Pope Francis, during a mass
in celebration of the Baptism of Jesus, baptized 32 babies in the Vatican’s
Sistine Chapel last January. It caused a stir and was highlighted by the media
because among them was 7-month old baby Giulia whose parents were “unmarried”
in catholic rites.
Ivan Scardia and Nicoletta
Franco, though married in a civil ceremony, had asked the Pope if he would
baptize their second child at a General Audience in September 25, and he said
yes. The Pope agreed because he believes that the children of parents in an
irregular situation should not be made to feel like a second-class Christian.
This move again reveals the Pope’s pastoral heart. Through this act, he would
like to focus on the importance of passing on the faith to the future
generation.
In his homily, he challenged
the parents of the babies: “Today, carry this thought home with you. We must be
transmitter of the faith. Think of this,
think always of how to hand on the faith to your children. These children are links
in a chain. You parents have a baby son or daughter to be baptized, but in
several years, it will be they that have a baby to baptize, or a grandchild and
so, the chain of faith! Above all, I want to tell you this: you are the persons
who hand on the faith, the transmitter; you have the duty to pass on the faith
to these babies. It’s the most beautiful legacy that you can leave to them: the
faith.”
These words make me remember
my parents with gratefulness. Checking on my baptismal certificate, I found out
that my dad and mom had me baptized 22 days after I was born on June 21, 1968
at the Immaculate Conception Parish in Madridejos, Cebu. That day, they became
the transmitter of the faith. Perhaps it was more of a social convention that motivated
them. Little did they know how far it could get me. The door of the faith
opened up many other doors. I did not even expect it would lead me to the doors
of the seminary. But the greatest door I am delightfully expecting to open is
the door to heaven!
One of the greatest gifts I
have received in baptism is sanctifying grace. This supernatural gift is free
but with wonderful consequences. In his great love, God shared his very life to
me. Since that day, I shared in the very heartbeat of God; I breathe his very
breath. In a very mysterious way, I have become a child of God. He has given me
a dignity and a destiny. He has raised me up to be more than dust. Though
created out of clay, he has given me a sublime vocation to share in his divine
nature. Moreover, his Spirit lives in me as in a temple. These thoughts give me
more reason to believe that we, as persons, are born for greater things!
Believing in the
supernatural dimension of our life has tremendous effect. Personally, it gives
me a lot of optimism about the future. I know I am not alone in my life’s
journey. My faith gives me the power to be resilient. I also observe this in
people who keep God in their lives. Once, a nursing student asked me to pray
for her because she was preparing for her board exam. I told her to study and
pray as I assured her of my prayers. Unfortunately, she did not make it. She
was devastated by the result. Yet she was able to rise up from the loss and
moved forward. She was able to see beyond the sad experience and learned from it.
Parents may be the
transmitter of the faith, but in the end, faith requires a very personal
assent. No one can truly inherit faith. Hence, faith is a personal decision
when one decides to accept the person of Christ and his message. To foster this
personal decision for Christ to those “born Catholics” becomes really
challenging. It requires conversion of heart and a deep experience of Jesus who
demands from every baptized: “be perfect just as your heavenly Father is
perfect.”
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