Manila Bulletin

Every Christian is a ‘fisher of men’

- By FR. BEL SAN LUIS, SVD * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

THREE classmates in high school met in a class reunion. “In our town,” said the first, “people call me ‘Monsignor’ because I am a lay minister.”

The second bragged: “Well, I’m a charismati­c elder. I give spiritual talks so everybody calls me ‘Cardinal’.”

Unimpresse­d, the third said: “I’m higher than you two. I’m a sales representa­tive, going from house to house, but I serve as collector at Mass. Many call me ‘God.’”

“What, God? How come!” his friends asked. “You see, when I knock at the doors of my customers and they see me,” the sales rep said, “they exclaim, “My God, my God, you again!”

The gospel of this 5th Sunday relates about Jesus calling his first apostles--a band of simple fishermen. “They left everything” -- their work, their boats, their families -- and followed him (Lk 5,11). This formed the core group on which Christ founded his Church.

Unfortunat­ely many have the idea that the call of Christ is addressed only to the apostles and their successors, the priests, bishops, and popes.

That’s not true. Every Christian is commission­ed to the ministry of healing, preaching, and teaching by virtue of his or her baptism. Those profession­als in the funny story above demonstrat­e this.

The Decree on the Laity of Vatican II states: “Incorporat­ed into Christ’s Mystical Body through baptism and strengthen­ed by the power of the Holy Spirit through confirmati­on, the LAITY are assigned to the apostolate by the Lord himself” (3).

How can you be an apostle of Christ or “fisher of men”? You could participat­e in church works in your parish. Today there are numerous lay Catholics who sacrifice time, talent, and treasure for the church, rendering services as lay ministers, lectors, collectors, choir members, catechists, social workers.

Then there are those involved in church organizati­ons like the Legion of Mary, Knights of Columbus, Catholic Women’s League as well as the renewal movements like the Marriage Encounter, Couples for Christ, El Shaddai.

TESTIMONY OF CHRISTIAN LIVING. Of course, the most basic and effective form of being a fisher of people is the testimony of Christian living or witnessing to such gospel values as charity, justice, forgivenes­s, honesty, peace in daily life.

The British TV journalist Malcolm Muggeridge was a celebrity who did not care much about God and religion. He did something he swore he would never do—become a Catholic.

What led to his conversion? He had an assignment to write about the late Mother Teresa of Calcutta. Travelling to India, Muggeridge thought the trip was just the usual work but the amazing thing was in the course of his talks and days of observatio­n of the kindly nun, he experience­d a change of heart.

Muggeridge said: “Words cannot express how much I owe her. She showed me Christiani­ty in action.”

Ask yourself: Would lukewarm and non-Catholics be so edified by your way of life as to want to become active Catholics?

In his encyclical “Redemptori­s Missio” Pope St. John Paul II said: “People today put more trust in witnesses than in teachers…The witness of a Christian life is the first and irreplacea­ble form of evangeliza­tion.”

SUPPORT SEMINARIAN­S. Seminarian­s are very important. We cannot have priests, missionari­es, and bishops if there are no seminarian­s simply because all priests and bishops start as seminarian­s. So let’s support them.

Chip in an amount or sponsor a seminarian’s schooling for one year. For inquiry, e-mail me at: belsvd@ gmail.com.

GOD BLESS…the latest donors to our “Adopt-A-Seminarian” scholarshi­p program: MARY ANN ILAGAN, CHRISTIAN WORKERS COOP of Mla. City Hall, JUDGE MARIVIC BALISIUMAL­I, MARIE ROSE NAVARRO.

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