Every Catholic, regardless of their state in life, shares a singular and profound vocation: the call to be a saint. This Universal Call to Holiness , famously emphasized during the Second Vatican Council , reminds us that sanctity is not a reserved status for those behind cloister walls or wearing clerical collars. Instead, it is a daily, intentional turning of the heart toward God amidst the laundry, the office meetings, and the dinner table. To grow in this pursuit, consider anchoring your day in the Morning Offering , which consecrates every labor and joy to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Cultivating a devotion to the Holy Spirit is also vital; by frequently praying Come, Holy Spirit, we invite the primary agent of sanctification to guide our small, hidden acts of charity that build the Kingdom of God in our own neighborhoods. The legacy of Pope St. John Paul II provides us with powerful modern blueprints for this journey through the many laypeople he raised to the altars. He beatified ...
The spiritual climax of the Gospel of John, as Father John Waiss points out, occurs at the foot of the Cross, where Jesus utters his parting words: “Woman, behold, your son!” and “Behold your mother!” (John 19:26-27). While these words were addressed to the Apostle John, the disciple whom Jesus loved, the Church has long understood this moment as a universal adoption. To truly image Christ, we must share in His parentage; if we embrace God as our spiritual Father but reject Mary as our mother, we treat Christ as a half-brother rather than our "firstborn among many brethren" (Rom. 8:29). As Origen noted as early as the third century, the profound depths of the Gospel are only accessible to those who, like John, rest their heads on Jesus’ breast and receive Mary into their own homes. This maternal role is deeply rooted in biblical typology, positioning Mary as the fulfillment of the great mothers of the Old Covenant. She is the New Eve , the mother of all the living according ...