evangelii nuntiandi
EVANGELII NUNTIANDI
APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION
OF HIS HOLINESS
POPE PAUL VI
TO THE EPISCOPATE, TO THE CLERGY
AND TO ALL THE FAITHFUL
OF THE ENTIRE WORLD
Venerable brothers and dear sons and daughters:
health and the apostolic blessing.
1. There is no doubt that the effort to proclaim the Gospel to the
people of today, who are buoyed up by hope but at the same time often
oppressed by fear and distress, is a service rendered to the Christian
community and also to the whole of humanity.
For this reason the duty of confirming the brethren - a duty which with
the office of being the Successor of Peter[1] we have received from the
Lord, and which is for us a "daily preoccupation,"[2] a program of life
and action, and a fundamental commitment of our Pontificate - seems to
us all the more noble and necessary when it is a matter of encouraging
our brethren in their mission as evangelizers, in order that, in this
time of uncertainty and confusion, they may accomplish this task with
ever increasing love, zeal and joy.
2. This is precisely what we wish to do here, at the end of this Holy
Year during which the Church, "striving to proclaim the Gospel to all
people,"[3] has had the single aim of fulfilling her duty of being the
messenger of the Good News of Jesus Christ - the Good News proclaimed
through two fundamental commands: "Put on the new self"[4] and "Be
reconciled to God."[5]
We wish to do so on this tenth anniversary of the closing of the Second
Vatican Council, the objectives of which are definitively summed up in
this single one: to make the Church of the twentieth century ever
better fitted for proclaiming the Gospel to the people of the twentieth
century
We wish to do so one year after the Third General Assembly of the Synod
of Bishops, which as is well known, was devoted to evangelization; and
we do so all the more willingly because it has been asked of us by the
Synod Fathers themselves. In fact, at the end of that memorable
Assembly, the Fathers decided to remit to the Pastor of the universal
Church, with great trust and simplicity, the fruits of all their
labors, stating that they awaited from him a fresh forward impulse,
capable of creating within a Church still more firmly rooted in the
undying power and strength of Pentecost a new period of
evangelization.[6]
3. We have stressed the importance of this theme of evangelization on
many occasions, well before the Synod took place. On June 22, 1973, we
said to the Sacred College of Cardinals: "The conditions of the society
in which we live oblige all of us therefore to revise methods, to seek
by every means to study how we can bring the Christian message to
modern man. For it is only in the Christian message that modern man can
find the answer to his questions and the energy for his commitment of
human solidarity."[7] And we added that in order to give a valid answer
to the demands of the Council which call for our attention, it is
absolutely necessary for us to take into account a heritage of faith
that the Church has the duty of preserving in its untouchable purity,
and of presenting it to the people of our time, in a way that is as
understandable and persuasive as possible.
4. This fidelity both to a message whose servants we are and to the
people to whom we must transmit it living and intact is the central
axis of evangelization. It poses three burning questions, which the
1974 Synod kept constantly in mind:
- In our day, what has happened to that hidden energy of the Good News,
which is able to have a powerful effect on man's conscience?
- To what extent and in what way is that evangelical force capable of
really transforming the people of this century?
- What methods should be followed in order that the power of the Gospel
may have its effect?
Basically, these inquiries make explicit the fundamental question that
the Church is asking herself today and which may be expressed in the
following terms: after the Council and thanks to the Council, which was
a time given her by God, at this turning-point of history, does the
Church or does she not find herself better equipped to proclaim the
Gospel and to put it into people's hearts with conviction, freedom of
spirit and effectiveness?
5. We can all see the urgency of giving a loyal, humble and courageous
answer to this question, and of acting accordingly.
In our "anxiety for all the Churches,"[8] we would like to help our
brethren and sons and daughters to reply to these inquiries. Our words
come from the wealth of the Synod and are meant to be a meditation on
evangelization. May they succeed in inviting the whole People of God
assembled in the Church to make the same meditation; and may they give
a fresh impulse to everyone, especially those "who are assiduous in
preaching and teaching,"[9] so that each one of them may follow "a
straight course in the message of the truth,"[10] and may work as a
preacher of the Gospel and acquit himself perfectly of his ministry.
Such an exhortation seems to us to be of capital importance, for the
presentation of the Gospel message is not an optional contribution for
the Church. It is the duty incumbent on her by the command of the Lord
Jesus, so that people can believe and be saved. This message is indeed
necessary. It is unique. It cannot be replaced. It does not permit
either indifference, syncretism or accommodation. It is a question of
people's salvation. It is the beauty of the Revelation that it
represents. It brings with it a wisdom that is not of this world. It is
able to stir up by itself faith - faith that rests on the power of
God.[11] It is truth. It merits having the apostle consecrate to it all
his time and all his energies, and to sacrifice for it, if necessary,
his own life.
6. The witness that the Lord gives of Himself and that Saint Luke
gathered together in his Gospel - "I must proclaim the Good News of the
kingdom of God"[12] - without doubt has enormous consequences, for it
sums up the whole mission of Jesus: "That is what I was sent to
do."[13] These words take on their full significance if one links them
with the previous verses, in which Christ has just applied to Himself
the words of the prophet Isaiah: "The Spirit of the Lord has been given
to me, for he has anointed me. He has sent me to bring the good news to
the poor."[14]
Going from town to town, preaching to the poorest - and frequently the
most receptive - the joyful news of the fulfillment of the promises and
of the Covenant offered by God is the mission for which Jesus declares
that He is sent by the Father. And all the aspects of His mystery - the
Incarnation itself, His miracles, His teaching, the gathering together
of the disciples, the sending out of the Twelve, the cross and the
resurrection, the permanence of His presence in the midst of His own -
were components of His evangelizing activity.
7. During the Synod, the bishops very frequently referred to this
truth: Jesus Himself, the Good News of God,[15] was the very first and
the greatest evangelizer; He was so through and through: to perfection
and to the point of the sacrifice of His earthly life.
To evangelize: what meaning did this imperative have for Christ? It is
certainly not easy to express in a complete synthesis the meaning, the
content and the modes of evangelization as Jesus conceived it and put
it into practice. In any case the attempt to make such a synthesis will
never end. Let it suffice for us to recall a few essential aspects.
8. As an evangelizer, Christ first of all proclaims a kingdom, the
kingdom of God; and this is so important that, by comparison,
everything else becomes "the rest," which is "given in addition."[16]
Only the kingdom therefore is absolute and it makes everything else
relative. The Lord will delight in describing in many ways the
happiness of belonging to this kingdom (a paradoxical happiness which
is made up of things that the world rejects),[17] the demands of the
kingdom and its Magna Charta,[18] the heralds of the kingdom,[19] its
mysteries,[20] its children,[21] the vigilance and fidelity demanded of
whoever awaits its definitive coming.[22]
9. As the kernel and center of His Good News, Christ proclaims
salvation, this great gift of God which is liberation from everything
that oppresses man but which is above all liberation from sin and the
Evil One, in the joy of knowing God and being known by Him, of seeing
Him, and of being given over to Him. All of this is begun during the
life of Christ and definitively accomplished by His death and
resurrection. But it must be patiently carried on during the course of
history, in order to be realized fully on the day of the final coming
of Christ, whose date is known to no one except the Father.[23]
10. This kingdom and this salvation, which are the key words of Jesus
Christ's evangelization, are available to every human being as grace
and mercy, and yet at the same time each individual must gain them by
force - they belong to the violent, says the Lord,[24] through toil and
suffering, through a life lived according to the Gospel, through
abnegation and the cross, through the spirit of the beatitudes. But
above all each individual gains them through a total interior renewal
which the Gospel calls metanoia; it is a radical conversion, a profound
change of mind and heart.[25]
11. Christ accomplished this proclamation of the kingdom of God through
the untiring preaching of a word which, it will be said, has no equal
elsewhere: "Here is a teaching that is new, and with authority behind
it."[26] "And he won the approval of all, and they were astonished by
the gracious words that came from his lips.[27] There has never been
anybody who has spoken like him."[28] His words reveal the secret of
God, His plan and His promise, and thereby change the heart of man and
his destiny.
12. But Christ also carries out this proclamation by innumerable signs,
which amaze the crowds and at the same time draw them to Him in order
to see Him, listen to Him and allow themselves to be transformed by
Him: the sick are cured, water is changed into wine, bread is
multiplied, the dead come back to life. And among all these signs there
is the one to which He attaches great importance: the humble and the
poor are evangelized, become His disciples and gather together "in His
name" in the great community of those who believe in Him. For this
Jesus who declared, "I must preach the Good News of the Kingdom of
God"[29] is the same Jesus of whom John the Evangelist said that He had
come and was to die "to gather together in unity the scattered children
of God."[30] Thus He accomplishes His revelation, completing it and
confirming it by the entire revelation that He makes of Himself, by
words and deeds, by signs and miracles, and more especially by His
death, by His resurrection and by the sending of the Spirit of
Truth.[31]
13. Those who sincerely accept the Good News, through the power of this
acceptance and of shared faith therefore gather together in Jesus' name
in order to seek together the kingdom, build it up and live it. They
make up a community which is in its turn evangelizing. The command to
the Twelve to go out and proclaim the Good News is also valid for all
Christians, though in a different way. It is precisely for this reason
that Peter calls Christians "a people set apart to sing the praises of
God,"[32] those marvelous things that each one was able to hear in his
own language.[33] Moreover, the Good News of the kingdom which is
coming and which has begun is meant for all people of all times. Those
who have received the Good News and who have been gathered by it into
the community of salvation can and must communicate and spread it.
14. The Church knows this. She has a vivid awareness of the fact that
the Savior's words, "I must proclaim the Good News of the kingdom of
God,"[34] apply in all truth to herself: She willingly adds with St.
Paul: "Not that I boast of preaching the gospel, since it is a duty
that has been laid on me; I should be punished if I did not preach
it"[35] It is with joy and consolation that at the end of the great
Assembly of 1974 we heard these illuminating words: "We wish to confirm
once more that the task of evangelizing all people constitutes the
essential mission of the Church."[36] It is a task and mission which
the vast and profound changes of present-day society make all the more
urgent. Evangelizing is in fact the grace and vocation proper to the
Church, her deepest identity. She exists in order to evangelize, that
is to say, in order to preach and teach, to be the channel of the gift
of grace, to reconcile sinners with God, and to perpetuate Christ's
sacrifice in the Mass, which is the memorial of His death and glorious
resurrection.
15. Anyone who rereads in the New Testament the origins of the Church,
follows her history step by step and watches her live and act, sees
that she is linked to evangelization in her most intimate being:
- The Church is born of the evangelizing activity of Jesus and the
Twelve. She is the normal, desired, most immediate and most visible
fruit of this activity: "Go, therefore, make disciples of all the
nations."[37] Now, "they accepted what he said and were baptized. That
very day about three thousand were added to their number.... Day by day
the Lord added to their community those destined to be saved."[38] -
Having been born consequently out of being sent, the Church in her turn
is sent by Jesus. The Church remains in the world when the Lord of
glory returns to the Father. She remains as a sign - simultaneously
obscure and luminous - of a new presence of Jesus, of His departure and
of His permanent presence. She prolongs and continues Him. And it is
above all His mission and His condition of being an evangelizer that
she is called upon to continue.[39] For the Christian community is
never closed in upon itself. The intimate life of this community - the
life of listening to the Word and the apostles' teaching, charity lived
in a fraternal way, the sharing of bread[40] this intimate life only
acquires its full meaning when it becomes a witness, when it evokes
admiration and conversion, and when it becomes the preaching and
proclamation of the Good News. Thus it is the whole Church that
receives the mission to evangelize, and the work of each individual
member is important for the whole.
- The Church is an evangelizer, but she begins by being evangelized
herself. She is the community of believers, the community of hope lived
and communicated, the community of brotherly love, and she needs to
listen unceasingly to what she must believe, to her reasons for hoping,
to the new commandment of love. She is the People of God immersed in
the world, and often tempted by idols, and she always needs to hear the
proclamation of the "mighty works of God"[41] which converted her to
the Lord; she always needs to be called together afresh by Him and
reunited. In brief, this means that she has a constant need of being
evangelized, if she wishes to retain freshness, vigor and strength in
order to proclaim the Gospel. The Second Vatican Council recalled[42]
and the 1974 Synod vigorously took up again this theme of the Church
which is evangelized by constant conversion and renewal, in order to
evangelize the world with credibility.
- The Church is the depositary of the Good News to be proclaimed. The
promises of the New Alliance in Jesus Christ, the teaching of the Lord
and the apostles, the Word of life, the sources of grace and of God's
loving kindness, the path of salvation - all these things have been
entrusted to her. It is the content of the Gospel, and therefore of
evangelization, that she preserves as a precious living heritage, not
in order to keep it hidden but to communicate it.
- Having been sent and evangelized, the Church herself sends out
evangelizers. She puts on their lips the saving Word, she explains to
them the message of which she herself is the depositary, she gives them
the mandate which she herself has received and she sends them out to
preach. To preach not their own selves or their personal ideas,[43] but
a Gospel of which neither she nor they are the absolute masters and
owners, to dispose of it as they wish, but a Gospel of which they are
the ministers, in order to pass it on with complete fidelity.
16. There is thus a profound link between Christ, the Church and
evangelization. During the period of the Church that we are living in,
it is she who has the task of evangelizing. This mandate is not
accomplished without her, and still less against her.
It is certainly fitting to recall this fact at a moment like the
present one when it happens that not without sorrow we can hear people
- whom we wish to believe are well-intentioned but who are certainly
misguided in their attitude - continually claiming to love Christ but
without the Church, to listen to Christ but not the Church, to belong
to Christ but outside the Church. The absurdity of this dichotomy is
clearly evident in this phrase of the Gospel: "Anyone who rejects you
rejects me."[44] And how can one wish to love Christ without loving the
Church, if the finest witness to Christ is that of St. Paul: "Christ
loved the Church and sacrificed himself for her"?[45]
17. In the Church's evangelizing activity there are of course certain
elements and aspects to be specially insisted on. Some of them are so
important that there will be a tendency simply to identify them with
evangelization. Thus it has been possible to define evangelization in
terms of proclaiming Christ to those who do not know Him, of preaching,
of catechesis, of conferring Baptism and the other sacraments.
Any partial and fragmentary definition which attempts to render the
reality of evangelization in all its richness, complexity and dynamism
does so only at the risk of impoverishing it and even of distorting it.
It is impossible to grasp the concept of evangelization unless one
tries to keep in view all its essential elements.
These elements were strongly emphasized at the last Synod, and are
still the subject of frequent study, as a result of the Synod's work.
We rejoice in the fact that these elements basically follow the lines
of those transmitted to us by the Second Vatican Council, especially in
"Lumen gentium," "Gaudium et spes" and "Ad gentes."
18. For the Church, evangelizing means bringing the Good News into all
the strata of humanity, and through its influence transforming humanity
from within and making it new: "Now I am making the whole of creation
new."[46] But there is no new humanity if there are not first of all
new persons renewed by Baptism[47] and by lives lived according to the
Gospel.[48] The purpose of evangelization is therefore precisely this
interior change, and if it had to be expressed in one sentence the best
way of stating it would be to say that the Church evangelizes when she
seeks to convert,[49] solely through the divine power of the message
she proclaims, both the personal and collective consciences of people,
the activities in which they engage, and the lives and concrete milieu
which are theirs.
19. Strata of humanity which are transformed: for the Church it is a
question not only of preaching the Gospel in ever wider geographic
areas or to ever greater numbers of people, but also of affecting and
as it were upsetting, through the power of the Gospel, mankind's
criteria of judgment, determining values, points of interest, lines of
thought, sources of inspiration and models of life, which are in
contrast with the Word of God and the plan of salvation.
20. All this could he expressed in the following words: what matters is
to evangelize man's culture and cultures (not in a purely decorative
way, as it were, by applying a thin veneer, but in a vital way, in
depth and right to their very roots), in the wide and rich sense which
these terms have in Gaudium et spes,[50] always taking the person as
one's starting-point and always coming back to the relationships of
people among themselves and with God.
The Gospel, and therefore evangelization, are certainly not identical
with culture, and they are independent in regard to all cultures.
Nevertheless, the kingdom which the Gospel proclaims is lived by men
who are profoundly linked to a culture, and the building up of the
kingdom cannot avoid borrowing the elements of human culture or
cultures. Though independent of cultures, the Gospel and evangelization
are not necessarily incompatible with them; rather they are capable of
permeating them all without becoming subject to any one of them.
The split between the Gospel and culture is without a doubt the drama
of our time, just as it was of other times. Therefore every effort must
be made to ensure a full evangelization of culture, or more correctly
of cultures. They have to be regenerated by an encounter with the
Gospel. But this encounter will not take place if the Gospel is not
proclaimed.
21. Above all the Gospel must be proclaimed by witness. Take a
Christian or a handful of Christians who, in the midst of their own
community, show their capacity for understanding and acceptance, their
sharing of life and destiny with other people, their solidarity with
the efforts of all for whatever is noble and good. Let us suppose that,
in addition, they radiate in an altogether simple and unaffected way
their faith in values that go beyond current values, and their hope in
something that is not seen and that one would not dare to imagine.
Through this wordless witness these Christians stir up irresistible
questions in the hearts of those who see how they live: Why are they
like this? Why do they live in this way? What or who is it that
inspires them? Why are they in our midst? Such a witness is already a
silent proclamation of the Good News and a very powerful and effective
one. Here we have an initial act of evangelization. The above questions
will ask, whether they are people to whom Christ has never been
proclaimed, or baptized people who do not practice, or people who live
as nominal Christians but according to principles that are in no way
Christian, or people who are seeking, and not without suffering,
something or someone whom they sense but cannot name. Other questions
will arise, deeper and more demanding ones, questions evoked by this
witness which involves presence, sharing, solidarity, and which is an
essential element, and generally the first one, in evangelization."[51]
All Christians are called to this witness, and in this way they can be
real evangelizers. We are thinking especially of the responsibility
incumbent on immigrants in the country that receives them.
22. Nevertheless this always remains insufficient, because even the
finest witness will prove ineffective in the long run if it is not
explained, justified - what Peter called always having "your answer
ready for people who ask you the reason for the hope that you all
have"[52] - and made explicit by a clear and unequivocal proclamation
of the Lord Jesus. The Good News proclaimed by the witness of life
sooner or later has to be proclaimed by the word of life. There is no
true evangelization if the name, the teaching, the life, the promises,
the kingdom and the mystery of Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God are
not proclaimed. The history of the Church, from the discourse of Peter
on the morning of Pentecost onwards, has been intermingled and
identified with the history of this proclamation. At every new phase of
human history, the Church, constantly gripped by the desire to
evangelize, has but one preoccupation: whom to send to proclaim the
mystery of Jesus? In what way is this mystery to be proclaimed? How can
one ensure that it will resound and reach all those who should hear it?
This proclamation - kerygma, preaching or catechesis - occupies such an
important place in evangelization that it has often become synonymous
with it; and yet it is only one aspect of evangelization.
23. In fact the proclamation only reaches full development when it is
listened to, accepted and assimilated, and when it arouses a genuine
adherence in the one who has thus received it. An adherence to the
truths which the Lord in His mercy has revealed; still more, an
adherence to a program of life - a life henceforth transformed - which
He proposes. In a word, adherence to the kingdom, that is to say, to
the "new world," to the new state of things, to the new manner of
being, of living, of living in community, which the Gospel inaugurates.
Such an adherence, which cannot remain abstract and unincarnated,
reveals itself concretely by a visible entry into a community of
believers. Thus those whose life has been transformed enter a community
which is itself a sign of transformation, a sign of newness of life: it
is the Church, the visible sacrament of salvation.[53] Our entry into
the ecclesial community will in its turn be expressed through many
other signs which prolong and unfold the sign of the Church. In the
dynamism of evangelization, a person who accepts the Church as the Word
which saves[54] normally translates it into the following sacramental
acts: adherence to the Church, and acceptance of the sacraments, which
manifest and support this adherence through the grace which they confer.
24. Finally, the person who has been evangelized goes on to evangelize
others. Here lies the test of truth, the touchstone of evangelization:
it is unthinkable that a person should accept the Word and give himself
to the kingdom without becoming a person who bears witness to it and
proclaims it in his turn.
To complete these considerations on the meaning of evangelization, a
final observation must be made, one which we consider will help to
clarify the reflections that follow.
Evangelization, as we have said, is a complex process made up of varied
elements: the renewal of humanity, witness, explicit proclamation,
inner adherence, entry into the community, acceptance of signs,
apostolic initiative. These elements may appear to be contradictory,
indeed mutually exclusive. In fact they are complementary and mutually
enriching. Each one must always be seen in relationship with the
others. The value of the last Synod was to have constantly invited us
to relate these elements rather than to place them in opposition one to
the other, in order to reach a full understanding of the Church's
evangelizing activity.
It is this global vision which we now wish to outline, by examining the
content of evangelization and the methods of evangelizing and by
clarifying to whom the Gospel message is addressed and who today is
responsible for it.
25. In the message which the Church proclaims there are certainly many
secondary elements. Their presentation depends greatly on changing
circumstances. They themselves also change. But there is the essential
content, the living substance, which cannot be modified or ignored
without seriously diluting the nature of evangelization itself.
26. It is not superfluous to recall the following points: to evangelize
is first of all to bear witness, in a simple and direct way, to God
revealed by Jesus Christ, in the Holy Spirit, to bear witness that in
His Son God has loved the world - that in His Incarnate Word He has
given being to all things and has called men to eternal life. Perhaps
this attestation of God will be for many people the unknown God[55]
whom they adore without giving Him a name, or whom they seek by a
secret call of the heart when they experience the emptiness of all
idols. But it is fully evangelizing in manifesting the fact that for
man the Creator is not an anonymous and remote power; He is the Father:
"...that we should be called children of God; and so we are."[56] And
thus we are one another's brothers and sisters in God.
27. Evangelization will also always contain - as the foundation,
center, and at the same time, summit of its dynamism - a clear
proclamation that, in Jesus Christ, the Son of God made man, who died
and rose from the dead, salvation is offered to all men, as a gift of
God's grace and mercy.[57] And not an immanent salvation, meeting
material or even spiritual needs, restricted to the framework of
temporal existence and completely identified with temporal desires,
hopes, affairs and struggles, but a salvation which exceeds all these
limits in order to reach fulfillment in a communion with the one and
only divine Absolute: a transcendent and eschatological salvation,
which indeed has its beginning in this life but which is fulfilled in
eternity.
28. Consequently evangelization cannot but include the prophetic
proclamation of a hereafter, man's profound and definitive calling, in
both continuity and discontinuity with the present situation: beyond
time and history, beyond the transient reality of this world, and
beyond the things of this world, of which a hidden dimension will one
day be revealed - beyond man himself, whose true destiny is not
restricted to his temporal aspect but will be revealed in the future
life.[58] Evangelization therefore also includes the preaching of hope
in the promises made by God in the new Covenant in Jesus Christ; the
preaching of God's love for us and of our love for God; the preaching
of brotherly love for all men - the capacity of giving and forgiving,
of self-denial, of helping one's brother and sister - which, springing
from the love of God, is the kernel of the Gospel; the preaching of the
mystery of evil and of the active search for good. The preaching
likewise - and this is always urgent - of the search for God Himself
through prayer which is principally that of adoration and thanksgiving,
but also through communion with the visible sign of the encounter with
God which is the Church of Jesus Christ; and this communion in its turn
is expressed by the application of those other signs of Christ living
and acting in the Church which are the sacraments. To live the
sacraments in this way, bringing their celebration to a true fullness,
is not, as some would claim, to impede or to accept a distortion of
evangelization: it is rather to complete it. For in its totality,
evangelization - over and above the preaching of a message - consists
in the implantation of the Church, which does not exist without the
driving force which is the sacramental life culminating in the
Eucharist.[59]
29. But evangelization would not be complete if it did not take account
of the unceasing interplay of the Gospel and of man's concrete life,
both personal and social. This is why evangelization involves an
explicit message, adapted to the different situations constantly being
realized, about the rights and duties of every human being, about
family life without which personal growth and development is hardly
possible,[60] about life in society, about international life, peace,
justice and development- a message especially energetic today about
liberation.
30. It is well known in what terms numerous bishops from all the
continents spoke of this at the last Synod, especially the bishops from
the Third World, with a pastoral accent resonant with the voice of the
millions of sons and daughters of the Church who make up those peoples.
Peoples, as we know, engaged with all their energy in the effort and
struggle to overcome everything which condemns them to remain on the
margin of life: famine, chronic disease, illiteracy, poverty,
injustices in international relations and especially in commercial
exchanges, situations of economic and cultural neo-colonialism
sometimes as cruel as the old political colonialism. The Church, as the
bishops repeated, has the duty to proclaim the liberation of millions
of human beings, many of whom are her own children- the duty of
assisting the birth of this liberation, of giving witness to it, of
ensuring that it is complete. This is not foreign to evangelization.
31. Between evangelization and human advancement- development and
liberation- there are in fact profound links. These include links of an
anthropological order, because the man who is to be evangelized is not
an abstract being but is subject to social and economic questions. They
also include links in the theological order, since one cannot
dissociate the plan of creation from the plan of Redemption. The latter
plan touches the very concrete situations of injustice to be combated
and of justice to be restored. They include links of the eminently
evangelical order, which is that of charity: how in fact can one
proclaim the new commandment without promoting in justice and in peace
the true, authentic advancement of man? We ourself have taken care to
point this out, by recalling that it is impossible to accept "that in
evangelization one could or should ignore the importance of the
problems so much discussed today, concerning justice, liberation,
development and peace in the world. This would be to forget the lesson
which comes to us from the Gospel concerning love of our neighbor who
is suffering and in need."[61]
The same voices which during the Synod touched on this burning theme
with zeal, intelligence and courage have, to our great joy, furnished
the enlightening principles for a proper understanding of the
importance and profound meaning of liberation, such as it was
proclaimed and achieved by Jesus of Nazareth and such as it is preached
by the Church.
32. We must not ignore the fact that many, even generous Christians who
are sensitive to the dramatic questions involved in the problem of
liberation, in their wish to commit the Church to the liberation effort
are frequently tempted to reduce her mission to the dimensions of a
simply temporal project. They would reduce her aims to a man-centered
goal; the salvation of which she is the messenger would be reduced to
material well-being. Her activity, forgetful of all spiritual and
religious preoccupation, would become initiatives of the political or
social order. But if this were so, the Church would lose her
fundamental meaning. Her message of liberation would no longer have any
originality and would easily be open to monopolization and manipulation
by ideological systems and political parties. She would have no more
authority to proclaim freedom as in the name of God. This is why we
have wished to emphasize, in the same address at the opening of the
Synod, "the need to restate clearly the specifically religious finality
of evangelization. This latter would lose its reason for existence if
it were to diverge from the religious axis that guides it: the kingdom
of God, before anything else, in its fully theological meaning...."[62]
33. With regard to the liberation which evangelization proclaims and
strives to put into practice one should rather say this:
- it cannot be contained in the simple and restricted dimension of
economics, politics, social or cultural life; it must envisage the
whole man, in all his aspects, right up to and including his openness
to the absolute, even the divine Absolute;
- it is therefore attached to a view of man which it can never
sacrifice to the needs of any strategy, practice or short-term
efficiency.
34. Hence, when preaching liberation and associating herself with those
who are working and suffering for it, the Church is certainly not
willing to restrict her mission only to the religious field and
dissociate herself from man's temporal problems. Nevertheless she
reaffirms the primacy of her spiritual vocation and refuses to replace
the proclamation of the kingdom by the proclamation of forms of human
liberation- she even states that her contribution to liberation is
incomplete if she neglects to proclaim salvation in Jesus Christ.
35. The Church links human liberation and salvation in Jesus Christ,
but she never identifies them, because she knows through revelation,
historical experience and the reflection of faith that not every notion
of liberation is necessarily consistent and compatible with an
evangelical vision of man, of things and of events; she knows too that
in order that God's kingdom should come it is not enough to establish
liberation and to create well-being and development.
And what is more, the Church has the firm conviction that all temporal
liberation, all political liberation- even if it endeavors to find its
justification in such or such a page of the Old or New Testament, even
if it claims for its ideological postulates and its norms of action
theological data and conclusions, even if it pretends to be today's
theology- carries within itself the germ of its own negation and fails
to reach the ideal that it proposes for itself whenever its profound
motives are not those of justice in charity, whenever its zeal lacks a
truly spiritual dimension and whenever its final goal is not salvation
and happiness in God.
36. The Church considers it to be undoubtedly important to build up
structures which are more human, more just, more respectful of the
rights of the person and less oppressive and less enslaving, but she is
conscious that the best structures and the most idealized systems soon
become inhuman if the inhuman inclinations of the human heart are not
made wholesome, if those who live in these structures or who rule them
do not undergo a conversion of heart and of outlook.
37. The Church cannot accept violence, especially the force of arms-
which is uncontrollable once it is let loose- and indiscriminate death
as the path to liberation, because she knows that violence always
provokes violence and irresistibly engenders new forms of oppression
and enslavement which are often harder to bear than those from which
they claimed to bring freedom. We said this clearly during our journey
in Colombia: "We exhort you not to place your trust in violence and
revolution: that is contrary to the Christian spirit, and it can also
delay instead of advancing that social uplifting to which you lawfully
aspire."[63] "We must say and reaffirm that violence is not in accord
with the Gospel, that it is not Christian; and that sudden or violent
changes of structures would be deceitful, ineffective of themselves,
and certainly not in conformity with the dignity of the people."[64]
38. Having said this, we rejoice that the Church is becoming ever more
conscious of the proper manner and strictly evangelical means that she
possesses in order to collaborate in the liberation of many. And what
is she doing? She is trying more and more to encourage large numbers of
Christians to devote themselves to the liberation of men. She is
providing these Christian "liberators" with the inspiration of faith,
the motivation of fraternal love, a social teaching which the true
Christian cannot ignore and which he must make the foundation of his
wisdom and of his experience in order to translate it concretely into
forms of action, participation and commitment. All this must
characterize the spirit of a committed Christian, without confusion
with tactical attitudes or with the service of a political system. The
Church strives always to insert the Christian struggle for liberation
into the universal plan of salvation which she herself proclaims.
What we have just recalled comes out more than once in the Synod
debates. In fact we devoted to this theme a few clarifying words in our
address to the Fathers at the end of the assembly.[65]
It is to be hoped that all these considerations will help to remove the
ambiguity which the word "liberation" very often takes on in
ideologies, political systems or groups. The liberation which
evangelization proclaims and prepares is the one which Christ Himself
announced and gave to man by His sacrifice.
39. The necessity of ensuring fundamental human rights cannot be
separated from this just liberation which is bound up with
evangelization and which endeavors to secure structures safeguarding
human freedoms. Among these fundamental human rights, religious liberty
occupies a place of primary importance. We recently spoke of the
relevance of this matter, emphasizing "how many Christians still today,
because they are Christians, because they are Catholics, live oppressed
by systematic persecution! The drama of fidelity to Christ and of the
freedom of religion continues, even if it is disguised by categorical
declarations in favor of the rights of the person and of life in
society!"[66]
40. The obvious importance of the content of evangelization must not
overshadow the importance of the ways and means.
This question of "how to evangelize" is permanently relevant, because
the methods of evangelizing vary according to the different
circumstances of time, place and culture, and because they thereby
present a certain challenge to our capacity for discovery and
adaptation.
On us particularly, the pastors of the Church, rests the responsibility
for reshaping with boldness and wisdom, but in complete fidelity to the
content of evangelization, the means that are most suitable and
effective for communicating the Gospel message to the men and women of
our times.
Let it suffice, in this meditation, to mention a number of methods
which, for one reason or another, have a fundamental importance.
41. Without repeating everything that we have already mentioned, it is
appropriate first of all to emphasize the following point: for the
Church, the first means of evangelization is the witness of an
authentically Christian life, given over to God in a communion that
nothing should destroy and at the same time given to one's neighbor
with limitless zeal. As we said recently to a group of lay people,
"Modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and
if he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses."[67]
St. Peter expressed this well when he held up the example of a reverent
and chaste life that wins over even without a word those who refuse to
obey the word.[68] It is therefore primarily by her conduct and by her
life that the Church will evangelize the world, in other words, by her
living witness of fidelity to the Lord Jesus- the witness of poverty
and detachment, of freedom in the face of the powers of this world, in
short, the witness of sanctity.
42. Secondly, it is not superfluous to emphasize the importance and
necessity of preaching. "And how are they to believe in him of whom
they have never heard? And how are they to hear without a preacher?...
So faith comes from what is heard and what is heard comes by the
preaching of Christ."[69] This law once laid down by the Apostle Paul
maintains its full force today.
Preaching, the verbal proclamation of a message, is indeed always
indispensable. We are well aware that modern man is sated by talk; he
is obviously often tired of listening and, what is worse, impervious to
words. We are also aware that many psychologists and sociologists
express the view that modern man has passed beyond the civilization of
the word, which is now ineffective and useless, and that today he lives
in the civilization of the image. These facts should certainly impel us
to employ, for the purpose of transmitting the Gospel message, the
modern means which this civilization has produced. Very positive
efforts have in fact already been made in this sphere. We cannot but
praise them and encourage their further development. The fatigue
produced these days by so much empty talk and the relevance of many
other forms of communication must not however diminish the permanent
power of the word, or cause a loss of confidence in it. The word
remains ever relevant, especially when it is the bearer of the power of
God.[70] This is why St. Paul's axiom, "Faith comes from what is
heard,"[71] also retains its relevance: it is the Word that is heard
which leads to belief.
43. This evangelizing preaching takes on many forms, and zeal will
inspire the reshaping of them almost indefinitely. In fact there are
innumerable events in life and human situations which offer the
opportunity for a discreet but incisive statement of what the Lord has
to say in this or that particular circumstance. It suffices to have
true spiritual sensitivity for reading God's message in events. But at
a time when the liturgy renewed by the Council has given greatly
increased value to the Liturgy of the Word, it would be a mistake not
to see in the homily an important and very adaptable instrument of
evangelization. Of course it is necessary to know and put to good use
the exigencies and the possibilities of the homily, so that it can
acquire all its pastoral effectiveness. But above all it is necessary
to be convinced of this and to devote oneself to it with love. This
preaching, inserted in a unique way into the Eucharistic celebration,
from which it receives special force and vigor, certainly has a
particular role in evangelization, to the extent that it expresses the
profound faith of the sacred minister and is impregnated with love. The
faithful assembled as a Paschal Church, celebrating the feast of the
Lord present in their midst, expect much from this preaching, and will
greatly benefit from it provided that it is simple, clear, direct,
well-adapted, profoundly dependent on Gospel teaching and faithful to
the magisterium, animated by a balanced apostolic ardor coming from its
own characteristic nature, full of hope, fostering belief, and
productive of peace and unity. Many parochial or other communities live
and are held together thanks to the Sunday homily, when it possesses
these qualities.
Let us add that, thanks to the same liturgical renewal, the Eucharistic
celebration is not the only appropriate moment for the homily. The
homily has a place and must not be neglected in the celebration of all
the sacraments, at paraliturgies, and in assemblies of the faithful. It
will always be a privileged occasion for communicating the Word of the
Lord.
44. A means of evangelization that must not be neglected is that of
catechetical instruction. The intelligence, especially that of children
and young people, needs to learn through systematic religious
instruction the fundamental teachings, the living content of the truth
which God has wished to convey to us and which the Church has sought to
express in an ever richer fashion during the course of her long
history. No one will deny that this instruction must be given to form
patterns of Christian living and not to remain only notional. Truly the
effort for evangelization will profit greatly- at the level of
catechetical instruction given at church, in the schools, where this is
possible, and in every case in Christian homes- if those giving
catechetical instruction have suitable texts, updated with wisdom and
competence, under the authority of the bishops. The methods must be
adapted to the age, culture and aptitude of the persons concerned, they
must seek always to fix in the memory, intelligence and heart the
essential truths that must impregnate all of life. It is necessary
above all to prepare good instructors- parochial catechists, teachers,
parents- who are desirous of perfecting themselves in this superior
art, which is indispensable and requires religious instruction.
Moreover, without neglecting in any way the training of children, one
sees that present conditions render ever more urgent catechetical
instruction, under the form of the catechumenate, for innumerable young
people and adults who, touched by grace, discover little by little the
face of Christ and feel the need of giving themselves to Him.
45. Our century is characterized by the mass media or means of social
communication, and the first proclamation, catechesis or the further
deepening of faith cannot do without these means, as we have already
emphasized.
When they are put at the service of the Gospel, they are capable of
increasing almost indefinitely the area in which the Word of God is
heard; they enable the Good News to reach millions of people. The
Church would feel guilty before the Lord if she did not utilize these
powerful means that human skill is daily rendering more perfect. It is
through them that she proclaims "from the housetops"[72] the message of
which she is the depositary. In them she finds a modern and effective
version of the pulpit. Thanks to them she succeeds in speaking to the
multitudes.
Nevertheless the use of the means of social communication for
evangelization presents a challenge: through them the evangelical
message should reach vast numbers of people, but with the capacity of
piercing the conscience of each individual, of implanting itself in his
heart as though he were the only person being addressed, with all his
most individual and personal qualities, and evoke an entirely personal
adherence and commitment.
46. For this reason, side by side with the collective proclamation of
the Gospel, the other form of transmission, the person-to-person one,
remains valid and important. The Lord often used it (for example, with
Nicodemus, Zacchaeus, the Samaritan woman, Simon the Pharisee), and so
did the apostles. In the long run, is there any other way of handing on
the Gospel than by transmitting to another person one's personal
experience of faith? It must not happen that the pressing need to
proclaim the Good News to the multitudes should cause us to forget this
form of proclamation whereby an individual's personal conscience is
reached and touched by an entirely unique world that he receives from
someone else. We can never sufficiently praise those priests who
through the sacrament of Penance or through pastoral dialogue show
their readiness to guide people in the ways of the Gospel, to support
them in their efforts, to raise them up if they have fallen, and always
to assist them with discernment and availability.
47. Yet, one can never sufficiently stress the fact that evangelization
does not consist only of the preaching and teaching of a doctrine. For
evangelization must touch life: the natural life to which it gives a
new meaning, thanks to the evangelical perspectives that it reveals;
and the supernatural life, which is not the negation but the
purification and elevation of the natural life.
This supernatural life finds its living expression in the seven
sacraments and in the admirable radiation of grace and holiness which
they possess.
Evangelization thus exercises its full capacity when it achieves the
most intimate relationship, or better still, a permanent and unbroken
intercommunication, between the Word and the sacraments. In a certain
sense it is a mistake to make a contrast between evangelization and
sacramentalization, as is sometimes done. It is indeed true that a
certain way of administering the sacraments, without the solid support
of catechesis regarding these same sacraments and a global catechesis,
could end up by depriving them of their effectiveness to a great
extent. The role of evangelization is precisely to educate people in
the faith in such a way as to lead each individual Christian to live
the sacraments as true sacraments of faith- and not to receive them
passively or reluctantly.
48. Here we touch upon an aspect of evangelization which cannot leave
us insensitive. We wish to speak about what today is often called
popular religiosity.
One finds among the people particular expressions of the search for God
and for faith, both in the regions where the Church has been
established for centuries and where she is in the course of becoming
established. These expressions were for a long time regarded as less
pure and were sometimes despised, but today they are almost everywhere
being rediscovered. During the last Synod the bishops studied their
significance with remarkable pastoral realism and zeal.
Popular religiosity, of course, certainly has its limits. It is often
subject to penetration by many distortions of religion and even
superstitions. It frequently remains at the level of forms of worship
not involving a true acceptance by faith. It can even lead to the
creation of sects and endanger the true ecclesial community.
But if it is well oriented, above all by a pedagogy of evangelization,
it is rich in values. It manifests a thirst for God which only the
simple and poor can know. It makes people capable of generosity and
sacrifice even to the point of heroism, when it is a question of
manifesting belief. It involves an acute awareness of profound
attributes of God: fatherhood, providence, loving and constant
presence. It engenders interior attitudes rarely observed to the same
degree elsewhere: patience, the sense of the cross in daily life,
detachment, openness to others, devotion. By reason of these aspects,
we readily call it "popular piety," that is, religion of the people,
rather than religiosity.
Pastoral charity must dictate to all those whom the Lord has placed as
leaders of the ecclesial communities the proper attitude in regard to
this reality, which is at the same time so rich and so vulnerable.
Above all one must be sensitive to it, know how to perceive its
interior dimensions and undeniable values, be ready to help it to
overcome its risks of deviation. When it is well oriented, this popular
religiosity call be more and more for multitudes of our people a true
encounter with God in Jesus Christ.
49. Jesus' last words in St. Mark's Gospel confer on the evangelization
which the Lord entrusts to His apostles a limitless universality: "Go
out to the whole world; proclaim the Good News to all creation."[73]
The Twelve and the first generation of Christians understood well the
lesson of this text and other similar ones; they made them into a
program of action. Even persecution, by scattering the apostles, helped
to spread the Word and to establish the Church in ever more distant
regions. The admission of Paul to the rank of the apostles and his
charism as the preacher to the pagans (the non Jews) of Jesus' Coming
underlined this universality still more.
50. In the course of twenty centuries of history, the generations of
Christians have periodically faced various obstacles to this universal
mission. On the one hand, on the part of the evangelizers themselves,
there has been the temptation for various reasons to narrow down the
field of their missionary activity. On the other hand, there has been
the often humanly insurmountable resistance of the people being
addressed by the evangelizer. Furthermore, we must note with sadness
that the evangelizing work of the Church is strongly opposed, if not
prevented, by certain public powers Even in our own day it happens that
preachers of God's Word are deprived of their rights, persecuted,
threatened or eliminated solely for preaching Jesus Christ and His
Gospel. But we are confident that despite these painful trials the
activity of these apostles will never meet final failure in any part of
the world.
Despite such adversities, the Church constantly renews her deepest
inspiration, that which comes to her directly from the Lord: To the
whole world! To all creation! Right to the ends of the earth! She did
this once more at the last Synod, as an appeal not to imprison the
proclamation of the Gospel by limiting it to one sector of mankind or
to one class of people or to a single type of civilization. Some
examples are revealing.
51. To reveal Jesus Christ and His Gospel to those who do not know them
has been, ever since the morning of Pentecost, the fundamental program
which the Church has taken on as received from her Founder. The whole
of the New Testament, and in a special way the Acts of the Apostles,
bears witness to a privileged and in a sense exemplary moment of this
missionary effort which will subsequently leave its mark on the whole
history of the Church.
She carries out this first proclamation of Jesus Christ by a complex
and diversified activity which is sometimes termed "pre-evangelization"
but which is already evangelization in a true sense, although at its
initial and still incomplete stage. An almost indefinite range of means
can be used for this purpose: explicit preaching, of course, but also
art, the scientific approach, philosophical research and legitimate
recourse to the sentiments of the human heart.
52. This first proclamation is addressed especially to those who have
never heard the Good News of Jesus, or to children. But, as a result of
the frequent situations of dechristianization in our day, it also
proves equally necessary for innumerable people who have been baptized
but who live quite outside Christian life, for simple people who have a
certain faith but an imperfect knowledge of the foundations of that
faith, for intellectuals who feel the need to know Jesus Christ in a
light different from the instruction they received as children, and for
many others.
53. This first proclamation is also addressed to the immense sections
of mankind who practice non-Christian religions. The Church respects
and esteems these non Christian religions because they are the living
expression of the soul of vast groups of people. They carry within them
the echo of thousands of years of searching for God, a quest which is
incomplete but often made with great sincerity and righteousness of
heart. They possess an impressive patrimony of deeply religious texts.
They have taught generations of people how to pray. They are all
impregnated with innumerable "seeds of the Word"[74] and can constitute
a true "preparation for the Gospel,"[75] to quote a felicitous term
used by the Second Vatican Council and borrowed from Eusebius of
Caesarea.
Such a situation certainly raises complex and delicate questions that
must be studied in the light of Christian Tradition and the Church's
magisterium, in order to offer to the missionaries of today and of
tomorrow new horizons in their contacts with non-Christian religions.
We wish to point out, above all today, that neither respect and esteem
for these religions nor the complexity of the questions raised is an
invitation to the Church to withhold from these non-Christians the
proclamation of Jesus Christ. On the contrary the Church holds that
these multitudes have the right to know the riches of the mystery of
Christ[76] - riches in which we believe that the whole of humanity can
find, in unsuspected fullness, everything that it is gropingly
searching for concerning God, man and his destiny, life and death, and
truth. Even in the face of natural religious expressions most worthy of
esteem, the Church finds support in the fact that the religion of
Jesus, which she proclaims through evangelization, objectively places
man in relation with the plan of God, with His living presence and with
His action; she thus causes an encounter with the mystery of divine
paternity that bends over towards humanity. In other words, our
religion effectively establishes with God an authentic and living
relationship which the other religions do not succeed in doing, even
though they have, as it were, their arms stretched out towards heaven.
This is why the Church keeps her missionary spirit alive, and even
wishes to intensify it in the moment of history in which we are living.
She feels responsible before entire peoples. She has no rest so long as
she has not done her best to proclaim the Good News of Jesus the
Savior. She is always preparing new generations of apostles. Let us
state this fact with joy at a time when there are not lacking those who
think and even say that ardor and the apostolic spirit are exhausted,
and that the time of the missions is now past. The Synod has replied
that the missionary proclamation never ceases and that the Church will
always be striving for the fulfillment of this proclamation.
54. Nevertheless the Church does not feel dispensed from paving
unflagging attention also to those who have received the faith and who
have been in contact with the Gospel often for generations. Thus she
seeks to deepen, consolidate, nourish and make ever more mature the
faith of those who are already called the faithful or believers, in
order that they may be so still more.
This faith is nearly always today exposed to secularism, even to
militant atheism. It is a faith exposed to trials and threats, and even
more, a faith besieged and actively opposed. It runs the risk of
perishing from suffocation or starvation if it is not fed and sustained
each day. To evangelize must therefore very often be to give this
necessary food and sustenance to the faith of believers, especially
through a catechesis full of Gospel vitality and in a language suited
to people and circumstances.
The Church also has a lively solicitude for the Christians who are not
in full communion with her. While preparing with them the unity willed
by Christ, and precisely in order to realize unity in truth, she has
the consciousness that she would be gravely lacking in her duty if she
did not give witness before them of the fullness of the revelation
whose deposit she guards.
55. Also significant is the preoccupation of the last Synod in regard
to two spheres which are very different from one another but which at
the same time are very close by reason of the challenge which they make
to evangelization, each in its own way.
The first sphere is the one which can be called the increase of
unbelief in the modern world. The Synod endeavored to describe this
modern world: how many currents of thought, values and countervalues,
latent aspirations or seeds of destruction, old convictions which
disappear and new convictions which arise are covered by this generic
name!
From the spiritual point of view, the modern world seems to he forever
immersed in what a modern author has termed "the drama of atheistic
humanism."[77]
On the one hand one is forced to note in the very heart of this
contemporary world the phenomenon which is becoming almost its most
striking characteristic: secularism. We are not speaking of
secularization, which is the effort, in itself just and legitimate and
in no way incompatible with faith or religion, to discover in creation,
in each thing or each happening in the universe, the laws which
regulate them with a certain autonomy, but with the inner conviction
that the Creator has placed these laws there. The last Council has in
this sense affirmed the legitimate autonomy of culture and particularly
of the sciences.[78] Here we are thinking of a true secularism: a
concept of the world according to which the latter is self-explanatory,
without any need for recourse to God, who thus becomes superfluous and
an encumbrance. This sort of secularism, in order to recognize the
power of man, therefore ends up by doing without God and even by
denying Him.
New forms of atheism seem to flow from it: a man centered atheism, no
longer abstract and metaphysical but pragmatic, systematic and
militant. Hand in hand with this atheistic secularism, we are daily
faced, under the most diverse forms, with a consumer society, the
pursuit of pleasure set up as the supreme value, a desire for power and
domination, and discrimination of every kind: the inhuman tendencies of
this "humanism."
In this same modern world, on the other hand, and this is a paradox,
one cannot deny the existence of real steppingstones to Christianity,
and of evangelical values at least in the form of a sense of emptiness
or nostalgia. It would not be an exaggeration to say that there exists
a powerful and tragic appeal to be evangelized.
56. The second sphere is that of those who do not practice. Today there
is a very large number of baptized people who for the most part have
not formally renounced their Baptism but who are entirely indifferent
to it and not living in accordance with it. The phenomenon of the non
practicing is a very ancient one in the history of Christianity; it is
the result of a natural weakness, a profound inconsistency which we
unfortunately bear deep within us. Today however it shows certain new
characteristics. It is often the result of the uprooting typical of our
time. It also springs from the fact that Christians live in close
proximity with non-believers and constantly experience the effects of
unbelief. Furthermore, the non-practicing Christians of today, more so
than those of previous periods, seek to explain and justify their
position in the name of an interior religion, of personal independence
or authenticity.
Thus we have atheists and unbelievers on the one side and those who do
not practice on the other, and both groups put up a considerable
resistance to evangelization. The resistance of the former takes the
form of a certain refusal and an inability to grasp the new order of
things, the new meaning of the world, of life and of history; such is
not possible if one does not start from a divine absolute. The
resistance of the second group takes the form of inertia and the
slightly hostile attitude of the person who feels that he is one of the
homily, who claims to know it all and to have tried it all and who no
longer believes it.
Atheistic secularism and the absence of religious practice are found
among adults and among the young, among the leaders of society and
among the ordinary people, at all levels of education, and in both the
old Churches and the young ones. The Church's evangelizing action
cannot ignore these two worlds, nor must it come to a standstill when
faced with them; it must constantly seek the proper means and language
for presenting, or representing, to them God's revelation and faith in
Jesus Christ.
57. Like Christ during the time of His preaching, like the Twelve on
the morning of Pentecost, the Church too sees before her an immense
multitude of people who need the Gospel and have a right to it, for God
"wants everyone to be saved and reach full knowledge of the truth."[79]
The Church is deeply aware of her duty to preach salvation to all.
Knowing that the Gospel message is not reserved to a small group of the
initiated, the privileged or the elect, but is destined for everyone,
she shares Christ's anguish at the sight of the wandering and exhausted
crowds, "like sheep without a shepherd" and she often repeats His
words: ''I feel sorry for all these people."[80] But the Church is also
conscious of the fact that, if the preaching of the Gospel is to be
effective, she must address her message to the heart of the multitudes,
to communities of the faithful whose action can and must reach others.
58. The last Synod devoted considerable attention to these "small
communities," or communautes de base, because they are often talked
about in the Church today. What are they, and why should they be the
special beneficiaries of evangelization and at the same time
evangelizers themselves?
According to the various statements heard in the Synod, such
communities flourish more or less throughout the Church. They differ
greatly among themselves both within the same region and even more so
from one region to another.
In some regions they appear and develop, almost without exception,
within the Church, having solidarity with her life, being nourished by
her teaching and united with her pastors. In these cases, they spring
from the need to live the Church's life more intensely, or from the
desire and quest for a more human dimension such as larger ecclesial
communities can only offer with difficulty, especially in the big
modern cities which lend themselves both to life in the mass and to
anonymity. Such communities call quite simply be in their own way an
extension on the spiritual and religious level- worship, deepening of
faith, fraternal charity, prayer, contact with pastors- of
the small sociological community such as the village, etc. Or again
their aim may be to bring together, for the purpose of listening to and
meditating on the Word, for the sacraments and the bond of the agape,
groups of people who are linked by age, culture, civil state or social
situation: married couples, young people, professional people, etc.;
people who already happen to be united in the struggle for justice,
brotherly aid to the poor, human advancement. In still other cases they
bring Christians together in places where the shortage of priests does
not favor the normal life of a parish community. This is all
presupposed within communities constituted by the Church, especially
individual Churches and parishes.
In other regions, on the other hand, communautes de base come together
in a spirit of bitter criticism of the Church, which they are quick to
stigmatize as "institutional" and to which they set themselves Up in
opposition as charismatic communities, free from structures and
inspired only by the Gospel. Thus their obvious characteristic is an
attitude of fault-finding and of rejection with regard to the Church's
outward manifestations: her hierarchy, her signs. They are radically
opposed to the Church. By following these lines their main inspiration
very quickly becomes ideological, and it rarely happens that they do
not quickly fall victim to some political option or current of thought,
and then to a system, even a party, with all the attendant risks of
becoming its instrument.
The difference is already notable: the communities which by their
spirit of opposition cut themselves off from the Church, and whose
unity they wound, can well be called communautes de base, but in this
case it is a strictly sociological name. They could not, without a
misuse of terms, be called ecclesial communautes de base, even if while
being hostile to the hierarchy, they claim to remain within the unity
of the Church. This name belongs to the other groups, those which come
together within the Church in order to unite themselves to the Church
and to cause the Church to grow.
These latter communities will be a place of evangelization, for the
benefit of the bigger communities, especially the individual Churches.
And, as we said at the end of the last Synod, they will be a hope for
the universal Church to the extent:
- that they seek their nourishment in the Word of God and do not allow
themselves to be ensnared by political polarization or fashionable
ideologies, which are ready to exploit their immense human potential;
- that they avoid the ever present temptation of systematic protest and
a hypercritical attitude, under the pretext of authenticity and a
spirit of collaboration;
- that they remain firmly attached to the local Church in which they
are inserted, and to the universal Church, thus avoiding the very real
danger of becoming isolated within themselves, then of believing
themselves to be the only authentic Church of Christ, and hence of
condemning the other ecclesial communities;
- that they maintain a sincere communion with the pastors whom the Lord
gives to His Church, and with the magisterium which the Spirit of
Christ has entrusted to these pastors;
- that they never look on themselves as the sole beneficiaries or sole
agents of evangelization- or even the only depositaries of the Gospel-
but, being aware that the Church is much more vast and diversified,
accept the fact that this Church becomes incarnate in other ways than
through themselves;
- that they constantly grow in missionary consciousness, fervor,
commitment and zeal;
- that they show themselves to be universal in all things and never
sectarian.
On these conditions, which are certainly demanding but also uplifting,
the ecclesial communautes de base will correspond to their most
fundamental vocation: as hearers of the Gospel which is proclaimed to
them and privileged beneficiaries of evangelization, they will soon
become proclaimers of the Gospel themselves.
59. If people proclaim in the world the Gospel of salvation, they do so
by the command of, in the name of and with the grace of Christ the
Savior. "They will never have a preacher unless one is sent,"[81] wrote
he who was without doubt one of the greatest evangelizers. No one can
do it without having been sent.
But who then has the mission of evangelizing?
The Second Vatican Council gave a clear reply to this question: it is
upon the Church that "there rests, by divine mandate, the duty of going
out into the whole world and preaching the gospel to every
creature."[82] And in another text: "...the whole Church is missionary,
and the work of evangelization is a basic duty of the People of
God."[83]
We have already mentioned this intimate connection between the Church
and evangelization. While the Church is proclaiming the kingdom of God
and building it up, she is establishing herself in the midst of the
world as the sign and instrument of this kingdom which is and which is
to come. The Council repeats the following expression of St. Augustine
on the missionary activity of the Twelve: "They preached the word of
truth and brought forth Churches."[84]
60. The observation that the Church has been sent out and given a
mandate to evangelize the world should awaken in us two convictions.
The first is this: evangelization is for no one an individual and
isolated act; it is one that is deeply ecclesial. When the most obscure
preacher, catechist or pastor in the most distant land preaches the
Gospel, gathers his little community together or administers a
sacrament, even alone, he is carrying out an ecclesial act, and his
action is certainly attached to the evangelizing activity of the whole
Church by institutional relationships, but also by profound invisible
links in the order of grace. This presupposes that he acts not in
virtue of a mission which he attributes to himself or by a personal
inspiration, but in union with the mission of the Church and in her
name.
From this flows the second conviction: if each individual evangelizes
in the name of the Church, who herself does so by virtue of a mandate
from the Lord, no evangelizer is the absolute master of his
evangelizing action, with a discretionary power to carry it out in
accordance with individualistic criteria and perspectives; he acts in
communion with the Church and her pastors.
We have remarked that the Church is entirely and completely
evangelizing. This means that, in the whole world and in each part of
the world where she is present, the Church feels responsible for the
task of spreading the Gospel.
61. Brothers and sons and daughters, at this stage of our reflection,
we wish to pause with you at a question which is particularly important
at the present time. In the celebration of the liturgy, in their
witness before judges and executioners and in their apologetical texts,
the first Christians readily expressed their deep faith in the Church
by describing her as being spread throughout the universe. They were
fully conscious of belonging to a large community which neither space
nor time can limit: From the just Abel right to the last of the
elect,[85] "indeed to the ends of the earth,[86] "to the end of
time."[87]
This is how the Lord wanted His Church to be: universal, a great tree
whose branches shelter the birds of the air,[88] a net which catches
fish of every kind[89] or which Peter drew in filled with one hundred
and fifty-three big fish,[90] a flock which a single shepherd
pastures.[91] A universal Church without boundaries or frontiers
except, alas, those of the heart and mind of sinful man.
62. Nevertheless this universal Church is in practice incarnate in the
individual Churches made up of such or such an actual part of mankind,
speaking such and such a language, heirs of a cultural patrimony, of a
vision of the world, of an historical past, of a particular human
substratum. Receptivity to the wealth of the individual Church
corresponds to a special sensitivity of modern man.
Let us be very careful not to conceive of the universal Church as the
sum, or, if one can say so, the more or less anomalous federation of
essentially different individual Churches. In the mind of the Lord the
Church is universal by vocation and mission, but when she puts down her
roots in a variety of cultural, social and human terrains, she takes on
different external expressions and appearances in each part of the
world.
Thus each individual Church that would voluntarily cut itself off from
the universal Church would lose its relationship to God's plan and
would be impoverished in its ecclesial dimension. But, at the same
time, a Church toto orbe diffusa would become an abstraction if she did
not take body and life precisely through the individual Churches. Only
continual attention to these two poles of the Church will enable us to
perceive the richness of this relationship between the universal Church
and the individual Churches.
63. The individual Churches, intimately built up not only of people but
also of aspirations, of riches and limitations, of ways of praying, of
loving, of looking at life and the world, which distinguish this or
that human gathering, have the task of assimilating the essence of the
Gospel message and of transposing it, without the slightest betrayal of
its essential truth, into the language that these particular people
understand, then of proclaiming it in this language.
The transposition has to be done with the discernment, seriousness,
respect and competence which the matter calls for in the field of
liturgical expression,[92] and in the areas of catechesis, theological
formulation, secondary ecclesial structures, and ministries. And the
word "language" should be understood here less in the semantic or
literary sense than in the sense which one may call anthropological and
cultural.
The question is undoubtedly a delicate one. Evangelization loses much
of its force and effectiveness if it does not take into consideration
the actual people to whom it is addresses, if it does not use their
language, their signs and symbols, if it does not answer the questions
they ask, and if it does not have an impact on their concrete life. But
on the other hand, evangelization risks losing its power and
disappearing altogether if one empties or adulterates its content under
the pretext of translating it; if, in other words, one sacrifices this
reality and destroys the unity without which there is no universality,
out of a wish to adapt a universal reality to a local situation. Now,
only a Church which preserves the awareness of her universality and
shows that she is in fact universal is capable of having a message
which can be heard by all, regardless of regional frontiers.
Legitimate attention to individual Churches cannot fail to enrich the
Church. Such attention is indispensable and urgent. It responds to the
very deep aspirations of peoples and human communities to find their
own identity ever more clearly.
64. But this enrichment requires that the individual Churches should
keep their profound openness towards the universal Church. It is quite
remarkable, moreover, that the most simple Christians, the ones who are
most faithful to the Gospel and most open to the true meaning of the
Church, have a completely spontaneous sensitivity to this universal
dimension. They instinctively and very strongly feel the need for it,
they easily recognize themselves in such a dimension. They feel with it
and suffer very deeply within themselves when, in the name of theories
which they do not understand, they are forced to accept a Church
deprived of this universality, a regionalist Church, with no horizon.
As history in fact shows, whenever an individual Church has cut itself
off from the universal Church and from its living and visible center-
sometimes with the best of intentions, with theological, sociological,
political or pastoral arguments, or even in the desire for a certain
freedom of movement or action- it has escaped only with great
difficulty (if indeed it has escaped) from two equally serious dangers.
The first danger is that of a withering isolationism, and then, before
long, of a crumbling away, with each of its cells breaking away from it
just as it itself has broken away from the central nucleus. The second
danger is that of losing its freedom when, being cut off from the
center and from the other Churches which gave it strength and energy,
it finds itself all alone and a prey to the most varied forces of
slavery and exploitation.
The more an individual Church is attached to the universal Church by
solid bonds of communion, in charity and loyalty, in receptiveness to
the Magisterium of Peter, in the unity of the lex orandi which is also
the lex credendi, in the desire for unity with all the other Churches
which make up the whole- the more such a Church will be capable of
translating the treasure of faith into the legitimate variety of
expressions of the profession of faith, of prayer and worship, of
Christian life and conduct and of the spiritual influence on the people
among which it dwells. The more will it also be truly evangelizing,
that is to say, capable of drawing upon the universal patrimony in
order to enable its own people to profit from it, and capable too of
communicating to the universal Church the experience and the life of
this people, for the benefit of all.
65. It was precisely in this sense that at the end of the last Synod we
spoke clear words full of paternal affection, insisting on the role of
Peter's Successor as a visible, living and dynamic principle of the
unity between the Churches and thus of the universality of the one
Church.[93] We also insisted on the grave responsibility incumbent upon
us, but which we share with our Brothers in the Episcopate, of
preserving unaltered the content of the Catholic faith which the Lord
entrusted to the apostles. While being translated into all expressions,
this content must be neither impaired nor mutilated. While being
clothed with the outward forms proper to each people, and made explicit
by theological expression which takes account of differing cultural,
social and even racial milieu, it must remain the content of the
Catholic faith just exactly as the ecclesial magisterium has received
it and transmits it.
66. The whole Church therefore is called upon to evangelize, and yet
within her we have different evangelizing tasks to accomplish. This
diversity of services in the unity of the same mission makes up the
richness and beauty of evangelization. We shall briefly recall these
tasks.
First, we would point out in the pages of the Gospel the insistence
with which the Lord entrusts to the apostles the task of proclaiming
the Word. He chose them,[94] trained them during several years of
intimate company,[95] constituted[96] and sent them out[97] as
authorized witnesses and teachers of the message of salvation. And the
Twelve in their turn sent out their successors who, in the apostolic
line, continue to preach the Good News.
67. The Successor of Peter is thus, by the will of Christ, entrusted
with the preeminent ministry of teaching the revealed truth. The New
Testament often shows Peter "filled with the Holy Spirit" speaking in
the name of all."[98] It is precisely for this reason that St. Leo the
Great describes him as he who has merited the primacy of the
apostolate.''[99] This is also why the voice of the Church shows the
Pope "at the highest point- in apice, in specula- of the
apostolate."[100] The Second Vatican Council wished to reaffirm this
when it declared that "Christ's mandate to preach the Gospel to every
creature (cf. Mk. 16:15) primarily and immediately concerns the bishops
with Peter and under Peter."[101]
The full, supreme and universal power"[102] which Christ gives to His
Vicar for the pastoral government of His Church is this especially
exercised by the Pope in the activity of preaching and causing to be
preached the Good News of salvation.
68. In union with the Successor of Peter, the bishops, who are
successors of the apostles, receive through the power of their
episcopal ordination the authority to teach the revealed truth in the
Church. They are teachers of the faith.
Associated with the bishops in the ministry of evangelization and
responsible by a special title are those who through priestly
ordination "act in the person of Christ."[103] They are educators of
the People of God in the faith and preachers, while at the same time
being ministers of the Eucharist and of the other sacraments.
We pastors are therefore invited to take note of this duty, more than
any other members of the Church. What identifies our priestly service,
gives a profound unity to the thousand and one tasks which claim our
attention day by day and throughout our lives, and confers a distinct
character on our activities, is this aim, ever present in all our
action: to proclaim the Gospel of God.[104]
A mark of our identity which no doubts ought to encroach upon and no
objection eclipse is this: as pastors, we have been chosen by the mercy
of the Supreme Pastor,[105] in spite of our inadequacy, to proclaim
with authority the Word of God, to assemble the scattered People of
God, to teed this People with the signs of the action of Christ which
are the sacraments, to set this People on the road to salvation, to
maintain it in that unity of which we are, at different levels, active
and living instruments, and unceasingly to keep this community gathered
around Christ faithful to its deepest vocation. And when we do all
these things, within our human limits and by the grace of God, it is a
work of evangelization that we are carrying out. This includes ourself
as Pastor of the universal Church, our brother bishops at the head of
the individual Churches, priests and deacons united with their bishops
and whose assistants they are, by a communion which has its source in
the sacrament of Orders and in the charity of the Church.
69. Religious, for their part, find in their consecrated life a
privileged means of effective evangelization. At the deepest level of
their being they are caught Up in the dynamism of the Church's life,
which is thirsty for the divine Absolute and called to holiness. It is
to this holiness that they bear witness. They embody the Church in her
desire to give herself completely to the radical demands of the
beatitudes. By their lives they are a sign of total availability to
God, the Church and the brethren.
As such they have a special importance in the context of the witness
which, as we have said, is of prime importance in evangelization. At
the same time as being a challenge to the world and to the Church
herself, this silent witness of poverty and abnegation, of purity and
sincerity, of self-sacrifice in obedience, can become an eloquent
witness capable of touching also non-Christians who have good will and
are sensitive to certain values.
In this perspective one perceives the role played in evangelization by
religious men and women consecrated to prayer, silence, penance and
sacrifice. Other religious, in great numbers, give themselves directly
to the proclamation of Christ. Their missionary activity depends
clearly on the hierarchy and must be coordinated with the pastoral plan
which the latter adopts. But who does not see the immense contribution
that these religious have brought and continue to bring to
evangelization? Thanks to their consecration they are eminently willing
and free to leave everything and to go and proclaim the Gospel even to
the ends of the earth. They are enterprising and their apostolate is
often marked by an originality, by a genius that demands admiration.
They are generous: often they are found at the outposts of the mission,
and they take the greatest of risks for their health and their very
lives. Truly the Church owes them much.
70. Lay people, whose particular vocation places them in the midst of
the world and in charge of the most varied temporal tasks, must for
this very reason exercise a very special form of evangelization.
Their primary and immediate task is not to establish and develop the
ecclesial community- this is the specific role of the pastors- but to
put to use every Christian and evangelical possibility latent but
already present and active in the affairs of the world. Their own field
of evangelizing activity is the vast and complicated world of politics,
society and economics, but also the world of culture, of the sciences
and the arts, of international life, of the mass media. It also
includes other realities which are open to evangelization, such as
human love, the family, the education of children and adolescents,
professional work, suffering. The more Gospel-inspired lay people there
are engaged in these realities, clearly involved in them, competent to
promote them and conscious that they must exercise to the full their
Christian powers which are often buried and suffocated, the more these
realities will be at the service of the kingdom of God and therefore of
salvation in Jesus Christ, without in any way losing or sacrificing
their human content but rather pointing to a transcendent dimension
which is often disregarded.
71. One cannot fail to stress the evangelizing action of the family in
the evangelizing apostolate of the laity.
At different moments in the Church's history and also in the Second
Vatican Council, the family has well deserved the beautiful name of
"domestic Church."[106] This means that there should be found in every
Christian family the various aspects of the entire Church. Furthermore,
the family, like the Church, ought to be a place where the Gospel is
transmitted and from which the Gospel radiates.
In a family which is conscious of this mission, all the members
evangelize and are evangelized. The parents not only communicate the
Gospel to their children, but from their children they can themselves
receive the same Gospel as deeply lived by them.
And such a family becomes the evangelizer of many other families, and
of the neighborhood of which it forms part. Families resulting from a
mixed marriage also have the duty of proclaiming Christ to the children
in the fullness of the consequences of a common Baptism; they have
moreover the difficult task of becoming builders of unity.
72. Circumstances invite us to make special mention of the young. Their
increasing number and growing presence in society and likewise the
problems assailing them should awaken in every one the desire to offer
them with zeal and intelligence the Gospel ideal as something to be
known and lived. And on the other hand, young people who are well
trained in faith and prayer must become more and more the apostles of
youth. The Church counts greatly on their contribution, and we ourself
have often manifested our full confidence in them.
73. Hence the active presence of the laity in the temporal realities
takes on all its importance. One cannot, however, neglect or forget the
other dimension: the laity can also feel themselves called, or be
called, to work with their pastors in the service of the ecclesial
community for its growth and life, by exercising a great variety of
ministries according to the grace and charisms which the Lord is
pleased to give them.
We cannot but experience a great inner joy when we see so many pastors,
religious and lay people, fired with their mission to evangelize,
seeking ever more suitable ways of proclaiming the Gospel effectively.
We encourage the openness which the Church is showing today in this
direction and with this solicitude. It is an openness to meditation
first of all, and then to ecclesial ministries capable of renewing and
strengthening the evangelizing vigor of the Church.
It is certain that, side by side with the ordained ministries, whereby
certain people are appointed pastors and consecrate themselves in a
special way to the service of the community, the Church recognizes the
place of non-ordained ministries which are able to offer a particular
service to the Church.
A glance at the origins of the Church is very illuminating, and gives
the benefit of an early experience in the matter of ministries. It was
an experience which was all the more valuable in that it enabled the
Church to consolidate herself and to grow and spread. Attention to the
sources however has to be complemented by attention to the present
needs of mankind and of the Church. To drink at these ever inspiring
sources without sacrificing anything of their values, and at the same
time to know how to adapt oneself to the demands and needs of today-
these are the criteria which will make it possible to seek wisely and
to discover the ministries which the Church needs and which many of her
members will gladly embrace for the sake of ensuring greater vitality
in the ecclesial community. These ministries will have a real pastoral
value to the extent that they are established with absolute respect for
unity and adhering to the directives of the pastors, who are the ones
who are responsible for the Church's unity and the builders thereof.
These ministries, apparently new but closely tied up with the Church's
living experience down the centuries - such as catechists, directors of
prayer and chant, Christians devoted to the service of God's Word or to
assisting their brethren in need, the heads of small communities, or
other persons charged with the responsibility of apostolic movements-
these ministries are valuable for the establishment, life, and growth
of the Church, and for her capacity to influence her surroundings and
to reach those who are remote from her. We owe also our special esteem
to all the lay people who accept to consecrate a part of their time,
their energies, and sometimes their entire lives, to the service of the
missions.
A serious preparation is needed for all workers for evangelization.
Such preparation is all the more necessary for those who devote
themselves to the ministry of the Word. Being animated by the
conviction, ceaselessly deepened, of the greatness and riches of the
Word of God, those who have the mission of transmitting it must give
the maximum attention to the dignity, precision and adaptation of their
language. Everyone knows that the art of speaking takes on today a very
great importance. How would preachers and catechists be able to neglect
this?
We earnestly desire that in each individual Church the bishops should
be vigilant concerning the adequate formation of all the ministers of
the Word. This serious preparation will increase in them the
indispensable assurance and also the enthusiasm to proclaim today Jesus
Christ.
74. We would not wish to end this encounter with our beloved brethren
and sons and daughters without a pressing appeal concerning the
interior attitudes which must animate those who work for evangelization.
In the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and in the name of the Apostles
Peter and Paul, we wish to exhort all those who, thanks to the charisms
of the Holy Spirit and to the mandate of the Church, are true
evangelizers to be worthy of this vocation, to exercise it without the
reticence of doubt or fear, and not to neglect the conditions that will
make this evangelization not only possible but also active and
fruitful. These, among many others, are the fundamental conditions
which we consider it important to emphasize.
75. Evangelization will never be possible without the action of the
Holy Spirit. The Spirit descends on Jesus of Nazareth at the moment of
His baptism when the voice of the Father- "This is my beloved Son with
whom I am well pleased"[107]- manifests in an external way the election
of Jesus and His mission. Jesus is "led by the Spirit" to experience in
the desert the decisive combat and the supreme test before beginning
this mission.[108] It is "in the power of the Spirit"[109] that He
returns to Galilee and begins His preaching at Nazareth, applying to
Himself the passage of Isaiah: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me." And
He proclaims: "Today this Scripture has been fulfilled."[110] To the
disciples whom He was about to send forth He says, breathing on them,
"Receive the Holy Spirit."[111]
In fact, it is only after the coming of the Holy Spirit on the day of
Pentecost that the apostles depart to all the ends of the earth in
order to begin the great work of the Church's evangelization. Peter
explains this event as the fulfillment of the prophecy of Joel: "I will
pour out my spirit."[112] Peter is filled with the Holy Spirit so that
he can speak to the people about Jesus, the Son of God.[113] Paul too
is filled with the Holy Spirit[114] before dedicating himself to his
apostolic ministry, as is Stephen when he is chosen for the ministry of
service and later on for the witness of blood.[115] The Spirit, who
causes Peter, Paul and the Twelve to speak, and who inspires the words
that they are to utter, also comes down "on those who heard the
word."[116]
It is in the "consolation of the Holy Spirit" that the Church
increases.[117] The Holy Spirit is the soul of the Church. It is He who
explains to the faithful the deep meaning of the teaching of Jesus and
of His mystery. It is the Holy Spirit who, today just as at the
beginning of the Church, acts in every evangelizer who allows himself
to be possessed and led by Him. The Holy Spirit places on his lips the
words which he could not find by himself, and at the same time the Holy
Spirit predisposes the soul of the hearer to be open and receptive to
the Good News and to the kingdom being proclaimed.
Techniques of evangelization are good, but even the most advanced ones
could not replace the gentle action of the Spirit. The most perfect
preparation of the evangelizer has no effect without the Holy Spirit.
Without the Holy Spirit the most convincing dialectic has no power over
the heart of man. Without Him the most highly developed schemas resting
on a sociological or psychological basis are quickly seen to be quite
valueless.
We live in the Church at a privileged moment of the Spirit. Everywhere
people are trying to know Him better, as the Scripture reveals Him.
They are happy to place themselves under His inspiration. They are
gathering about Him; they want to let themselves be led by Him. Now if
the Spirit of God has a preeminent place in the whole life of the
Church, it is in her evangelizing mission that He is most active. It is
not by chance that the great inauguration of evangelization took place
on the morning of Pentecost, under the inspiration of the Spirit.
It must be said that the Holy Spirit is the principal agent of
evangelization: it is He who impels each individual to proclaim the
Gospel, and it is He who in the depths of consciences causes the word
of salvation to be accepted and understood.[118] But it can equally be
said that He is the goal of evangelization: He alone stirs up the new
creation, the new humanity of which evangelization is to be the result,
with that unity in variety which evangelization wishes to achieve
within the Christian community. Through the Holy Spirit the Gospel
penetrates to the heart of the world, for it is He who causes people to
discern the signs of the times- signs willed by God- which
evangelization reveals and puts to use within history.
The Bishops' Synod of 1974, which insisted strongly on the place of the
Holy Spirit in evangelization, also expressed the desire that pastors
and theologians- and we would also say the faithful marked by the seal
of the Spirit by Baptism- should study more thoroughly the nature and
manner of the Holy Spirit's action in evangelization today. This is our
desire too, and we exhort all evangelizers, whoever they may be, to
pray without ceasing to the Holy Spirit with faith and fervor and to
let themselves prudently be guided by Him as the decisive inspirer of
their plans, their initiatives and their evangelizing activity.
76. Let us now consider the very persons of the evangelizers.
It is often said nowadays that the present century thirsts for
authenticity. Especially in regard to young people it is said that they
have a horror of the artificial or false and that they are searching
above all for truth and honesty.
These "signs of the times" should find us vigilant. Either tacitly or
aloud- but always forcefully- we are being asked: Do you really believe
what you are proclaiming? Do you live what you believe? Do you really
preach what you live? The witness of life has become more than ever an
essential condition for real effectiveness in preaching. Precisely
because of this we are, to a certain extent, responsible for the
progress of the Gospel that we proclaim.
"What is the state of the Church ten years after the Council?" we asked
at the beginning of this meditation. Is she firmly established in the
midst of the world and yet free and independent enough to call for the
world's attention? Does she testify to solidarity with people and at
the same time to the divine Absolute? Is she more ardent in
contemplation and adoration and more zealous in missionary, charitable
and liberating action? Is she ever more committed to the effort to
search for the restoration of the complete unity of Christians, a unity
that makes more effective the common witness, "so that the world may
believe"[119] We are all responsible for the answers that could be
given to these questions.
We therefore address our exhortation to our brethren in the Episcopate,
placed by the Holy Spirit to govern the Church.[120] We exhort the
priests and deacons, the bishops' collaborators in assembling the
People of God and in animating spiritually the local communities. We
exhort the religious, witnesses of a Church called to holiness and
hence themselves invited to a life that bears testimony to the
beatitudes of the Gospel. We exhort the laity: Christian families,
youth, adults, all those who exercise a trade or profession, leaders,
without forgetting the poor who are often rich in faith and hope- all
lay people who are conscious of their evangelizing role in the service
of their Church or in the midst of society and the world. We say to all
of them: our evangelizing zeal must spring from true holiness of life,
and, as the Second Vatican Council suggests, preaching must in its turn
make the preacher grow in holiness, which is nourished by prayer and
above all by love for the Eucharist.[121]
The world which, paradoxically, despite innumerable signs of the denial
of God, is nevertheless searching for Him in unexpected ways and
painfully experiencing the need of Him- the world is calling for
evangelizers to speak to it of a God whom the evangelists themselves
should know and be familiar with as if they could see the
invisible.[122] The world calls for and expects from us simplicity of
life, the spirit of prayer, charity towards all, especially towards the
lowly and the poor, obedience and humility, detachment and
self-sacrifice. Without this mark of holiness, our word will have
difficulty in touching the heart of modern man. It risks being vain and
sterile.
77. The power of evangelization will find itself considerably
diminished if those who proclaim the Gospel are divided among
themselves in all sorts of ways. Is this not perhaps one of the great
sicknesses of evangelization today? Indeed, if the Gospel that we
proclaim is seen to be rent by doctrinal disputes, ideological
polarizations or mutual condemnations among Christians, at the mercy of
the latter's differing views on Christ and the Church and even because
of their different concepts of society and human institutions, how can
those to whom we address our preaching fail to be disturbed,
disoriented, even scandalized?
The Lord's spiritual testament tells us that unity among His followers
is not only the proof that we are His but also the proof that He is
sent by the Father. It is the test of the credibility of Christians and
of Christ Himself. As evangelizers, we must offer Christ's faithful not
the image of people divided and separated by unedifying quarrels, but
the image of people who are mature in faith and capable of finding a
meeting-point beyond the real tensions, thanks to a shared, sincere and
disinterested search for truth. Yes, the destiny of evangelization is
certainly bound up with the witness of unity given by the Church. This
is a source of responsibility and also of comfort.
At this point we wish to emphasize the sign of unity among all
Christians as the way and instrument of evangelization. The division
among Christians is a serious reality which impedes the very work of
Christ. The Second Vatican Council states clearly and emphatically that
this division "damages the most holy cause of preaching the Gospel to
all men, and it impedes many from embracing the faith."[123] For this
reason, in proclaiming the Holy Year we considered it necessary to
recall to all the faithful of the Catholic world that "before all men
can be brought together and restored to the grace of God our Father,
communion must be reestablished between those who by faith have
acknowledged and accepted Jesus Christ as the Lord of mercy who sets
men free and unites them in the Spirit of love and truth."[124]
And it is with a strong feeling of Christian hope that look to the
efforts being made in the Christian world for this restoration of the
full unity willed by Christ. St. Paul assures us that "hope does not
disappoint us."[125] While we still work to obtain full unity from the
Lord, we wish to see prayer intensified. Moreover we make our own the
desire of the Fathers of the Third General Assembly of the Synod of
Bishops, for a collaboration marked by greater commitment with the
Christian brethren with whom we are not yet united in perfect unity,
taking as a basis the foundation of Baptism and the patrimony of faith
which is common to us. By doing this we can already give a greater
common witness to Christ before the world in the very work of
evangelization. Christ's command urges us to do this; the duty of
preaching and of giving witness to the Gospel requires this.
78. The Gospel entrusted to us is also the word of truth. A truth which
liberates[126] and which alone gives peace of heart is what people are
looking for when we proclaim the Good News to them. The truth about
God, about man and his mysterious destiny, about the world; the
difficult truth that we seek in the Word of God and of which, we
repeat, we are neither the masters nor the owners, but the
depositaries, the heralds and the servants.
Every evangelizer is expected to have a reverence for truth, especially
since the truth that he studies and communicates is none other than
revealed truth and hence, more than any other, a sharing in the first
truth which is God Himself. The preacher of the Gospel will therefore
be a person who even at the price of personal renunciation and
suffering always seeks the truth that he must transmit to others. He
never betrays or hides truth out of a desire to please men, in order to
astonish or to shock, nor for the sake of originality or a desire to
make an impression. He does not refuse truth. He does not obscure
revealed truth by being too idle to search for it, or for the sake of
his own comfort, or out of fear. He does not neglect to study it. He
serves it generously, without making it serve him.
We are the pastors of the faithful people, and our pastoral service
impels us to preserve, defend, and to communicate the truth regardless
of the sacrifices that this involves. So many eminent and holy pastors
have left us the example of this love of truth. In many cases it was an
heroic love. The God of truth expects us to be the vigilant defenders
and devoted preachers of truth.
Men of learning- whether you be theologians, exegetes or historians-
the work of evangelization needs your tireless work of research, and
also care and tact in transmitting the truth to which your studies lead
you but which is always greater than the heart of man, being the very
truth of God.
Parents and teachers, your task- and the many conflicts of the present
day do not make it an easy one- is to help your children and your
students to discover truth, including religious and spiritual truth.
79. The work of evangelization presupposes in the evangelizer an ever
increasing love for those whom he is evangelizing. That model
evangelizer, the Apostle Paul, wrote these words to the Thessalonians,
and they are a program for us all: "With such yearning love we chose to
impart to you not only the gospel of God but our very selves, so dear
had you become to us."[127] What is this love? It is much more than
that of a teacher; it is the love of a father; and again, it is the
love of a mother.[128] It is this love that the Lord expects from every
preacher of the Gospel, from every builder of the Church. A sign of
love will be the concern to give the truth and to bring people into
unity. Another sign of love will be a devotion to the proclamation of
Jesus Christ, without reservation or turning back. Let us add some
other signs of this love.
The first is respect for the religious and spiritual situation of those
being evangelized. Respect for their tempo and pace; no one has the
right to force them excessively. Respect for their conscience and
convictions, which are not to be treated in a harsh manner.
Another sign of this love is concern not to wound the other person,
especially if he or she is weak in faith,[129] with statements that may
be clear for those who are already initiated but which for the faithful
can be a source of bewilderment and scandal, like a wound in the soul.
Yet another sign of love will be the effort to transmit to Christians
not doubts and uncertainties born of an erudition poorly assimilated
but certainties that are solid because they are anchored in the Word of
God. The faithful need these certainties for their Christian life; they
have a right to them, as children of God who abandon themselves
entirely into His arms and to the exigencies of love.
80. Our appeal here is inspired by the fervor of the greatest preachers
and evangelizers, whose lives were devoted to the apostolate. Among
these we are glad to point out those whom we have proposed to the
veneration of the faithful during the course of the Holy Year. They
have known how to overcome many obstacles to evangelization.
Such obstacles are also present today, and we shall limit ourself to
mentioning the lack of fervor. It is all the more serious because it
comes from within. It is manifested in fatigue, disenchantment,
compromise, lack of interest and above all lack of joy and hope. We
exhort all those who have the task of evangelizing, by whatever title
and at whatever level, always to nourish spiritual fervor[130]
This fervor demands first of all that we should know how to put aside
the excuses which would impede evangelization. The most insidious of
these excuses are certainly the ones which people claim to find support
for in such and such a teaching of the Council.
Thus one too frequently hears it said, in various terms, that to impose
a truth, be it that of the Gospel, or to impose a way, be it that of
salvation, cannot but be a violation of religious liberty. Besides, it
is added, why proclaim the Gospel when the whole world is saved by
uprightness of heart? We know likewise that the world and history are
filled with "seeds of the Word"; is it not therefore an illusion to
claim to bring the Gospel where it already exists in the seeds that the
Lord Himself has sown?
Anyone who takes the trouble to study in the Council's documents the
questions upon which these excuses draw too superficially will find
quite a different view.
It would certainly be an error to impose something on the consciences
of our brethren. But to propose to their consciences the truth of the
Gospel and salvation in Jesus Christ, with complete clarity and with a
total respect for the free options which it presents- "without
coercion, or dishonorable or unworthy pressure"[131]- far from being an
attack on religious liberty is fully to respect that liberty, which is
offered the choice of a way that even non-believers consider noble and
uplifting. Is it then a crime against others' freedom to proclaim with
joy a Good News which one has come to know through the Lord's
mercy?[132] And why should only falsehood and error, debasement and
pornography have the right to be put before people and often
unfortunately imposed on them by the destructive propaganda of the mass
media, by the tolerance of legislation, the timidity of the good and
the impudence of the wicked? The respectful presentation of Christ and
His kingdom is more than the evangelizer's right; it is his duty. It is
likewise the right of his fellow men to receive from him the
proclamation of the Good News of salvation. God can accomplish this
salvation in whomsoever He wishes by ways which He alone knows.[133]
And yet, if His Son came, it was precisely in order to reveal to us, by
His word and by His life, the ordinary paths of salvation. And He has
commanded us to transmit this revelation to others with His own
authority. It would be useful if every Christian and every evangelizer
were to pray about the following thought: men can gain salvation also
in other ways, by God's mercy, even though we do not preach the Gospel
to them; but as for us, can we gain salvation if through negligence or
fear or shame- what St. Paul called "blushing for the Gospel"[134] - or
as a result of false ideas we fail to preach it? For that would be to
betray the call of God, who wishes the seed to bear fruit through the
voice of the ministers of the Gospel; and it will depend on us whether
this grows into trees and produces its full fruit.
Let us therefore preserve our fervor of spirit. Let us preserve the
delightful and comforting joy of evangelizing, even when it is in tears
that we must sow. May it mean for us- as it did for John the Baptist,
for Peter and Paul, for the other apostles and for a multitude of
splendid evangelizers all through the Church's history- an interior
enthusiasm that nobody and nothing can quench. May it be the great joy
of our consecrated lives. And may the world of our time, which is
searching, sometimes with anguish, sometimes with hope, be enabled to
receive the Good News not from evangelizers who are dejected,
discouraged, impatient or anxious, but from ministers of the Gospel
whose lives glow with fervor, who have first received the joy of
Christ, and who are willing to risk their lives so that the kingdom may
be proclaimed and the Church established in the midst of the world.
81. This then, brothers and sons and daughters, is our heartfelt plea.
It echoes the voice of our brethren assembled for the Third General
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. This is the task we have wished to
give you at the close of a Holy Year which has enabled us to see better
than ever the needs and the appeals of a multitude of brethren, both
Christians and non-Christians, who await from the Church the Word of
salvation.
May the light of the Holy Year, which has shone in the local Churches
and in Rome for millions of consciences reconciled with God, continue
to shine in the same way after the Jubilee through a program of
pastoral action with evangelization as its basic feature, for these
years which mark the eve of a new century, the eve also of the third
millennium of Christianity.
82. This is the desire that we rejoice to entrust to the hands and the
heart of the Immaculate Blessed Virgin Mary, on this day which is
especially consecrated to her and which is also the tenth anniversary
of the close of the Second Vatican Council. On the morning of Pentecost
she watched over with her prayer the beginning of evangelization
prompted by the Holy Spirit: may she be the Star of the evangelization
ever renewed which the Church, docile to her Lord's command, must
promote and accomplish, especially in these times which are difficult
but full of hope!
In the name of Christ we bless you, your communities, your families,
all those who are dear to you, in the words which Paul addressed to the
Philippians: "I give thanks to my God every time I think of you- which
is constantly, in every prayer I utter- rejoicing, as I plead on your
behalf, at the way you have all continually helped to promote the
gospel.... I hold all of you dear- you who...are sharers of my gracious
lot...to defend the solid grounds on which the gospel rests. God
himself can testify how much I long for each of you with the affection
of Christ Jesus!"[135]
Given in Rome, at Saint Peter's, on the Solemnity of the Immaculate
Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, December 8, 1975, the thirteenth
year of our Pontificate.
PAULUS PP. VI
Notes
1. Cf. Lk 22:32.
2. 2 Cor 11:28.
3. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Decree on the Church's
Missionary Activity Ad Gentes, 1: AAS 58 (1966), p. 947.
4. Cf. Eph 4:24, 2:15; Col 3:10; Gal 3:27; Rom 13:114; 2 Cor 5:17.
5. 2 Cor 5:20.
6. Cf. Paul VI, Address for the closing of the Third General Assembly
of the Synod of Bishops (26 October 1974): AAS 66 (19740, PP. 634-635,
637.
7. Paul VI, Address to the College of Cardinals (22 June 1973): AAS 65
(1973), p. 383.
8. 2 Cor 11:28.
9. 1 Tim 5:17.
10. 2 Tim 2:15.
11. Cf. 1 Cor 2:5.
12. Lk 4:43.
13. Ibid.
14. Lk 4:18; cf. Is 61:1.
15. Cf. Mk 1:1; Rom 1:1-3.
16. Cf. Mt 6:33.
17. Cf. Mt 5:3-12.
18. Cf. Mt 5-7.
19. Cf. Mt 10.
20. Cf. Mt 13.
21. Mt 18.
22. Cf. Mt 24-25.
23. Cf. Mt. 24:36; Acts 1:7; 1 Thess 5:1-2.
24. Cf. Mt 11:12; Lk 16:16.
25. Cf. Mt 4:17.
26. Mk 1:27.
27. Lk 4:22.
28. Jn 7:46.
29. Lk 4:43.
30. Jn 11:52.
31. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on
Divine Revelation Dei Verbum, 4: AAS 58 (1966), pp. 818-819.32. 1 Pt
2:9.
33. Cf. Acts 2:11.
34. Lk 4:43.
35. 1 Cor 9:16.
36. "Declaration of the Synod Fathers", 4: L'Osservatore Romano (27
October 1974), p. 6.
37. Mt 28:19.
38. Acts 2:41, 47.
39. Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 8: AAS 57 (1965), p. 11; Decree on the Church's
Missionary Activity Ad Gentes, 5: AAS 58 (1966), pp 951-952.
40. Cf. Acts 2:42-46; 4:32-35; 5:12-16.
41. Cf. Acts 2:11; 1 Pt 2:9.
42. Cf. Decree on the Church's Missionary Activity Ad Gentes, 5, 11-12:
AAS 58 (1966), pp. 951-952, 959-961.
43. Cf. 2 Cor 4:5; Saint Augustine Sermo XLVI, De Pastoribus: ccl XLI,
pp. 529-530.
44. Lk 10:16; cf. Saint Cyprian, De Unitate Ecclesiae, 14: PL 4, 527;
Saint Augustine, Enarrat. 88, Sermo, 2, 14: PL 37, 1140; Saint John
Chrysostom, Hom. de capto Eutropio, 6: PG 52, 462.
45. Eph 5:25.
46. Rev. 21:5; cf. 2 Cor 5:17; Gal 6:15.
47. Cf. Rom 6:4.
48. Cf. Eph 4:24-25; Col 3:9-10.
49. Cf. Rom 1:16; 1 Cor 1:18, 2:4.
50. Cf. 53: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1075.
51. Cf. Tertullian Apologeticum, 39: CCL, I, PP. 150-153; Minucius
Felix, Octavius 9 and 31: CSLP, Turin 1963, pp. 11-13, 47-48.
52. 1 Pt 3:15.
53.Cf. Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the
Church Lumen Gentium, 1, 9, 48; AAS 57 (1965), pp. 5, 12-14, 53-54;
Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Mod |