Final List of Propostions on New Evangelization for the
Transmission of the Christian Faith upon the XIII Ordinary General Assemblyof the Synod of Bishops
Introduction
Proposition 1: THE DOCUMENTATION SUBMITTED TO THE HOLY
FATHER
In addition to the entire documentation on The New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith related to this synod, submitted to the Holy Father for his consideration, namely, the Lineamenta, the Instrumentum laboris, the Relatio ante disceptationem, the Relatio post disceptationem, the presentations, both given in the synod hall and those in scriptis, the Message to the People of God, the Reports of the Small Groups and their discussions, the synod fathers have given a certain importance to the following propositions.
In addition to the entire documentation on The New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith related to this synod, submitted to the Holy Father for his consideration, namely, the Lineamenta, the Instrumentum laboris, the Relatio ante disceptationem, the Relatio post disceptationem, the presentations, both given in the synod hall and those in scriptis, the Message to the People of God, the Reports of the Small Groups and their discussions, the synod fathers have given a certain importance to the following propositions.
The Synod Fathers also humbly request the Holy Father to consider the opportuneness of issuing a document on transmitting the Christian faith through a new evangelization.
Proposition 2: SYNOD EXPRESSES GRATITUDE
The Synod
Fathers recognize with gratitude the heritage of Papal teaching, often
enriching the fruits of earlier Synodal assemblies, that is foundational to the
work during these sessions of the Synod for the New Evangelization for the
Transmission of the Christian Faith. The reflections of the Synod draw upon
documents such as Evangelii nuntiandi of Pope Paul VI, Catechesi tradendae,
Redemptoris missio and Novo millennio ineunte of Blessed John Paul II and Deus
caritas est, Sacramentum caritatis and Verbum Domini of Pope Benedict XVI. The
most recent example of this guidance is the Year of Faith, proclaimed by our
Holy Father at the beginning of this Synod. For this prophetic ministry we are
most grateful.
Proposition 3: ORIENTAL CATHOLIC CHURCHES
The Oriental
Catholic Churches sui juris, which are enlightened by the Tradition that has
been handed down from the Apostles through the Fathers, are the patrimony of
the whole Church of Christ (cf. Orientalium Ecclesiarum, 2, Codex Canonum
Ecclesiarum Orientalium, 39). These Churches are part of the Apostolic heritage
through which the Good News was brought to far-off lands (cf. Ecclesia in Medio
Oriente, 88).
They are
thankful for the possibility offered to them to carry out their pastoral duties
towards their migrant faithful in countries with Latin Church traditions. They
also hope that their tradition might be more fully known and respected among
the faithful and clergy of particular Churches around the world.
1) The Nature of the New Evangelization
Proposition 4: THE HOLY TRINITY SOURCE OF THE NEW
EVANGELIZATION
The Church and her evangelizing mission have their origin and source in the Most Holy Trinity according to the plan of the Father, the work of the Son, which culminated in his death and glorious Resurrection, and the mission of the Holy Spirit. The Church continues this mission of God’s love in our world. Evangelization has to be understood in a broad and profound theological-doctrinal framework as an activity of word and sacrament which, especially through the Eucharist, admits us to participation in the life of the Trinity, and this then arouses through the grace of the Holy Spirit the power to evangelize and to give witness to the Word of God with enthusiasm and courage.
The Church and her evangelizing mission have their origin and source in the Most Holy Trinity according to the plan of the Father, the work of the Son, which culminated in his death and glorious Resurrection, and the mission of the Holy Spirit. The Church continues this mission of God’s love in our world. Evangelization has to be understood in a broad and profound theological-doctrinal framework as an activity of word and sacrament which, especially through the Eucharist, admits us to participation in the life of the Trinity, and this then arouses through the grace of the Holy Spirit the power to evangelize and to give witness to the Word of God with enthusiasm and courage.
The New
Evangelization recognizes the primacy of God’s grace and how in baptism one
comes to live in Christ. This emphasis on divine filiation should bring the
baptized to a life of faith that clearly manifests their Christian identity in
all aspects of their personal activity.
Proposition 5: THE NEW EVANGELIZATION AND INCULTURATION
Jesus offers
the gift of the Holy Spirit and reveals to us the love of the Father.
The New Evangelization is a time of awakening, of new encouragement and new witness that Jesus Christ is the center of our faith and daily life. It calls on every member of the Church to a renewal of faith and an actual effort to share it.
The New Evangelization is a time of awakening, of new encouragement and new witness that Jesus Christ is the center of our faith and daily life. It calls on every member of the Church to a renewal of faith and an actual effort to share it.
It also requires discerning the signs of the
times in the world that impacts the ministry of the Church and in the different
particular Churches in their proper territories. Among these signs one needs to
recognize certainly a growing awareness of people to the changing circumstances
of life today. Furthermore it calls the Church to reach out to those who are
far from God and the Christian community to invite them to once again hear the
Word of God in order to encounter the Lord Jesus in a new and profound way.
The New
Evangelization calls for particular attention to the inculturation of the faith
that can transmit the Gospel in its capacity to value what is positive in every
culture, at the same time, purifying it from elements that are contrary to the
full realization of the person according to the design of God revealed in
Christ. Inculturation involves the effort to have the Gospel take flesh in each
people’s culture” (CCC, 854).
Proposition 6: PROCLAMATION OF THE GOSPEL
God, our
savior, wills everyone to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth
(cf. 1 Tim 2: 4). Since the Church believes in this divine plan of universal
salvation she must be missionary (cf. Evangelii nuntiandi, 14, CCC, 851). She
also knows that “those also can attain to salvation who through no fault of
their own do not know the Gospel of Christ or His Church, yet sincerely seek
God and moved by grace strive by their deeds to do His will as it is known to
them through the dictates of conscience.” (Lumen gentium , 16). The Gospel of
Jesus Christ is the proclamation of his life and of the paschal mystery of his
passion, death, resurrection and glorification. The Council reminds us,
however, that evangelization is necessary for the salvation of all since “But
often men, deceived by the Evil One, have become vain in their reasonings and
have exchanged the truth of God for a lie, serving the creature rather than the
Creator (cf. Rm 1: 21, 25). Or some there are who, living and dying in this
world without God, are exposed to final despair. Wherefore to promote the glory
of God and procure the salvation of all of these, and mindful of the command of
the Lord, ‘Preach the Gospel to every creature’ (Mk 16:15), the Church fosters
the missions with care and attention” (Lumen gentium, 16).
Proposition 7: NEW EVANGELIZATION AS A PERMANENT
MISSIONARY DIMENSION OF THE CHURCH
It is
proposed that the Church proclaim the permanent world-wide missionary dimension
of her mission in order to encourage all the particular Churches to evangelize.
Evangelization can be understood in three aspects. Firstly, evangelization ad
gentes is the announcement of the Gospel to those who do not know Jesus Christ.
Secondly, it also includes the continuing growth in faith that is the ordinary
life of the Church. Finally, the New Evangelization is directed especially to
those who have become distant from the Church.
In so doing,
all the particular Churches will be encouraged to value and integrate all their
various agents and capabilities. At the same time, each particular Church must
have the freedom to evangelize according to her own traits and traditions,
always in unity with the proper Bishops’ Conference or the Synod of the Eastern
Catholic Church. Such a world-wide mission will respond to the action of the
Holy Spirit, as in a new Pentecost, through a call issued by the Roman Pontiff,
who invites all faithful to visit all families and bring the life of Christ to
all human situations.
Proposition 8: WITNESSING IN A SECULARIZED WORLD
We are
Christians living in a secularized world. Whereas the world is and remains
God’s creation, secularization falls within the sphere of human culture. As
Christians we cannot remain indifferent to the process of secularization. We
are in fact in a situation similar to that of the first Christians and as such
we should see this both as a challenge and a possibility.
We live in
this world, but are not of this world (cf. Jn 15:19; 17:11, 16). The world is
God’s creation and manifests his love. In and through Jesus Christ we receive
God’s salvation and are able to discern the progress of his creation. Jesus
opens the doors for us anew so that, without fear, we can lovingly embrace the
wounds of the Church and of the world (cf. Benedict XVI).
In our present age, that manifests aspects more difficult than the past, even if we are like “the little flock” (Lk 12:32), we bear witness to the Gospel message of salvation and we are called to be salt and light of a new world (cf. Mt 5:13-16).
Proposition 9: NEW EVANGELIZATION AND INITIAL
PROCLAMATION
The
foundation of all initial proclamation, the kerygmatic dimension, the Good
News, makes prominent an explicit announcement of salvation. “For I delivered
to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our
sins in accordance with the scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the
scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve” (1 Cor 15:3-5).
The ‘first proclamation’ is where the kerygma, the message of salvation of the
paschal mystery of Jesus Christ, is proclaimed with great spiritual power to
the point of bringing about repentance of sin, conversion of hearts and a
decision of faith. At the same time there has to be continuity between first
proclamation and catechesis which instructs us in the deposit of the faith. We
consider it necessary that there be a Pastoral Plan of Initial Proclamation,
teaching a living encounter with Jesus Christ. This pastoral document would
provide the first elements for the catechetical process, enabling its insertion
into the lives of the parish communities.
The Synod Fathers propose that guidelines of the initial proclamation of the
kerygma be written. This compendium would include:
- Systematic
teaching on the kerygma in Scripture and Tradition of the Catholic Church;
- Teachings and quotations from the missionary saints and martyrs in our Catholic history that would assist us in our pastoral challenges of today; and
- Qualities and guidelines for the formation of Catholic evangelizers today.
- Teachings and quotations from the missionary saints and martyrs in our Catholic history that would assist us in our pastoral challenges of today; and
- Qualities and guidelines for the formation of Catholic evangelizers today.
Proposition 10 : RIGHT TO PROCLAIM AND TO HEAR THE GOSPEL
To proclaim
the Good News and the person of Jesus is an obligation for each Christian,
founded in the Gospel: “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit” (Mt 28: 19).
At the same time, it is an inalienable right for each person, whatever one’s religion or lack of religion, to be able to know Jesus Christ and the Gospel. This proclamation, given with integrity, must be offered with a total respect for each person, without any form of proselytizing.
Proposition 11: NEW EVANGELIZATION AND THE PRAYERFUL
READING OF SACRED SCRIPTURE
God has
communicated himself to us in his Word made flesh. This divine Word, heard and
celebrated in the Liturgy of the Church, particularly in the Eucharist,
strengthens interiorly the faithful and renders them capable of authentic
evangelical witness in daily life. The Synod Fathers desire that the divine
word “be ever more fully at the heart of every ecclesial activity” (Verbum
Domini, 1). The gate to Sacred Scripture should be open to all believers. In
the context of the New Evangelization every opportunity for the study of Sacred
Scripture should be made available. The Scripture should permeate homilies,
catechesis and every effort to pass on the faith.In consideration of the
necessity of familiarity with the Word of God for the New Evangelization and
for the spiritual growth of the faithful, the Synod encourages dioceses,
parishes, small Christian communities to continue serious study of the Bible
and Lectio Divina, the — the prayerful reading of the Scriptures (cf. Dei
Verbum, 21-22).
Proposition 12 : DOCUMENTS OF VATICAN II
The Synod
Fathers recognize the teaching of Vatican II as a vital instrument for
transmitting the faith in the context of the New Evangelization. At the same
time, they consider that the documents of the Council should be properly read
and interpreted. Therefore, they wish to manifest their adherence to the
thought of our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, who has indicated the
hermeneutical principle of reform within continuity so as to be able to
discover in those texts the authentic spirit of the Council. “There is the
"hermeneutic of reform", of renewal in the continuity of the one
subject-Church which the Lord has given to us. She is a subject which increases
in time and develops, yet always remaining the same, the one subject of the
journeying People of God. [...] However, wherever this interpretation guided
the implementation of the Council, new life developed and new fruit ripened”
(Benedict XVI, Address to the Roman Curia, 22 December 2005). In this way it
will be possible to respond to the need for renewal required by the modern
world and, at the same time, faithfully preserve the identity of the Church’s
nature and mission.
2) The Context of the Church’s Ministry Today
Proposition 13: CHALLENGES OF OUR TIME
The
proclamation of the good news in different contexts of the world — marked by
the processes of globalization and secularism — places different challenges
before the Church: at times in an outright religious persecution, at other
times in a widespread indifference, interference, restriction or harassment.
The Gospel
offers a vision of life and of the world that cannot be imposed, but only
proposed, as the good news of the gratuitous love of God and of peace. The
message of truth and of beauty can help people escape from the loneliness and
lack of meaning to which the conditions of post-modern society often relegate
them.
Therefore,
believers must strive to show to the world the splendor of a humanity grounded
in the mystery of Christ. Popular religiosity is important but not sufficient;
more is needed to help recognize the duty to proclaim to the world the reason
for Christian hope, to those Catholics estranged from the Church, to those who
do not follow Christ, to the sects and those experimenting with different kinds
of spiritualities.
Proposition 14: THE NEW EVANGELIZATION AND RECONCILIATION
In a world
that is broken by wars and violence, a world hurt by a widespread individualism
which separates human beings among themselves, and pits one against the other,
the Church must exercise her ministry of reconciliation in a calm and resolute
way. The Church in the spirit of the New Evangelization undertakes the task of
reconciliation. Faithful to Jesus’ message, (“...he has broken down the
dividing wall of hostility” Eph 2:14), the Church has to make an effort to
break down the walls that separate human beings. With the message of love, she
has to preach the newness of the salvific Gospel of Our Lord, who came to free
us from our sins and to invite us to build harmony, peace and justice among all
peoples.
Proposition 15: NEW EVANGELIZATION AND HUMAN RIGHTS
Consistent
with the emphasis placed on human dignity by the New Evangelization, this Synod
urges legislators, teachers and others who work in the human sciences to grant
full respect to the human person both in public policy and practice.
At the same
time, every opportunity must be taken in various local situations and
associations to articulate, uphold and guard, both in theory and in practice,
those rights flowing from an adequate understanding of the human person as set
forth in the natural law.
Proposition 16: RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
The Synod
Fathers reaffirm that religious freedom is a basic human right. This includes
the freedom of conscience and also the liberty to freely choose one’s religion.
We are in solidarity with our brothers and sisters, in different parts of the
world, who are suffering from lack of religious freedom and even persecution.
In light of
the recognition of the Second Vatican Council as an instrument for the New
Evangelization and the growing need to protect the religious liberty of
Christians throughout the world, the Synod Fathers propose a renewed commitment
to and wider diffusion of the teachings of Dignitatis Humanae. This renewal
seeks to affirm and promote freedom in religious matters for individuals,
families and institutions to protect the common good of all. Such a freedom
includes the right to teach the Christian faith without compromise of its
tenets to children in the family and/or school. The Synod Fathers propose that
the Holy Father consider the opportuneness of establishing a commission of
Church leaders representing various parts of the Church throughout the world or
entrusting this task to the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, to
address attacks on religious liberty, and to obtain accurate information for
public witness to the fundamental right to religious freedom and freedom of
conscience.
Proposition 17: PREAMBLES OF FAITH AND THEOLOGY OF
CREDIBILITY
In the contemporary context of a global Culture, many doubts and obstacles cause an extended skepticism and introduce new paradigms of thought and life. It is of paramount importance, for a New Evangelization, to underline the role of the Preambles of Faith. It is necessary not only to show that faith does not oppose reason, but also to highlight a number of truths and realities which pertain to a correct anthropology, that is enlightened by natural reason. Among them, is the value of the Natural Law, and the consequences it has for the whole human society. The notions of “Natural Law” and “human nature” are capable of rational demonstrations, both at the academic and popular levels. Such an intellectual development and enterprise will help the dialogue between Christian faithful and people of good will, opening a way to recognize the existence of a God the Creator and the message of Jesus Christ the Redeemer. The Synodal Fathers ask theologians to develop a new apologetics of Christian thought, that is a theology of credibility adequate for a New Evangelization. The Synod calls on theologians to accept and respond to the intellectual challenges of the New Evangelization by participating in the mission of the Church to proclaim to all the Gospel of Christ.
In the contemporary context of a global Culture, many doubts and obstacles cause an extended skepticism and introduce new paradigms of thought and life. It is of paramount importance, for a New Evangelization, to underline the role of the Preambles of Faith. It is necessary not only to show that faith does not oppose reason, but also to highlight a number of truths and realities which pertain to a correct anthropology, that is enlightened by natural reason. Among them, is the value of the Natural Law, and the consequences it has for the whole human society. The notions of “Natural Law” and “human nature” are capable of rational demonstrations, both at the academic and popular levels. Such an intellectual development and enterprise will help the dialogue between Christian faithful and people of good will, opening a way to recognize the existence of a God the Creator and the message of Jesus Christ the Redeemer. The Synodal Fathers ask theologians to develop a new apologetics of Christian thought, that is a theology of credibility adequate for a New Evangelization. The Synod calls on theologians to accept and respond to the intellectual challenges of the New Evangelization by participating in the mission of the Church to proclaim to all the Gospel of Christ.
Proposition 18: NEW EVANGELIZATION AND THE MEANS OF
SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
The use of means of social communication has an important role to play in order to reach every person with the message of salvation. In this field, especially in the world of electronic communications, it is necessary that convinced Christians be formed, prepared and made capable to transmit faithfully the content of the faith and of Christian morality. They should have the ability to use well the languages and the instruments of today that are available for communication in the global village. The most effective form of this communication of the faith remains the sharing of the testimony of life, without which none of the “media” efforts will result in an effective transmission of the Gospel. Education in the wise and constructive use of social media is an important means to be utilized in the New Evangelization.
The use of means of social communication has an important role to play in order to reach every person with the message of salvation. In this field, especially in the world of electronic communications, it is necessary that convinced Christians be formed, prepared and made capable to transmit faithfully the content of the faith and of Christian morality. They should have the ability to use well the languages and the instruments of today that are available for communication in the global village. The most effective form of this communication of the faith remains the sharing of the testimony of life, without which none of the “media” efforts will result in an effective transmission of the Gospel. Education in the wise and constructive use of social media is an important means to be utilized in the New Evangelization.
Proposition 19: NEW EVANGELIZATION AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
The Papal
Magisterium in its social teaching demonstrated the theological,
anthropological and educational bonds between evangelization and the
development and freedom of both the person and society. Today it is not
possible to think of the New Evangelization without the proclamation of full
freedom from everything that oppresses the human person, i.e. sin and its
consequences. Without a serious commitment for life and justice and the change
of the situations that generate poverty and exclusion (cf. Sollicitudo rei
socialis, 36) there can be no progress. This is particularly true in the face
of challenges of globalization.
Proposition 20: THE NEW EVANGELIZATION AND THE WAY OF
BEAUTY
In the New Evangelization, there should be a particular attention paid to the way of beauty: Christ, the “Good Shepherd” (cf. Jn 10:11) is the Truth in person, the beautiful revelation in sign, pouring himself out without measure. It is important to give testimony to the young who follow Jesus, not only of his goodness and truth, but also of the fullness of his beauty. As Augustine affirmed, “it is not possible to love what is not beautiful” (Confessions, Bk IV, 13.20). Beauty attracts us to love, through which God reveals to us his face in which we believe. In this light artists feel themselves both spoken to and privileged communicators of the New Evangelization. In the formation of seminarians, education in beauty should not be neglected nor education in the sacred arts as we are reminded in the teaching of the Second Vatican Council (cf. Sacrosanctum concilium, 129). Beauty should always be a special dimension of the new evangelization.
In the New Evangelization, there should be a particular attention paid to the way of beauty: Christ, the “Good Shepherd” (cf. Jn 10:11) is the Truth in person, the beautiful revelation in sign, pouring himself out without measure. It is important to give testimony to the young who follow Jesus, not only of his goodness and truth, but also of the fullness of his beauty. As Augustine affirmed, “it is not possible to love what is not beautiful” (Confessions, Bk IV, 13.20). Beauty attracts us to love, through which God reveals to us his face in which we believe. In this light artists feel themselves both spoken to and privileged communicators of the New Evangelization. In the formation of seminarians, education in beauty should not be neglected nor education in the sacred arts as we are reminded in the teaching of the Second Vatican Council (cf. Sacrosanctum concilium, 129). Beauty should always be a special dimension of the new evangelization.
It is
necessary that the Church be vigilant in caring for and promoting the quality
of the art that is permitted in the sacred spaces reserved for liturgical
celebrations, guarding both its beauty and the truthfulness of its expression. It
is important for the New Evangelization that the Church be present in all
fields of art, so as to support with her spiritual and pastoral presence the
artists in their search for creativity and to foster a living and true
spiritual experience of salvation that becomes present in their work.
Proposition 21: MIGRANTS
Just as many
countries have greatly benefited from the presence of people coming from other
countries, so too the Church is nourished in a significant way with the witness
and the evangelizing work of many of those engaged with the missionary mandate:
“Go out into the whole world and proclaim the Gospel to all creation” (Mk 16:
15).
Given the risks and threats to the faith of the migrating peoples, it is important that the Church gives her support through a pastoral plan that includes them and their families, and reminds them of their important place as the living cell of society and the domestic Church. Parishes should help the migrants integrate themselves into society and the Christian community.
The Church’s pastoral plan for migrants should not only welcome migrants and promote their human dignity, but should above all help them be integrated into the life of the Church, respecting their own ritual tradition; this plan should also help them avoid becoming lost to the Catholic Church. Immigrants are not only recipients, but also protagonists of the proclamation of the Gospel in the modern world. In the face of the great migratory movements, it is important to insist on the centrality and dignity of the person, in particular in light of the grave phenomena of a new slavery connected to the shameful trafficking of human beings, especially children, and the selling of organs. This awareness must increase when dealing with refugees, the displaced, those on the sea, nomads and people without a fixed home.
Proposition 22: CONVERSION
The drama and
intensity of the age old clash between good and evil, between faith and fear
should be presented as the essential background, a constituent element of the
call to conversion in Christ. This struggle continues at a natural and
supernatural level. “For the gate is narrow and the way is hard, that leads to
life, and those who find it are few” (Mt 7: 14). Many bishops spoke of the need
for renewal in holiness in their own lives, if they are to be true and
effective agents of the New Evangelization. The New Evangelization requires
personal and communal conversion, new methods of evangelization and renewal of
the pastoral structures, to be able to move from a pastoral strategy of
maintenance to a pastoral position that
is truly missionary. The New Evangelization guides us to an authentic
pastoral conversion which moves us to attitudes and initiatives which leads to
evaluations and changes in the dynamics of pastoral structures which no longer
respond to the evangelical demands of the current time.
Proposition 23: HOLINESS AND THE NEW EVANGELIZERS
The universal
call to holiness is constitutive of the New Evangelization that sees the Saints
as effective models of the variety and forms in which this vocation can be
realized. What is common in the varied stories of holiness is the following of
Christ expressed in a life of faith active in charity which is a privileged
proclamation of the Gospel.
We recognize
Mary as the model of holiness that is manifest in acts of love including the
supreme gift of self. Holiness is a significant part of every evangelizing
commitment for the one who evangelizes and for the good of those evangelized.
Proposition 24 : THE SOCIAL TEACHING OF THE CHURCH
In order to
advance a New Evangelization in society, greater attention should be given to
the Church’s social doctrine, understanding that it is a proclamation and
witness of faith, an irreplaceable means of education in the faith (cf. Caritas
in veritate, 15). This embrace of the Church’s social doctrine should permeate
the content of catechesis, Christian education, formation of seminarians and
religious, the continuing formation of bishops and priests and most especially
the formation of the laity. The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church
is a precious resource in accomplishing this continuing formation.
Proposition 25: URBAN SCENARIOS OFTHE NEW EVANGELIZATION
The Church
acknowledges that human cities and the culture they express, as well as the
transformations that take place in them, are a privileged place of the New
Evangelization. Understanding herself at the service of the salvific plan of
God, the Church recognizes that the “Holy City, the New Jerusalem” (cf. Rev 21,
2-4) is in a certain way already present in human realities. Putting in
practice an urban pastoral plan, the Church wants to identify and understand
those experiences, languages and styles of life, that are typical of urban
societies. She intends to render her liturgical celebrations, her experiences
of communitarian life, and her exercise of charity, relevant to the urban
context, in order to incarnate the Gospel in the life of all citizens.
The Church also knows that in many cities one sees the absence of God, in the many attacks on human dignity. Among them: violence related to drug trafficking, corruption of various kinds, and many other crimes. We are convinced that the proclamation of the Gospel can be the basis to restore the dignity of human life in these urban contexts. It is the Gospel of Jesus, who “came that they may have life and have it abundantly” (Jn 10: 10).
3) Pastoral Responses to the Circumstances of Our Day
Proposition 26 : PARISHES AND OTHER ECCLESIAL REALITIES
The bishops
gathered in Synod affirm that the parish continues to be the primary presence
of the Church in neighborhoods, the place and instrument of Christian life,
which is able to offer opportunities for dialogue among men, for listening to
and announcing the Word of God, for organic catechesis, for training in
charity, for prayer, adoration and joyous Eucharistic celebrations. In addition
the Synod Fathers would like to encourage parishes to find ways to orient
themselves to a greater emphasis on evangelization which could include parish
missions, parish renewal programs and parish retreats. The presence and
evangelizing action of associations, movements and of other ecclesial realities
are useful stimuli for the realization of this pastoral conversion. Parishes as
well as traditional and new ecclesial realities are called to make visible
together the communion of the particular Church united around the Bishop.
In order to bring to all people the Good News of Jesus, as required by a New Evangelization, all the parishes and their small communities should be living cells, places to promote the personal and communitarian encounter with Christ, experience the richness of liturgy, to give initial and permanent Christian formation, and to educate all the faithful in fraternity and charity especially towards the poor.
Proposition 27: EDUCATION
“Go therefore
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have
commanded you” (Mt 28:19-20). Education is a constitutive dimension of
evangelization. To proclaim the Risen Jesus Christ is to accompany all human
beings in their personal story, in their development and in their spiritual
vocation. Education needs, at the same time, to promote everything that is
true, good and beautiful that is a part of the human person, that is to say, to
educate the mind and the emotions to appreciate reality. Children, teenagers
and young people have a right to be evangelized and educated. The schools and
Catholic universities respond in this way to this need. Public institutions
should recognize and support this right. Schools should assist families in
introducing children into the beauty of the faith. Schools offer a great
opportunity to transmit the faith or at least to make it known. The Synod
Fathers are grateful for the work of education carried out by thousands of
teachers, male and female, in Catholic educational institutions in the five
continents. Because of the singular role of teachers, it is important that they
receive ongoing formation in carrying out their responsibilities. Schools must
be free to teach. This freedom is an inalienable right. For this reason in
order to ensure that our institutions are agents of evangelization and not just
products of evangelization, the Synod:
-Encourages Catholic educational institutions to do all that is possible to
preserve their identity as ecclesial institutions;
- Invites all teachers to embrace the leadership which is theirs as
baptized disciples of Jesus, giving witness through their vocation as
educators;
- Urges particular Churches, religious families, and all those who have
responsibility in the educational institutions, to facilitate the
co-responsibility of lay people, offering adequate formation and accompaniment
for this.
Proposition 28: ADULT CATECHESIS
One cannot
speak of the New Evangelization if the catechesis of adults is non-existent,
fragmented, weak or neglected. When these defects are present, pastoral
ministry faces a very serious challenge. The phases and levels of the
catechumenate of the Church show how biblically, catechetically, spiritually
and liturgically a person’s history and faith-journey can be understood as a
vocation through a relationship with God (cf. Evangelii nuntiandi, 18; Instrumentum
laboris, 92). In all these things, the public character of the decision of
faith which the catechumen makes, which gradually grows in the community and
the diocese, has a positive impact on all the faithful.
Proposition 29: CATECHESIS, CATECHISTS AND THE CATECHISM
Good
Catechesis is essential for the New Evangelization. The Synod calls attention
to the indispensable service that catechists provide the ecclesial communities
and expresses profound gratitude for their dedication. All catechists, who are
at the same time evangelizers, need to be well prepared. Every effort should be
made within the possibilities of the local situation to provide catechists with
strong ecclesial formation, that is spiritual, biblical, doctrinal and
pedagogical. Personal witness to the faith is itself a powerful form of
catechesis.
The “Catechism of the Catholic Church” and its Compendium are, above all, a resource for teaching the faith and supporting adults in the Church in their evangelizing and catechizing mission. According to the Apostolic Letter Ministeria quaedam of Pope Paul VI, Episcopal Conferences have the possibility to request from the Holy See the institution of the Ministry of Catechist.
Proposition 30: THEOLOGY
Theology as
the science of faith has an importance for the New Evangelization. Priests,
teachers and catechists must be formed in institutions of higher education. The
Church appreciates and promotes research and the teaching of theology.
Scientific theology has its own proper place in the university where it must
carry out dialogue between faith and the other disciplines and the secular
world. Theologians are called to carry out this service as a part of the
salvific mission of the Church. It is necessary that they think and feel with
the Church (sentire cum Ecclesia). The Synod proposes that the New
Evangelization be considered as an integral dimension of the mission of every
theological faculty and that a department of New Evangelization studies be
established in Catholic Universities.
Pope Benedict XVI teaches: “Jesus identifies himself with those in need, with the hungry, the thirsty, the stranger, the naked, the sick and those in prison. ‘As you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me’ (Mt 25: 40). Love of God and love of neighbour have become one: in the least of the brethren we find Jesus himself, and in Jesus we find God” (Deus caritas est, 15). Today there are new poor and new faces of poverty: the hungry, the homeless, the sick and abandoned, drug addicts, migrants and the marginalized, political and environmental refugees, the indigenous peoples. The current economic crisis seriously affects the poor. Among the poorest in contemporary society are the victims of grievous loss of respect for the inviolable dignity of innocent human life. The preferential option for the poor leads us to seek out the poor and to work on their behalf so that they may feel at home in the Church. They are both recipients and actors in the New Evangelization.
Proposition 32: THE SICK
The New
Evangelization must be ever aware of the Paschal Mystery of the death and
Resurrection of Jesus Christ. This mystery sheds light on the suffering of
people who can find in the Cross of Christ understanding and acceptance of the
mystery of suffering that gives them hope in the life to come.
In the sick,
the suffering, persons with disabilities and those with special needs, Christ’s
suffering is present and has a missionary force. For Christians, there must
always be place for the suffering and the sick. They need our care, but we
receive even more from their faith.
Through the sick, Christ enlightens His Church, so that everyone who enters into contact with them will find reflected the light of Christ. This is why the sick are very important participants in the New Evangelization.
Through the sick, Christ enlightens His Church, so that everyone who enters into contact with them will find reflected the light of Christ. This is why the sick are very important participants in the New Evangelization.
All those in
contact with the sick need to be aware of their mission. We cannot forget when
we build new hospitals to pay attention so that we do not lack a consoling and
supportive environment and a place for prayer.
Proposition 33: THE SACRAMENT OF PENANCE AND THE NEW
EVANGELIZATION
The Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation is the privileged place to receive God’s mercy and forgiveness. It is a place for both personal and communal healing. In this sacrament, all the baptized have a new and personal encounter with Jesus Christ, as well as a new encounter with the Church, facilitating a full reconciliation through the forgiveness of sins. Here the penitent encounters Jesus, and at the same time he or she experiences a deeper appreciation of himself and herself. The Synod Fathers ask that this sacrament be put again at the center of the pastoral activity of the Church. In every diocese, at least one place should be especially dedicated in a permanent way for the celebration of this sacrament, where priests are always present, allowing God’s mercy to be experienced by all the faithful. The sacrament should be especially available, even on a daily basis, at places of pilgrimage and specially designated churches. Fidelity to the specific norms which rule the administration of this sacrament is necessary. Every priest should consider the Sacrament of Penance an essential part of his ministry and of the New Evangelization, and in every parish community a suitable time should be set apart for hearing confessions.
The Sacrament of Penance and Reconciliation is the privileged place to receive God’s mercy and forgiveness. It is a place for both personal and communal healing. In this sacrament, all the baptized have a new and personal encounter with Jesus Christ, as well as a new encounter with the Church, facilitating a full reconciliation through the forgiveness of sins. Here the penitent encounters Jesus, and at the same time he or she experiences a deeper appreciation of himself and herself. The Synod Fathers ask that this sacrament be put again at the center of the pastoral activity of the Church. In every diocese, at least one place should be especially dedicated in a permanent way for the celebration of this sacrament, where priests are always present, allowing God’s mercy to be experienced by all the faithful. The sacrament should be especially available, even on a daily basis, at places of pilgrimage and specially designated churches. Fidelity to the specific norms which rule the administration of this sacrament is necessary. Every priest should consider the Sacrament of Penance an essential part of his ministry and of the New Evangelization, and in every parish community a suitable time should be set apart for hearing confessions.
Proposition 34 : SUNDAYS AND FEAST DAYS
The Eucharist
must be the source and summit of the New Evangelization. The Synod Fathers urge
all Christ’s faithful to renew their understanding and love for the Eucharistic
celebration, in which their lives are transformed and joined to Christ’s
offering of his own life to the glory of God the Father for the salvation of
the whole world.
Even though
there is a tension between the Christian Sunday and the secular Sunday, Sunday
needs to be recovered for the New Evangelization according to Blessed John Paul
II’s teaching in “Dies Domini”. Sunday with its sacred and special character
together with Sunday Mass should be the center of Catholic life. Full, active
and conscious participation in the liturgy on the part of the whole community
is the goal. The liturgical year with its feasts should be followed by a true
program of evangelization, especially at Christmas and Easter.
Proposition 35: LITURGY
The worthy
celebration of the Sacred Liturgy, God’s most treasured gift to us, is the
source of the highest expression of our life in Christ (cf. Sacrosanctum
concilium, 10). It is, therefore, the primary and most powerful expression of
the new evangelization. God desires to manifest the incomparable beauty of his
immeasurable and unceasing love for us through the Sacred Liturgy, and we, for
our part, desire to employ what is most beautiful in our worship of God in
response to his gift. In the marvelous exchange of the Sacred Liturgy, by which
heaven descends to earth, salvation is at hand, calling forth repentance and
conversion of heart (cf. Mt 4:17; Mk 1:15). Evangelization in the Church calls
for a liturgy that lifts the hearts of men and women to God. The liturgy is not
just a human action but an encounter with God which leads to contemplation and
deepening friendship with God. In this sense, the liturgy of the Church is the
best school of the faith.
Proposition 36: SPIRITUAL DIMENSION OF THE NEW
EVANGELIZATION
The principal
agent of evangelization is the Holy Spirit, who opens hearts and converts them
to God. The experience of encountering the Lord Jesus, made possible by the
Spirit, which introduces one into the Trinitarian life, welcomed in a spirit of
adoration, supplication and of praise, must be fundamental to every aspect of
the New Evangelization. This is the “contemplative dimension” of the New
Evangelization which is nourished continually through prayer, beginning with
the liturgy, especially the Eucharist, source and summit of the life of the
Church. Therefore, we propose that prayer be encouraged and taught from
infancy. Children and youth should be educated in the family and in schools to
recognize the presence of God in their lives, to praise Him, to give thanks for
the gifts received from Him, and to ask that the Holy Spirit guide them.
Proposition 37: THE SACRAMENT OF CONFIRMATION IN THE NEW
EVANGELIZATION
All the
Christian faithful are entrusted with the mission to evangelize, due to the
sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation. Here the faithful are sealed by the
anointing of the Holy Spirit and are called to participate in the mystery of
Pentecost. Through Confirmation, all the baptized receive the fullness of the
Holy Spirit, his charisms, and the power to give witness to the Gospel openly
and with courage.
It is
important that mystagogical catechesis
accompany the grace of filial adoption received at Baptism, underlining the
importance of the gift of the Holy Spirit which enables one to fully
participate in the Eucharistic witness of the Church and its influence in all
the spheres of life and human activity. Hence proper and systematic catechesis
prior to the reception of these sacraments is of prime importance.
Proposition 38: CHRISTIAN INITIATION AND THE NEW
EVANGELIZATION
The Synod wishes to state that Christian initiation is a crucial element in the New Evangelization and is the means by which the Church, as a mother, brings forth children and regenerates herself. Therefore we propose that the traditional process of Christian initiation, that has often become simply a proximate preparation for the sacraments, be everywhere considered in a catechumenal prospective, giving more relevance to permanent mystagogy, and thus becoming true initiation to Christian life through the sacraments. (cf. General Directory of Catechesis, 91). In this perspective it is not without consequences that the situation today concerning the three sacraments of Christian initiation, despite their theological unity, are pastorally diverse. These differences in the ecclesial communities are not of a doctrinal nature but differences of pastoral judgment. This Synod however requests that what the Holy Father has affirmed in Sacramentum caritatis, 18, become a stimulus for dioceses and episcopal conferences to review their practices of Christian initiation: “Concretely, it needs to be seen which practice better enables the faithful to put the sacrament of the Eucharist at the center, as the goal of the whole process of initiation” (Sacramentum caritatis, 18).
The Synod wishes to state that Christian initiation is a crucial element in the New Evangelization and is the means by which the Church, as a mother, brings forth children and regenerates herself. Therefore we propose that the traditional process of Christian initiation, that has often become simply a proximate preparation for the sacraments, be everywhere considered in a catechumenal prospective, giving more relevance to permanent mystagogy, and thus becoming true initiation to Christian life through the sacraments. (cf. General Directory of Catechesis, 91). In this perspective it is not without consequences that the situation today concerning the three sacraments of Christian initiation, despite their theological unity, are pastorally diverse. These differences in the ecclesial communities are not of a doctrinal nature but differences of pastoral judgment. This Synod however requests that what the Holy Father has affirmed in Sacramentum caritatis, 18, become a stimulus for dioceses and episcopal conferences to review their practices of Christian initiation: “Concretely, it needs to be seen which practice better enables the faithful to put the sacrament of the Eucharist at the center, as the goal of the whole process of initiation” (Sacramentum caritatis, 18).
Proposition 39: POPULAR PIETY AND THE NEW EVANGELIZATION
Popular piety
is a true place to encounter Christ, and also express the faith of the
Christian people in the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Saints. The New
Evangelization recognizes the value of these faith experiences and encourages
them as ways to grow in Christian virtue.
Pilgrimages to shrines and sanctuaries are an important aspect of the new evangelization. Not only because of the millions of people who continue to make these pilgrimages but because this form of popular piety at this time is an especially promising opportunity for conversion and the growth of faith. It is important therefore that a pastoral plan be developed that properly welcomes the pilgrims and, in response to the deep desire of the pilgrims, opportunities be offered so that the time of the pilgrimage can be lived as a true moment of grace.
Proposition 40: THE PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR THE PROMOTION
OF THE NEW EVANGELIZATION
The Synod is
grateful to the Holy Father for establishing the Pontifical Council for the
Promotion of the New Evangelization as an instrument at the service of the
particular Churches, and asks that this Dicastery carry on the synodal
discussions in further study and in the development and promotion of the New
Evangelization. It also requests that consideration be given in each Episcopal
conference to the establishment of a commission in order to promote the study
and diffusion of the pontifical Magisterium relative to the themes that are a
part of the New Evangelization. In this way, there can be created a strong collaboration
among the particular Churches and therefore greater effectiveness in
implementing the New Evangelization.
4) Agents / Participants of the New Evangelization
Proposition 41: NEW EVANGELIZATION AND THE PARTICULAR
CHURCH
The
particular church, led by the bishop, who is helped by priests and deacons,
with the collaboration of consecrated persons and the laity, is the subject of
the New Evangelization. This is so because in each place, the particular church
is the concrete manifestation of the Church of Christ and as such initiates,
coordinates and accomplishes the pastoral actions through which the New
Evangelization is carried out.
In the Church
the call to holiness, directed to all the baptized, rings out, inviting them to
follow Christ and turn with love and goodwill towards all people, in order to
discern the action of the Holy Spirit in them. “As I have loved you, that you
also love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if
you have love for one another” (Jn 13:34-35). For the first Christian
communities, communion was a constitutive element of the life of faith and
necessary to evangelization: they had one heart and mind. The Church is
communion, that is to say, the Church is the Family of God. The Church enables
each of her members to be aware of their responsibility to be like leaven in
the dough. In this way, “faith working through love” (Gal 5: 6) will become a
contagious witness for the world in all her dimensions, offering to every
person the possibility of meeting Christ and becoming evangelizers in their
turn.
It would be desirable if each particular
church, whatever difficulties occur, developed a sense of mission among her
faithful by cooperating with other particular churches.
Proposition 42: INTEGRATED PASTORAL ACTIVITY
Each
particular Church is the primary community of the Church’s mission. It must
animate and lead a renewed pastoral activity able to integrate the variety of
charisms, ministries, states of life and resources. All these realities must be
coordinated within an organic missionary project, capable of communicating the
fullness of Christian life to everyone, especially to those who feel themselves
far from the Church’s care. Such an endeavor must arise from the dialogue and
cooperation of all diocesan components, including: parishes, small Christian
communities, educational communities, communities of consecrated life,
associations, movements and individual faithful. Every pastoral program must
transmit the true novelty of the Gospel, and be centered on a personal and
living encounter with Jesus. It should also be ordered to eliciting in all
people a generous embrace of the faith, and a willingness to accept the call to
be witnesses.
Proposition 43: HIERARCHICAL AND CHARISMATIC GIFTS
The Holy
Spirit directs the Church in her missionary evangelization “with various
hierarchical and charismatic gifts” (Lumen gentium, 4). In fact the dioceses are
“a portion of the people of God under the pastoral care of the bishop, helped
by his presbyterate” (Christus Dominus, 11), where the diverse charismatic
realities recognize the authority of the bishop as integral to their own proper
action in service of the ecclesial mission. The Bishop has the responsibility
for “judging the genuineness of these gifts and guiding their ordinary use”
(Lumen gentium, 12), as an authentic resource for the life and mission of the
Church. The hierarchical gifts and the charismatic gifts, flowing from the one
Spirit of God, are not in competition but rather co-essential to the life of
the Church and to the effectiveness of her missionary action (cf. John Paul II,
Message to Participants at the World Congress of Ecclesial movements, May 27,
1998). The consecrated life occupies a special place in the charismatic
dimension of the Church (cf. Mutuae relationes, 34, Rispartire da Cristo, 32);
as such, fully inserted into the ecclesial communion, they contribute with
their own proper gifts to missionary evangelization. Studies should be
undertaken at both diocesan and interdiocesan levels to see how both the
charismatic and hierarchical gifts are able to cooperate in the pastoral action
and in the spiritual life of the Church. Since Vatican II, the New
Evangelization has greatly benefited from the dynamism of the new ecclesial
movements and new communities. Their ideal of holiness and unity has been the
source of many vocations and remarkable missionary initiatives. The Synod
recognizes these new realities and encourages them to utilize their charisms in
close collaboration with the dioceses and the parish communities, who in turn,
will benefit from their missionary spirit.
Proposition 44: NEW EVANGELIZATION IN THE PARISH
The parish, in
and through all of its activities, should animate its members to become agents
of the New Evangelization, witnessing through both their words and their lives.
For this reason, it is important to remember that the parish remains the usual
environment for the spiritual life of the parishioners. The Synod therefore
encourages parish visits to families as a way of parish renewal. It sometimes
happens that the parish is seen as only a place for important events or even as
a tourist center. Along the same line, “pastoral agents” in hospitals, youth
centres, factories, prisons, etc., have to bear in mind that the New
Evangelization should find a home in these places. The Church should in fact be
present in such places, since Christ showed his preference for the persons
found there. As much as lies within their power, all Churches are therefore
exhorted to be open to this mission, wherever they are.
Proposition 45: THE ROLE OF THE LAY FAITHFUL IN THE NEW
EVANGELIZATION
The vocation
and the mission proper to lay faithful is the transformation of worldly
structures, to let all human behavior and activities be informed by the Gospel.
This is the reason why it is so important to guide the Christian laity into an
intimate knowledge of Christ in order to form their moral conscience through
their life in Christ. The Second Vatican Council identifies four main aspects
of the mission of the baptized: the witness of their lives, works of charity
and mercy, renewing the temporal order and direct evangelization (cf. Lumen gentium,
Apostolicam actuositatem). In this way, they will be able to give witness of a
life truly coherent with their Christian faith, as individual persons and as a
community. The laity cooperate in the Church’s work of evangelization, as
witnesses and at the same time as living instruments they share in her saving
mission (cf. Ad gentes, 41). Therefore the Church values the gifts that the
Spirit is making to every baptized for the construction of the body, and should
provide adequate encouragement and training to foster their apostolic zeal in
the transmission of the faith.
Proposition 46: COLLABORATION OF MEN AND WOMEN IN THE
CHURCH
The Church
appreciates the equal dignity of women and men in society as made in the image
of God, and in the Church based on their common vocation as baptized into
Christ.
The Church’s Pastors have recognized the special capacities of women, such as their attention to others and their gifts for nurture and compassion, most especially in their vocation as mothers. Women together with men witness to the Gospel of life through their dedication to transmission of life in the family. Together they help to keep the faith alive.
The Synod
acknowledges that today, women (lay and religious) together with men contribute
to theological reflection at all levels and share pastoral responsibilities in
new ways, thus carrying forward the New Evangelization for the transmission of
the faith.
Proposition 47: FORMATION FOR EVANGELIZERS
This Synod
considers that it is necessary to establish formation centers for the New
Evangelization, where lay people learn how to speak of the person of Christ in
a persuasive manner adapted to our time and to specific groups of people (young
people, agnostics, the elderly and so forth). Trinitarian Christocentricity
(cf. General Directory of Catechesis, 98-100) is the most essential and
fundamental criterion for presenting the Gospel message in all three moments of
evangelization, whether for initial proclamation, catechesis or on-going
formation (cf. GDC, 60-72). All teaching and resources are to be evaluated in
this light.
Proposition 48: THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY
Established
by the sacrament of matrimony, the Christian family as the domestic Church is
the locus and first agent in the giving of life and love, the transmission of
faith and the formation of the human person according to the values of the
gospel. In imitating Christ, the whole Church must dedicate herself to
supporting families in the catechesis of children and youth. In many cases the
grandparents will have a very important role. At the same time the New
Evangelization should strive to address significant pastoral problems around
marriage, the case of divorced and remarried, the situation of their children,
the fate of abandoned spouses, the couples who live together without marriage
and the trend in society to redefine marriage.
The Church
with maternal care and evangelical spirit should seek appropriate responses for
these situations, as an important aspect of the new evangelization. Every
pastoral plan of evangelization should also include a respectful invitation to
all those who live alone, to experience God in the family of the Church. It is
necessary to educate people in how to live human sexuality according to
Christian anthropology, both before marriage as well as in marriage itself. The
Synod notes with appreciation those families who leave their homes in order to
be evangelizers for Christ in other countries and cultures.
Proposition 49: PASTORAL DIMENSION OF THE ORDAINED
MINISTRY
The Synod
Fathers encourage bishops and priests to know the lives of the people they
serve in a more personal way. People are looking for authentic and credible
witnesses in their bishops and priests who live and model the faith and the New
Evangelization. The bishop is an evangelizer who leads by example and shares
with all the baptized the blessings of being called to evangelization. Ongoing
formation for clergy on the New Evangelization and methods for evangelization
in the diocese and parish are needed in order to learn effective means to
mobilize the laity to engage in the New Evangelization. We invite the Bishops,
those principally responsible for the whole pastoral work of the Church, to
develop a plan that animates and accompanies in a direct and personal manner the
pastoral work of the presbyterate, the decisive leadership core of the New
Evangelization. Confronted with the scandals affecting priestly life and
ministry, which we deeply regret, we propose nevertheless that thanks and
encouragement be given to the faithful service of so many priests and that
pastoral orientations be given to the particular churches on a presbyteral
pastoral plan that is systematic and organized, that supports the genuine
renewal of the life and ministry of the priests, who are the primary agents of
the New Evangelization (cf. Pastores dabo vobis, 2). So that priests will be
adequately prepared for the work of the New Evangelization, the Synod wishes
that in their formation, care is taken to form them in a deep spirituality,
solid doctrine, the capacity to communicate in catechesis and an awareness of
modern cultural phenomena.
Seminaries should take as their focus the New Evangelization so
that it becomes the recurring and unifying theme in programs of human,
spiritual, intellectual and pastoral formation in the ars celebrandi, in
homiletics and in the celebration of the sacrament of Reconciliation, all very
important parts of the New Evangelization.The Synod recognizes and encourages
the work of deacons whose ministry provides the Church great service. Ongoing
formation programs within the diocese should also be available for deacons.
Proposition
50: CONSECRATED LIFE
The Consecrated life, of both men and women, has made a very
important contribution to the Church’s work of evangelization throughout
history. In this moment of new evangelization, the Synod asks all men and women
religious and members of secular institutes to live their identity as
consecrated persons radically and with joy. The witness of a life which
manifests the primacy of God and which, by means of the common life, expresses
the humanizing force of the Gospel is a powerful proclamation of the Reign of
God. Consecrated life, fully evangelical and evangelizing, in profound
communion with the pastors of the Church and in co-responsibility with the
laity, faithful to the respective charisms, will offer a significant
contribution to the New Evangelization. The Synod asks Religious Orders and
Congregations to be fully available to go to the geographical, social and
cultural frontiers of evangelization. The Synod invites religious to move
toward the new aeropaghi of mission.
Because the New Evangelization is essentially a spiritual matter, the Synod
also underlines the great importance of the contemplative life in the
transmission of the faith. The age-old tradition of the consecrated
contemplative life in its previous forms of stable community life of prayer and
work continues to be a powerful source of grace in the life and mission of the
Church. The Synod hopes that the New Evangelization will move many more
faithful to embrace this form of life.
Proposition
51: YOUTH AND THE NEW EVANGELIZATION
In the New Evangelization, the youth are not only the future but
also the present (and gift) in the Church. They are not only the recipients but
also agents of evangelization, especially with their peers. The youth are in
the stage of searching for truth and meaning in life that Jesus who is the
Truth and their Friend can provide. Through exemplary Christian adults, the
saints, especially the young saints, and through committed youth ministers, the
Church is visible and credible for the youth. Wherever they are, at home, in
school, or in the Christian community, it is necessary that evangelizers meet
the young and spend time with them; propose to them and accompany them in
following Jesus, guide them to discover their vocation in life and in the
Church. As the media greatly influence
the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual well-being of the youth, the
Church through catechesis and youth ministry strives to enable and equip them
to discern between good and evil, to choose Gospel values over worldly values,
and to form firm faith convictions. The World Youth Day celebrations and YOUCAT
are special instruments of the New Evangelization.
Proposition
52: ECUMENICAL DIALOGUE
The ecumenical dimension of the engagement for the New
Evangelization should be highlighted. This corresponds to the prayer of the
Lord Jesus “so that they may all be one” (Jn 17, 23). The credibility of our
service to the Gospel will be much greater if we can overcome our divisions.
While upholding Catholic identity and communion, the New Evangelization
promotes ecumenical collaboration, which demonstrates how much the faith given
in Baptism unites us. The Synod Fathers are grateful for the progress in
ecumenical dialogue since the Second Vatican Council. Despite past
difficulties, this dialogue was particularly shown in this Synod by the
participation of the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, of the Archbishop of
Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams and of the fraternal delegates. The Synod
Fathers express their desire that the Church continues her efforts in this path
of unity and charity.
Proposition
53: INTERRELIGIOUS DIALOGUE
The dialogue with all believers is a part of the New
Evangelization. In particular, the Church invites Christians to persevere and
to intensify their relations with Muslims according to the teaching of the
Declaration Nostra aetate. Despite difficulties, this dialogue must continue.
It always depends on the partners having an adequate formation, an authentic
ecclesial foundation as Christians and an attitude of respect for the
conscience of people and for religious liberty for all. Faithful to the
teaching of Vatican II, the Church respects the other religions and their
adherents and is happy to collaborate with them in the defense and promotion of
the inviolable dignity of every person.
Proposition
54: THE DIALOGUE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND FAITH
The dialogue between science and faith is a vital field in the New
Evangelization. On the one hand, this dialogue requires the openness of reason
to the mystery which transcends it and an awareness of the fundamental limits
of scientific knowledge. On the other hand, it also requires a faith that is
open to reason and to the results of scientific research.
Proposition
55: COURTYARD OF THE GENTILES
The ecclesial communities open a kind of Courtyard of the Gentiles
where believers and non-believers can dialogue about fundamental themes: the
great values of ethics, art and science, and the search for the transcendent.
This dialogue is directed in particular to “those to whom religion is something
foreign, to whom God is unknown and who nevertheless do not want to be left
merely Godless, but rather to draw near to him, albeit as the Unknown”
(Benedict XVI, Address to the Members of the Roman Curia, 21 December 2009). In
a particular way, Catholic educational institutions could promote such a
dialogue which is never separated from the “initial proclamation”.
Proposition
56: STEWARDSHIP OF CREATION
The Stewardship of creation also serves evangelization in many
ways. It is a witness to our faith in the goodness of God’s creation. It
demonstrates a sense of solidarity with all those who depend for their life and
sustenance on the goods of creation. It shows inter-generational solidarity
with those who come after us, and is a clear witness to the responsible and
equitable use of the goods of the earth, our common home.
Conclusion
Proposition 57: THE TRANSMISSION OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH
Proposition 57: THE TRANSMISSION OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH
“You will be my witnesses” (Acts 1:8). From the very beginning the
Church has understood her responsibility to pass on the Good News. The task of
the New Evangelization, following in this apostolic tradition, is the
transmission of the faith. The Second Vatican Council reminds us that this task
is a complex process which involves the faith and life of every Christian.
This faith cannot be transmitted in a life which is not modeled after the Gospel or a life which does not find its meaning, truth and future based on the Gospel.
For this reason, the New Evangelization for the transmission of
the Christian faith calls all believers to renew their faith and their personal
encounter with Jesus in the Church, to deepen their appreciation of the truth of
the faith and joyfully to share it.
Proposition
58: MARY, THE STAR OF THE NEW EVANGELIZATION
Vatican Council II presented Mary in the context of the Mystery of
Christ and of the Church (cf. Lumen gentium, 52-68). Pope Paul VI declared her
the “Star of Evangelization.” She is therefore the model of faith, hope and
love. She is the first helper who brings disciples to the Master (cf. Jn 2). In
the Upper Room she is the Mother of the believers (cf. Acts 1:14).
As Mother of the Redeemer, Mary becomes a witness of God’s love. She freely fulfills God’s will. She is the strong woman, who along with John, remains at the foot of the Cross. She always intercedes for us and accompanies the faithful in their journey as far as the cross of the Lord. As Mother and Queen she is a sign of hope for suffering and needy peoples. Today she is the “Missionary” who will aid us in the difficulties of our time and with her nearness open the hearts of men and women to the faith.We fix our gaze on Mary. She will help us to proclaim the message of salvation to all men and women, so that they too may become agents of Evangelization. Mary is the Mother of the Church. Through her presence, may the Church become a home for many and Mother of all peoples
From the Synod Office in the Vatican Rome
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