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323 West Illinois Street - Chicago IL 60654

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Fr. Joseph Chamblain, O.S.M. Pastor

 

3/3/2024 Fr. Joseph Chamblain, OSM
YES THERE IS GOOD NEWS

Some days it seems as if the easiest job in the world is to tally up the bad news. War continues to rage in Eastern Europe and the Middle East and crime and violence in Chicago never take a holiday. Congress is in gridlock. With a presidential election not many months away, 64% of Americans say they would like an alternative to Biden and Trump. All kinds of issues are swirling around about migration and the southern border; the homeless crisis is not solving itself; and the Chicago Bears and the Chicago White Sox keep reminding us that they are the really needy ones. In the Church an aging pontiff is trying to push us to become a more Spirit-led Church, while the supporting structures continue to crumble. In our Archdiocese between 2000 and 2019, Mass attendance declined by 35%, baptisms by 40% and weddings by 33% and fewer than 20% of Catholics attend Mass regularly. We could go on and on but we all have the picture.

This is one of the reasons I found participating in the annual Rite of Election and Continuing Conversion at Holy Name Cathedral so uplifting. This past Sunday February 18, the eight members of our adult catechumenate, their sponsors, a few family members, and the leaders of our RCIA were among the more than a thousand people that quite literally filled the church. This is one of four services in which those who are preparing for Easter Sacraments (Baptism, Confirmation, and First Communion) are formally affirmed and declared “elect” by Cardinal Cupich or an auxiliary bishop. While the other three services may not have been as well filled, it was an awesome moment to see more than half of the congregation in the Sanctuary responding to the call to full membership in the Catholic Church. Having attended this event every year, this is the most crowded ceremony I have seen in a long time. And this is only one Archdiocese. This same ritual is happening in churches and cathedrals all over the world.

Of course, statistics tell us that more people are leaving the church than joining it and that not everyone who is received into the Catholic Church at Easter will remain active in it. My point is that even amid all the gloom and doom in our world and in our church, people are still being drawn to the community and finding value in it. It reminds us not to take what we have for granted or overlook the opportunities we have to model our faith to others. The same statistics also tell us that the people who make up what is now our nation’s largest religious denomination (“none”) are not all averse to organized religion. Many of them are actively searching. How we represent our Catholic faith at work or at the grocery store or at a condo meeting may make a difference. It also means that we should not assume that the visitors or new faces we see at Sunday Mass are Catholic. They may be people of another faith or of no faith who want to see what Catholic worship is like. People want to check out what the actual experience of the community is like before they check out what the group believes. Hence, the smile we show the visitor, the handshake we offer at the sign of peace, and the actual engagement we exhibit in the responses and in the singing at Mass are clues to outsiders of how much the worship means to us. After all, everyone else is just as weary of bad news as we are. The Good News that has touched our lives is the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. That is meant to be good news for everybody.

This past weekend I was not very visible at Assumption. About six months ago I had been invited by the Adult Faith Coordinator at Immaculate Conception Parish in Elmhurst to preach a parish mission, something I had not done in about ten years. This meant preaching at all the weekend Masses and giving a presentation Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday evenings. It seemed like a good idea at the time, but it turned out to be a lot of work at the last minute! But it was also nice to experience another Catholic community seeking to address the same issues that we all face. As Pope Francis said on his visit to the United States in 2015, “One of the great challenges facing the Church in this generation is to foster in the faithful a sense of personal responsibility for the Church’s mission, and to enable them to fulfill that responsibility as missionary disciples, as a leaven of the Gospel in the world.” Leaven, you know, is not much to write home about all by itself. However, its impact can be felt throughout the loaf of bread. That is the ministry to which Pope Francis has called us. We may not see ourselves as very important, but that does not mean that our influence does not matter.

 

                                 Fr. Joe

 

 

 

 

 


 

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This list includes the last thirteen months of messages.
Click on a date to see the message.

   
4/28/2024   OUR COMMON VOCATION
4/21/2024   LIFE THROUGH DARKENED GLASSES
3/31/2024   HOW TO AVOID CELEBRATING EASTER
4/7/2024   A SEASON OF CELEBRATION
4/14/2024   A WORLD OF PLASTIC
3/17/2024   APPROACHING THE CITY OF DESTINY
3/24/2024   A WEEK OF PROCESSIONS
3/3/2024   YES THERE IS GOOD NEWS
3/10/2024   MAKING THE HEADLINES
2/4/2024   WHY YOUR SUPPORT MATTERS
2/18/2024   NOT JUST THE SAME OLD STUFF
2/25/2024   WHAT WE NEED RIGHT NOW
2/11/2024   THE ORIGINAL SOFT ENTRY POINT
12/31/2023   WELCOMING, ACCOMPANYING, SENDING
1/7/2024   DOING A LITTLE DIGGING
1/14/2024   THAT ALL MAY BE ONE
1/21/2024   CATCHING UP ON THIS AND THAT
1/28/2024   WHAT'S REALLY BEHIND DRY JANUARY
12/24/2023   IT HAPPENED THAT WAY FOR A REASON
12/17/2023   HUMAN LIFE IS AT STAKE
12/10/2023   ARE WE ASKING TOO MUCH OF OURSELVES?
12/3/2023   WHY DO WE WAIT?
11/19/2023   IS IT REALLY THANKSGIVING?
11/26/2023   THAT MEETING IN ROME
11/5/2023   PRAYING FOR THE DEAD
11/12/2023   DIGGING INTO THE LEFTOVERS
10/22/2023   SERVING THE GODS OF LOVE
10/29/2023   TURN LOOSE THE SPOOKS
10/15/2023   THE JOURNEY BEFORE US
10/8/2023   WHAT RUNNERS TEACH THE REST OF US
9/24/2023   LEARN A LESSON FROM THE SAINTS
10/1/2023   WHAT NEXT, MOTHER EARTH?
9/10/2023   SCARS FROM THE PANDEMIC
9/17/2023   THE FAITH FORMATION OF CHILDREN
8/20/2023   HOW DO WE NEED TO CHANGE?
8/27/2023   CARE FOR CREATION
9/3/2023   HOPE FILLED SIGNS IN CHANGING TIMES
8/13/2023   OUR IMMIGRANT PAST AND OUR PARISH FEAST DAY
8/6/2023   DOES MY PRESENCE MAKE A DIFFERENCE?
7/30/2023   TEACH US HOW TO PRAY
7/16/2023   GRADING ON THE CURVE
7/23/2023   A MEASURE OF SUCCESS
7/2/2023   THE SYNOD ON SYNODALITY
7/9/2023   A CHURCH BURNS IN ST. LOUIS
6/25/2023   MOVING ACROSS THE RIVER
6/11/2023   BRINGING BACK THE CUP
6/18/2023   IS LIFE EVER ORDINARY?
6/4/2023   IT'S NOT FOR EVEYONE
5/28/2023   UNWRAPPING OUR GIFTS
5/21/2023   HOW CHURCHES GROW
5/14/2023   A NEW LOOK FOR THE CHURCH
5/7/2023   OPENING OUR EYES
4/23/2023   WE BEGAN ON EASTER
4/30/2023   THE INSIDE STORY
4/16/2023   FINDING A NEW WAY
4/2/2023   GETTING BACK TO BASICS
4/9/2023   ENCOUNTERING THE RISEN LORD