ABOUT
Catholicer exists to confront the root of Christianity’s decline in the West: the split between faith and daily life. Most Christians struggle to reconcile this divided existence—faith on one side, citizenship or career on the other—while Western society elevates democracy, capitalism, and social programs as if they were moral frameworks. These systems were built to preserve order, not to bring salvation or spread the Gospel. Those who take faith seriously often withdraw from public life, while those who pursue careers tend to drift away once their Christian education ends. Yet some attempt to maintain both, trying to serve God by reshaping companies or government around the “common good.” They convince themselves this is holy work, but in reality the institution receives the glory while Christ is forgotten.
When Christians in public corporations improve labor practices or governments expand social programs, society praises politics or business, not Jesus. In this way, Christians surrender their witness and allow institutions to look holier than the Church itself. The same pattern marks politics. Christians enter public office claiming to defend democracy or fight for social programs. Instead of standing openly as representatives of Christ in a world that rejects him, many assume that serving the public is their service to God to love neighbors. But without Christ at the center, their work is reduced to principle-driven activism, and the credit goes to governments or parties that deliver results. Public service swells, while the name of Christ shrinks—an inversion of John’s witness: “He must increase, I must decrease.”
As part of the Roman Catholic Church, Catholicer is trying to restore the focus on God by bringing Catholic presence into the workspace and marketplace, where most people spend the majority of their lives. Founders are guided by a Catholic framework that aligns their mission with Christ’s calling and extends it through the company. Employees have access to inner-healing support in a Catholic environment that respects religious freedom and forbids proselytizing. This ensures that Christian love is actively lived through Christ, rather than being disguised as the achievements of public entities.
When Christians in public corporations improve labor practices or governments expand social programs, society praises politics or business, not Jesus. In this way, Christians surrender their witness and allow institutions to look holier than the Church itself. The same pattern marks politics. Christians enter public office claiming to defend democracy or fight for social programs. Instead of standing openly as representatives of Christ in a world that rejects him, many assume that serving the public is their service to God to love neighbors. But without Christ at the center, their work is reduced to principle-driven activism, and the credit goes to governments or parties that deliver results. Public service swells, while the name of Christ shrinks—an inversion of John’s witness: “He must increase, I must decrease.”
As part of the Roman Catholic Church, Catholicer is trying to restore the focus on God by bringing Catholic presence into the workspace and marketplace, where most people spend the majority of their lives. Founders are guided by a Catholic framework that aligns their mission with Christ’s calling and extends it through the company. Employees have access to inner-healing support in a Catholic environment that respects religious freedom and forbids proselytizing. This ensures that Christian love is actively lived through Christ, rather than being disguised as the achievements of public entities.