I feel some anxiety about the decline of faith in Jesus Christ generally, and the decline of Catholic faith specifically, but there is really no decline in religion. I don’t say that to be a nit-picker but simply to point out that mankind is religious by nature and what has been happening is a replacement of Christianity in the West with a variety of religions, some more obvious than others. A glaring example is the Oprah new-age religion. But even those who claim no religion and no God either worship at the altar of secular humanism via science and technology or at the other end of the spectrum are pure hedonists, worshipping at the altar of sensual gratification. There are also great numbers of people, many in the environmental movements that have essentially a neo-pagan worship of the planet Mother Earth, perhaps without even recognizing it. And not to be forgotten is the influx of traditional eastern religions and the world-wide expansion of Islam.
The only real question is what do we as Catholics do about it. Is it possible to argue someone into the Kingdom of God? No. Can we rely on the media for the real story? Of course not. Are there great homilists that can persuade people? Not many, and on their own they cannot change the course of history.
Why would anyone want to be Christian in the first place? Why would anyone want to be Catholic? Why would fallen away Catholics want to come home? There is nothing we can do or say to make that happen.
The only way that any one person, or many people will repent of sin and turn to Jesus Christ is if the Holy Spirit works in their hearts and convicts them of their sin. And when they are ready, it doesn’t take a great speaker, although sometimes that happens, nor does it take a great apologist, although that happens too. It takes us being ready to lead them by the hand to the Master, our Lord Jesus Christ.
So what do we do? We spend as much time as physically possible on our knees begging and pleading with the Father, in the name of Jesus the Son, to send the Holy Spirit to work in the hearts of our family and neighbors, our cities and towns, our country; to bring people in repentance to God, one heart, one soul at a time. We need to forget ourselves in this cause. We need to storm heaven, enlist the aid of all of the saints and angels to pray for this cause. We need to fast for this cause. We need to offer every little bit of our suffering for this cause. We must continue on our knees for our brothers and sisters until the Holy Spirit stirs their hearts so that they cannot rest until the seek out forgiveness and reconciliation with God. And we must not be surprised by the unlikely instruments God uses to accomplish this great revival of faith. The ones we think will be the great evangelizers may not be at all. And we must be ready and willing to be used by God for the salvation of even one soul, if not many, but if only one our time was well spent.
Remember this. There is no problem in our homes, no problem in our towns and cities or country, no problem in our Church, no problem in our seminaries, no problem in the priesthood or episcopate; no problem that we face today that would not be healed or cured by a great awakening in the hearts of people and a widespread personal faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. We can talk ourselves blue about issues, but most of that fades into the background when the Holy Spirit starts moving in a great way in the hearts and minds of a people.
“You have not, because you ask not.” We have to start asking for this. It is the only way back from the edge of the cliff where we now are perched. And we have to search our own hearts every day as well, repent of our own sins, and speak the truth in love at every opportunity.
And we don’t have to wait for leadership on this. What we can do, we can do now. As long as we don’t care about who gets the credit, great things will happen, and we will give all the glory to God, which is rightfully his anyway. Those leaders who are in the way, God will move aside or go over. Those leaders who recognize the work of the Holy Spirit when they see a movement of repentance, will pitch in to help. One leader who will recognize and welcome this is Benedict XVI. If one looks closely at his various messages while visiting the United States, especially those to young people, he often speaks of the necessity of personal repentance and personal faith.
So this decline we see is not set in stone. It is reversible, if we ask God to reverse it, and don’t stop asking. Repentance is not popular, but the Holy Spirit can change that, if we ask him to do so.