MISSION

Evangelize
The Culture

Jesus Christ and His Victory over Sin and Death

The apostles and early evangelists were all martyred or jailed for their transgressions against the ruling powers of their time. Their crime was the message they were spreading; that Jesus Christ had conquered death and He is Lord. No longer shall any earthly king or worldly power reign over man. We have been saved from tyranny and called to the Kingdom of God. A kingdom of love, peace and freedom.

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"It is not you who have chosen me, but I who have chosen you."

John 15:16

Upon winning a battle or conquering a foreign city Roman armies would send messengers carrying the Euangelion, or "good news", of their victory. In an act of mockery and to send a message to dissenters of Roman authority and then emperor Caesar Augustus, Pontius Pilate nailed over the crucified Christ a sign that read IESVS NAZARENVS REX IVDAEORVM - "Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews". Through Gods providence this proclamation cemented Pontius Pilate in history as the first Christian evangelist.

The real good news is this; Jesus Christ risen from the dead. The Resurrection of Jesus Christ illustrates the victory of God over the powers of the world. Proclaiming Christ as Lord has always been a challenge to any instantiation of lordship present within a given culture. No longer are we held captive by false worship to wealth, pleasure, power or honor. In right worship to what is most high, our lives and efforts come to their truest and fullest expression.


Give your life away, in love.


The story of our salvation is for all people and we have been tasked with carrying out its message. Christianity is a missionary religion and not a private affair. For this is what the Lord has commanded us: “I have made you a light for the Gentiles, that you may bring salvation to the ends of the earth.” Acts 13:47.

Modernity has muzzled the Christian mission to evangelize the good news of the resurrection. One could argue individuality and personal freedom are what we praise and worship most in the modern age. Throughout the Bible we see a juxtaposition of right and wrong praise. In Christ we see the ultimate example of right praise and the embodiment of right worship to God. It is not the taking in of earthly pleasures and worshiping of worldly powers that will set us free, but the giving away of ones life in love. And if we stop living out our mission to evangelize, that message won't be heard.

Frequently Asked Questions &

Practical Evangelization

What we mean by God
God is being itself and thus metaphysically greater than anything in the material domain. Everything in the material world is and owes its being to the ground and cause and source of all being, which is God.
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The Trinity
Reality exists in relationship. In times of retrospection, have you ever uttered the phrase, "What was I thinking?" In this "Double I" phenomenon we see that our mind is able to make an image of itself. There is a higher observer, which typically constitutes some form of ideal. The lower observer is us in each moment, whose actions can be judged or assessed by the higher observer as meeting the ideal to varying degrees of success. When properly ordered, our higher and lower selves exist in harmonious relationship to one another. The higher acts as a beacon or guiding light. Out of love, it calls the lower self to meet and become one with its meaning, purpose and identity.
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Incarnation
Is the perennial human story NOT one of embodiment of higher ordered principals? Across time and cultures and differing faiths, have we not ultimately been called to be something more than our primitive, animal instincts would inevitably lead us to? We want to be good, truthful, beautiful, brave, empathetic, loving, etc.
In the Incarnation and the God-Man Jesus Christ, the story of humankind became real in a shocking way. A way the reveals our deepest and truest meaning, purpose and identity.
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The Eucharist
For better or worse, each one of us will go through some sort of life changing event at some point in our lives. This event does not necessarily mean a change to our physical being, although it could. More often than not, the change made by such an event effects us and alters who we are at a much deeper level than our mere physical presence. When an umpire calls a player "out", when a police officer says "you're under arrest", a change in being has occurred under the authority of the law.
These examples of authority pale in comparison to Gods divine authority. Gods word is creative, and so, what he says, is. Christ said "This is my body and my blood..." and in a process of deification, we are blessed to receive His Real and True presence in the Eucharist.
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The Resurrection
Sin and death were ushered into human experience as a consequence of The Fall. In prideful taking of the fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, we endeavor to know the good as we determine it. We build and shape ourselves and our societies around this interpretation of the good - and suffer the consequences of it ad infinitum.
Our separation from God, and from our ultimate meaning, purpose, and identity, is a type of death, albeit spiritual. Our fallen state of consciousness into primarily the material realm facilitates the view of bodily death as our ultimate end.
But Christianity, rooted in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, reveals a totally different ending.
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What is divine revelation?
Our word "revelation" comes from the Latin word revelatio, meaning "to uncover". The Greeks used the word apokalypsis to describe revelation, which meant a "lifting of the veil".
As Catholics, we believe that Truth exists and does reveal itself to us. We believe that we are made and blessed to come into a relationship of knowing with truth. The patterns of intelligibility through the created world helps to shed light on the goodness and order and truth behind creation.
The Christian God calls us and speaks to us. And did so in a profound way as author of The Great Story.
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What is the Bible?
The Bible is not A book. It's a collection of books. The Greek word ta biblia literally means "The Books". The Bible is more properly understood as a library. Full of varying genres all offering up their own vision of truth in reality and our human experience.
The Bible is not an old dusty book on bronze age mythology full of stories that have no relevance in our post-modern age. The Bible is alive. The stories of the Bible tell us something true about ourselves and the world we live. The Bible describes reality and cannot be separated from it.
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The Sacraments
The Sacraments are a mystical and spiritual rite of receiving Gods grace. St. Leo The Great said, "What was visible in our savior, has now passed over into His mysteries." The event of the Incarnation is prolonged through the Sacraments, across space and time.
We see the Incarnational structure on display in regard to matter and form. Material things such as bread, water, wine, hands, are no doubt present. But also present is the accompanying word, or form, which gives matter its meaning.
By receiving the Sacraments we encounter Christ and are spiritually nourished, healed, renewed, and sent on the ultimate mission of our lives.
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Mary Mother of God
Early Church Fathers have rightly pointed out the parallel and correction to Adam and Eve, made by Mary and Jesus. Through her faith and fidelity, Mary becomes the new Eve, and begins the revolution that was completed by Jesus as the new Adam. The revolution of bringing the human race back "online" so to speak. Mary teaches us a great deal about living a life receiving Gods grace and offering it back to him as sacrifice.
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ALL ROADS CATHOLIC MEDIA

All of us together are His Mystical Body.

All Roads Catholic Media highlights Jackson Catholic Parish events, Holy Sacraments, and personal witness from parishioners.  Our mission is to help the younger generations feel comfortable participating in parish life, to understand and live out their faith more boldly, and to evangelize more effectively in their everyday lives.