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Foreword

For far too long, we Catholics have been filled with a spirit of apathy and embarrassment about sharing our faith. We keep the faith to ourselves and contain it within the walls of the Church. When we are challenged by our friends and loved ones about why we are Catholic, we cower. When the culture tries to shove subjective truth down our throats, we worry about being politically correct. When unborn children are slaughtered and marriage is redefined, we remain silent or turn the other way. We must pray, of course, but we must also act and speak the Truth in love. We must go out with the Holy Spirit at our side, meet people where they are, and witness to them.

The saints are the quintessential examples of how to evangelize effectively, and through them Christ reveals who we are called to be. We cannot simply sit back and say, “I’m a good person” because there are no “good” people in heaven—only saints. The saints and their evangelizing witness form a foundation for holiness and make clear what is expected of a follower of Jesus. Their lives remind us that we are called to participate in the kingdom of heaven here on earth as evangelizing witnesses, influencing the culture with truth and love, compassion and mercy, peace and freedom—all qualities that flow from the very heart of God.

Casting Nets with the Saints is a spiritual nexus between effective evangelization and the lives of the saints. In this truly inspirational book, Chris Stewart leads us on a fascinating journey of encounter with fifty-six men and women who responded generously to the love of God showered on them. They have survived the pains and challenges of this world, they have washed their robes white in the blood of the Lamb, and now they rejoice and share in the total victory of Christ.

This extraordinary journey of learning to share the Gospel more effectively teaches us that in order to become saints, we don’t need to be great theologians like St. Augustine or St. John Paul II. We don’t need to be martyrs like St. Victor of Marseilles or Emil Kapaun. We don’t need to be great leaders like St. Benedict and St. Elizabeth of Hungary. We don’t even need to perform great works of charity like St. Teresa of Calcutta or St. Vincent de Paul. In order to become saints, we must allow ourselves to be totally consumed by the fire of God’s absolute love. We become saints by fulfilling Christ’s command to love the Lord our God with our whole heart, soul, mind, and strength, and then sharing the faith in love with everyone we meet.

To be saints means that we must seek union with the Father in love through the deepening and strengthening of our relationship with Jesus in the Holy Spirit. Jesus’s call to sainthood begins with his command to us: “Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Mt 5:48). Holiness is a calling by God to share in his very life through desiring and striving for perfection in love. The way of holiness molds, shapes, and forms us into the Body of Christ—into Jesus himself. The more we act under God’s Spirit, the more we seek to know and to do God’s holy will in our lives. The more we implore the assistance and grace of the Holy Spirit, the more we grow in holiness and the closer we come to sainthood.

The saints presented in this book are as fascinating as they are diverse: men and women, adults and children, scholars and mystics, ancients and moderns. Many of these saints are household names (St. Patrick and St. Katharine Drexel), some are more obscure (St. Frances of Rome and St. Vitalis of Gaza), and some I had never heard of (St. Hospitius and St. Clotilde). Yet they all share a common gift for sharing the faith with humility, mercy, and purity of heart. They were not afraid to stand up for and defend “the way, and the truth, and the life” (John 14:6), which is not an idea or philosophy, but the Person of Jesus Christ. They fought subjectivism, the idea that “truth is whatever I want it to be” that was rampant in their day, just as it is in ours. Like us, they lived in a world that believed that saints have no real value and that becoming a saint (i.e., living a holy and virtuous life) is a waste of time.

If we think of our world today as a vineyard, our culture tries to convince us that the rotting fruit it produces—which reeks of moral and spiritual decay—is actually good for us. The truth is, if we eat this fruit, we will become violently ill; and if we continue to eat it, we will inevitably die. This is why each and every one of us is called to be an evangelizing saint! We must share the good, life-giving fruit of the Gospel with people who are spiritually sick and dying.

The world is the field in which the word of God is sown. Through our efforts as evangelizing saints—as sowers of the seed of the Gospel of Jesus Christ—the world will bear rich fruit. Yet, like the saints in this book, we may not know what fruit we are producing, because it is God who picks and distributes the fruit of our labors. We may never know how someone was touched by something we said. We may never know how things turned out after someone came to us for advice. We may never know how someone’s life was changed when they met Jesus in us. But as his saints, members of the Body of Christ making our way to heaven, we know that “God’s love has been poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, and it is in this outpouring of love that the God who wishes to reveal Himself achieves his purpose and goals.”1

You may be asking yourself, “But why am I called to evangelize? Isn’t that the job of the clergy or for incredibly holy people like the saints?”

The answer is no, and that is precisely the point of Casting Nets with the Saints—by our baptism into Christ’s death, we are called to be evangelizing disciples. A disciple is one who hears, accepts, and carries out the teaching of Jesus. A disciple follows and imitates Jesus. Each of us who has been baptized has this mission and calling: to share our experience of knowing Jesus Christ personally and to invite others to share in his life.

To be saints who do the work of evangelization, we must let God work in us. We must take our hands off the steering wheel and let God drive. We must empty ourselves of sin so that God can fill us with his love. We must die to the ways of this world so that Christ can live in us.

In this world of sin and darkness, Chris Stewart’s Casting Nets with the Saints shows how poor and humble saints shine brightly. Through them, the light of Christ ignites our hearts and inspires us to respond lovingly to the Father’s tender embrace. When we live out the mission of loving God and neighbor, we too become saints. We should rejoice and be glad, for our reward will be great in heaven.

Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers, M.T.S.

Author and EWTN series host

November 9, 2016

Casting Nets with the Saints

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