things that I enjoy, the things that refresh me, that re-create me. God created me to be myself, and he enjoys me. (It took me a long time to even begin to accept that as true in any way shape or form!) He did not create me to get things done, or to be like some other person. He wants me! Including the parts of me that are a restful expression of who He is! It is good for me to have a hobby; it is good for me take a long, hot bath,  to read a good book, to go for a hike. Jesus certainly did suffer in his life, but that isn’t all that even He did. (Don’t you think that He enjoyed working with wood and expressing his creativity in that way?) I have gradually come to realize that when I can recognize my intrinsic value in these ways, my natural desire to eat right and to exercise develops along the way, and then those things are much easier to do than when I make crazy New Year’s resolutions. And doesn’t the simplicity and balance of that idea ring true in a way that seems like God?


Five simple principles. Lord, please help me to remember them and embrace them in this coming year, more than I ever have been able to do before. I will find You there!
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Why "spiritual but not religious" doesn't work...

11/23/2015

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Every family has rules. We use rules to keep our kids safe and healthy, and to help them be successful. Rules provide a structural framework that enables the family to function and to have good relationships. Everyone would agree that families are not about rules, they are about relationships and love. We would even say this knowing that families have many rules that are incredibly restrictive of a child’s daily life and choices. Think about some of the rules we have…

when to get up,

how long it should take to get dressed,

what to wear and what not to wear,

what you can or can’t  have for breakfast,

what to take to school,

you have to go to school,

what chores and homework needs to be done before you can play,

how long you can be on your computer,

what you can watch,

how you sit at the table,

how you ask for food,

how you eat your food,

on and on and on…….



From a certain perspective, not seeing the loving relationships that rules help the family create and maintain, a person could say that families are all about rules, and they could rebel against that and state, “I am going to have a family where we just love each other, and not have rules.” I think we all know that this just plain wouldn’t work.



What is true about the family is also true about the Church. The family of God has specific rules to follow. The rules are not there as an end unto themselves, they are there to keep us safe, healthy, and successful. They are there to facilitate relationships, (especially our relationship with God). But we have a problem. And that is that for at least a couple of generations we were raised with lots of rules but no relationship. And this caused people to come away from their experience of Catholicism believing it was all about rules, and only about rules. Yet, nothing could be further from the truth. Christianity is all about relationship: about a Father’s overwhelming love for his children, his desire to create a family, and to have his children enter into his own eternal, blessed life. So he has rules that can lead us to be healthy children, free children, who know how to live well and to truly love.



I think this false associate between rules and boring, useless church, is the root of a pervasive attitude that many people in our modern culture have: people want to be spiritual (rules are unnecessary baggage) but not religious (which means, of course, following lots of rules). In other words, they want the benefits of a loving family but don’t want to follow the rules that sustain the family and make it functional. When we realize that the rules are there to help us enter into the life of peace, joy, and hope that Jesus has for us, we can embrace them.  Indeed, we can even grow to love them. Read Psalm 119. It is one of the longest psalms, filled with joy, and it is written by a person who has grown to love God’s laws.



Think about the responses a child can have to his/her parents rules. When children are little, 2, 3 or 4 years old, they are constantly testing the rules, pushing the envelope, sometimes defiantly breaking the rules. Good parents learn how to lovingly discipline, to react to a child’s testing in a way that motivates them to learn to obey, to show them that obedience really is the best path. We know, as parents, a child must learn to obey, it is literally a matter of life and death. Once a child learns obedience, family life can settle into a routine of trusting, loving communication, and support, which then becomes the foundation for that child to grow in independence and confidence, and to experience the wide array of blessings that are the fruit of a loving family.



What would happen to a child who saw the rules only as the efforts of power hungry parents trying to control him, and decided to steadfastly refuse to obey the rules? Would he not have separated himself from the very thing that he most needs?



God’s family is the very same as our own, our families are modeled after God’s family structure. God gives us the important rules for living, rules regarding respect, kindness, gentleness, mercy, sexuality, marriage, and a host of other things that are a part of our everyday life. I can choose to see these rules as something man-made, made by the church to control people, seeing them therefore as arbitrary. Then I can believe that I can choose my own way to go. Or I can see them as the steps of a stairway that the Lord wants me to climb in order to become the person he has created me to be, that I might have the abundant life of peace, joy, and hope that he died to give me. I can learn obedience, which takes a certain brand of humility. I can choose to believe that God actually knows, better than I do, how I should live. Or I can walk away, and spend the rest of my life searching for the experience of knowing God as my dad, my best friend, my lover, my supporter, my provider and never find him; because all those things happen in a family, a family with rules.​



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Taking the Gospel Outside the Walls of the Church

10/20/2015

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"In the Gospel there's the beautiful passage about the shepherd who realizes that one of his sheep is missing, and he leaves the 99 to go out and find the one, but, brothers and sisters, we have only one. We're missing 99! We must go out and find them.” Pope Francis address to parish leaders from the Diocese of Rome June 18, 2013


Pope Francis has had a reoccurring theme in his messages from the time that he first became pope, and actually even before that. The theme is, “Avanti,” that is, “Go forth.” He has called on bishops, priests and lay people to get outside the walls of the Church to spread the message of the gospel. He even reverses the popular image of Jesus knocking on a door, which we see as Jesus wanting to come in, interpreting it as Jesus wanting to get out! Jesus wants to get out of our churches and into the lives of the people around us.


So here is a radical proposal. We all know that there are wonderful, amazing Catholic video series out now; Bishop elect Robert Baron’s Catholicism, Symbolon, Great Adventures Bible Studies, and many more. What we typically do with these series is show them in the church hall, and with all our advertising, promoting, and announcing, we get the same crowd that came to the last series we presented.  What would happen if Catholic disciples showed these videos in their homes and invited their friends, relatives and coworkers? 


For many who are away from the church, the idea of going to an event in a church building can be intimidating and risky. Many who have drifted from the faith have no interest in returning and therefore no interest in attending a class. Some have lost their trust in the Church as an institution and as a source of truth and so have no interest in what the Church has to say. Besides, everyone knows that every Christian church has an agenda - “They want me to join!”


We all know that the New Evangelization is about building relationships of trust where the message of God’s love and grace can be spoken and heard; where the gospel can be effectively communicated. Our culture has lost that trusting relationship with the Church. Therefore, we must go out of Her as individual missionary disciples and BE the bridges of trust. My neighbors and friends, even my children and my siblings, would probably never go to the Church for a video series if I invited them. But if I invited them to my home, my domestic church, to watch a video and have an informal discussion, they probably just might.


Small group settings have always been a wonderful resource for evangelization and discipleship, and arguably the most effective one. When I invite people to my home, it is much less threatening, there is not the outward appearance of an agenda, it is in the context of relationship, and it is casual and relaxing.


Over the years, I have been part of many small groups that met in homes. This setting fosters a certain vulnerability that cannot be replicated in a “class” (classroom setting?). In a home setting, relationships can develop that encourage vulnerability and honest communication. Genuine caring can be expressed in practical ways and (practical) prayer. Here, the gospel can be communicated in a much more organic (natural?) way.


I want to be clear that what I am encouraging is the empowerment and support by parishes of the disciples in their midst to turn their homes into little centers of evangelization. These are not to be “parish” programs hosted in homes. Parish programs invariably come with lots of baggage: coordination, communication, safe environment issues, and the like. This is simple, grassroots evangelization that any Catholic disciple could do.  


It is simple, and with programs like “Formed” from the Augustine institute, where there is a wide array of quality Catholic videos available to stream, it is getting even simpler. Just choose a video series that has spoken to you, taught you, changed you. Buy the series or get it from your parish library. Set aside one evening a week for this coming fall. Start inviting. Invite twice or three times as many people as you can host because most will not be able to attend, even though they appreciate the invitation. Make your home as inviting and comfortable as you can but keep it simple. A simple snack, a bowl of popcorn, carrot or celery sticks - nothing burdensome. And then see what the Holy Spirit is able to do in people’s hearts, even outside the walls of the Church!
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Formed: A powerful new tool for the New Evangelization

8/26/2015

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I had the opportunity to participate in a webinar this week with Dr. Tim Gray, the president of the Augustine Institute out of Denver, Colorado, as he explained the plans they have for their new online ministry, "Formed." 

About a year ago the Augustine Institute developed a wonderful adult faith formation video series called "Symbolon." They released the series for purchase as is usually done with video programs. Parishes or individuals buy the program and watch it in homes and parish halls across the country. But then, they did something new. They made the entire content of Symbolon available online so that parishes could purchase a subscription, that would enable parishioners to access the content using a password. Now, every parishioner could have access to the material at any time on any device.  We saw the value of this immediately in our work of trying to reach young families who are notoriously busy and will not ever come to the wonderful opportunities for spiritual growth we make available in our parish hall. We took a risk and bought the subscription. We did a big "in house" promotion of Symbolon at the beginning of Advent with the pastor talking about it at every Mass. Then just before Ash Wednesday we did a big mailing to every person in the parish inviting them to watch one episode a week throughout Lent. We had over 150 individuals register. This was pretty amazing for us because we are a small parish and adult faith formation classes generally only draw 25 or 30 people. We had positive feedback from young and old alike. 

So now, the Augustine Institute is poised to release "Formed." Like Symbolon, it is an online video delivery system that makes quality Catholic teaching available to every parishioner on every device at any time. But....it is so much more! "Formed" will have an impressive array of excellent teaching material and resources from some of the best Catholic teachers in America today. All of the Augustine Institute’s programs will be available including:

Symbolon - a 20 part series for adults on the content and life of our faith

Beloved - a 12 part marriage preparation/enrichment series

Ydisciple - a powerful discipleship program for teens already being used in youth ministries across the country

Lectio - studies of scripture and tradition, like the popular series "Peter" and "The Eucharist"

And they plan to add more, including a baptismal preparation series entitled "Reborn" (awesome teaser on their website: http://www.augustineinstitute.org

Now this is truly amazing to have all of these resources available online on demand. But the Institute didn't stop there. They formed partnerships with other leaders in adult Catholic faith formation so that "Formed" will also feature:

  • Bishop-elect Robert Barron's Catholicism series
  • Steven Ray's Footprints of God series, tracing and explaining salvation history 
  • Fr. Michael Gaitley's 33 Days to Morning Glory Marion consecration retreat
  • Full length Ignatius Press movies to stream, including their popular "Padre Pio" and "Mother Teresa"  movies
  • Ignatius Press ebooks for download
  • Lighthouse Ministries audio presentations for download

And they intend to add more. Their desire is to produce a "one stop" site full of quality Catholic content for parishes and individuals. 

I was obviously very impressed with their plans. The technology they are using is state of the art. According to Dr. Gray, their performance tests have delivered the video content faster and smoother than Netflix and Amazon Prime. Using tools that can reach young families right in the midst of their busy lives removes a significant barrier that prevents them from learning more deeply the great truths of our faith. Because of its quality and accessibility, I believe Formed can be a truly powerful force in the furtherance of the New Evangelization in Maine.

Watch the trailer here:http://www.augustineinstitute.org/formed-coming-soon



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    Don Smith is a "revert" to the Catholic Church. After being a Protestant minister for over 20 years he is happy to be "home." 

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