If I am Lifted Up . . .
There are a number of stories I could tell:
There is my own story since it was the recognition of a presence of God that I had not experienced elsewhere that originally lured me into praying in Catholic churches as an undergraduate.
And the story of a friend of mine, who was a unbelieving, practicing homosexual and yet was also seeking and would spend hours at a time simply sitting in my parish, soaking up the Real Presence.
I could tell you of an unbaptized college student who went to a friend of mine, a Catholic chaplain and said she wanted to become Catholic. The priest asked "Why? Do you have Catholic family members or friends, do you attend Mass, have you been reading books? What has made you want to become Catholic? "No", she replied and then dragged him with trembling hands into the sanctuary and pointed to the tabernacle. "I want that", she said. She didn't know what That was but she could feel the goodness eminating from the tabernacle.
I could tell you of a large, urban diocese rejuvenated by a lay person who championed Eucharistic Adoration and collaborated with her bishop to establish it in the cathedral and then throughout the diocese.
My question:
What if we stop thinking of Adoration as only a devotion for the already devout and consider it also as a form of evangelization particularly suited to the post-modern mindset which responds to mystery and presence?
The presence of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament is accessible to the non-baptized, the non-Catholic, the unchurched, the lapsed, the badly catechized, the wounded, the skeptical, the seeking, and the prodigal.
I know that there are movements for youth and young adults that combine adoration and praise and worship in various creative ways. I know of evangelization retreats that incorporate Adoration into the retreat. But this is the sort of thing that could be easily done in the local parish - Adoration regularly presented in a context that would be accessible to and sensitive to the unbelieving, the marginal, the seeking.
So it would have to be simply explained and simply presented and not simply dripping with the uber Catholic insider visuals that could distract or alarm. Reverent, haunting, and intentionally accessible on a regular basis to those with no Catholic background.
"If I am lifted up, I will draw everyone to me" said Christ in John 12:32.
Anyone know of a parish or diocese that is doing this?

2 Comments:
The Oblates of the Virgin Mary have a eucharistic chapel in Boston in which they evangelize by inviting people into the chapel from off the street. Appearently, it has had a great effect on the neighborhood with the crime rate plummeting since they started the ministry. You can read about it at
http://stclementshrine.org/page.php?2
Amazing post, Sherry!
One of my responses to anyone who tells me or demonstrates to me with their actions that they are searching for something beyond themselves is to invite them to talk with me and pray with me before the Blessed Sacrament reposed in the Tabernacle of a Church. Usually, I'll meet them for coffee nearby a Church and we'll get to talking, and then I invite them to come and sit with me before the Blessed Sacrament.
Oftentimes, they fall silent on their own after spending just a few minutes before the Blessed Sacrament.
What could be a more evangelizing experience than sitting before Christ?
As I've mentioned, we often utilize Eucharistic Adoration on teen retreats (whose purpose is evangelization) and at our parish. Often, we do a simple procession of the Eucharist (as our pastor was always busy), without Benediction, so the whole experience was fairly accessible to those with little CAtholic background (no incense, strange vestments or anything like that).
Also, our monstrance was a very simple gold nimbus cross, so it doesn't seem overly ornate or strange looking to the uninitiated either.
Powerful, powerful things happen before the Blessed Sacrament.
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home