A friend of mine emailed this to me today, so I thought I would share it with you guys. Consider it an early Father’s Day reflection.
Father’s Day
As we prepare to celebrate Fathers we should reflect a bit on what a father is. Today I’m afraid that there are a large number of people who can no longer relate to the reality or the concept of a father. This was not always the case as most marriages never suffered from the ravages of divorce. Many individuals today did not have the benefit of a father at home, or even in their life to any extent. 50%+ of marriages, including Catholic marriages, end in divorce. Single parent families are painfully common.
A human being needs both a father and a mother, male and female, to receive the fullness of nurturing, love, and support. One parent can try heroically to fill both roles, and do quite well, but it is never the same as when mom and dad fulfill their respective roles.
A father, along with a mother, obviously collaborate with God to bring life into existence. You will never know the eternal joy of Heaven without your father and mother saying yes to life. A father protects and supports his family. If evil in any form threatens his family a father must engage the evil and protect the family. This is true most of all spiritually, but also physically, emotionally, economically, and morally.
Dad has to fight many a battle to win the war of the salvation of the souls of his spouse and children. If dad doesn’t even know there is a war, where would that leave his family? How many sleepless nights fathers have had had worrying how to provide for mom and the kids? How many days he has come home from work bone tired, trying to provide a life for the family better than he had? How many deaths has he died agonizing over the welfare of each of his children?
Remember your father this Fathers Day. Pray for him, alive or deceased. While you are doing this, hopefully through a day started with the Holy Eucharist, remember your priests, who are truly fathers in the spiritual sense. They too have expended a lot of blood, sweat, and tears trying to insure the well-being of their spiritual children. Without the priest there is no forgiveness through the sacrament of Reconciliation. Without the priest there is no strengthening through the sacrament of Confirmation. Without the priest there is no anointing of the sick. Most of all, no priest no Eucharist the Source, Center, and Summit of the Church’s life.
Let’s pray for our fathers, both biological and spiritual, this Father’s Day, and every day. We need them, and they need us.
God bless you,
Fr. John Corapi

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This four-part series is a compilation that addresses some of the most essential elements of being a good father. All authentic paternity subsists in and flows from the paternity of God our Father. Whether it is the spiritual paternity of the priest, or the natural and biological paternity of our earthly fathers, it is all rooted in God our Father. One cannot be a “father” without having children. Fathers beget children: priests in the spiritual order, natural and biological fathers in the temporal and corporeal order. Fathers do a lot more than just “beget” life, however. A true father loves his children, provides for their well being, protects them, educates them, etc.

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