Networking Surprises and Inspiring People

Chad’s son, Eli

Chad’s son, Eli

      I’ve been approaching Catholic dioceses around the country to offer by book, The Father’s Son, to parishes as a resource for Adult Faith Study, book discussion groups, parish reads, RCIA, etc. The response from diocesan leaders for Evangelization, Discipleship, and Adult Faith Formation has been humbling and encouraging. The real blessing in this outreach has been connecting with some of these men and women of faith and their obvious commitment to share the Catholic faith. While we are all aware of the dwindling attendance at Masses, especially for younger adults, some of these dioceses are energized and creating amazing parishes. One quote from an Alaska diocese read – “Our 18-35ish-year-old groups are really gaining some networking momentum through gathering social events, book, and bible studies, as well as prayer, adoration, and Mass.” That was encouraging to hear.

       One of the leaders I was blessed to connect with, Chad Judice, from the Diocese of Lafayette, Louisiana was a great and encouraging example of the leaders we have in the Church today. Chad is the Director of the Office of Catechetics in Lafayette, but he is also the father of his son, Eli, who was born with spina bifida. He has written several books on Eli and appeared on EWTN and other programs to share his incredibly moving story of love. When I conversed with him and then listened to his interviews, I choked up as a saw the type of man Christ calls us all to be. Chad seemed to get the kind of love Christ was trying to teach us about, but few of us see as deeply as he seemed to have a firm grasp of. What could have been a tragedy, Eli has brought joy and love to his family, and they have returned it to him. Maybe we only get glimpses of the love God has for us through our experiences, suffering, and fully trusting in God’s plan for us.

       Chad describes Eli with love and sees the dignity and joy of a young boy vs someone defined by a condition which they have.  One of the recommendations for his first book, Waiting for Eli, captured it well. "Thanks for being such a witness to the Gospel of Life. I would love to meet the little boy who has taught so many people the greatest lesson of all - to love unconditionally." - Fr. Michael Russo, Pastor Our Lady of Fatima Church.  Chad sees Eli’s life as a pro-life story. Most children diagnosed with spina bifida are sadly aborted, assuming the worst-case scenario – assuming that ending the baby’s life is the most humane thing to do.  Take a look at the videos on www.chadjudice.com and see if you agree with Chad and his wife, Ashley’s, decision to trust in God’s plan and loving choice of life.

      As I mentioned, I have met some great and passionately committed individuals with a vocation and mission to share the power of the Catholic faith and Christ to others. They may not all have as profoundly powerful a story as Chad Judice, but they all have a story and a love of Christ that comes across so clearly in their responses. I’ve been humbled and greatly moved and motivated by these people and I hope I can be a part of that mission to evangelize and be an example of the love Christ showed to us with his very life. We have an unconditionally loving father in heaven who sees us as his beloved sons and daughters, so I will end with a quote Chad included on his website.

 "One night a father overheard his son pray: Dear God, make me the kind of man my Daddy is. Later that night, the father prayed: Dear God make me the kind of man my son needs me to be." ---Author Unknown

Lessons My Mother Still Teaches Me Today

Mom.JPG

My mother was a beautiful woman in so many ways. She would have been 99 years old this week but died at 79 after being bed-ridden with Multiple Sclerosis for twenty-five years. It was during those years that she taught me the greatest lessons about life and the dignity of the human person. Rita Marie Doherty was the ninth and youngest child of Catherine and Patrick, immigrants from Donegal, Ireland who taught her about the importance of faith and family. At sixteen, she was taking care of the household after her mother died, and at twenty-one, she was married to my Italian father, Benjamin “Babe” Sano and started her own family.

 My father was the strict disciplinarian, while my mother probably trusted us too much, and would always take the time to sit and listen to our day. I can’t remember her without a smile on her face as she gazed into your eyes and made you feel as if nothing else mattered. In this world of busyness, her example of being truly present with her children and others seems to resonate even more to me today. We never had much money, never took a vacation, and lived simply. There was never any doubt that God was the center of her life and our family was her love and her vocation. She loved to walk, to garden, visit with her brothers and sisters, volunteer at church, and sing – she was happy.

 In her forties, she noticed some physical things happening to her body. By the age of fifty-four, the woman who loved to walk miles to Mass every morning was now bedridden and totally dependent upon my father and us for everything. The most interesting thing was that she didn’t feel angry or cheated. She trusted completely in God and His plan for her, no matter what the path was in front of her. “Take up your cross.” She continued to greet everyone with an enthusiastic smile and a positive attitude toward life. Over all those years, I never heard her complain or feel as if she was a victim, as she focused only on giving whoever came to visit her full attention. Her body atrophied and she could not feed herself (“this too shall pass” is what she would always say), yet her faith and trust in God only grew. She still had a mission in life and she took it on every single day.

 What stood out for me was that she knew she was beloved by God and He was her only real source of purpose and worth, and while she was ready to go many times over those twenty-five years, her patient waiting for heaven showed the depth of that faith and trust. Regardless of our circumstances, she taught me that we always have a purpose and a mission to others – to let them know we are all the beloved sons and daughters of a loving God. She let me know that, no matter what this world brings, it is a small part of our full existence. She let me know what unconditional, self-giving love was all about and how it was the only true source of our happiness. She let me know the dignity of all human life from the start – and she let me know how much I mattered to her, every single day.  I know she is alive today, smiling down on her family, letting us know that she still cares and she still loves us. What better gift can a parent give to their child?

Masculinity - a thing of the past?

Masculinity - a thing of the past?

When you hear the term “masculinity,” what thoughts come to mind for you?  Are we still raising our boys to become men and what does that mean?  There has seemed to be a negative connotation being masculine, possible when it is defined by dominance, oppression, superiority or even aggressiveness.  In recent decades, the media and other groups have worked to make men almost irrelevant in society.  Television portrays male characters as either buffoons or playboys, and less so as characters to take seriously

Read More