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Franciscan at Home

Forming those who form others

From Suffering to Sacrificial Offering: Teaching the Pivotal Steps to Suffering Well

Image of a statue of the baptism of the LordNone of us wants to suffer. We don’t want to be diagnosed with a disease. We don’t want to experience loss.But suffering is inevitable. When it comes, what are we to do? Is it merely to be endured? What, if anything, can we learn from Jesus and his experience of suffering? What does his response to suffering mean for us, who are joined to him in baptism?

The Priesthood of Jesus

Jesus is the eternal Son of the Father. He is the divine Teacher and our model of holiness. The Letter to the Hebrews tells us that he is also a priest, our great High Priest, making of his entire life—but especially his Paschal Mystery—a sacrifice to the Father (see CCC 662; Heb 7; 9:11–15). If we are baptized into Christ and joined into union with him, then the fact that he has a priestly identity and mission means something significant for us.

In the baptismal liturgy, these words are spoken over the newly baptized person: “He [God] now anoints you with the Chrism of salvation, so that you may remain as a member of Christ, Priest, Prophet, and King, unto eternal life.”[1] The ritual text indicates that every baptized person possesses a priestly identity and mission, which centers around the offering of sacrifice. From this point on, our lives are meant to be sacrificial. At Mass, those who are priests by baptism gather around the one who is a priest by ordination, who stands in the person of Jesus, and we all as the assembled body of Christ offer the sacrifice of Jesus to the Father.

Yet, there is another offering that we priests (by baptism) make in the liturgy. While every facet of the life of the baptized person is capable of being offered to God as a gift, our suffering can also be offered to God. Let’s consider here what would be required for suffering to be experienced and turned over to the Father as a priestly offering.

I’d like to suggest that there are three steps to suffering in a way aligned with our missionary identity. Each of these movements is needed if our sufferings are to be experienced as truly ours and if we are to be conscious and present to them so that they might be given to the Father as a gift.

Stepping into the Experience Itself

The first movement in this sacrificial dynamism is to be interiorly present to our suffering, to be alert to it. Tribulation of any kind is, on the one hand, inescapable for us human beings and, on the other, an experience that can be instinctually pushed away. Our first priestly movement, then, is to not immediately seek diversion but instead be as present to it as we can. We Christians shouldn’t impulsively run from experiencing suffering. Jesus himself said, “Whoever does not take up his cross and follow after me is not worthy of me” (Mt 10:38).

There is another reason why we shouldn’t immediately turn away from the experience of suffering: We are not alone in it. God himself desires to deeply enter into the experience of our suffering with us. While we know that, ultimately, he wants to draw good from our suffering, this doesn’t mean that he is only concerned with outcomes. Rather, he enters in. It is in this desolate place where he may be found. And finding him there can bring about both intimacy with him and the strength we need.

When it came to his own suffering, the Gospels reveal that Jesus not only truly drank the full chalice of suffering, he was alertly present to it before it began. Indeed, he anticipated his own suffering in advance of the events which led to his suffering and death. Numerous times he warned his disciples that he was soon to be taken from them (see Mt 16:21–23; 17:22–23; Mk 9:30–32; Lk 9:44–45). And when he was finally nailed to the Cross, the Nicene Creed poignantly tells us that “he suffered death.”

The Need for Acceptance

Second, we must accept the reality with which we are faced. To be clear, this does not preclude us from pursuing a solution, which is frequently important. We can, though, in the present moment, move toward accepting our circumstances. If we are going to somehow offer our suffering, in some manner the experience has to be ours to offer.

Depending on what we are experiencing, this, of course, can be quite difficult for us to do. This is especially so when the pain or anguish is acute and we feel alone. We might feel that our suffering is unjust. We might cry out to God, “Why are you allowing this?” or, “I don’t deserve this!” or, “Please, Lord, take this away!” When we are in anguish, emotions are strong and raw. Consequently, what I am proposing—taking upon ourselves a posture of acceptance—will not be easy to do. It is a significant milestone to be able to say to oneself as much as to the Lord: “This is my current situation and I accept it.”

Turning to Others in Our Need

Unquestionably, we human beings will frequently need help in moving ourselves into this interior space. Drawing upon good friends who have acquired wisdom in their own suffering can be especially helpful in moving toward acceptance. Friends who understand the Catholic insight into suffering can support and embolden us, which is such a tremendous blessing (for us and for them).

There is a second, infinitely more significant source of assistance we need. We can also turn to God for help in accepting the reality in which we stand. He surely knows well this terrain of suffering.

Certainly we can reach out to him and ask him to deliver us—and sometimes he will! But in my experience, frequently he chooses to not rescue us. This can be puzzling and painful for us to accept. “If he loves me,” we can ask, “why does he allow this in my life?” To this question there are no pat, easy answers. In some way, the suffering person who continues to suffer, even after asking the Lord to extricate him from suffering, has a choice to make.

When God doesn’t answer our prayer for immediate deliverance, how will we respond? Some might turn away from him in bitterness, not understanding God’s silence and apparent inaction. And in our desolation, we can certainly understand such a response. Yet, if we are interiorly able to move toward Jesus, it becomes possible for us to open the hidden parts of ourselves to the Lord amidst our anguish and suffering. And this can be the most profound and intimate of experiences, making possible a deep communion and friendship with him.

Coming to see that our Lord delights in drawing especially close to those who suffer is to learn something about his heart for us. Knowing his profound compassion for those who suffer, and becoming alert to his presence in our own suffering, can be a catalyst for significant spiritual growth.

Image of a priest celebrating the Holy EucharistThe reality of a crucified God is remarkable. When we seek Christ on the Cross in our prayer—when, for example, we pray the Sorrowful Mysteries of the Rosary or the Chaplet of Divine Mercy, or invest ourselves into a course of spiritual reading, and each and every time we participate in the sacrifice of the Mass—we are seeking to be present to our Lord in his suffering love. We can be assured that our generosity to God in this desire will not outshine his generosity to us. To an infinitely greater degree, he, too, wishes to draw close to us. And knowing the Lord’s close presence to us in our suffering with his accompanying grace, especially through the sacraments, we know that he gives us a supernatural capacity to do what is naturally very difficult: to accept whatever has happened to us.

A Sacrificial Gift

Once we have accepted our particular experience of suffering, we are ready to offer it as a gift, a sacrifice, to God. In accepting the experience, it has been embraced as our own, and we are then capable of offering it. It is as if we can take it up into our hands and freely give it to God.

This action, joined to the kenotic offering of Christ, becomes salvific. That is, our offering, because it is joined to his, becomes a catalyst of grace in the world. To be clear, all of the power for the world’s salvation comes from the Cross of Christ, which is our spes unica, our only hope. But he desires to lift us up into this saving action so that we might share with him this work of glorifying the Father and sanctifying the world. How infinitely valuable the priestly offering of our suffering becomes! In this way, the bedridden sick person can become, by her free will and this closeness of Jesus, a significant protagonist in the battle against evil and the culture of death.

We as baptismal priests can offer our sufferings to the Father through the Son in the Holy Spirit. But we can also offer every part of our life as a gift to God. Such an offering can be made by the Christian throughout the day and in the midst of ordinary life. A morning and evening offering can be immensely helpful in assisting us practically to be conscious and alert and consistent in living our priestly identity on a daily basis. More than this, frequently attending Holy Mass will play an unparalleled role in our priestly work. The Second Vatican Council tells us: “Together with the offering of the Lord’s body, [our sacrifices] are most fittingly offered in the celebration of the Eucharist.”[2] In the Mass, we offer the sacrifice of every part of our life, sufferings and all. These sacrifices are joined to the sacrificial gift that Jesus makes of himself, and both of these make up the one sacrifice offered by the one who stands in the person of Christ, who is our great High Priest.

Jesus himself demonstrated these integral movements of priestly sacrifice. He was aware and alert to sufferings. He accepted them. From the Garden of Gethsemane his extraordinary words resound: “My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from me; yet, not as I will, but as you will” (Mt 26:39). And then, of course, from the Cross he was able to say to his Father, “Into your hands I commend my spirit” (Lk 23:46) and “it is finished” (Jn 19:30). With these words, the great sacrifice of self-emptying Love that stands at the center of history was accomplished.

This priestly life into which we are baptized, in the end, is a participation in divine life. God is love, and to love divinely means to perpetually give oneself away. Our baptism gives us the capacity for this deep life of sacrificial love—to offer every aspect of our lives to the Father, including our sufferings. This upward movement of love glorifies the God who is love, and it has an extraordinary capacity to contribute to the healing and renewal of our fallen world.

 

Dr. James Pauley is Professor of Theology and Catechetics at Franciscan University and author of two books focused on the renewal of catechesis: An Evangelizing Catechesis: Teaching from Your Encounter with Christ (Our Sunday Visitor, 2020) and the revised edition of Liturgical Catechesis in the 21st Century: A School of Discipleship (Liturgy Training Publications, 2022). He also serves on the USCCB’s Eucharistic Revival Advisory Council.

Art Credit: Sculpted group of the baptism of Jesus by François Rude, Adobe Stock; Image of Priest Celebrating Mass, Adobe Stock.

Notes:

[1]  United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Divine Worship, Order of Baptism for One Child, in The Order of Baptism of Children, 2nd typical ed. (Liturgical Press, 2020), no. 98.

[2]  Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium (Dogmatic Constitution on the Church), no. 34.

This article originally appeared on pages 4 - 10 in the print edition.

Encountering God in Catechesis—A Life-Changing Encounter on a Theology of the Body Retreat

Image of teenagers praising God and praying in a ChapelIt was my freshman year of high school, and I was attending a youth retreat focused on the Theology of the Body. My 15-year-old self had no idea what the Theology of the Body really meant, but I had heard someone throw around the words “sex and dating,” so it intrigued me enough to attend. I was raised in the Catholic faith; my parents took us to Mass each Sunday and even taught our religious education classes. At this point in my life, I knew the faith was a priority for my family, and I believed in God, but I also had my own priorities in high school, like being popular and well-liked. But what I thought would be a fun weekend with friends to giggle about the word “sex” turned out to be a life-changing weekend.
 

My youth minister had invited two theology graduate students, Amber and Chris, to give the talks on the retreat. When Amber and Chris spoke about God’s plan for relationships and his desire for an intimate relationship with each of us, my heart was drawn into this beautiful concept of a personal relationship with the Lord. As they spoke about this personal God who desired an intimate relationship with us, it was as if my heart began to burn within me. I began to realize a deep desire for an intimate relationship with God. It was from this place of intimacy with the Lord that they taught us about God’s plan for intimacy in marriage and the sexual act. Chris and Amber gave examples of how God had brought real freedom into their own lives through his grace. When they spoke about these topics of sex and dating, it was not as if I was hearing an empty theological lecture. It was clear that they were speaking from a place of living this intimate relationship with the Lord.

The Spiritual Life—On the End of Life: Some Reflections on the Life and Death of My Mother

Art painting of St. Veronica with the veil My beautiful mother, Kathleen Pauley, died on June 4, 2025 at the age of 83. She is an extraordinary person and an intimate friend of Jesus. She lived with suffering from a very early age and was well acquainted with the Cross. In the weeks of serious illness that led up to her death, I learned many things from her about our life in Christ, lessons which have helped me see suffering and death in a way more aligned with our Christian hope.

First, some background: Kathy was a woman after the Lord’s heart. Around four decades ago, she told me of being asked by our Lord in prayer if she would suffer for souls. She gave her assent to this seemingly strange request. Days later, she slipped on a puddle of water in the produce department of the grocery store and severely injured her back. And from that day on, she experienced a series of serious physical setbacks that lasted the rest of her life. Although her suffering had begun much earlier through a very difficult and painful childhood, this choice she was given by our Lord was a pivotal moment in her life where he made a proposal of love and she freely accepted it. After decades of intentionally sharing in his Cross, the final stage of her earthly pilgrimage took place over two months as she battled a very serious blood infection in her heart. This infection caused a heart attack and several strokes, which impaired her vision by about 80%. In being a member of her family who sought to accompany her through this experience, she taught me much from her school of suffering. Here are seven lessons I learned from her.

Lesson One: Suffering That Stays

My mother understood something remarkable about God: out of love, he only infrequently chooses to take away suffering. This is counterintuitive, of course, for us humans, who see suffering as the greatest of evils—as something from which we want God to rescue us. Instead, he chooses to enter deeply and intimately into our experience of suffering, accompanying us in radical, divine solidarity. Kathy experienced the presence of God in her suffering quite profoundly; she spoke sometimes of her experience of being deeply loved by Jesus as she suffered. It seems that this confidence in his closeness allowed her to embrace reality as it confronted her. Often, of course, she didn’t feel close to him; yet, she persevered in those periods of dryness and spiritual darkness. But always he provided for her, usually in unexpected ways.

Here’s a compelling example I witnessed: In her last days, I found myself marveling at how the Lord had drawn close and was uniquely providing for the needs of his beloved daughter as she suffered. Because of the strokes she had had, she often hallucinated. Yet, most of her hallucinations were of the loveliest type. For a span of about a week, she frequently believed she was not in a hospital bed facing a dire prognosis but rather at an enormous party with all of her family and friends around her. As I sat by her bedside, she asked me time and again if people were having a good time. And at one point, she brought a rush of tears to my eyes when she told me she was so excited because my daughters and nieces were going to “put on a show” for everyone, drawing on memories of a dozen years ago when the then-toddling Pauley girls loved to put on shows for Nana and Papa with play acting and singing.

Through these experiences with her, I found myself marveling at how the Lord was taking good care of his beloved and giving her joy. For much of my time with her, she was, as they say, happy as a clam. I know this isn’t the experience of most who suffer—and it certainly wasn’t her experience through most of her own life as she struggled to embrace some difficult realities. But, for a few days during her final weeks, her experience of joy showed me God’s great tenderness and closeness to her. I was so grateful to him for this. While he rarely took away her suffering, it did bring about opportunities for intimacy and union with Jesus that were just breathtaking to behold.

Inspired Through Art—Building the Community of the Church

Manuscript Leaf with Scenes from  the Life of St. Francis of Assisi

To view a full resolution of this artwork on a smartboard, click here.

In every age of the Church, God raises up saintly men and women whose holiness builds up the community of the Church. These saints are living reflections of the face of Christ in the world, and their lives invite our imitation on the path of holiness aided by God’s grace. In our own time, the Church continues to raise up for our imitation saintly men and women who respond to our baptismal vocation to Christian discipleship. They remind us that the Christian life is lived out precisely within the community of the Church and the Communion of Saints.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church, quoting the Second Vatican Council’s Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium, highlights our communion with the saints when it teaches that:

It is not merely by the title of example that we cherish the memory of those in heaven; we seek, rather, that by this devotion to the exercise of fraternal charity the union of the whole Church in the Spirit may be strengthened. Exactly as Christian communion among our fellow pilgrims brings us closer to Christ, so our communion with the saints joins us to Christ, from whom as from its fountain and head issues all grace, and the life of the People of God itself. (CCC 957; quoting Lumen Gentium 50; cf. Eph 4:1–6)

Each liturgical year on the fourth day of October, the Church celebrates the memorial of St. Francis of Assisi. This beloved saint embraced radical discipleship through poverty and the preaching of the Gospel to all—rich and poor, lowly and exalted. St. Francis was, and continues to be, a builder of the community of the Church through his radical witness to holiness of life and missionary discipleship. As we join the Church in celebrating his saintly life and in imitating his saintly virtues, an exquisite illuminated manuscript from the early 14th century offers a stirring visual catechesis for our contemplation.

From the Shepherds—Fearing the Fear of the Lord in Catechetical Instruction

Image of the resurrection of Christ with soldiers fearing the tomb openingAt a regional bishop’s meeting that i recently attended, an animated dialogue took place regarding different catechetical approaches currently employed in our Catholic schools. The discussion was wide ranging, but several bishops lamented the all-too-common absence of any treatment of the “fear of the Lord.” It appears that many texts avoid all but a passing reference to it. What also became apparent is that, in numerous cases, the reason for its exclusion is that many teachers and catechists simply don’t understand it themselves! Many intentionally omit it in order to protect people, especially children, from what they judge to be a punitive focus that is out of keeping with modern religious sensibilities. The teaching is thought to be inherently Jansenist, and they fear its effect on children and catechumens. This is a tragedy, as nothing could be further from the truth.

Fear of the Lord is a critically important disposition of a person toward God. It acknowledges the infinite glory and majesty of the Supreme Being, the One Creator God who effortlessly sustains all that he has created in being. He is mysterious beyond comprehension, an all-consuming fire, at once terrible in power and fascinating beyond imagination. As the Catechism affirms, “we firmly believe and confess without reservation that there is only one true God, eternal infinite (immensus) and unchangeable, incomprehensible, almighty and ineffable, the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit; three persons indeed, but one essence, substance or nature entirely simple” (202) and one “infinitely above everything that we can understand or say” (206).

To truly grasp the immense mystery of God’s infinite splendor and grandeur is to be amazed. It is to be filled with deep religious awe. God is discovered as the numinous, omnipresent presence to which every creature owes its existence and to whom they must answer. The Catechism affirms that, when faced with God’s presence, humans discover their own insignificance and recognize God’s holiness (see 208). This is, of course, absolutely true and profoundly important. But it is also where the confusion begins.

Editor's Reflections—St. Francis, Frodo, You, and Me: Our Need for Community in Living a Missionary Life

A panoramic view of Gaming Kartause, a large monastery complex with red-tiled roofs and a prominent church spireLast spring, most of my family spent a semester at Franciscan University of Steubenville’s beautiful campus in Gaming, Austria. As an introvert, one of my worries going into the semester was getting to know a whole new group of coworkers and joining their community as an outsider. Never have I been more delighted to discover my worries were unwarranted.We were picked up at the airport by a beautiful and generous family. When we arrived to Gaming late at night, a benevolent philosophy professor insisted on bringing in our bags. There was warm pumpkin soup and tea waiting for us at the dinner table. And with a burst of joy and energy, four amazing Franciscan TOR sisters rushed into the house with hugs and words of welcome. Over the course of the next four months, the faculty and staff there became the dearest of friends. Never have I experienced friendship and community in such a concentrated way.

For most of us, our current cultural climate is one of stark isolation. With families spread out geographically more than ever, and with screens drawing us away from real human interaction, it is easy to live significantly withdrawn from good relationships. Without the cultural supports for community that previous generations enjoyed, unless we take intentional steps toward others, it’s very easy to lead a solitary and lonely life.

And yet, we human beings were made for communion with others. We know theologically that we were made for union with God (who is a communion of Trinitarian persons) and with all the baptized who are joined to him. And on a natural human level, we know that good relationships are critical to the flourishing of every human being—even if finding such authentic community can be a bewildering quest today.

Encountering God In Catechesis

Becoming a Channel of Grace in Catechesis

The OCIA class I was leading was about to enter the period of the catechumenate, and it was time for a talk on human sexuality and Christian anthropology. This talk had been looming in my mind for weeks prior, causing me no small amount of anxiety. I felt reasonably confident in my ability to communicate the Church’s teaching on these controversial topics, but it is always somewhat daunting for me to get up in front of a group of people and talk about sex, gender, and other “theology of the body” topics. As my audience was composed of adults who were seeking to become Catholic, I knew there was a good chance that many of them were still in need of conversion on these topics. They had all made some concrete step toward becoming Catholic, but nevertheless, the Church’s teaching on human sexuality can be a moment for some to walk away. In my mind, the stakes were high.

A fresco painting by Michelangelo titled 'The Creation of Adam' from the Sistine Chapel ceiling, depicting God reaching out to touch Adam's finger.

My first instinct when preparing a talk has always been to go to the Catechism or some other authoritative resource. For this particular topic, I turned to the great St. John Paul II’s Man and Woman He Created Them: A Theology of the Body. While I was well acquainted with the Church’s teaching on human sexuality, I had never actually taken the time to read John Paul II’s catecheses on these topics. I was immediately struck by how thoroughly driven by Scripture each catechesis was. While Man and Woman He Created Them is by no means light reading, to me it read like an extremely well-done Bible study. The doctrinal conclusions that John Paul II arrived at seemed almost obvious because of the way in which he used Scripture to drive his arguments. Reading through his teachings was like being led by a highly skilled guide through a treacherous mountain range. And while John Paul II was the guide, the path was laid out by God himself. Reading Theology of the Body was like being in conversation with God. It was prayerful. I was so captivated by the book that I tore through it far quicker than I ever imagined I could.

Mystical Fraternity: Community and Communion

A vibrant stained glass window depicting scenes from the Parable of the Good Samaritan, including the Samaritan helping the injured man, bringing him to an inn, and paying the innkeeper C. S. Lewis’s devil Screwtape advises junior tempter Wormwood, “The parochial organization should always be attacked, because, being a unity of place and not of likings, it brings people . . . together in the kind of unity the Enemy desires.”[1] Christian community makes tangibly present communion with Christ. It is often the first place people begin to encounter him and believe in the possibility of his love, which is manifested through the love of the Church’s members. Even in its veiled, earthly form, the Communion of Saints has the power to radiate Christ to the world. This article will briefly examine the nature of this communion and its power to bear witness to Christ, as well as offer some ideas for fostering a deeper and more intentional living of this communion within our communities.

The Communion of Saints

The Communion of Saints on earth is quite simple: Its source is Christ; its soul is charity. Christ himself, on the evening before his Passion, prayed, “that they may all be one, as you, Father, are in me and I in you, that they also may be in us, . . . that they may be brought to perfection as one, that the world may know that you sent me, and that you loved them even as you loved me” (Jn 17:21, 23). The members of the Church are “a holy people united with the unity of the Trinity.”[2] The Holy Spirit unites the Church in a single bond of love. Moreover, in the Eucharist, Christ binds each person together so that they are members of this same whole.

Being enriched by Christ’s gift and made one in him opens our horizons. In the midst of its treatment of the Our Father, the Catechism has this stunning line: “Finally, if we pray the Our Father sincerely, we leave individualism behind, because the love that we receive frees us from it” (2792). God’s love frees us. We no longer need to protect ourselves. Transformed by the renewal of our minds (Rom 12:2), grace allows us to see the love God has bestowed on us. It opens our eyes to the fact that my brother or sister in the Lord is in some way part of me.[3] And it moves us to “leave individualism behind,” embracing this communion. We are able to live heroic charity, loving as we have been loved.

“Beloved, let us love one another, because love is of God; everyone who loves is begotten by God and knows God” (1 Jn 4:7). God takes our ordinary nature and, through grace, elevates it to share in his life. This means that simple, everyday gestures of love and care take on extraordinary depth. They are the “stuff” sanctity is made of. I can remember gathering with a group to pray for a friend who was dying. I knew her as my mentor and a gifted catechetical leader, but as others shared how they knew her, I began to realize there was so much more to her life of sanctity than just what she did for the Church in her role as catechist. One friend shared how my mentor had helped her with laundry during her prolonged recovery from surgery. Another spoke of how she had come to understand authentic family life when my mentor had opened her home to her and helped her. These simple, human gestures of love and self-sacrifice provided the deepest and most authentic witness to Christ that my mentor offered in her very full life. This is the kind of love Tertullian said caused the pagans to exclaim, “See how these Christians love one another!”[4] Sometimes it is the humblest gestures that speak the most loudly of Christ’s presence and love.

Sin in the Communion of Saints

Image painting on the ceiling of a Church in O The modern ethos regarding sin is a perplexing one. On the one hand, it seems that everything is morally okay, so long as it does not hurt anyone else. Yet, on the other hand, there are very strange and strict social sins that are virtually forbidden unless one wants to end up ostracized by the modern (and oftentimes online) community. Sin today is treated with an increasingly permissive attitude. What stands out as the overarching theme of this new morality, however, is a law of radical individualism regarding sin. Everything is acceptable if it feels good for the individual, as long as social norms are not violated.

Our Communal Lord and Savior

This strange and ambiguous moral philosophy espoused by our modern world stands in sharp contrast to the revelation of Scripture and the teaching of the Church. Particularly, the law of radical individualism stands in opposition to our belief in the “Communion of Saints,” professed in the Creed. The Catechism is beautifully succinct in its identification of this entity: “The communion of saints is the Church” (946).

The Second Vatican Council emphasized the Church as the “People of God,” a descriptor that is very fitting in our age.[1] The Communion of Saints, therefore, must be seen in light of this community of persons around Christ, their head. This Communion of Saints is a true communion—a sharing among persons of what is held in common. The Catechism proceeds to express that what is shared in common are spiritual goods, which are shared among the People of God both on earth and in heaven. The antiphon of the Eastern liturgies captures this: “God’s holy gifts for God’s holy people” (CCC 948).

What emerges from this basic structure is the antithesis of radical individualism. As members of the People of God and of the Communion of Saints, we do not merely have a personal Lord and Savior but a God who, in gathering us into a community, acts within this communion. Jesus Christ saves us personally, but not alone; his work is mediated by the action of the entire Church, of which he is the head. Lumen Gentium, Vatican II’s Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, expresses this beautifully: “God, however, does not make men holy and save them merely as individuals, without bond or link between one another. Rather has it pleased Him to bring men together as one people” (no. 9).

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