September 16, 2003

Failure and Christianity

Those outside the Church (especially the media) are constantly discussing the failures of individual members of the Church. Usually this is taken to indicate the entire Church has problems, rather than that one individual has problems. But I contend that failure is an important part of Christianity.

Why? Ultimately our salvation lies in the struggle to do good and to be good. We are called to perfection, which is a difficult calling only attainable through the workings of the Holy Spirit. But, our calling also requires humility, the virtue grown and nourished by failure. And failure teaches us another key lesson: how to get up and start again. Christ illustrated this persistence beautifully when he fell three times carrying the cross and yet rose again each time. We must do the same, rising in hope even after our failures.

As we grow in the Holy Spirit, big failures become small ones and yet, they are still failures. The “Church full of hypocrites” I heard the other day and thought, “And God wants even more hypocrites”. Hypocrites who strive for holiness and despite these failings continue in hope and humility. May God bless us all with enough failure to keep us humble and enough success to ensure our sainthood!

Jay

Posted by Jay at September 16, 2003 10:02 PM | TrackBack

Comments

Hey Jay great post.

Are you going to answer the questions you asked for at IdeaJoy? see:

http://ideajoy.blogspot.com/2003_09_01_ideajoy_archive.html#10635750994750142

- Peace

Posted by: DJ King at September 17, 2003 11:43 AM

Post a comment











Remember personal info?






 
The Bloggers
Danny Young married Catholic
Jay Baptist convert
Joe Cradle Catholic

Categories
Recent Comments
On Prayer Requests
elaine
said:
Father, I bring before Your throne all those who are in need of a share of Your healing and peace, E... [read more]


On Becoming Catholic: Francis Beckwith’s reasons
Randy
said:
Those early church fathers, it is amazing how powerful they are in completely destroying the protest... [read more]


On Islam: A lesson for Christianity
Burnt Marshwiggle
said:
It almost seems like we have a historical "paper-scissor-rock" situation where people choose weak-Ch... [read more]


On A strong presidential candidate for Christians
Daniel
said:
I was thinking of "power" in the secular sense of the word - economic, political, military, etc. Bu... [read more]


On The Patron Saint of the Americas
Burnt Marshwiggle
said:
Michael O wrote: That being said, I feel more of a devotion to Our Lady each passing day. I appr... [read more]


On Who is the Woman Clothed in the Sun of Revelation 12?
samantha
said:
this woman isat war with bablylondon the great, or vice versa . she is a natural country type who li... [read more]


On Why can’t non-Catholics receive Holy Communion?
Burnt Marshwiggle
said:
Sandra, If you need help with the sacrament of confession, I would highly recommend reading a book ... [read more]


On What’s the point of Godparents? The Role of the Godmother and Godfather
Burnt Marshwiggle
said:
Mary, Yes, this has been possible since the Second Vatican Council (I can find the reference from t... [read more]


On Contact Information
Ken Kelley
said:
Please help me in finding someone or forwarding this to someone who has the gift of the Holyghost in... [read more]


On Clean Shopping, Clean Conscience
when we were one
said:
Lacey St. Thomas Aquinas noted that God created only good... what man chooses to do with his creati... [read more]


Communities
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.