New Year’s Resolutions may be notorious for their attrition rates, but that should not stop Christians from making them. The changing over of the calendar year is a great opportunity for disciples of Jesus to assess where He might be calling us to grow and to make a firm decision to follow Him more closely.
Here are a few suggestions for formulating a New Year’s Resolution that will help you grow in love for the Lord in 2021:
Choose a virtue to focus on this year
The Catholic tradition acknowledges seven main virtues: the four cardinal, or “human,” virtues (prudence, justice, courage, and temperance), which grow in us by our own natural efforts; and the three theological virtues (faith, hope, and love), which can only be gained directly through a gift of God.
The Catechism says of the virtues that they “[allow] the person not only to perform good acts, but to give the best of himself. The virtuous person tends toward the good with all his sensory and spiritual powers; he pursues the good and chooses it in concrete actions.” (CCC 1803)Soak in Scripture
God’s Word can never be exhausted; it is always “living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword” (Hebrews 4:12) - meaning its ability to pierce our hearts and produce new action of the Holy Spirit within us is unquenchable. If it feels like God has been distant or silent in your life this year, perhaps a good New Year’s resolution would be to immerse yourself more fully in the Scriptures in 2021.You might begin by choosing one of the Gospels and working your way slowly and prayerfully through it. For the more ambitious types, Ascension Press just announced that they are releasing a new podcast called “The Bible in a Year” with Fr. Mike Schmitz (Augustine Institute has their own print version of the same concept); imagine having read the entire Bible by January 1, 2022!
Decide to follow one of these schedules, or choose another way to make Scripture a more regular part of your daily life. The point is, you can’t go wrong by “soaking” in the Word of God this year.
Let the Saints inspire you
This year has had its share of oversized problems. For many of us, it can feel like there is nothing that we can do to fight against disease, injustice, and wide-scale suffering. But as Catholics, we can never allow even the most overwhelming crises facing our world to discourage us; we know that Jesus calls us to holiness and that it is through our faithfulness to this call that He wants to transform the face of the earth.
In his 1988 apostolic exhortation Christifidelis laici, Pope John Paul II said that saints “have always been the source and origin of renewal in the most difficult circumstances in the Church's history” (Christifidelis laici, 16). Friends, we are living through a difficult moment in the Church’s history, but God has chosen us for such a time as this. It is not first and foremost through high-powered institutions or impassioned coalitions that God’s Kingdom is made manifest in the world; it is through the simple “yes” of people like you and me when we give our lives generously to God and strive to become saints. JPII knew this - which is why he became a saint, and why he has since inspired so many others to do the same.
This year, we would do well to spend time learning about some great saints who were called to stand up courageously to the culture in which they lived, asking them to pray for us and working to imitate their bold witness to the Gospel. John Paul II was certainly a striking example of the power of holiness to transform culture; St. Thomas More, St. Teresa of Avila, and St. Damian of Molokai also stand out as exemplary models for us as we navigate the challenging times in which we live. Pope Francis has also declared that in 2021 the Church will celebrate the Year of St. Joseph (one of the greatest saints of all!) and has invited all Catholics to reflect more deeply on his life and virtues, making him a wonderful choice as well.
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