That the title of a keynote address given by Fr. Gregory Gresko, who is Chaplain at the Blessed John Paul II Shrine in Washington, DC, at the Knights of Columbus College Councils conference in late September. Here are the opening paragraphs:
Blessed John Paul II provides us with important help in what it means
to be a “man of God”. To the beloved Pope, the man of God -- through
and through -- is a man of freedom. He is free because he stands in
front of God and, when he is living a life of holiness, he is never
afraid to stand in front of God. The man of God is free from himself,
and thus he is able to respond to the call of God to follow Jesus Christ
as a faithful disciple, pure in heart and focused on God’s true Way.
He is free from the material world and from all worldly power, which
enables him to realize his full dignity as a human person. In choosing
Christ, the man of God as a free man then can make a complete and free
gift of himself to God and to neighbor. Free from himself, the man of
God accepts suffering in obedience to Christ so that through the
discipline of this suffering, God may conform him more perfectly into
the image and likeness of His Son.
It is remarkable that, throughout his life as Supreme Pontiff of
the Holy Catholic Church, Blessed John Paul II would approach other
people not in order to get something from them, but instead so that he
could make a gift of himself to them. Certainly, he always received
much in being with other people, constantly learning God’s movement in
the human person through his ministry to others. We gain much from
viewing Blessed John Paul’s life as an alternate page to the Gospel of
the young man, whom Jesus calls to abandon everything to follow him in
pursuit of perfect righteousness and holiness of life. The man of God
feels himself loved by God and responds in like love, through his
discipleship in following Christ.
In the spirit of Saint Bartholomew who was a “true son of
Israel”, a true leader first commits to become a man of God. Otherwise,
where would such a leader lead those around him? A true leader in the
Kingdom of God is one who follows Christ, on his knees in fervent prayer
seeking the will of God … on his knees in humble, loving service to his
neighbor as Jesus washes the feet of His disciples in the Upper Room as
one of the last actions before His Crucifixion. We know that a true
leader will be one who has no guile, no duplicity of heart … The man of
God refuses to embrace a double standard by which he would proclaim to
believe in the Gospel of Jesus Christ and in that Faith passed on
through God’s Holy Church, but then behave otherwise. A true leader is
one without falsehood, who refuses to take part in the lie that sin
always is, in its very substance. A true leader wants sin to have no
part of him, so that every part of him may belong to God. If I am going
to be a good leader, I cannot lead people to God if I am not following
Him first myself. I cannot follow Him if I neglect looking deeply,
diligently, and consistently for the path He is walking and along which
He desires to lead me. If I am merely looking at myself for direction, I
will fail to see what Christ is showing me, and I won’t be able to show
Him or the fullness of His Love to others.
In his Sermon on Pastors (46), Saint Augustine gives us a
realistic portrait of the man who struggles to be a man of God but who
has to fight in daily battle against the reality of sin and temptation:
There are men who want to live a good life and have already
decided to do so, but are not capable of bearing sufferings even though
they are ready to do good. Now it is a part of the Christian’s strength
not only to do good works but also to endure evil. Weak men are those
who appear to be zealous in doing good works but are unwilling or unable
to endure the sufferings that threaten. Lovers of the world … are kept
from good works by some evil desire, lie sick and listless, and it is
this sickness that deprives them of any strength to accomplish good
works.
How what Saint Augustine described over sixteen centuries ago
rings all too true today! How do we respond to the challenge to the
human soul that is sin, to evil that threatens the soul’s life now and
its eventual salvation? Blessed John Paul II, in his great Apostolic
Exhortation on the vocation and the mission of lay faithful in the
Church and in the world, Christifideles laici, provides us with a vital
answer, that man is called to respond fundamentally by fulfilling his
authentic vocation as a disciple of Christ: We come to a full sense of
the dignity of the lay faithful if we consider the prime and fundamental
vocation that the Father assigns to each of them in Jesus Christ
through the Holy Spirit: the vocation to holiness, that is, the
perfection of charity. Holiness is the greatest testimony of the
dignity conferred on a disciple of Christ … The call to holiness is
rooted in Baptism and proposed anew in the other Sacraments, principally
in the Eucharist. Since Christians are reclothed in Christ Jesus and
refreshed by his Spirit, they are "holy". They therefore have the
ability to manifest this holiness and the responsibility to bear witness
to it in all that they do (16). God entrusts this vocation to holiness
to the laity, that they will live in the pursuit of holiness in whatever
their state in life might be. As the Church’s baptized laymen, your
responsibility is to contribute to the world’s sanctification, living
your lives rooted in faith in the Holy Gospel and demonstrating
Christian hope in ways that unfold the love of Christ to every person
whom you encounter. Through your particular circumstances in life, God
unfolds His Divine plan and communicates a particular vocation to you,
to seek “the Kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and by
ordering them according to the plan of God" (CL 38). At this year’s
Ecclesial Convention of the Diocese of Rome (11 June 2012), Pope
Benedict XVI elaborated further on what it means to be baptized and
shares insight into how Christians may live life in a manner faithful to
our baptismal vows: "To be baptized means, in fact, essentially a being
emancipated, a being liberated from this culture. We know also today a
type of culture in which truth does not count; even if they wish to have
the whole truth appear, only the sensation counts, and the spirit of
calumny and of destruction. A culture that does not seek the good,
whose moralism is in reality a mask to confuse, to create confusion and
destruction. Against this culture, in which the lie is presented in the
guise of truth and of information, against this culture which seeks
only well-being and denies God, we say no. We must say no to what we
know is false, and we must say yes with fervent assent to the Truth we
hold so dear for we belong to it … Indeed, we have been baptized into
God Who is Truth! This Truth articulates everything in love, which
transpires through the perfect gift of self, not through self-centered
lusts in sin that seek to place myself on the throne that belongs
rightly only to God, to whom I am consecrated."
When we hear challenging words such as these from our Holy
Father, they prompt us to take our lives of faith seriously as
Christians. The holiness of our lives should be our first priority as
Christians, and it requires firm resolution on our part to reject what
God considers to be profane in thought, word, and action. We never
should put ourselves in a position where we would compromise our
morality or lead others to do the same. Just as we would never want to
settle for second best in other areas of our lives, why should we expect
to find happiness if we settle for mediocrity in our faith practice?
Does the pattern of my decision-making lead others to believe that I am
Christian? Does the message I communicate to people who may not even
know me reveal my words and actions as genuine reflections of Christ?
Read the entire address on the Knights of Columbus website.