Archbishop
Charles Chaput
If you send an e-mail
to Denver’s Archbishop Charles Chaput, don’t be surprised when
you receive a prompt response from him. His e-mail address is
posted on the archdiocesan Web site (www.archden.org),
and he replies to about one hundred messages weekly.
“When one opens new
doors of communication,” says the fifty-five-year-old Capuchin
Franciscan Friar, “people communicate. That’s a wonderful
burden.”
It sometimes means answering e-mail at 4:30 a.m. to allow time for
his other responsibilities, including weekly visits to northern
Colorado parishes, where he meets his flock face-to-face.
“You’d be amazed
at how quickly a bishop discovers what’s on their minds,” he
says. From these discussions, and prayer, Archbishop Chaput
decides what topics to address in his pastoral letters. Since
being installed as Denver’s archbishop, in April 1997, he’s
written four letters — on evangelization, contraception,
reconciliation and priestly vocations. He also writes a regular
column for the archdiocesan newspaper, and his articles appear in
a number of other publications.
In his writings and
his talks, Archbishop Chaput tackles the tough subjects. “It’s
important for any bishop to speak the truth passionately, clearly
and without compromise,” he says. “If we do that, and if we
always do it with love, we’re fulfilling our mandate to ‘Go
and make disciples of all nations.’ That’s the example Jesus
gave us. He withheld nothing. His words were plain and to the
point.” As are the archbishop’s words.
“Sharing the gospel
isn’t always easy,” he says. “Living it is even harder. Even
many Catholics want the truth to be different on issues like
contraception, the death penalty and abortion. But we bishops, or
priests, or religious, or laity, do others no favor when we
distort or discard pieces of the truth to make them more palatable
to modern tastes.”
And modern tastes are
being profoundly influenced by technology, which is one reason the
Denver archdiocese hosted a conference in 1998 on “The New
Technologies and the Human Person.”
“These tools can do
more than change how we communicate,” says Archbishop Chaput.
“They can change how we think. The most important legacy of the
information age won’t be how it simplified or accelerated our
lifestyles or work but, instead, how it changed us.” |
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"It's
important for any bishop to speak the truth passionately,
clearly and without compromise." |
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| In
Denver, they’re already finding tremendous uses for the new
technologies. Last year, the archdiocese began conducting an
on-line course on the Holy Father’s encyclical Tertio Millennio
Adveniente. “New technologies always have unintended
consequences,” says the archbishop. “The Internet is inundated
with pornography. It’s also a powerful vehicle for the spread of
misinformation . . . I hope we’ll steer these new technologies
in a way that glorifies God and respects the human person.”
But the greatest
challenge facing the Church in the coming millennium, says
Archbishop Chaput, is nothing new.
“It’s the same
crisis faced by people since the dawn of humanity,” he explains.
“It’s a crisis of faith. We simply do not believe deeply
enough. God has revealed Himself to us through Jesus Christ, but
we’re afraid to follow His example. So, the central crisis we
face isn’t something happening in our culture or our Church —
it’s within ourselves. If we want to change the world, we need
to begin by changing our hearts.”
Archbishop Chaput is
planting the seeds in Denver to do just that.” In many ways, the
coming millennium is fertile missionary territory,” he says. “Our
task is to recover the faith and missionary zeal of the early
Christians, so we can proclaim the gospel with the same energy and
confidence.” A key component for those of northern Colorado will
be Our Lady of the New Advent Theological Institute which,
according to the archbishop, is “dedicated to forming a new
generation of Catholic evangelizers.” A major seminary, the St.
John Vianney Theological Seminary, operates under and within the
institute. The institute will grant pontifical degrees through the
Pontifical Lateran University in Rome. Initially, only seminarians
will receive such degrees, but lay people will eventually study at
the institute also.
“People view the
seminary as a tremendous sign of hope for the Church here,”
Archbishop Chaput says. “To see nearly sixty dedicated
seminarians in formation gives us confidence that we will have
enough priests to serve our growing population (in northern
Colorado) in the next millennium. But I think the seminary means
more than the solution to a priest shortage . . . I think the new
seminary — and the wonderful young men studying in it — is
helping to renew the entire Church in northern Colorado.”
The archbishop would
like to see the institute become a “spiritual heart” for the
archdiocese, where “all people can come to more deeply explore
their role in God’s plan.”
The archbishop
discerned his own role in God’s plan guided by his family. “Priestly
vocations usually take root in a prayerful and supportive family
environment, and mature with the encouragement of a spiritual
adviser,” he says. “The Holy Spirit does dramatic work, but
that doesn’t mean He sends divine lightning bolts to stimulate
vocations. There’s a human component, too. And if we don’t
have enough priests, it’s not because the Holy Spirit isn’t at
work among us. It’s because we, as a Church, as families and as
individuals, are not doing our part.”
The Church, he adds,
needs families that pray together, attend Mass every Sunday, and
make their faith central to their lives.
Many of the flock in
Denver’s archdiocese are heeding that call, guided by their holy
shepherd.
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