This article ran in diocesan newspapers in the U.S. and in the Catholic Press Association paper The Catholic Journalist.
One morning last
spring, I caught my older daughter flipping through a diocesan newspaper while
eating breakfast. I had to smile. On that particularly morning, she wasn’t
officially Catholic. She entered the Church later that day at the 2:30 Mass at
the Cathedral Basilica in St. Louis, Missouri. It was Pentecost Sunday and
soon, my second child would be entering the faith I had chosen less than a
decade earlier.
“Did you read the
diocesan newspapers when you lived here? Or is this a new thing for you?” I asked
her.
She looked up from
the paper and smiled. “When there was no catalog or magazine on the table, I
would read it. It was something to do.” She laughed and closed the paper.
Those were rough
years. She had moved into our house with her little boys and was trying to
juggle them and full-time employment. She was also trying hard to avoid God.
But on this
particular Sunday, the fight against God ended. On that day, she was received
into Mother Church.
My husband also
used to scan diocesan newspapers and magazines before he converted. He's the
kind of guy that goes through withdrawal when he doesn't have a book to read.
In the years after my conversion (before his own conversion), he would read the
Catholic papers that were on the table – the random complimentary copies I
received as a columnist. This is the
same man who promised he would never become Catholic. He was born Southern
Baptist, and he would die Southern Baptist.
He’s been Catholic
since 2008.
I don't know if
there is a cause and effect relationship between conversions and subscriptions
to diocesan periodicals, but at the very least, there is some correlation. I
believe families that have subscriptions to diocesan papers are the very
families most likely to experience conversion and ongoing conversion – even
among families in which some members actively resist God. There are times that
the diocesan newspaper on the kitchen table is the only remaining voice for
Mother Church in the lives of those who stubbornly resist grace.
I am blessed to
write for diocesan papers and magazines, but I am even more blessed to have
those periodicals in my home and on my kitchen table. There was a time when my
husband told me to stop talking about my new-found faith – but he would still
read the diocesan newspaper. My daughter tuned me out for years. But last
spring, she entered the Church.
Diocesan papers
are tools of evangelization. Sometimes, they are the only evangelization tool
left in a household.
If you are reading
this, you understand how important this magazine or newspaper is. You know that
it assists you in your journey – and you know that it assists those who live
under your roof and sit at your kitchen table.
In a world that is
filled with many voices and so many words, it is a blessing to have faithful media
coming into our homes, sharing words that matter – words that bring life.
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