St. Josemaría Escrivá, the founder of Opus Dei, felt for most people life was chiefly about making ordinary everyday life something extraordinary.
“God doesn’t pull you out of your environment, He doesn’t remove you from the world, nor from your state in life, nor from your noble human ambitions, nor from your professional work... but, there, He wants you to be holy!”
The
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops defines a saint as “the members of
the Church who have arrived at perfect union with Christ, who join their wills
to the will of God in praying for those in the Church.”
This past month the
relic of the new saint, Carlos Acuti, was in Anacortes (the small mainland town
where we catch the ferry). Many we know went to pay homage to this young man who
had a great devotion to the Eucharist and was a very savvy user of the
internet. Why we ask, would 70 year old people go to pray before a recognized saint, but one who was still a teenager when he died?
What we tend to forget is, most saints were not extraordinary individuals, but ordinary people striving for holiness within their call in life, be it in a monastery, in a factory, in a family. They lived their lives not on a pedestal but down in the trenches of life, closely connected to God through prayer.
To be a saint is what we are all called to be, and while the Church has given us examples to imitate, there are thousands of people who live holy lives without being noticed by those around them.Tapestries: Los Angeles Cathedral- John Nava