The Saints, Role Models for Being Human and Holy
For the past 40 years whenever I celebrate the sacrament of Confirmation, I regularly take the opportunity to acquaint our young people with the saints. I urged them to choose a patronal saint for their Confirmation name and then to learn about the saints that they had chosen. I do so because the saints play a critically important role in the life of the Church. They are the Catholics who have succeeded in being very human and simultaneously very holy––the same challenge that we all now face.
Our young people always need heroes in their lives––people of substance to help them to understand what true success is actually all about. Too many of the popular personalities to whom young people often gravitate do not provide the type of human examples that will keep our youngsters truly happy and satisfied. The saints have always provided those types of models by being truly human and deeply spiritually triumphant.
The human qualities of the saints act as assurances that God can and does draw holiness out of a good sense of humor, a strong attraction to sports and the persisting ability to overcome mistakes and then to start all over again. These human characteristics should encourage all of us in the pursuit of holiness. They are essential for young people starting out in life.
I love the saints who had a well-developed and demonstrated sense of humor. St. John XXIII was a notoriously funny man. In one of his first appearances as the new pope, one person shouted out: “He’s so fat!” To which the pontiff replied: “The conclave was not a beauty contest!”
Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati loved skiing in the Italian mountains. He was also deeply devoted to caring for the poor in Turin – so much so that at his funeral, his wealthy family members were stunned at how many of the town’s poor came to mourn his passing. He had made many of them the recipients of his abundant generosity.
Blessed Carlo Acutis now lies in state wearing Nike sneakers as a visible reminder that he was a teenager who enjoyed the games and activities in which all teenagers participate. Carlo’s profound love for the Eucharist did not rob him of his youthful joy.
In short, saints are like us in so many typical ways even as they serve as models for holiness. There are lots of candidates for sainthood whose lives are being reviewed now. Six of those candidates are African Americans whose faith witness has become a source of encouragement for all of us.
Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman was a dynamo evangelizer whose energy and zeal were recognized by the U.S. bishops in June 1989 when she addressed our conference in Newark.
Venerable Father Augustus Tolton was the first identified African American priest to serve in the USA. His life is now dramatized in a moving production titled: Tolton: From Slave to Priest, a play that was recently performed at The Catholic University of America.
All six of those extraordinary Catholics are on the path to being formally recognized as saints and acknowledged as spiritual inspirations for the people of our time. Along with all of the Church’s saints, they should encourage us to see how the strength of their humanity led them to holiness––as our human struggles and triumphs can and should do the same for us.
CARDINAL WILTON GREGORY is the Archbishop of Washington. He was one of the original eight bishops who penned “What I Have Seen and Heard,” a pastoral letter on racism in America. Cardinal Gregory will celebrate Mass for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati on the Feast of Christ the King, November 24, at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Peter in Chainsin Downtown Cincinnati.
This article appeared in the November 2024 edition of The Catholic Telegraph Magazine. For your complimentary subscription, click here.