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I could have
said that we have a new theological institute and our seminaries
are growing; or that tens of thousands of you did pilgrimages here
within the archdiocese to seek the Jubilee indulgence; or that we
reached out and deepened our friendship with the Jewish community,
and our brothers and sisters in the Greek Orthodox Church; or that
individual parishes and Catholic organizations honored the Jubilee
in hundreds of different ways.
I could
have said all of that and more -- and it would have been true. But
I didn’t say any of it, because the numbers aren’t finally important.
Questions
about the "success" of the Jubilee are good, and they
make sense. But they're also, in an important way, incomplete and
premature. Was the Jubilee Year a success'? I believe it was enormously
successful, both here in northern Colorado and around the world.
But I don't think we gain anything in trying to measure it by the
standards of the world.
Six months,
12 months, even 18 months after World Youth Day 1993, some people
here in Denver were still trying to track the data on things like
increased Mass attendance, numbers of conversions and youth ministry
growth, in order to correlate that mathematically with the event
that had happened. Of course, they couldn't do it, at least not
in any conclusive way.
But seven
years later, I think most of us here tonight would agree that the
Church in northern Colorado is stronger, healthier and more evangelical
than at any time in the recent past -- exactly because World
Youth Day had a transfiguring effect. World Youth Day changed the
way the Church perceived herself and her surroundings. And that
gradually changed the way she approached her mission. Today, nearly
everybody arriving here from the outside notices it.
That's
how we need to understand the Jubilee Year. We need to remember
that immediate results, even when they're good, are the least
important fruit. How could anyone hope to measure the "success"
of the cross in statistics? Or the first Pentecost, or the conversion
of Paul, or World Youth Day or the Jubilee? None of these things
can be seen for what they really are in the short run -- just as
our redemption was once no more than the word "yes" in
the mouth of young Jewish girl 2,000 years ago.
But in
the long run, these things make a huge difference. They make all
the difference in the world. That's the only way to judge the Great
Jubilee. In eight or 10 years -- that's when the real seeds will
start to show. Our job, beginning tonight, is to keep the Jubilee
alive in our hearts and our actions each day. And if we do, God
in His own good time will bring the Jubilee Year to fruition in
the lives of our Church and our families. So let’s join with Mary,
the mother of our Savior and our mother, in giving grateful
thanks in song:
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