Keeping Promises
Fr. Frank Pavone
International Director -- Priests for Life
I am delighted at the work and growth of the Promise Keepers.
I am delighted first of all because I am a Christian. Anything that advances
and exalts the name and work of Jesus Christ is a cause of joy for me. The
Promise Keepers is not an organization, but a movement, and at its heart is the
proclamation of Christ.
A second cause of joy is that fact that this movement is one of the responses
Christians of our day give to the crying need for strong men in society, in
families, and in the churches. To keep promises is a manly thing to do. We live
in a society in which countless broken promises erode the very foundations of
trust and cooperation that are needed for survival.
The Promise Keeper makes the commitment to:
1. honor Jesus Christ through worship, prayer and obedience to God's Word in
the power of the Holy Spirit;
2. pursue vital relationships with a few other men, understanding that he
needs brothers to help him keep his promises;
3. practice spiritual, moral, ethical, and sexual purity;
4. build strong marriages and families through love, protection and biblical
values;
5. support the mission of his church by honoring and praying for his pastor,
and by actively giving his time and resources;
6. reach beyond any racial and denominational barriers to demonstrate the
power of biblical unity; and
7. influence his world, being obedient to the Great Commandment (see Mark
12:30-31) and the Great Commission (see Matthew 28:19-20 ).
A third cause of joy is the emphasis which Promise Keepers places on
reconciliation. Racial reconciliation is always a need, because prejudice has a
way of finding very deep, subtle corners of the heart in which to reside long
after we think it is gone.
Denominational reconciliation is also needed, and is a commitment of Promise
Keepers. We as Catholics can help this process of reconciliation by learning
more about Promise Keepers, and attending their activities in our communities.
Finally, as a pro-life leader, I rejoice in the commitment that Promise
Keepers make to provide "protection" to their families. One of the major factors
that lead to abortions is the lack of commitment on the part of the father of
the child. Furthermore, the voice and activity of men in our society willing to
protect the most defenseless is a welcome and necessary element in the solution
to this tragic problem.
There is also need for a ministry of encouragement to men suffering from
post-abortion distress. They grieve the loss of their child. Some are filled
with the guilt of deliberately failing to protect their child; others are filled
with the anger of having lost their child against their will.
May similar efforts, like St. Joseph's Covenant Keepers, likewise grow and
flourish. And may the gifts of life and family be blessed in the process.
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