Happy New Year! Making resolutions is the norm this time of year, as we come up with a mental list of areas we want to improve or things we want to accomplish. While losing those stubborn pounds, exercising regularly, and getting to work on time are great resolutions, there’s one more important resolution that belongs on all of our lists: being more Christ-like. If you’ve fallen off the proverbial wagon in regards to praying, including God in your life, loving your neighbor as yourself, or practicing the other tenets of our Catholic faith, now is the time to hop back on that wagon and try again. As we start turning the pages of the book of 2015, here’s our list of faith-based New Year’s resolutions that you can try; we’ll be trying to stick to them right along with you:
Dust-off your rosary beads.
Read more about the lives of saints.
Scan the Ten Commandments—are you sticking to these important rules?
Seven deadly sins.
Along with the Ten Commandments, keep a list of the seven deadly sins handy. Also known as the seven capital sins, the seven deadly sins are: pride, greed, gluttony, lust, sloth, envy, and anger.
Pick up the phone or ring a doorbell.
Be a nicer person.
This resolution is simple and direct and is something we were all taught to be from an early age. Say please and thank you; let someone who seems to be in a rush jump ahead of you in the checkout line; carve out time in your schedule to spend with your aging parents; say “God bless you” to a stranger who sneezes. There are endless ways to be a nicer person.
Work on your short fuse.
If you have a short fuse when it comes to a difficult co-worker, a rebellious teenager, or a nosy neighbor, take a few deep breaths and pray for the patience to handle each situation.
Be happy.
How can you find happiness when there’s so much you have to worry about: putting food on the table, funding your children’s education, finding a job, the list goes on? Just as there’s always something to be unhappy about, there’s always something to be happy about. Try to find even just one thing to be glad about each day. “The true Christian,” says Pope Francis “exudes great joy. The Christian sings with joy, and walks, and carries this joy.” In true Pope Francis fashion, he goes on to say,
“Sometimes these melancholy Christians’ faces have more in common with pickled peppers than the joy of having a beautiful life.”