Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
James Martin, S.J.December 17, 2008
(Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J. Collection, Fordham University Libraries)

A few days ago, I mentioned accompanying Avery Cardinal Dulles, SJ, to a fundraising dinner in Boston, where he gave a moving presentation on the topic of hope, just a few weeks after the attacks of Sept. 11.  The New England Province of the Society of Jesus graciously sent me his remarks, which I don’t think have been published before now.  

 HOPE IN THE UNSEEN

            It was suggested to me that I should use this occasion to say a few words about hope, since this virtue seems in short supply in these dark days.

            Our hopes tend to fade whenever we cease to be in control.  For the moment we Americans seem to have lost control of our destiny.  We are afraid because our future does not rest in our own hands.  On September 11 two great symbols of our security collapsed, or at least suffered grave damage.  The World Trade Center towers looked very solid, as did the walls of the Pentagon, but both proved to be paper thin.  The growing likelihood of biological warfare raises our anxiety yet further.  Not only our wealth and military power, but also our health is at risk.

 

            It will be for others to address the economic, military, and medical problems.  As a theologian, I have to recognize that Christian hope never rests on material things.  As individuals we try to follow the teaching of Jesus, who reminds us that rust corrodes, moths consume, and thieves break in and steal.  Jesus instructs us to build treasure in heaven, the one bank that can never fail.  The only thing that counts in the end is whether or not we hear the greeting of the Lord, “Well done, you good and faithful servant.”

 

            Jesus Christ is not only the personal hope for each one of us.  He is also the hope of the world.  If the world turns away from Him, it goes terribly astray.  The pursuit of riches produces massive poverty; the pursuit of freedom begets slavery; and the pursuit of peace ends in destructive violence.  But with the strength and generosity that comes from the Lord we can take part in building here on earth what the liturgy calls “a kingdom of truth and life, of holiness and grace, of justice, love, and peace.”

 

            As I reflect on the past half century and more, I am immensely grateful for my vocation to share in the apostolate of the Society of Jesus.  As Jesuits, we are dedicated to the gospel of hope.  We seek to place our own hope in God alone and to help others to focus their hopes on Him.  This apostolate of hope is immensely relevant today, when many people are on the brink of discouragement and despair.  But you, at least, are not.  Seeing so many of you at this dinner, I am reminded that we Jesuits could achieve nothing without friends such as yourselves, who support our work and do it with us.  You are as important to our work as any Jesuit is.  Whatever the future holds, we can only be assured of this:  that nothing we do together in the service of the Lord will be done in vain.

 

 

Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J.

The Jesuit Dinner

Boston Copley Marriott Hotel

October 25, 2001

James Martin, SJ

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Greg Heille, O.P., joins “Preach” host Ricardo da Silva, S.J., to reflect on the homiletic legacy of Pope Francis: always on message, spoken from the heart, simple without losing depth.
PreachMay 12, 2025
A confessional is seen in a file photo at the Memorial Church of the Holy Sepulcher on the grounds of the Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in Washington. The Department of Justice announced May 5, 2025, it was opening a civil rights investigation into a Washington state mandatory reporter bill that it called an "anti-Catholic law" for having no exception for the seal of the confessional. (OSV News photo/Nancy Phelan Wiechec)
Washington State's new law mandating priests to divulge abuse revealed in confessions is the latest salvo in a larger dispute between the Catholic Church and multiple U.S. states.
Connor HartiganMay 12, 2025
A.I. assistants are advertised as helping us speak more clearly and easily. But are they accomplishing the opposite?
Chad EngellandMay 12, 2025
I listened to Pope Leo’s first messages with Augustinian ears. In his first words from the balcony, and then in his homily at his first Mass, I heard abiding themes from the Doctor of Grace.
James K. A. SmithMay 12, 2025