Dear Friend,
First of all, I want to say thank
you to all those who have written to me, expressing their gratitude
for Parts 1 and 2 of this series.
Mass murders and the disregard for
human life are continuously in the news. More fervent prayer is needed
for hearts to change throughout the world.
At this moment, let us concentrate
and embrace this time as an
opportunity to sharpen our priorities and to unite more fully in Jesus
and Mary as we continue with our series, “Return to
Virtue.”
The Theological Virtue of Hope
St. Augustine said in
his Confessions that
nations don’t have souls and therefore must endure the consequences of
human actions in this world only. In other words, nations have no hope
of an afterlife – but humans do.
Ironically, those who have hope in
a life to come are the ones who have the greatest positive impact on
societies in the
here-and-now because they
never despair of the ravages of the world or the sins of
men.
They bring a supernatural view of
the world to the problems of society, and they address these problems
from a moral perspective. God is in charge. God’s plan will eventually
win. We believe that, hope in it and work for it.
American society really needs that
supernatural view right now.
Radical Virtue
When we launched our “radical
solution to our nation’s problems” last week, we
made the case that we can only take our country, and every nation back
by restoring virtue.
And virtue begins with each one of
us.
The most essential and greatest of
all the Christian virtues are what we call the theological virtues –
Faith, Hope, and Charity. We are talking in this email specifically
about Hope as a radical virtue, radical meaning “rooted” in the very
life of God.
That is the key to all the
theological virtues. They come from God. They cannot be gained by
human effort, although we must also cooperate with the grace they
give. They are gifts of God and must be bestowed on us.
And that is the very reason why the
theological virtues are so powerful. They are sparks of God’s very
life.
The Virtue of Hope
The Catechism of the Catholic
Church (CCC) says an
amazing thing about Hope that sounds oddly like something the American
founding fathers might have said:
The virtue of hope responds
to the aspiration to
happiness which God has
placed in the heart of every man; it takes up the hopes that inspire
men's activities and purifies them so as to order them to the Kingdom
of heaven; it keeps man from discouragement; it sustains him during
times of abandonment; it opens up his heart in expectation of eternal
beatitude. Buoyed up by hope, he is preserved from selfishness and led
to the happiness that flows from charity. (CCC, 1818)
Hope is an aspirational virtue. In other words, it is rooted in the
heart of man and does all kinds of wonderful things for our inner
life: it “inspires” and “purifies” our activities; it “sustains” us
and keeps us “from discouragement”’; it “preserves us from
selfishness” – wow!
The Church teaches us, essentially,
that Hope has all kinds of actual benefits for temporal life as well
as eternal.
Hope is a Firm Anchor
The essential element of hope is a
desire for unending life with God, which is gained by “placing our
trust in God’s promises and relying not on our own strength, but on
the help of the grace of the Holy Spirit” (CCC, 1817).
And there precisely is where the
strength of this virtue comes from – from God’s strength, not our own.
Hope is based in a humility of heart to recognize that we need God and
that “without God [we] can do nothing” (John 15:5).
Hope in God is the inner strength
for each individual and for society. The Book of Hebrews encourages us
to hold fast to the hope that lies before us. This we have as an
anchor of the soul, sure and firm, which reaches into the interior
behind the veil, where Jesus has entered on our behalf as forerunner.
(Hebrews 6:23)
Imagine a society of men and women
whose souls are firmly anchored in the strength of God even while the
turbulent seas of unrest rage all around them.
In our own day, we witnessed the
valiant people of Catholic Poland endure seventy years of Communist
tyranny with the firm Hope that they would eventually be free of that
terrible system of evil.
And we all know how that story
ended. The fall of Communism was a victory of Hope.
Hope as the Source of Endurance and Joy
The story of Poland points out
another aspect of Hope that characterizes all who have it in their
heart:
Hope is best expressed by
endurance; that is, perseverance through
trials, never giving up and never wavering in belief of something
better.
Hebrews 11 points out that after believing God’s
promises, the patriarchs and great saints of the Old Testament – Abel,
Enoch, Noah, Abraham and others – all waited for their fulfillment, even though the coming Christ was still
far off:
They did not receive what had been
promised but saw it and greeted it from afar and acknowledged
themselves to be strangers and aliens on earth (Hebrews
11:13).
Just as numerous generations of
Poles died before the ’90s without seeing an end to Communism, so Hope
does not always achieve its end…right now.
It is the confident expectation
that what God has promised will come true, in
time. Far from being a passive submission to fate or a depressing
acceptance of the evils of this world, Hope gives us joy, even in our
trials.
“Rejoice in hope, endure in
affliction, persevere in prayer,” said St. Paul to the Romans (12:12).
There was a man of Hope.
What Are People of Hope to Do?
This question has two positive
answers. First, people of Hope always act to improve the conditions of
society and of their fellow man.
Are there people around you who are
in despair or suffering? Be the light of Hope to them. Reach out and
strengthen those who are going through trials.
And second, where solutions to
society’s problems cannot be gained quickly, people of Hope embody
the endurance that helps
society survive earthly evils and problems.
Identify the groups and individuals
who are working for long-term change in society. Support them,
strengthen them, participate in campaigns that add to the cumulative
efforts for change even if you don’t see the fruits right
now.
That is the endurance of the
saints.
The Final Word
The ultimate expression of Hope is
purely supernatural: we pray for the salvation of all souls, even the
souls of our enemies.
St. Paul asked Timothy “that
supplications, prayers, petitions, and thanksgivings be offered for
everyone” because God “wills everyone to be saved and to come to
knowledge of the truth” (1 Timothy 2:1.4).
People of hope pray … for all
people, all the time, and in all circumstances.
Working and praying for the
salvation of others is a great virtue and is the ultimate sign of our
Hope in the saving power of Christ!
Please stay tuned for the final
installment of Return to Virtue, the theological virtue of Charity.
And please pray for us as we pray
for you and your families!
Yours in the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the
Immaculate Heart of Mary,
Thomas J. McKenna Founder and President Catholic Action for
Faith and Family http://www.catholicaction.org/
P.S. Have you
submitted your intentions for the Solemn Pontifical High Mass,
celebrated Cardinal Burke, on February 1, that will be livestreamed
from the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in La Crosse,
Wisconsin? Click here.
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