A Well-Built Faith: A Catholic's Guide to Knowing and Sharing What We Believe

A Well-Built Faith: A Catholic's Guide to Knowing and Sharing What We Believe

A Well-Built Faith: A Catholic's Guide to Knowing and Sharing What We Believe

A Well-Built Faith: A Catholic's Guide to Knowing and Sharing What We Believe

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Overview

Nail down the facts, tear down the barriers!



The Catechism of the Catholic Church is over nine hundred pages long, so it comes as no surprise that many Catholics think of their faith as complex—and certainly too complex to share with others! A Well-Built Faith—cleverly developed around a construction theme—makes it easy and flat-out fun for any Catholic to know what they believe and to feel confident in sharing those beliefs with others.

The eighteen-chapter book—at times profound, at times humorous, always practical—follows the structure of the four pillars of the Catechism of the Catholic Church (Creed, Sacraments, Morality, and Prayer). Taking otherwise difficult topics about the Catholic faith and making them accessible and relevant to the lives of average Catholics, acclaimed author and teacher Joe Paprocki does so in a way that never compromises the rich depth of Catholic teaching and tradition.

From the Trinity to the seven sacraments, from the Ten Commandments to the Lord’s Prayer, A Well-Built Faith will help Catholics nail down the facts of the faith and tear down the barriers keeping them from sharing their beliefs with others.'

Also available in Spanish! Una Fe Bien Construida

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780829427578
Publisher: Loyola Press
Publication date: 08/01/2008
Series: Toolbox Series
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 176
Sales rank: 430,240
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 12 - 18 Years

About the Author

JOE PAPROCKI, D.Min., has been a catechetical leader and religious educator in the Chicago area for more than thirty years. His books include Living the Mass, The Bible Blueprint, The Catechist’s Toolbox (Loyola Press).  He is the National Consultant for Faith Formation at Loyola Press in Chicago.  Joe blogs about his work as a catechist at Catechist’s Journey (www.catechistsjourney.com).

Read an Excerpt

Introduction—A Little H.E.L.P.
 
The Right Tools and a Firm Foundation
I was getting my tires changed on my car one day and, as I sat in the waiting room at the auto mechanic, I noticed something interesting. There before me was an entire wall filled with framed certificates for all of the mechanics on duty. It seems that they had been trained in the knowledge and skills needed to service cars properly. They had not only learned how to use the right tools as mechanics, but they had also, through their training, acquired a firm foundation for getting the job done properly. What was even more impressive was that some of the mechanics who had been working there for some time had continued to compile certificates. As technology and cars progressed and changed, so too did the mechanics.
We Catholics seek to be people who have the right tools and a firm foundation to serve God and others. How do we do this? Through faith formation. Catechesis is the process through which we become equipped with the right tools and a firm foundation to live out our baptism. This is a process that is never finished—it is ongoing and lifelong. We all need to start somewhere. That’s where A Well-Built Faith: A Catholic’s Guide to Knowing and Sharing What We Believe comes in. This book is designed to give you a firm foundation to get started in a lifelong process of developing a well-built faith. Whether you are a catechist, a liturgical minister, a parish pastoral council member, a catechumen or candidate in the RCIA, or an everyday Catholic trying to remain faithful to your baptismal call and grow closer to the Lord, A Well-Built Faith is designed for you, “so that the one who belongs to God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:17).
A firm foundation provides support for that which is built upon it. In ancient times, pillars provided the support for mammoth structures that would otherwise collapse under the weight of tons of building materials. When it comes to our faith, the Catholic Church has arranged a vast array of doctrines and beliefs into a somewhat mammoth structure we know as the Catechism of the Catholic Church. This structure is supported by four pillars, which provide a firm foundation for our faith.
 1. The Creed 3. The Moral Life
 2. The Sacraments 4. A Life of Prayer
This simple organization of over 2000 years of a living Tradition provides us with easy access to our faith. At the same time, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, at over 900 pages long, was not written with the average Catholic as its targeted reader. Rather, it was written as a reference book for bishops and for those who teach the Catholic faith. With that in mind, the bishops of the United States produced a more readable resource, the United States Catholic Catechism for Adults (2006), which follows the organization of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Even so, the United States Catholic Catechism for Adults weighs in at over 600 pages, still a daunting task for many readers. Catholics continue to ask for help in learning about their faith in a way that makes it accessible. With this book, A Well-Built Faith, help has arrived.
A Little H.E.L.P.
Shortly after the events of September 11, 2001, there was a great deal of tension between Muslims and non-Muslims in many parts of the United States. In an effort to respond to the situation with Gospel values, I invited the Imam of a local Muslim community in the Chicago suburbs to meet with a number of catechetical leaders from the surrounding Catholic parishes for a dialogue. He agreed and the catechetical leaders were excited to have an opportunity to participate in a positive interreligious experience.
A week before the meeting, the Imam called me and said that he regretted that he would not be able to attend, but that he would send a representative in his place. At the meeting, the catechetical leaders and I listened as this gracious gentleman explained the basic precepts of Islam in a very straightforward manner. When all was said and done, I thanked him for joining us and sharing his knowledge of Islam with us. I asked him what his position at the mosque was. He laughed and said, “Oh, no, I do not work at the Mosque. I own a video store on 95th Street!” I was flabbergasted, as were those standing nearby who overheard. We thought he was the Muslim equivalent of a catechetical leader or an associate pastor in a Catholic parish. In essence what had happened was the “pastor” (the Imam) had invited one of his “parishioners” to speak about Islam in his place!
Could you do the same if your pastor asked you to represent him at a meeting of non-Catholics who wanted to learn more about the Catholic faith?
I’ve asked this question to numerous groups of Catholics, especially catechists, and the number of people who feel they would have the right tools to represent the Catholic faith properly is extremely low. Why is this? Is the Catholic faith so complex that we cannot summarize it in some simple ways? Muslims can speak of the five pillars of Islam—the five duties required of every Muslim—and Buddhists can speak of the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path.
So, what can Catholics speak of? For the answer to that, we can go to the four pillars of our Catholic faith, as outlined in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. If someone were to ask us to explain the Catholic faith to them, we should be able to turn to these four pillars—Creed, Sacraments, Morality, and Prayer—for guidance. When it comes to talking about our faith, these four pillars provide us with all of the H.E.L.P. that we need:
H = We Hold on to our faith that is revealed to us through Scripture and Tradition and is summarized in the Creed.
E = We Express our faith in the liturgy and sacraments of the Church.
L = We Live our faith according to Catholic morality.
P = We Pray our faith by maintaining a healthy prayer life.
With H.E.L.P., we should be able to do as St. Peter urged in his Letter: “Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope” (1 Peter 3:15).
A Well-Built Faith
I had the opportunity to watch a home being built right next door to mine. Over weeks and months, I saw a beautiful new home rise from its foundation to take its place as the biggest home on our block. It was a sight to see. Later, when folks moved in, I had a chance to talk to my new neighbor and compliment him on his beautiful new home. Surprisingly, he launched into a litany of complaints about how poorly the home was built. While beautiful from the outside, it seems the home was not well built and was now creating a number of headaches for the new owner.
When it comes to our faith, it needs to be well built, not just attractive looking from the outside. This book, A Well-Built Faith, is designed to give you H.E.L.P. so that you have a firm foundation to speak about your faith. Ongoing faith formation is an action that says, in essence, “God is so great, so wonderful, and so loving, that with every fiber of my being, I want to know him more intimately.” God is actively present in our lives, shaping us into the person that reflects his divine image. Learning about our faith is not simply an intellectual exercise. It is a movement of the heart. St. Anselm taught that theology can be thought of as “faith seeking understanding.” We seek to understand the Lord God so that our faith may be strengthened and, like St. Richard of Chichester, we may be able to “see thee more clearly, love thee more dearly, and follow thee more nearly . . . day by day.” With a well-built faith, we can do this.
Ash Wednesday, 2008
 
PART ONE
The Creed:
Holding on to Faith
Chapter One
Laying a Firm Foundation: Transmitting Faith
 
I love working with cement and concrete. I suppose that goes back to when I was a boy. One of my favorite things was to watch a cement truck at a construction site. What little boy is not amazed by the pouring of wet cement? At the same time, what little boy can resist immortalizing himself by etching his initials in wet cement? Not that I ever did that, of course. By the way, if you find the initials J.P. in the foundation of your home, it’s probably my brother, John. Anyway, when it comes to our faith, it is important to have a firm foundation. Luckily, the Catholic faith is founded on four pillars.
Making Christians
In the second century, one of the Church Fathers—Tertullian—wrote that “Christians are made, not born.” Tertullian was reminding us that it is the Church’s responsibility to make Christians and that this task involves certain tools used in a certain way. Tertullian, of course, was merely reminding us of what Jesus said right before his Ascension into heaven: “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you” (Matthew 28:19–20). Jesus is quite clear that making disciples is our great commission and he gives us an indication of how we are to do this: by baptizing and by teaching.
Jesus himself identified what is needed for a firm foundation in the Christian life—faith, hope, love, forgiveness, compassion, mercy, justice, and so on—but he didn’t stop there. He showed us, through his own life example, how this firm foundation is built and strengthened. This task of building faith and making disciples of Christ is known as evangelization. And it is the Church’s most important task. Pope Paul VI said this boldly in his encyclical On Evangelization in the Modern World, “The Church exists in order to evangelize.” To evangelize is to call people to conversion—to call people from following misguided paths to following Jesus who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. To make a Christian is to impart a way of life. This means that becoming a follower of Jesus—a disciple—requires not only information but also transformation. We need to know certain things to be a disciple of Jesus, but we also need to do specific things to live as his followers.
Beginning with the End in Mind
When you build something, it’s always good to begin with the end in mind.
When it comes to forming Catholics in faith, we, too, should begin with the end in mind.
So, just what is an adult Catholic supposed to “look like”? The answer very simply is: we are all to become saints.
Of course, few if any of us will ever be canonized as saints. However, the church has always had another understanding of the word saints. The early church referred to all of the faithful followers of Jesus as the saints. And how did the saints live? “They devoted themselves to the teaching of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread and to the prayers” (Acts of the Apostles 2:42). In other words, the saints—the first followers of Jesus—devoted themselves to the following:
 holding on to their faith
 expressing faith
 living faith
 praying faith

These are the four “pillars” of our Catholic way of life, then and now.
Laying a Firm Foundation — Understanding the Four Pillars of Our Faith
When someone makes an argument that has little or no substance to it, we say that the person “doesn’t have a leg to stand on.” As Catholics, we actually have four legs to stand on! The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches us that our faith is grounded in the firm foundation of the following four principles:
 1. the Creed (holding on to faith)
 2. the sacraments (expressing faith)
 3. the moral life (living faith)
 4. prayer (praying faith)
The Four Pillars of Every Relationship
Every loving relationship includes the following four principles:
 1. You love that person because you believe certain things about him or her to be true: he or she is good, kind, forgiving, fun to be with, or any number of other qualities.
 2. You express your love for that person in a variety of ways: cards, flowers, gifts, hugs, kisses, a gentle touch, a passionate embrace.
 3. You act toward that person in a way that shows you love and respect him or her.
 4. You communicate with that person in an ongoing manner, even if separated by distance.
In a similar way, each of us has been baptized into a deep, intimate, and loving relationship with God and with one another. This relationship is supported by
what we believe about God (the Creed)
how we express our love for God and how God expresses his love for us (the sacraments)
how we act toward God and toward others (the moral life)
how we communicate with God (prayer)
 
The Creed (Holding on to Faith)
Believing is something that we do, not only with our heads, but also with our hearts. The following story illustrates this.
A stunt man was thrilling crowds gathered at the Niagara Falls, making his way across a tightrope that stretched from one end of the Falls to the other while riding a unicycle and carrying another person on his shoulders! As he and his passenger successfully dismounted on solid ground, the crowd broke into wild applause. The stunt man thanked the crowd and asked, “How many of you truly believe that I can do that again?” Having just witnessed the amazing stunt, everyone in the crowd raised their hand. The stunt man then mounted his unicycle and pointed to his shoulders asking, “Alright, then, who’s next?”
To believe is to enter into a relationship with another and to place our trust in that person. Until that happens, what we have is not a belief, but an idea. An idea evolves into a belief when it makes the leap from the head to the heart. Belief or faith is not blind. It is grounded in reason. We do not intimately love another person unless we have good reason (and some degree of evidence) to think that this person can be trusted. In the same way, we place our faith in God, not blindly, but based on good reason and some degree of evidence that God can be trusted. What is that evidence? Namely, the story of salvation history and the living witness of other followers of Christ. The Sacred Scriptures tell us the story of how God has been faithful to his people since the dawn of creation. The living witness of the saints—those canonized and those quietly leading lives of faith—provides us with credible evidence of the trustworthiness of God. Our own experience can also lead us to believe that God can be trusted. And yet, in the end, we have no proof, no guarantee—only an invitation to trust. And so, when we say in the Creed, “We believe in one God,” we do so at our own risk.
The Sacraments (Expressing Faith)
To be sacramental is to express beyond words. Catholics are sacramental because human beings are sacramental. Humans express love in a variety of ways beyond words. We do not feel that our love is fully expressed unless we can reach out to another person and touch them in some way. We are bodily creatures who experience the spiritual world in bodily—physical—ways. And so, as Catholics, we experience God and express ourselves to God using the physical. We use our bodies (standing, kneeling, bowing, lifting hands, signing ourselves) and we use physical objects (water, oil, bread, wine, fire, garments, rosary beads, incense) to encounter God who transcends words. We worship the intangible God using tangible realities.
The Moral Life (Living Faith)
Country and Western songs tend to be filled with heartache, telling tales of good loving gone bad. Two people in love are supposed to treat each other in a certain way and when that doesn’t happen, relationships lose faith. Just as certain actions express that love, other actions express rejection of that love.
God is in love with us and he is inviting us to love him and one another in return. If we say that we love God, then we are supposed to act in ways that express that love and avoid actions that show rejection of that love. It’s that simple.
Then why is it so hard?
It seems like living a moral life should be so easy. There are only ten rules to follow (the Commandments), and God is so wonderful and loving, who would ever dream of doing wrong by him? The painful truth is, we human beings are never satisfied. We always want more. Our hungry hearts seek satisfaction in places and things other than God. Like a married person who seems to “have it all” but still goes off to have an affair, we can all too easily forget how good God is to us and instead, go off to seek fulfillment elsewhere.
Living the moral life is not a matter of simply avoiding bad things. It is a matter of recognizing how loved we are and then responding to that love in the way our beloved—God—asks us to: by seeking fulfillment only in him and by loving our neighbors. God is faithful to us and we cannot hurt God through our immoral actions. The only hearts that risk becoming “achey-breaky” are our own.
Marvin and Tina were not a very religious couple but tried their best; they only went to church once a year. As they were leaving the church, the priest said, “Marvin, it sure would be nice to see you and Tina at Mass more than once a year.” “I know,” replied Marvin, “We’re very busy people, leading active lives, but at least we keep the Ten Commandments.” “That’s great,” the priest said. “I’m glad to hear that you keep the Commandments.” “Yes, we sure do,” Marvin said proudly. “Tina keeps six of them and I keep the other four.”
 
Prayer (Praying Faith)
A survey conducted years ago asked people in successful marriages to identify the top ten qualities of a healthy marriage. One might think that sex, given all the attention it is given in our culture, would have been the number one quality. Not so. What was number one? Communication! Relationships last when people communicate with one another.
Prayer is the way we communicate with God. Communication, of course, is a two-way street: speaking and listening. Many of us were taught that prayer is “talking to God.” This is only part of the dynamic of prayer. If prayer were understood as simply talking to God, than St. Paul’s insistence that we should “pray always” would mean that we should be talking incessantly to God. Poor God! Imagine having to listen to someone else speak incessantly! Without listening, we are missing the voice of God. Later on in this book, we’ll explore how God speaks to us and what it means to hear God’s voice. For now, it is enough to know that prayer is the fourth pillar of our Catholic faith and that without prayer we run the risk of collapsing like a card table with only three legs.
 
Scripture
“Go therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:18–20)
Prayer
Lord God, each day is another opportunity for you to make me into one of your disciples. If I have failed you recently, remake me, so that I may hold on to my faith in you, express my faith in you, live that faith, and pray from within that faith. And thank you for being with me, always!

Table of Contents

contents

Acknowledgments    ix
        Introduction——A Little H.E.L.P. xi
Part One — The Creed: Holding on to Faith
    Chapter 1    Laying a Firm Foundation: Transmitting Faith    3
    Chapter 2    Assembly-Line Construction: Human Desire, Revelation, and Faith 11
    Chapter 3    Who’s the Boss?: Scripture and Tradition 17
    Chapter 4    Using Brand-Name Equipment: The Trinity 25
    Chapter 5    The Bulldozer: Sin, Salvation, and the Cross of Jesus31
    Chapter 6    Union Workers: The Church, Mary, the Saints, and Eternity 37

Part Two — The Sacraments: Expressing Faith
    Chapter 7     Using a Laser Level for Alignment: Worship and Liturgy 49
    Chapter 8    Construction Safety Signs: Mystery and Sacramentality 57
    Chapter 9    The Welding Process: Sacraments of Initiation 63
    Chapter 10    Steamrollers: Sacraments of Healing 75
    Chapter 11    Installing New Windows: Sacraments at the Service of Communion 85

Part Three — The Moral Life: Living Faith
    Chapter 12     Handle with Care: Human Dignity, Sin, and Mercy 95
    Chapter 13    Building according to Code: The Commandments, Beatitudes, and Virtues 103
    Chapter 14    Tuck-Pointing, Painting, and Siding: Works of Mercy and Social Justice 115
    Chapter 15    Measure Twice, Cut Once: Conscience and Moral Decision Making 123

Part Four — Prayer: Praying Faith
    Chapter 16     Excavators and Cranes: Prayer 131
    Chapter 17    Walkie-Talkies: Forms of Prayer 139
    Chapter 18    Access to Restricted Areas: The Lord’s Prayer and How Prayer Works 149

    Conclusion    One More Word to Learn 157

 

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