Rooted in Christ, Building for the Future

By David Cooley

It’s a new year—a fresh start—and *The Catholic Telegraph* has a new cover design to support our exciting and bold initiative to help build up the Kingdom of God in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati.

For five years now, *The Catholic Telegraph* as a magazine has been “bringing faith into the home,” and that is something we will always strive to do. Yet, we know that while everything begins in the home—the place where we nurture our faith and the faith of our family—we can’t just stay within its confines and comforts.

As Christians, we are called to go out into the world and bring the Good News of the Gospel of Jesus Christ to our community and everywhere we go! Mission territory awaits right outside the front door, and we want to partner with you on that Christian adventure.

And so, we decided this year on the theme “Building the Kingdom.” We will do our best each month to expand on that theme with stories and articles to inform and inspire.

My team and I have talked at length about our mission to evangelize, and our new cover is just one way through which we hope to reach more people. We seek to lead with beauty and include more information on the cover to encourage people to not only open and read it, but also share it with another person who might find it interesting or helpful.

Additionally, we hope to expand our reach through the various channels available to us. Whether we like it or not, the digital arena is also mission territory and, on the positive side, allows us more flexibility and space than the printed page.

Sharing the Gospel in today’s world is not for the faint of heart but for the brave and joyful. We often find ourselves in environments that are indifferent or even hostile.

We are all called to build the Kingdom, but the task is sometimes daunting and overwhelming, leaving us uncertain of where or how to begin. It’s always a good idea to start small.

If we are building something beautiful for God, let’s do it brick by brick; with one small action at a time, focusing on one person at a time. This might be reaching out to a neighbor in need, getting more involved at our parish, starting a new apostolate, or simply setting aside more time to pray and inviting others to join us.

Whenever I get overwhelmed, I like to remember Mother Teresa’s famous quote:
“Not all of us can do great things. But we can do small things with great love.”

When constructing a building or bridge, the work is done board by board, brick by brick. It’s a good analogy and a reminder to take things one step at a time.

The worker’s key task when building is ensuring the foundation is strong. If we are to help build God’s Kingdom here on earth, we must have Christ as the foundation, the cornerstone upon which we build.

If we keep Christ at the center of everything we do, we can at least know we are on the right track even if we don’t see the results we hoped for.

I’ll close with another quote from Mother Teresa:
“God doesn’t ask that we succeed in everything, but that we are faithful.”

— David Cooley
https://www.thecatholictelegraph.com/rooted-in-christ-building-for-the-future/103592

Why twice-born men and women are needed in Holy Matrimony

Becoming a Christian—experiencing the new birth in Christ—transforms each individual who embraces it. In his letter to the Ephesian Christians, the Apostle Paul explains this supernatural experience of being born again from above by accepting Jesus Christ as one’s personal Lord and Savior.

In the second chapter of Ephesians, Paul makes it clear that while we “were by nature the children of wrath” (Eph. 2:3) and “dead in sins,” God “quickened us together with Christ” (Eph. 2:5). When we respond to the Holy Spirit’s convicting work, confess our sins, and accept Christ as our personal Savior, He regenerates us through the work of the Holy Spirit.

This miraculous process transforms believers—both Jew and Gentile—into “a new man” (Eph. 2:15). The Greek word Paul uses for “new” signifies a completely new and different kind of person.

After the coming of the Holy Spirit in a mighty way at Pentecost, these “new men” were indwelt with God’s Spirit in a never-before-experienced way. A supreme example of this transformation is the astonishing difference in the Apostle Peter. Before Pentecost, Peter was confused and uncertain; after Pentecost, he was commanding and confident, preaching powerfully to thousands.

It was as if Peter had stepped into a spiritual telephone booth and emerged wearing a spiritual Superman suit. The point is that after Pentecost, God created a new kind of man—one who did not exist before the Spirit personally indwelt twice-born believers.

Understanding this is critically important. Why? Because only such twice-born men and women can fulfill their biblical roles, especially in Holy Matrimony.

Only a twice-born man can consistently love his wife with agape love, just as Christ loved the church and gave Himself for it. Likewise, only a woman who has been born again from above can consistently submit herself under the spiritual leadership of her husband.

Being born again—a “new” kind of man or woman—should transform all our relationships if we are surrendered to the Holy Spirit’s work in our lives.

Another spiritually significant relationship transformed by the Holy Spirit is the pastor–church member relationship. There are close parallels between the New Testament model for pastors and church members and the husband–wife relationship.

God instructs pastors through Peter not to “lord over” God’s flock but to be good shepherds who lovingly serve the people (1 Pet. 5:1-5). Correspondingly, church members are admonished to “submit yourselves” (Heb. 13:17) to their spiritual leaders who have “spoken unto you the word of God” (Heb. 13:7).

The phrase “submit yourselves” uses the same Greek verb—and in the same unusual middle or reflexive tense—as the one used for wives submitting to their own husbands “as unto the Lord” (Eph. 5:22).

Becoming a born-again Christian should change every relationship in our lives. God never commands us to do something that we cannot accomplish with His help. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, we are enabled to live transformed lives that honor God in all our relationships.
https://www.christianpost.com/voices/why-twice-born-men-and-women-needed-in-holy-matrimony.html

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