Catholics United for the Faith
 
 


Lay Witness magazine is a publication of Catholics United for the Faith made available to its members. To become a member of CUF, please click here.

 


Content from the Jul/Aug 2003 Issue:

Lay Witness Feature Articles
Catholic Families in the New Millennium
By MichaelAnn Martin
 
Christ the Evangelist
By David Warner
 
Contemplating the Face of Christ
By Regis Martin
 
In the Shoes of Our Fisherman
By Mike Sullivan
 
Marketing for the New Millennium
By Matthew Pinto
 
The Art of Prayer
By Sr. Chiara Marie, P.C.C.
 
The Lily and the Cross
By PaulaAnne Sharkey Lemire
 
Why Must I Work?
By Andrew D. Muras
 
Lay Witness Department Updates
Book Reviews   By Various
 
Chapter News   By CUF
 
CUF News   By CUF
 
CUF Profiles   By CUF
 
Faith Fact   By CUF
 
In Brief   By CUF
 
Letters to the Editor   By CUF
 
The Eucharistic Sacrifice   By Pope John Paul II
 
Lay Witness Columns
A Visit with the Holy Father
By Mary Ann Kuharski
 
Among the Greeks
By Stephen Pimentel
 
Blessed Among Women
By Joseph Almeida
 
Fr. Jack Whitley, C.S.B.
By Molly Mulqueen
 
Funeral Rights
By Leon J. Suprenant, Jr.
 
Hope
By Donald DeMarco
 
Something New Under the Sun
By Leon J. Suprenant, Jr.
 
Temptation, Part II
By Scott Hahn
 
Wisdom For Today
By Fr. Thomas G. Morrow
 
CUF Resources
Member Services
Church Documents

From Our Founder

How different the holy Church would be this very day if, years ago, we had been filled with a spirit of humility and compunction, of patience and ready obedience, with the spirit of the Publican, who stood afar off, not venturing to raise his eyes to heaven, but only saying, “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner” (Lk. 18:13). Or if, like St. Paul, we had begun by saying, from the bottom of our hearts, “Lord, what would you have me do?” Or if, like St. Catherine of Siena, we had been able to cry: “Thanks be to Thee, Eternal Father! . . . I was sick and you gave me . . . a medicine against a secret infirmity that I knew not of, in this precept that in no way can I judge any rational creature, and particularly Thy servants, upon whom oft times I, as one blind and sick with this infirmity, passed judgment under the pretext of Thy honor and the salvation of souls.”

H. Lyman Stebbins
March 1987