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DECREE
AD GENTES
ON THE MISSION ACTIVITY
OF THE CHURCH
PREFACE
1. Divinely sent to the nations of the
world to be unto them "a universal sacrament of salvation,"(1) the Church,
driven by the inner necessity of her own catholicity, and obeying the
mandate of her Founder (cf. Mark 16:16), strives ever to proclaim the
Gospel to all men. The Apostles themselves, on whom the Church was
founded, following in the footsteps of Christ, "preached the word of truth
and begot churches."(2) It is the duty of their successors to make this
task endure "so that the word of God may run and be glorified (2 Thess.
3:1) and the kingdom of God be proclaimed and established throughout the
world.
In the present state of affairs, out of
which there is arising a new situation for mankind, the Church, being the
salt of the earth and the light of the world (cf. Matt. 5:13-14), is more
urgently called upon to save and renew every creature, that all things may
be restored in Christ and all men may constitute one family in Him and one
people of God.
Therefore, this sacred synod, while
rendering thanks to God for the excellent results that have been achieved
through the whole Church's great - hearted endeavor, desires to sketch the
principles of missionary activity and to rally the forces of all the
faithful in order that the people of God, marching along the narrow way of
the Cross, may spread everywhere the reign of Christ, Lord and overseer:
of the ages (cf. Ecc. 36:19), and may prepare the way for his coming.
CHAPTER I
PRINCIPLES OF DOCTRINE
2. The pilgrim Church is missionary by
her very nature, since it is from the mission of the Son and the mission
of the Holy Spirit that she draws her origin, in accordance with the
decree of God the Father.(1)
This decree, however, flows from the
"fount - like love" or charity of God the Father who, being the "principle
without principle" from whom the Son is begotten and Holy Spirit proceeds
through the Son, freely creating us on account of His surpassing and
merciful kindness and graciously calling us moreover to share with Him His
life and His cry, has generously poured out, and does not cease to pour
out still, His divine goodness. Thus He who created all things may at last
be "all in all" (1 Cor. 15:28), bringing about at one and the same time
His own glory and our happiness. But it pleased God to call men to share
His life, not just singly, apart from any mutual bond, but rather to mold
them into a people in which His sons, once scattered abroad might be
gathered together (cf. John 11:52).
3. This universal design of God for the
salvation of the human race is carried out not only, as it were, secretly
in the soul of a man, or by the attempts (even religious ones by which in
diverse ways it seeks after God) if perchance it may contact Him or find
Him, though He be not far from anyone of us (cf. Acts 17:27). For these
attempts need to be enlightened and healed; even though, through the
kindly workings of Divine Providence, they may sometimes serve as leading
strings toward God, or as a preparation for the Gospel.(2) Now God, in
order to establish peace or the communion of sinful human beings with
Himself, as well as to fashion them into a fraternal community, did ordain
to intervene in human history in a way both new and finally sending His
Son, clothed in our flesh, in order that through Him He might snatch men
from the power of darkness and Satan (cf. Col. 1:13; Acts 10:38) and
reconcile the world to Himself in Him (cf. 2 Cor. 5:19). Him, then, by
whom He made the world,(3) He appointed heir of all things, that in Him He
might restore all (cf. Eph. 1:10).
For Jesus Christ was sent into the world
as a real mediator between God and men. Since He is God, all divine
fullness dwells bodily in Him (Gal. 2:9). According to His human nature,
on the other hand, He is the new Adam, made head of a renewed humanity,
and full of grace and of truth (John 1:14). Therefore the Son of God
walked the ways of a true Incarnation that He might make men sharers in
the nature of God: made poor for our sakes, though He had been rich, in
order that His poverty might enrich us (2 Cor. 8:9). The Son of Man came
not that He might be served, but that He might be a servant, and give His
life as a ransom for the many - that is, for all (cf. Mark 10:45). The
Fathers of the Church proclaim without hesitation that what has not been
taken up by Christ is not made whole.(4) Now, what He took up was our
entire human nature such as it is found among us poor wretches, save only
sin (cf. Heb. 4:15; 9.28). For Christ said concerning Himself, He whom the
Father sanctified and sent into the world (cf. John 10:36): the Spirit of
the Lord is upon me, because He anointed me; to bring good news to the
poor He sent me, to heal the broken - hearted, to proclaim to the captives
release, and sight to the blind" (Luke 4:18). And again: "The Son of Man
has come to seek and to save what was lost" (Luke 19:10).
But what the Lord preached that one
time, or what was wrought in Him for the saving of the human race, must be
spread abroad and published to the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8), beginning
from Jerusalem (cf. Luke 24:27), so that what He accomplished at that one
time for the salvation of all, may in the course of time come to achieve
its effect in all.
4. To accomplish this, Christ sent from
the Father His Holy Spirit, who was to carry on inwardly His saving work
and prompt the Church to spread out. Doubtless, the Holy Spirit was
already at work in the world before Christ was glorified.(5) Yet on the
day of Pentecost, He came down upon the disciples to remain with them
forever (cf. John 14:16). The Church was publicly displayed to the
multitude, the Gospel began to spread among the nations by means of
preaching, and there was presaged that union of all peoples in the
catholicity of the faith by means of the Church of the New Covenant, a
Church which speaks all tongues, understands and accepts all tongues in
her love, and so supersedes the divisiveness of Babel.(6) For it was from
Pentecost that the "Acts of the Apostles" took again, just as Christ was -
conceived when the Holy Spirit came upon the Virgin Mary, and just as
Christ was impelled to the work of His ministry by the same Holy Spirit
descending upon Him while He prayed.(7)
Now, the Lord Jesus, before freely
giving His life for the world, did so arrange the Apostles' ministry and
promise to send the Holy Spirit that both they and the Spirit might be
associated in effecting the work of salvation always and everywhere.(8)
Throughout all ages, the Holy Spirit makes the entire Church "one in
communion and in ministering; He equips her with various gifts of a
hierarchical and charismatic nature," a giving life, soul - like, to
ecclesiastical institutions(10) and instilling into the hearts of the
faithful the same mission spirit which impelled Christ Himself. Sometimes
He even visibly anticipates the Apostles' acting,(11) just as He
unceasingly accompanies and directs it in different ways.(12)
5. From the very beginning, the Lord
Jesus "called to Himself those whom He wished; and He caused twelve of
them to be with Him, and to be sent out preaching (Mark 3:13; cf. Matt.
10:1-42). Thus the Apostles were the first budding - forth of the New
Israel, and at the same time the beginning of the sacred hierarchy. Then,
when He had by His death and His resurrection completed once for all in
Himself the mysteries of our salvation and the renewal of all things, the
Lord, having now received all power in heaven and on earth (cf. Matt. 28
18), before He was taken up into heaven (cf. Acts 1:11), founded His
Church as the sacrament of salvation and sent His Apostles into all the
world just as He Himself had been sent by His Father (cf. John 20:21),
commanding them: "Go, therefore, and make disciples of a nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit; teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you" (Matt.
28:19 ff.). "Go into the whole world, preach the Gospel to every creature.
He who believes and is baptized shall be saved; but he who does not
believe, shall be condemned" (Mark 16:15ff.). Whence the duty that lies on
the Church of spreading the faith and the salvation of Christ, not only in
virtue of the express command which was inherited from the Apostles by the
order of bishops, assisted by the priests, together with the successor of
Peter and supreme shepherd of the Church, but also in virtue of that life
which flows from Christ into His members; "From Him the whole body, being
closely joined and knit together through every joint of the system,
according to the functioning in due measure of each single part, derives
its increase to the building up of itself in love" (Eph. 4:16). The
mission of the Church, therefore, is fulfilled by that activity which
makes her, obeying the command of Christ and influenced by the grace and
love of the Holy Spirit, fully present to all men or nations, in order
that, by the example of her life and by her preaching, by the sacraments
and other means of grace, she may lead them to the faith, the freedom and
the peace of Christ; that thus there may lie open before them a firm and
free road to full participation in the mystery of Christ.
Since this mission goes on and in the
course of history unfolds the mission of Christ Himself, who was sent to
preach the Gospel to the poor, the Church, prompted by the Holy Spirit,
must walk in the same path on which Christ walked: a path of poverty and
obedience, of service and self - sacrifice to the death, from which death
He came forth a victor by His resurrection. For thus did all the Apostles
walk in hope, and by many trials and sufferings they filled up those
things wanting to the Passion of Christ for His body which is the Church
(cf. Col. 1:24). For often, the blood of Christians was like a seed.(13)
6. This duty, to be fulfilled by the
order of bishops, under the successor of Peter and with the prayers and
help of the whole Church, is one and the same everywhere and in every
condition, even though it may be carried out differently according to
circumstances. Hence, the differences recognizable in this, the Church's
activity, are not due to the inner nature of the mission itself, but
rather to the circumstances in which this mission is exercised.
These circumstances in turn depend
sometimes on the Church, sometimes on the peoples or groups or men to whom
the mission is directed. For the Church, although of itself including the
totality or fullness of the means of salvation, does not and cannot always
and instantly bring them all into action. Rather, she experiences
beginnings and degrees in that action by which she strives to make God's
plan a reality. In fact, there are times when, after a happy beginning,
she must again lament a setback, or at least must linger in a certain
state of unfinished insufficiency. As for the men, groups and peoples
concerned, only by degrees does she touch and pervade them, and thus take
them up into full catholicity. The right sort of means and actions must be
suited to any state or situation.
"Missions" is the term usually given to
those particular undertakings by which the heralds of the Gospel, sent out
by the Church and going forth into the whole world, carry out the task of
preaching the Gospel and planting the Church among peoples or groups who
do not yet believe in Christ. These undertakings are brought to completion
by missionary activity and are mostly exercised in certain territories
recognized by the Holy See. The proper purpose of this missionary activity
is evangelization, and the planting of the Church among those peoples and
groups where it has not yet taken root.(14) Thus from the seed which is
the word of God, particular autochthonous churches should be sufficiently
established and should grow up all over the world, endowed with their own
maturity and vital forces. Under a hierarchy of their own, together with
the faithful people, and adequately fitted out with requisites for living
a full Christian life, they should make their contribution to the good of
the whole Church. The chief means of the planting referred to is the
preaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. To preach this Gospel the Lord
sent forth His disciples into the whole world, that being reborn by the
word of God (cf. 1 Peter 1:23), men might be joined to the Church through
baptism - that Church which, as the body of the Word Incarnate, is
nourished and lives by the word of God and by the eucharistic bread (cf.
Acts 2:43).
In this missionary activity of the
Church various stages sometimes are found side by side: first, that of the
beginning or planting, then that of newness or youth. When these have
passed, the Church's missionary activity does not cease, but there lies
upon the particular churches already set up the duty of continuing this
activity and of preaching the Gospel to those still outside.
Moreover, the groups among which the
Church dwells are often radically changed, for one reason or other, so
that an entirely new set of circumstances may arise. Then the Church must
deliberate whether these conditions might again call for her missionary
activity. Besides, circumstances are sometimes such that, for the time
being, there is no possibility of expounding the Gospel directly and
forthwith. Then, of course, missionaries can and must at least bear
witness to Christ by charity and by works of mercy, with all patience,
prudence and great confidence. Thus they will prepare the way for the Lord
and make Him somehow present.
Thus it is plain that missionary
activity wells up from the Church's inner nature and spreads abroad her
saving Faith. It perfects her Catholic unity by this expansion. It is
sustained by her apostolicity. It exercises the collegial spirit of her
hierarchy. It bears witness to her sanctity while spreading and promoting
it. Thus, missionary activity among the nations differs from pastoral
activity exercised among the faithful as well as from undertakings aimed
at restoring unity among Christians. And yet these two ends are most
closely connected with the missionary zeal(15) because the division among
Christians damages the most holy cause of preaching the Gospel to every
creature(16) and blocks the way to the faith for many. Hence, by the very
necessity of mission, all the baptized are called to gather into one
flock, and thus they will be able to bear unanimous witness before the
nations to Christ their Lord. And if they are not yet capable of bearing
witness to the same faith, they should at least be animated by mutual love
and esteem.
7. This missionary activity derives its
reason from the will of God, "who wishes all men to be saved and to come
to the knowledge of the truth. For there is one God, and one mediator
between God and men, Himself a man, Jesus Christ, who gave Himself as a
ransom for all" (1 Tim. 2:45), "neither is there salvation in any other"
(Acts 4:12). Therefore, all must be converted to Him, made known by the
Church's preaching, and all must be incorporated into Him by baptism and
into the Church which is His body. For Christ Himself "by stressing in
express language the necessity of faith and baptism (cf. Mark 16:16; John
3:5), at the same time confirmed the necessity of the Church, into which
men enter by baptism, as by a door. Therefore those men cannot be saved,
who though aware that God, through Jesus Christ founded the Church as
something necessary, still do not wish to enter into it, or to persevere
in it."(17) Therefore though God in ways known to Himself can lead those
inculpably ignorant of the Gospel to find that faith without which it is
impossible to please Him (Heb. 11:6), yet a necessity lies upon the Church
(1 Cor. 9:16), and at the same time a sacred duty, to preach the Gospel.
And hence missionary activity today as always retains its power and
necessity.
By means of this activity, the Mystical
Body of Christ unceasingly gathers and directs its forces toward its own
growth (cf. Eph. 4:11-16). The members of the Church are impelled to carry
on such missionary activity by reason of the love with which they love God
and by which they desire to share with all men the spiritual goods of both
its life and the life to come.
Finally, by means of this missionary
activity, God is fully glorified, provided that men fully and consciously
accept His work of salvation, which He has accomplished in Christ. In this
way and by this means, the plan of God is fulfilled - that plan to which
Christ conformed with loving obedience for the glory of the Father who
sent Him,(18) that the whole human race might form one people of God and
be built up into one temple of the Holy Spirit which, being the expression
of brotherly harmony, corresponds with the inmost wishes of all men. And
so at last, there will be realized the plan of our Creator who formed man
to His own image and likeness, when all who share one human nature,
regenerated in Christ through the Holy Spirit and beholding the glory of
God, will be able to say with one accord: "Our Father."(19)
8. Missionary activity is closely bound
up even with human nature itself and its aspirations. For by manifesting
Christ the Church reveals to men the real truth about their condition and
their whole calling, since Christ is the source and model of that redeemed
humanity, imbued with brotherly love, sincerity and a peaceful spirit, to
which they all aspire. Christ and the Church, which bears witness to Him
by preaching the Gospel, transcend every peculiarity of race or nation and
therefore cannot be considered foreign anywhere or to anybody.(20) Christ
Himself is the way and the truth, which the preaching of the Gospel opens
to all in proclaiming in the hearing of all these words of Christ:
"Repent, and believe the Gospel" (Mark 1:15). Now, since he who does not
believe is already judged (cf. John 3:18), the words of Christ are at one
and the same time words of judgment and of grace, of death and of life.
For it is only by putting to death what is old that we are able to
approach the newness of life. This is true first of all about persons, but
it holds also for the various goods of this world which bear the mark both
of man's sin and of God's blessing: "For all have sinned and have need of
the glory of God" (Rom. 3:23). No one is freed from sin by himself and by
his own power, no one is raised above himself, no one is completely rid of
his sickness or his solitude or his servitude.(21) On the contrary, all
stand in need of Christ, their model, their mentor, their liberator, their
Savior, their source of life. The Gospel has truly been a leaven of
liberty and progress in human history, even in the temporal sphere, and
always proves itself a leaven of brotherhood, of unity and of peace. Not
without cause is Christ hailed by the faithful as "the expected of the
nations, and their Savior."(22)
9. And so the time for missionary
activity extends between the first coming of the Lord and the second, in
which latter the Church will be gathered from the four winds like a
harvest into the kingdom of God.(23) For the Gospel must be preached to
all nations before the Lord shall come (cf. Mark 13:10).
Missionary activity is nothing else and
nothing less than an epiphany, or a manifesting of God's decree, and its
fulfillment in the world and in world history, in the course of which God,
by means of mission, manifestly works out the history of salvation. By the
preaching of the word and by the celebration of the sacraments, the center
and summit of which is the most holy Eucharist, He brings about the
presence of Christ, the author of salvation. But whatever truth and grace
are to be found among the nations, as a sort of secret presence of God, He
frees from all taint of evil and restores to Christ its maker, who
overthrows the devil's domain and wards off the manifold malice of vice.
And so, whatever good is found to be sown in the hearts and minds of men,
or in the rites and cultures peculiar to various peoples, not only is not
lost, but is healed, uplifted, and perfected for the glory of God, the
shame of the demon, and the bliss of men.(24) Thus, missionary activity
tends toward eschatological fullness.(25) For by it the people of God is
increased to that measure and time which the Father has fixed in His
power(cf. Acts 1:7). To this people it was said in prophecy: "Enlarge the
space for your tent, and spread out your tent cloths unsparingly" (Is.
54:2).(26) By missionary activity, the mystical body grows to the mature
measure of the fullness of Christ (cf. Eph. 4:13); and the spiritual
temple, where God is adored in spirit and in truth (cf. John 4:23), grows
and is built up upon the foundation of the Apostles and prophets, Christ
Jesus Himself being the supreme corner stone (Eph. 2:20).
CHAPTER II
MISSION WORK ITSELF
10. The Church, sent by Christ to reveal
and to communicate the love of God to all men and nations, is aware that
there still remains a gigantic missionary task for her to accomplish. For
the Gospel message has not yet, or hardly yet, been heard by two million
human beings (and their number is increasing daily), who are formed into
large and distinct groups by permanent cultural ties, by ancient religious
traditions, and by firm bonds of social necessity. Some of these men are
followers of one of the great religions, but others remain strangers to
the very knowledge of God, while still others expressly deny His
existence, and sometimes even attack it. The Church, in order to be able
to offer all of them the mystery of salvation and the life brought by God,
must implant herself into these groups for the same motive which led
Christ to bind Himself, in virtue of His Incarnation, to certain social
and cultural conditions of those human beings among whom He dwelt.
ARTICLE 1: Christian Witness
11. The Church must be present in these
groups through her children, who dwell among them or who are sent to them.
For all Christians, wherever they live, are bound to show forth, by the
example of their lives and by the witness of the word, that new man put on
at baptism and that power of the Holy Spirit by which they have been
strengthened at Conformation. Thus other men, observing their good works,
can glorify the Father (cf. Matt. ES:16) and can perceive more fully the
real meaning of human life and the universal bond of the community of
mankind.
In order that they may be able to bear
more fruitful witness to Christ, let them be joined to those men by esteem
and love; let them acknowledge themselves to be members of the group of
men among whom they live; let them share in cultural and social life by
the various. undertakings and enterprises of human living; let them be
familiar with their national and religious traditions; let them gladly and
reverently lay bare the seeds of the Word which lie hidden among their
fellows. At the same time, however, let them look to the: profound changes
which are taking place among nations, and let them exert themselves to
keep modern man, intent as he is on the science and technology of today's
world from becoming a stranger to things divine; rather, let them awaken
in him a yearning for that truth and:charity which God has revealed. Even
as Christ Himself searched the hearts of men, and led them to divine
light, so also His disciples, profoundly penetrated by the Spirit of
Christ, should show the people among whom they live, and should converse
with them, that they themselves may learn by sincere and patient dialogue
what treasures a generous God has distributed among the nations of the
earth. But at the same time, let them try to furbish these treasures, set
them free, and bring them under the dominion of God their Savior.
12. The presence of the Christian
faithful in these human groups should be inspired by that charity with
which God has loved us, and with which He wills that we should love one
another (cf. 1 John 4:11). Christian charity truly extends to all, without
distinction of race, creed, or social condition: it looks for neither gain
nor gratitude. For as God loved us with an unselfish love, so also the
faithful should in their charity care for the human person himself, loving
him with the same affection with which God sought out man. Just as Christ,
then, went about all the towns and villages, curing every kind of disease
and infirmity as a sign that the kingdom of God had come (cf. Matt.
9:35ff; Acts 10:38), so also the Church, through her children, is one with
men of every condition, but especially with the poor and the afflicted.
For them, she gladly spends and is spent (cf. 2 Cor. 12:15), sharing in
their joys and sorrows, knowing of their longings and problems, suffering
with them in death's anxieties. To those in quest of peace, she wishes to
answer in fraternal dialogue, bearing them the peace and the light of the
Gospel.
Let Christians labor and collaborate
with others in rightly regulating the affairs of social and economic life.
With special care, let them devote themselves to the education of children
and young people by means of different kinds of schools, which should be
considered not only as the most excellent means of forming and developing
Christian youth, but also as a valuable public service, especially in the
developing nations, working toward the uplifting of human dignity, and
toward better living conditions. Furthermore, let them take part in the
strivings of those peoples who, waging war on famine, ignorance, and
disease, are struggling to better their way of life and to secure peace in
the world. In this activity, the faithful should be eager to offer prudent
aid to projects sponsored by public and private organizations, by
governments, by various Christian communities, and even by non - Christian
religions.
However, the Church has no desire at all
to intrude itself into the government of the earthly city. It claims no
other authority than that of ministering to men with the help of God, in a
spirit of charity and faithful service (cf. Matt. 20:26; 23:11).(1)
Closely united with men in their life
and work, Christ's disciples hope to render to others true witness of
Christ, and to work for their salvation, even where they are not able to
announce Christ fully. For they are not seeking a mere material progress
and prosperity for men, but are promoting their dignity and brotherly
union, teaching those religious and moral truths which Christ illumined
with His light; and in this way, they are gradually opening up a fuller
approach to God. Thus they help men to attain to salvation by love for God
and neighbor, and the mystery of Christ begins to shine forth, in which
there appears the new man, created according to God (cf. Eph. 4:24), and
in which the charity of God is revealed.
ARTICLE 2: Preaching the Gospel
and Gathering together the People of God
13. Wherever God opens a door of speech
for proclaiming the mystery of Christ (cf. Col. 4:3), there is announced
to all men (cf. Mark 16:15; 1 Cor. 9:15; Rom. 10:14) with confidence and
constancy (cf. Acts 4:13, 29, 31; 9:27, 28; 13:46; 14:3; 19:8; 26:26;
28:31; 1 Thess. 2:2; 2 Cor. 3:12; 7:4; Phil. 1:20; Eph. 3:12; 6:19, 20)
the living God, and He Whom He has sent for the salvation of all, Jesus
Christ (cf. 1 Thess. 1:9-10; 1 Cor. 1:18-21; Gal. 1:31; Acts 14:15-17,
17:22-31), in order that non - Christians, when the Holy Spirit opens
their heart (cf. Acts 16:14), may believe and be freely converted to the
Lord, that they may cleave sincerely to Him Who, being the "way, the
truth, and the life" (John 14:6), fulfills all their spiritual
expectations, and even infinitely surpasses them.
This conversion must be taken as an
initial one, yet sufficient to make a man realize that he has been
snatched away from sin and led into the mystery of God's love, who called
him to enter into a personal relationship with Him in Christ. For, by the
workings of divine grace, the new convert sets out on a spiritual journey,
by means of which, already sharing through faith in the mystery of
Christ's Death and Resurrection, he passes from the old man to the new
one, perfected in Christ (cf. Col. 3:5-10; Eph. 4:20-24). This bringing
with it a progressive change of outlook and morals, must become evident
with its social consequences, and must be gradually developed during the
time of the catechumenate. Since the Lord he believes in is a sign of
contradiction (cf. Luke 2:34; Matt. 10:34-39), the convert often
experiences an abrupt breaking off of human ties, but he also tastes the
joy which God gives without measure (cf. 1 Thess. 1:6).
The Church strictly forbids forcing
anyone to embrace the Faith, or alluring or enticing people by worrisome
wiles. By the same token, she also strongly insists on this right, that no
one be frightened away from the Faith by unjust vexations on the part of
others.(2)
In accord with the Church's ancient
custom, the convert's motives should be looked into, and if necessary,
purified.
14. Those who, through the Church, have
accepted from God a belief in Christ(3) are admitted to the catechumenate
by liturgical rites. The catechumenate is not a mere expounding of
doctrines and precepts, but a training period in the whole Christian life,
and an apprenticeship duty drawn out, during which disciples are joined to
Christ their Teacher. Therefore, catechumens should be properly instructed
in the mystery of salvation and in the practice of Gospel morality, and by
sacred rites which are to be held at successive intervals,(4) they should
be introduced into the life of faith, of liturgy, and of love, which is
led by the People of God.
Then, when the sacraments of Christian
initiation have freed them from the power of darkness (cf. Col. 1:13),(5)
having died with Christ been buried with Him and risen together with Him
(cf. Rom. 6:4-11; Col. 2:12-13; 1 Peter 3:21-22; Mark 16:16), they receive
the Spirit (cf. 1 Thess. 3:5-7; Acts 8:14-17) of adoption of sons and
celebrate the remembrance of the Lord's death and resurrection together
with the whole People of God.
It is to be desired that the liturgy of
the Lenten and Paschal seasons should be restored in such a way as to
dispose the hearts of the catechumens to celebrate the Easter mystery at
whose solemn ceremonies they are reborn to Christ through baptism.
But this Christian initiation in the
catechumenate should be taken care of not only by catechists or priests,
but by the entire community of the faithful, so that right from the outset
the catechumens may feel that they belong to the people of God. And since
the life of the Church is an apostolic one, the catechumens also should
learn to cooperate wholeheartedly, by the witness of their lives and by
the profession of their faith, in the spread of the Gospel and in the
building up of the Church.
Finally, the juridic status of
catechumens should be clearly defined in the new code of Canon law. For
since they are joined to the Church, they are already of the household of
Christ,(7) and not seldom they are already leading a life of faith, hope,
and charity.
ARTICLE 3: Forming a Christian
Community
15. The Holy Spirit, who calls all men
to Christ by the seeds of the Lord and by the preaching of the Gospel,
stirs up in their: hearts a submission to the faith Who in the womb of the
baptismal font, He begets to a new life those who believe in Christ, He
gathers them into the one People of God which is "a chosen race, a royal
priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased people" (1 Peter 2:9).(8)
Therefore, let the missionaries, God's
coworkers, ( cf. 1 Cor. 3:9), raise up congregations of the faithful such
that, walking worthy of the vocation to which they have been called (cf.
Eph. 4:1), they may exercise the priestly, prophetic, and royal office
which God has entrusted to them. In this way, the Christian community will
be a sign of God's presence in the world: for by reason of the eucharistic
sacrifice, this community is ceaselessly on the way with Christ to the
Father;(9) carefully nourished on the word of God(10) it bears witness to
Christ;(11) and finally, it walks in charity and is fervent with the
apostolic spirit.(12)
The Christian community should from the
very start be so formed that it call provide nor its necessities insofar
as this is possible.
This congregation of the faithful,
endowed with the riches of its own nation's culture, should be deeply
rooted in the people. Let families flourish which are imbued with the
spirit of the Gospel(13) and let them be assisted by good schools; let
associations and groups be organized by means of which the lay apostolate
will be able to permeate the whole of society with the spirit of the
Gospel. Lastly, let charity shine out between Catholics of different
rites.(14)
The ecumenical spirit should be nurtured
in the neophytes, who should take into account that the brethren who
believe in Christ are Christ's disciples, reborn in baptism, sharers with
the People of God in very many good things. Insofar as religious
conditions allow, ecumenical activity - should be furthered in such a way
that, excluding any appearance of indifference or confusion on the one
hand, or of unhealthy rivalry on the other, Catholics should cooperate in
a brotherly spirit with their separated brethren, among to the norms of
the Decree on Ecumenism, making before the nations a common profession of
faith, insofar as their beliefs are common, in God and in Jesus Christ,
and cooperating in social and in technical projects as well as in cultural
and religious ones. Let them cooperate especially for the sake of Christ,
their common Lord: let His Name be the bond that unites them! This
cooperation should be undertaken not only among private persons, but also,
subject to approval by the local Ordinary, among churches or ecclesial
communities and their works.
The Christian faithful gathered together
out of all nations into the Church "are not marked off from the rest of
men by their government, nor by their language, nor by their political
institutions,"(15) and so they should live for God and Christ in a
respectable way of their own national life. As good citizens, they should
be true and effective patriots, all together avoiding racial prejudice and
hypernationalism, and should foster a universal love for man.
To obtain all these things, the most
important and therefore worthy of special attention are the Christian
laity: namely, those who have been incorporated into Christ and live in
the world. For it is up to them, imbued with the spirit of Christ, to be a
leaven working on the temporal order from within, to dispose it always in
accordance with Christ.(16)
But it is not enough that the Christian
people be present and be organized in a given nation, nor is it enough to
carry out an apostolate by way of example. They are organized for this
purpose, they are present for this, to announce Christ to their non -
Christian fellow - citizens by word and example, and to aid them toward
the full reception of Christ.
Now, in order to plant the Church and to
make the Christian community grow, various ministries are needed, which
are raised up by divine calling from the midst of the faithful
congregation, and are to be carefully fostered and tended to by all. Among
these are the offices of priests, of deacons, and of catechists, and
Catholic action. Religious men and women likewise, by their prayers and by
their active work, play an indispensable role in rooting and strengthening
the Kingdom of Christ in souls, and in causing it to be spread.
16. Joyfully the Church gives thanks for
the priceless gift of the priestly calling which God has granted to so
many youths among those nations but recently converted to Christ. For the
Church drives deeper roots in any given sector of the human family when
the various faithful communities all have, from among their members, their
own ministers of salvation in the order of bishops, priests, and deacons,
serving their own brethren, so that the young churches gradually acquire a
diocesan structure with their own clergy.
What this council has decreed concerning
priestly vocations and formation, should be religiously observed where the
Church is first planted, and among the young churches. Of great importance
are the things which are said about closely joining spiritual formation
with the doctrinal and pastoral; about living a life patterned after the
Gospel without looking out for ones own comfort or that of one's family;
about cultivating a deep appreciation of the mystery of the Church. From
all this, they will be well taught to dedicate themselves wholly to the
service of the Body of Christ and to the work of the Gospel, to cleave to
their own bishop as his faithful co - workers, and to cooperate with their
colleagues.(17)
To attain this general end, the whole
training of the students should be planned in the light of the mystery of
salvation as it is revealed in the Scriptures. This mystery of Christ and
of man's salvation they can discover and live in the liturgy.(18)
These common requirements of priestly
training, including the pastoral and practical ones prescribed by the
council(19) should be combined with an attempt to make contact with their
own particular national way of thinking and acting. Therefore, let the
minds of the students be kept open and attuned to an acquaintance and an
appreciation of their own nation's culture. In their philosophical and
theological studies, let them consider the points of contact which mediate
between the traditions and religion of their homeland on the one hand and
the Christian religion on the other.(20) Likewise, priestly training
should have an eye to the pastoral needs of that region; and the students
should learn the history, aim, and method of the Church's missionary
activity, and the special social, economic, and cultural conditions of
their own people. Let them be educated in the ecumenical spirit, and duly
prepared for fraternal dialogue with non - Christians.(21) All this
demands that studies for the priesthood be undertaken, so far as possible,
in association and living together with their own people.(22) Finally, let
care be taken that students are trained in ordinary ecclesiastical and
financial administration.
Moreover, suitable priests should be
chosen, after a little pastoral practice, to pursue higher studies in
universities, even abroad and especially in Rome as well as in other
institutes of learning. In this way the young churches will have at hand
men from among the local clergy equipped with the learning and skill
needed for discharging more difficult ecclesiastical duties.
Where episcopal conferences deem it
opportune, the order of the diaconate should be restored as a permanent
state of life according to the norms of the Constitution "De
Ecclesia."(23) For there are men who actually carry out the functions of
the deacon's office, either preaching the word of God as catechists, or
presiding over scattered Christian communities in the name of the pastor
and the bishop, or practicing charity in social or relief work. It is only
right to strengthen them by the imposition of hands which has come down
from the Apostles, and to bind them more closely to the altar, that they
may carry out their ministry more effectively because of the sacramental
grace of the diaconate.
17. Likewise worthy of praise are the
ranks of men and women catechists, well deserving of missionary work to
the nations. Imbued with the apostolic spirit, they labor much to make an
outstanding and altogether necessary contribution to the spread of the
Faith and of the Church.
In our time, when there are so few
clerics to preach the Gospel to such great numbers and to exercise the
pastoral ministry, the position of catechists is of great importance.
Therefore their training must be so accomplished and so adapted to
advances on the cultural level that as reliable coworkers of the priestly
order, they may perform their task well, though it be weighed down with
new and greater burdens.
There should therefore be an increase in
the number of schools, both on the diocesan and on the regional levels,
wherein future catechists may study Catholic doctrine, especially in the
fields of Scripture and the liturgy, as well as catechetical method and
pastoral practice; schools wherein they can develop in themselves a
Christian character, and wherein they can devote themselves tirelessly to
cultivating piety and sanctity of life. Moreover, conventions or courses
should be held in which at certain times catechists could he refreshed in
the disciplines and skills useful for their ministry and in which their
spiritual life could be nourished and strengthened. In addition, for those
who devote themselves entirely to this work, a decent standard of living
should be provided, and social security, by paying them a just wage.(24)
It would be desirable for the Sacred
Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith to provide special funds for
the due training and support of catechists. If it seems necessary and
fitting, let a special "Opus pro Catechists" be founded.
Moreover, the churches should gratefully
acknowledge the noble work being done by auxiliary catechists, whose help
they will need. These preside over the prayers in their communities and
teach sacred doctrine. Something suitable should be done for their
doctrinal and spiritual training. Besides, it is to be hoped that, where
it seems opportune, catechists who are duly trained should receive a "missio
canonica" in a publicly celebrated liturgical ceremony, so that in the
eyes of the people they may serve the Faith with greater authority.
18. Right from the planting stage of the
Church, the religious life should be carefully fostered. This not only
offers precious and absolutely necessary assistance to missionary
activity, but by a more inward consecration made to God in the Church, it
also clearly manifests and signifies the inner nature of the Christian
calling.(25)
Religious institutes, working to plant
the Church, and thoroughly Imbued with mystic treasures with which the
Church's religious tradition is adorned, should strive to give expression
to them and to hand them on, according to the nature and the genius of
each nation. Let them reflect attentively on how Christian religious life
might be able to assimilate the ascetic and contemplative traditions,
whose seeds were sometimes planted by God in ancient cultures already
prior to the preaching of the Gospel.
Various forms of religious life are to
be cultivated in the young churches, in order that they may display
various aspects of the mission of Christ and of the life of the Church,
and may devote themselves to various pastoral works, and prepare their
members to exercise them rightly. On the other hand, the bishops in their
conference should see to it that congregations pursuing the same apostolic
aims are not multiplied to the detriment of the religious life and of the
apostolate.
Worthy of special mention are the
various projects for causing the contemplative life to take root. There
are those who in such an attempt have kept the essential element of a
monastic institution, and are bent on implanting the rich tradition of
their order; there are others again who are returning to the simpler forms
of ancient monasticism. But all are studiously looking for a genuine
adaptation to local conditions. Since the contemplative life belongs to
the fullness of the Church's presence, let it be put into effect
everywhere.
CHAPTER III
PARTICULAR CHURCHES
19. The work of planting the Church in a
given human community reaches a certain goal when the congregation of the
faithful already rooted in social life and somewhat conformed to the local
culture, enjoys a certain firmness and stability. That is to say, it is
already equipped with its own supple (perhaps still insufficient) of local
priests, Religious, and lay men, and is endowed with these institutions
and ministries which are necessary for leading and expanding the life of
the people of God under the guidance of their own bishop.
In such new churches, the life of the
People of God must mature in all those fields of Christian life which are
to be reformed by the norms of this council. The congregations of the
faithful become daily more aware of their status as communities of faith,
liturgy, and love. The laity strive by their civic and apostolic activity
to set up a public order based on justice and love. The means of social
communication are put to wise use at the opportune time. By a truly
Christian life, families become seedbeds of the lay apostolate and of
vocations to the priesthood and the Religious life. Finally, the Faith is
taught by an adequate catechesis; it is celebrated in a liturgy in harmony
with the genius of the people, and by suitable canonical legislation, it
is introduced into upright institutions and local customs.
The bishops, in turn, each one together
with his own college of priests, being more and more imbued with the mind
of Christ and of the Church, feel and live along with the universal
Church. Let the young church keep up an intimate communion with the whole
Church, whose tradition they should link to their own culture, in order to
increase, by a certain mutual exchange of forces, the life of the Mystical
Body.(1) Hence, stress should be laid on those theological, psychological,
and human elements which can contribute to fostering this sense of
communion with the universal Church.
But these churches, very often located
in the poorer portions of the globe, are mostly suffering from a very
serious lack of priests and of material support. Therefore, they are badly
in need of the continued missionary activity of the whole Church to
furnish them with those subsidies which serve for the growth of the local
Church, and above all for the maturity of Christian life. This mission
action should also furnish help to those churches, founded long since,
which are in a certain state of regression or weakness.
Yet these churches should launch a
common pastoral effort and suitable works to increase the number of
vocations to the diocesan clergy and to religious institutes, to discern
them more readily, and to train them more efficiently,(2) so that little
by little these churches may be able to provide for themselves and to
bring aid to others.
20. Since the particular church is bound
to represent the universal Church as perfectly as possible, let it realize
that it has been sent to those also who are living in the same territory
with it, and who do not yet believe in Christ. By the life witness of each
one of the faithful and of the whole community, let the particular church
be a sign which points out Christ to others.
Furthermore, there is need of the
ministry of the word, so that the Gospel may reach all. The bishop should
be first and foremost a herald of the Faith, who leads new disciples to
Christ.(3) In order that he may properly fulfill this noble task, let him
thoroughly study both the conditions of his flock, and the private
opinions of his countrymen concerning God, taking careful note also of
those changes which urbanization, migrations, and religious indifferentism
have introduced.
The local priests in the young churches
should zealously address themselves to the work of spreading the Gospel,
and join forces with the foreign missionaries who form with them one
college of priests, united under the authority of the bishop. They should
do this, not only with a view to the feeding the faithful flock, and to
the celebrating of divine worship, but also to the preaching of the Gospel
to those outside, let them show themselves ready, and when the occasion
presents itself, let them with a willing heart offer the bishop their
services for missionary work in distant and forsaken areas of their own
diocese or of other dioceses.
Let religious men and women, and the
laity too, show the same fervent zeal toward their countrymen, especially
toward the poor.
Episcopal conferences should see to it
that biblical, theological, spiritual and pastoral refresher courses are
held at stated intervals with this intention, that amid all vicissitudes
and changes the clergy may acquire a fuller knowledge of the theological
sciences and of pastoral methods.
For the rest, those things which this
council has laid down, particularly in the Decree on the Life and Work of
Priests, should be religiously observed.
In order that this missionary work of
the particular church may be performed, there is need of qualified
ministers, who are to be prepared in due time in a way suited to the
conditions of each church. Now since men are more and more banding
together into associations, it is very fitting that episcopal conferences
should form a common plan concerning the dialogue to be held with such
associations. But if perchance in certain regions, groups of men are to be
found who are kept away from embracing the Catholic Faith because they
cannot adapt themselves to the peculiar form which the church has taken in
there, it is hoped that this condition will be provided for in a special
way,(4) until such time as all Christians can gather together in one
community. Let..individual bishops call to their dioceses the missionaries
whom the Holy See may have on hand for this purpose; or let them receive
such missionaries glad]y, and support their undertakings effectively.
In order that this missionary zeal may
flourish among those in their own homeland, it is very fitting that the
young churches should participate as soon as possible in the universal
missionary work of the Church, and send their own missionaries to proclaim
the Gospel all over the world, even though they themselves are suffering
from a shortage of clergy. For their communion with the universal Church
will be somehow brought to perfection when they themselves take an active
part in missionary zeal toward other nations.
21. The church has not been really
founded, and is not yet fully alive, nor is it a perfect sign of Christ
among men, unless there is a laity worthy of the name working along with
the hierarchy. For the Gospel cannot be deeply grounded in the abilities,
life and work of any people without the active presence of laymen.
Therefore, even at the very founding of a Church, great attention is to be
paid to establishing a mature, Christian laity.
For the lay faithful fully belong at one
and the same time both to the People of God and to civil society: they
belong to the nation in which they were born; they have begun to share in
its cultural treasures by means of their education; they are joined to its
life by manifold social ties; they are cooperating in its progress by
their efforts, each in his own profession; they feel its problems to be
their very own, and they are trying to solve them. They also belong to
Christ, because they were regenerated in the Church by faith and by
baptism, so that they are Christ's in newness of life and work (cf. 1 Cor.
15:23), in order that in Christ, all things may be made subject to God,
and finally God will be all in all (cf. Cor. 15:28).
Their main duty, whether they are men or
women, is the witness which they are bound to bear to Christ by their life
and works in the home, in their social milieu, and in their own
professional circle. In them, there must appear the new man created
according to God in justice and true holiness (cf. Eph. 4:24). But they
must give expression to this newness of life in the social and cultural
framework of their own homeland, according to their own national
traditions. They must be acquainted with this culture; they must heal it
and preserve it; they must develop it in accordance with modern
conditions, and finally perfect it in Christ, so that the Faith of Christ
and the life of the Church are no longer foreign to the society in which
they live, but begin to permeate and to transform it. Let them be one with
their fellow countrymen in sincere charity, so that there appears in their
way of life a new bond of unity and of universal solidarity, which is
drawn from the mystery of Christ. Let them also spread the Faith of Christ
among those with whom they live or have professional connections - an
obligation which is all the more urgent, because very many men can hear of
Christ and of the Gospel only by means of the laity who are their
neighbors. In fact, wherever possible, the laity should be prepared, in
more immediate cooperation with the hierarchy, to fulfill a special
mission of proclaiming the Gospel and communicating Christian teachings,
so that they may add vigor to the nascent Church.
Let the clergy highly esteem the arduous
apostolate of the laity. Let them train the laity to become conscious of
the responsibility which they as members of Christ have for all men; let
them instruct them deeply in the mystery of Christ, introduce them to
practical methods, and be at their side in difficulties, according to the
tenor of the Constitution Lumen Gentium and the Decree Apostolicam
Actuositatem.
While pastors and laymen, then, retain
each their own state of life and their own responsibilities, let the whole
young church render one firm and vital witness to Christ, and become a
shining beacon of the salvation which comes to us in Christ.
22. The seed which is the word of God,
watered by divine dew, sprouts from the good ground and draws from thence
its moisture, which it transforms and assimilates into itself, and finally
bears much fruit. In harmony with the economy of the Incarnation, the
young churches, rooted in Christ and built up on the foundation of the
Apostles, take to themselves in a wonderful exchange all the riches of the
nations which were given to Christ as an inheritance (cf Ps. 2:8). They
borrow from the customs and traditions of their people, from their wisdom
and their learning, from their arts and disciplines, all those things
which can contribute to the glory of their Creator, or enhance the grace
of their Savior, or dispose Christian life the way it should be.(5)
To achieve this goal, it is necessary
that in each major socio - cultural area, such theological speculation
should be encouraged, in the light of the universal Church's tradition, as
may submit to a new scrutiny the words and deeds which God has revealed,
and which have been set down in Sacred Scripture and explained by the
Fathers and by the magisterium.
Thus it will be more clearly seen in
what ways faith may seek for understanding, with due regard for the
philosophy and wisdom of these peoples; it will be seen in what ways their
customs, views on life, and social order, can be reconciled with the
manner of living taught by divine revelation. From here the way will be
opened to a more profound adaptation in the whole area of Christian life.
By this manner of acting, every appearance of syncretism and of false
particularism will be excluded, and Christian life will be accommodated to
the genius and the dispositions of each culture.(6) Particular traditions,
together with the peculiar patrimony of each family of nations, illumined
by the light of the Gospel, can then be taken up into Catholic unity.
Finally, the young particular churches, adorned with their own traditions,
will have their own place in the ecclesiastical communion, saving always
the primacy of Peter's See, which presides over the entire assembly of
charity.(7)
And so, it is to be hoped that episcopal
conferences within the limits of each major socio - cultural territory
will so coordinate their efforts that they may be able to pursue this
proposal of adaptation with one mind and with a common plan.
CHAPTER IV
MISSIONARIES
23. Although every disciple of Christ,
as far in him lies, has the duty of spreading the Faith,(1) Christ the
Lord always calls whomever He will from among the number of His disciples,
to be with Him and to be sent by Him to preach to the nations (cf. Mark
3:13). Therefore, by the Holy Spirit, who distributes the charismata as He
wills for the common good (1 Cor. 12:11), He inspires the missionary
vocation in the hearts of individuals, and at the same time He raises up
in the Church certain institutes(2) which take as their own special task
the duty of preaching the Gospel, a duty belonging to the whole Church.
They are assigned with a special
vocation who, being endowed with a suitable natural temperament, and being
fit as regards talent and other qualities, have been trained to undertake
mission work;(3) or be they autochthonous or be they foreigners: priests,
Religious, or laymen. Sent by legitimate authority, they go out in faith
and obedience to those who are far from Christ. They are set apart for the
work for which they have been taken up (cf. Acts 13:2), as ministers of
the Gospel, "that the offering up of the Gentiles may become acceptable,
being sanctified by the Holy Spirit" (Rom. 15:16).
24. Yet man must respond to God Who
calls, and that in such a way, that without taking counsel with flesh and
blood (Gal. 1:16), he devotes himself wholly to the work of the Gospel.
This response, however can only be given when the Holy Spirit gives His
inspiration and His power. For he who is sent enters upon the life and
mission of Him Who "emptied Himself, taking the nature of a slave" (Phil.
2:7). Therefore, he must be ready to stay at his vocation for an entire
lifetime, and to renounce himself and all those whom he thus far
considered as his own, and instead to "make himself all things to all men"
(1 Cor. 9:22).
Announcing the Gospel to all nations, he
confidently makes known the mystery of Christ, whose ambassador he is, so
that in him he dares to speak as he ought (cf. Eph. 6:19; Acts 4:31), not
being ashamed of the scandal of the Cross. Following in his Master's
footsteps, meek and humble of heart, he proves that His yoke is easy and
His burden light (Matt. 11:29ff.) By a truly evangelical life,(4) in much
patience, in long - suffering, in kindness, in unaffected love (cf. 2 Cor.
6:4ff.), he bears witness to his Lord, if need be to the shedding of his
blood. He will ask of God the power and strength, that he may know that
there is an overflowing of joy amid much testing of tribulation and deep
poverty (2 Cor. 8:2). Let him be convinced that obedience is the hallmark
of the servant of Christ, who redeemed the human race by His obedience.
The heralds of the Gospel lest they
neglect the grace which is in them, should be renewed day by day in the
spirit of their mind (cf. 1 Tim. 4:14; Eph. 4:23; 2 Cor. 4:16). Their
Ordinaries and superiors should gather the missionaries together from time
to time, that they be strengthened in the hope of their calling and may be
renewed in the apostolic ministry, even in houses expressly set up for
this purpose.
25. For such an exalted task, the future
missionary is to be prepared by a special spiritual and moral training.(5)
For he must have the spirit of initiative in beginning, as well as that of
constancy in carrying through what he has begun; he must be persevering in
difficulties, patient and strong of heart in bearing with solitude,
fatigue, and fruitless labor. He will encounter men with an open mind and
a wide heart; he will gladly take up the duties which are entrusted to
him; he will with a noble spirit adapt himself to the people's foreign way
of doing things and to changing circumstances; while in the spirit of
harmony and mutual charity, he will cooperate with his brethren and all
who dedicate themselves to the same task, so that together with the
faithful, they will be one heart and one soul (cf. Acts 2:42; 4:32)(7) in
imitation of the apostolic community.
These habits of mind should be earnestly
exercised already in his time of training; they should be cultivated, and
should be uplifted and nourished by the spiritual life. Imbued with a
living faith and a hope that never fails, the missionary should be a man
of prayer. Let him have an ardent spirit of power and of love and of
prudence (cf. 2 Tim. 1:7). Let him learn to be self - sufficing in
whatever circumstances (Phil. 4:11); always bearing about in himself the
dying of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may work in those to whom he is
sent (2 Cor. 4:10ff.), out of zeal of souls, let him gladly spend all and
be spent himself for souls (cf. 2 Cor. 12:15ff.), so that "by the daily
practice of his duty he may grow in the love of God and neighbor."(8) Thus
obedient to the will of the Father together with Christ, he will continue
His mission under the hierarchical authority of the Church.
26. Those who are sent to different
nations in order to be good ministers of Christ, should he nourished with
the "words of faith and with good doctrine" (1 Tim. 4:6), which they
should draw principally from the Sacred Scriptures, studying the mystery
of Christ, whose heralds and witnesses they will be.
Therefore, all missionaries - priests,
Brothers, Sisters, and lay folk - each according to their own state,
should be prepared and trained, lest they be found unequal to the demands
of their future work.(9) From the very beginning, their doctrinal training
should be so planned that it takes in both the universality of the Church
and the diversity of the world's nations. This holds for all of their
studies by which they are prepared for the exercise of the ministry, as
also for the other studies which it would be useful for them to learn,
that they may have a general knowledge of the peoples, cultures, and
religions; not only a knowledge that looks to the past, but one that
considers the present time. For anyone who is going to encounter another
people should have a great esteem for their patrimony and their language
and their customs. It is very necessary for the future missionary to
devote himself to missiological studies: that is, to know the teachings
and norms of the Church concerning missionary activity, to know along what
roads the heralds of the Gospel have run in the course of the centuries,
and also what is the present condition of the missions, and what methods
are considered more effective at the present time.(8)
But even though this entire training
program is imbued with pastoral solicitude, a special and organized
apostolic training ought to be given, by means of both teaching and
practical exercises.(9)
Brothers and Sisters, in great numbers,
should be well instructed and prepared in the catechetical art, that they
may collaborate still better in the apostolate.
Even those who take part in missionary
activity only for a time have to be given a training which is suited to
their condition.
All these different kinds of formation
should be completed in the lands to which they are sent, so that the
missionaries may have a more thorough knowledge of the history, social
structures, and customs of the people; that they may have an insight into
their moral order and their religious precepts, and into the secret
notions which, according to their sacred tradition, they have formed
concerning God, the world and man.(10) Let the missionaries learn the
languages to such a degree that they can use them in a fluent and polished
manner, and so find more easy access to the minds and the hearts of men.
(11) Furthermore, they should be properly introduced into special pastoral
problems.
Some should be more thoroughly prepared
in missiological institutes or in other faculties or universities, so that
they may be able to discharge special duties more effectively(12) and be a
help, by their learning, to other missionaries in carrying on the mission
work, which especially in our time presents so many difficulties and
opportunities. It is moreover highly desirable that the regional episcopal
conferences should have available an abundance of such experts, and that
they should make fruitful use of their knowledge and experience in the
necessities of their office. Nor should there be wanting some who are
perfectly skilled in the use of practical instruments and the means of
social communication, the importance of which should be highly appreciated
by all.
27. All these things, though necessary
for everyone who is sent to the nations, can scarcely be attained to in
reality by individual missionaries. Since even mission work itself, as
experience teaches, cannot be accomplished by lone individuals, a common
calling has gathered these individuals together into institutes, in which,
with united efforts, they are properly trained and might carry out this
work in the name of the Church and under the direction of the hierarchy.
For many centuries, these institutes have borne the burden of the day and
the heat, devoting themselves to missionary labor either entirely or in
part. Often vast territories were committed to them by the Holy See for
evangelization, and there they gathered together a new people for God, a
local church clinging to their own shepherds. With their zeal and
experience, they will serve, by fraternal cooperation either in the care
of souls or in rendering special services for the common good, those
churches which were founded at the cost of their sweat and even of their
blood.
Sometimes, throughout the entire extent
of some region, they will take certain tasks upon themselves; e.g., the
evangelization of groups of peoples who perhaps for special reasons have
not yet accepted the Gospel message, or who have thus far resisted it.(13)
If need be, let them be on hand to help
and train, out of their own experience, those who will devote themselves
to missionary activity for a time.
For these reasons, and since there are
still many nations to be led to Christ, the institutes remain extremely
necessary.
CHAPTER V
PLANNING MISSIONARY ACTIVITY
28. The Christian faithful, having
different gifts (cf. Rom. 12:6), according to each one's opportunity,
ability, charisms and ministry (cf. 1 Cor. 3:10) must all cooperate in the
Gospel. Hence all alike, those who sow and those who reap (cf. John 4:37),
those who plant and those who irrigate, must be one (cf. 1 Cor. 3:8), so
that "in a free and orderly fashion cooperating toward the same end,"(1)
they may spend their forces harmoniously for the building up of the
Church.
Wherefore, the labors of the Gospel
heralds and the help given by the rest of the Christian faithful must be
so directed and intertwined that "all may be done in order" (1 Cor. 14:40)
in all fields of missionary activity and cooperation.
29. Since the charge of proclaiming the
Gospel in the whole world falls primarily on the body of bishops,(2) the
synod of bishops or that "stable Council of bishops for the entire
Church,"(3) among the affairs of general concern,(4) should give special
consideration to missionary activity, which is the greatest and holiest
task of the Church.(5)
For all missions and for the whole of
missionary activity there should be only one competent office, namely that
of the "Propagation of the Faith," which should direct and coordinate,
throughout the world, both missionary work itself and missionary
cooperation. However, the law of the Oriental Churches is to remain
untouched.(6)
Although the Holy Spirit in diverse
manners arouses the mission spirit in the Church of God, and oft times
anticipates the action of those whose task it is to rule the life of the
Church, yet for its part, this office should promote missionary vocations
and missionary spirituality, zeal and prayer for the missions, and should
put out authentic and adequate reports about them. Let it raise up
missionaries and distribute them according to the more urgent needs of
various areas. Let it arrange for an orderly plan of action, issue
directives and principles adapted to evangelization, and give the impetus.
Let it take care of stimulating and coordinating an effective collection
of funds, which are to be distributed according to reasons of necessity
and usefulness, the extent of the territory in question, the number of
believers and non - believers, of undertakings and institutes, of
ministers and missionaries.
In coordination with the Secretariat for
Promoting Christian Unity, let it search out ways and means for bringing
about and directing fraternal cooperation as well as harmonious living
with missionary undertaking of other Christian communities, that as far as
possible the scandal of division may be removed.
Therefore, this office must be both an
instrument of administration and an organ of dynamic direction, which
makes use of scientific methods and means suited to the conditions of
modern times, always taking into consideration present - day research in
matters of theology, of methodology and missionary pastoral procedure.
In the direction of this office, an
active role with a deliberative vote should be had by selected
representatives of all those who cooperate in missionary work: that is,
the bishops of the whole world (the episcopal conferences should be heard
from in this regard), as well as the moderators of pontifical institutes
and works, in ways and under conditions to be fixed by the Roman Pontiff.
All these, being called together at stated times, will exercise supreme
control of all mission work under the authority of the Supreme Pontiff.
This office should have available a permanent group of expert consultors,
of proven knowledge and experience, whose duty it will be, among other
things to gather pertinent information about local conditions in various
regions, and about the thinking of various groups of men) as well as about
the means of evangelization to be used. They will then propose
scientifically based conclusions for mission work and cooperation.
Institutes of religious women, regional
undertakings for the mission cause, and organizations of laymen
(especially international ones) should be suitably represented.
30. In order that the proper goals and
results may be obtained, all missionary workers should have but "one heart
and one soul" (Acts 4:32) in the actual carrying out of mission work
itself.
It is the bishop's role, as the ruler
and center of unity in the diocesan apostolate, to promote missionary
activity, to direct it and to coordinate it but always in such a way that
the zeal and spontaneity of those who share in the work may be preserved
and fostered. All missionaries, even exempt Religious, are subject to his
power in the various works which refer to the exercise of the sacred
apostolate.(7) To improve coordination, let the bishop set up, insofar as
possible, a pastoral council, in which clergy, Religious, and laity may
have a part, through the medium of selected delegates. Moreover let them
take care that apostolic activity be not limited to those only who have
already been converted. A fair proportion of personnel and funds should be
assigned to the evangelization of non - Christians.
31. Episcopal conferences should take
common counsel to deal with weightier questions and urgent problems,
without however neglecting local differences.(8) Lest the already
insufficient supply of men and means be further dissipated, or lest
projects be multiplied without necessity, it is recommended that they pool
their resources to found projects which will serve the good of all as for
instance, seminaries; technical schools and schools of higher learning;
pastoral, catechetical, and liturgical centers; as well as the means of
social communication.
Such cooperation, when indicated, should
also be initiated between several different episcopal conferences.
32. It would also be good to coordinate
the activities which are being carried on by ecclesiastical institutes and
associations. All these, of whatever kind, should defer to the local
Ordinary in all that concerns missionary activity itself. Therefore, it
will be very helpful to, draw up contracts to regulate relations between
local Ordinaries and the moderator of the institute.
When a territory has been committed to a
certain institute, both the ecclesiastical superior and the institute will
be concerned to direct everything to this end, that the new Christian
community may grow into a local church, which in due time will be governed
by its own pastor with his clergy.
When the commission of a certain
territory expires, a new state of affairs begins. Then the episcopal
conference and the institutes in joint deliberation should lay down norms
governing the relations between local Ordinaries and the institutes.(9) It
will be the role of Holy See to outline the general principles according
to which regional and even particular contracts are to be drawn up.
Although the institutes will be prepared
to continue the work which they have begun, cooperating in the ordinary
ministry of the care of souls, yet when the local clergy grows numerous,
it will be provided that the institute, insofar as this is in agreement
with its purpose, should remain faithful to the diocese, generously taking
over special works or some area in it.
33. The institutes engaged in missionary
activity in the same territory should find ways and means of coordinating
their work. Therefore, it will be very useful to have conferences of
Religious men and unions of Religious women, in which institutes of the
same country or region should take part. These conferences should ask what
things can be done by combined efforts, and they should be in close touch
with the episcopal conferences.
All these things, with equal reason,
should be extended to include the cooperation of missionary institutes in
the home lands, so that questions and joint projects can be settled with
less expense, as for instance the formation of future missionaries, as
well as courses for missionaries, relations with public authorities and
with international or supranational organizations.
34. Since the right and methodical
exercise of missionary activity requires that those who labor for the
Gospel should be scientifically prepared for their task, and especially
for dialogue with non - Christian religions and cultures, and also that
they should be effectively assisted in the carrying out of this task, it
is desired that, for the sake of the missions, there should be fraternal
and generous collaboration on the part of scientific institutes which
specialize in missiology and in other arts and disciplines useful for the
missions, such as ethnology and linguistics, the history and science of
religions, sociology, pastoral skills and the like.
CHAPTER VI
COOPERATION
35. Since the whole Church is
missionary, and the work of evangelization is a basic duty of the People
of God, this sacred synod invites all to a deep interior renewal; so that,
having a vivid awareness of their own responsibility for spreading the
Gospel, they may do their share in missionary work among the nations.
36. As members of the living Christ,
incorporated into Him and made like unto Him through baptism and through
confirmation and the Eucharist, all the faithful are duty - bound to
cooperate in the expansion and spreading out of His Body, to bring it to
fullness as soon as may be (Eph. 4:13).
Therefore, all sons of the Church should
have a lively awareness of their responsibility to the world; they should
foster in themselves a truly catholic spirit; they should spend their
forces in the work of evangelization. And yet, let everyone know that
their first and most important obligation for the spread of the Faith is
this: to lead a profoundly Christian life. For their fervor in the service
of God and their charity toward others will cause a new spiritual wind to
blow for the whole Church, which will then appear as a sign lifted up
among the nations (cf. Is. 11:12), "the light of the world" (Matt. 5:14)
and "the salt of the earth" (Matt. 5:13). This testimony of a good life
will more easily have its effect if it is given in unison with other
Christian communities, according to the norms of the Decree on Ecumenism,
12.(1) From this renewed spirit, prayer and works of penance will be
spontaneously offered to God that He may fructify the missionaries' work
with His grace; and then there will be missionary vocations, and the
material subsidies which the missions need will be forthcoming.
But in order that each and every one of
the Christian faithful may he fully acquainted with the present condition
of the Church in the world, and may hear the voice of the multitudes who
cry "Help us!" (cf. Acts 16:9), modern means of social communication
should be used to furnish such mission information that the faithful may
feel this mission work to be their very own, and may open their hearts to
such vast and profound human needs, and may come to their assistance.
It is also necessary to coordinate the
information, and to cooperate with national and international agencies.
37. But since the People of God lives in
communities, especially in dioceses and parishes, and becomes somehow
visible in them, it is also up to these to witness Christ before the
nations.
The grace of renewal cannot grow in
communities unless each of these extends the range of its charity to the
ends of the earth, and devotes the same care to those afar off as it does
to those who are its own members.
Thus the whole community prays, works
together, and exercises its activity among the nations through those of
its sons whom God has chosen for this most excellent task.
It will be very useful, provided the
universal scope of mission work is not thereby neglected, to keep in
contact with missionaries who are from one's own community, or with some
parish or diocese in the missions, so that the communion between the
communities may be made visible, and serve for their mutual edification.
38. All bishops, as members of the body
of bishops succeeding to the College of Apostles, are consecrated not just
for some one diocese, but or the salvation of the entire world. The
mandate of Christ to preach the Gospel to every creature (Mark 16:15)
primarily and immediately concerns them, with Peter and under Peter.
Whence there arises that communion and cooperation of churches which is so
necessary today for carrying on the work of evangelization. In virtue of
this communion, the individual churches bear the burden of care for them
all, and make their necessities known to one another, and exchange mutual
communications regarding their affairs, since the extension of the Body of
Christ is the duty of the whole College of Bishops.(2)
In his own diocese, with which he
constitutes one unit the bishop, stimulating, promoting and directing the
work for the missions, makes the mission spirit and zeal of the People of
God present and as it were visible, so that the whole diocese becomes
missionary.
It will be the bishop's task to raise up
from among his own people, especially the sick and those oppressed by
hardship, some souls to offer prayers and penance to God with a wide -
open heart for the evangelization of the world. The bishop will also
gladly encourage youths and clerics who have vocations to mission
institutes, accepting it with a grateful spirit if God should call some of
them to be employed in the missionary activity of the Church. The bishop
will exhort and help the diocesan congregations to play a role of their
own in the missions; he will promote the works of mission institutes among
his own faithful, but most especially the papal mission works. For it is
only right to give these works pride of place, since they are the means of
imbuing Catholics from their very infancy with a real universal and
missionary outlook; and they are also the means of making an effective
collection of funds to subsidize all missions, each according to its
needs.(3)
But since the need for workers in the
vineyard of the Lord is growing from day to day, and diocesan priests have
expressed the wish to play an ever greater part in the evangelization of
the world, this sacred synod desires that the bishops considering the very
serious dearth of priests which is hindering the evangelization of many
areas, should send some of their better priests, who offer themselves for
mission work and have received a suitable preparation, to those dioceses
which are lacking in clergy, where at least for a time they will exercise
their missionary ministry in a spirit of service.(4)
But in order that the missionary
activity of the bishops may be exercised more effectively for the good of
the whole Church, it would be expedient for the episcopal conferences to
take charge of those affairs which concern the orderly cooperation of
their own region.
In their own conference, the bishops
should deliberate about dedicating to the evangelization of the nations
some priests from among the diocesan clergy; they should decide what
definite offering each diocese should be obliged to set aside annually for
the work of the missions, in proportion to its own budget;(5) they should
consider how to direct and control the ways and means by which the
missions receive direct help; they should deal with assisting and if need
be, founding, missionary institutes and seminaries for diocesan mission
clergy, and the promoting of closer relations between such institutes and
the dioceses.
It also pertains to the episcopal
conferences to found and promote works for the brotherly reception and due
pastoral care of those who immigrate from mission lands for the sake of
studying or finding work. For through them, far - away peoples are
sometimes made near; and an excellent opportunity is offered to
communities which have long been Christian to converse with nations which
have not yet heard the Gospel, and to show them in their own dutiful love
and aid, the genuine face of Christ.(6)
39. Priests personally represent Christ,
and are collaborators of the order of bishops in that threefold sacred
task which by its very nature belongs to the mission of the Church.(7)
Therefore, they should fully understand that their life is also
consecrated to the service of the missions. Now because by means of their
own ministry - which consists principally in the Eucharist which perfects
the Church - they are in communion with Christ the Head and are leading
others to this communion, they cannot help but feel how much is yet
wanting to the fullness of that Body, and how much therefore must be done
that it may grow from day to day. They shall therefore plan their pastoral
care in such a way that it will serve to spread the Gospel among non -
Christians.
In their pastoral activities, priests
should stir up and preserve amid the faithful a zeal for the
evangelization of the world, by instructing them in sermons and in
Christian doctrine courses about the Church's task of announcing Christ to
all nations; by enlightening Christian families about the necessity and
the honor of fostering missionary vocations among their own sons and
daughters, by promoting mission fervor in young people from the schools
and Catholic associations so that among them there may arise future
heralds of the Gospel. Let priests teach the faithful to pray for the
missions, and let them not be ashamed to ask alms of them for this
purpose, becoming like beggars for Christ and for the salvation of souls.
Professors in seminaries and
universities will teach young people the true state of the world and of
the Church, so that the necessity of a more intense evangelization of non
- Christians will become clear to them and will nurture their zeal. In
teaching the dogmatic, biblical, moral, and historical branches, they
should focus attention on the missionary elements therein contained, so
that in this way a missionary, awareness may be formed in future priests.
40. Religious institutes of the
contemplative and of the active life have so far played, and still do
play, the main role in the evangelization of the world. This sacred synod
gladly acknowledges their merits and thanks God for all that they have
expended for the glory of God and the service of souls while exhorting
them to go on untiringly in the work which they have begun, since they
know that the virtue of charity, which by reason of their vocation they
are bound to practice with greater perfection, obliges and impels them to
a truly catholic spirit and work.(9)
Institutes of the contemplative life, by
their prayers, sufferings, and works of penance have a very great
importance in the conversion of souls, because it is God who sends workers
into His harvest when He is asked to do so (cf. Matt. 9:38) God who opens
the minds of non - Christians to hear the Gospel (cf. Acts 16:14), and God
who fructifies the word of salvation in their hearts (cf. 1 C,or. 3:7). In
fact, these institutes are asked to found houses in mission areas, as not
a few of them have already done, so that there, living out their lives in
a way accommodated to the truly religious traditions of the people, they
can bear excellent witness among non - Christians to the majesty and love
of God, as well as to our union in Christ.
Institutes of the active life, whether
they pursue a strictly mission ideal or not, should ask themselves
sincerely in the presence of God, whether they would not be able to extend
their activity for the expansion of the Kingdom of God among the nations;
whether they could possibly leave certain ministries to others so that
they themselves could expend their forces for the missions, whether they
could possibly undertake activity in the missions, adapting their
constitutions if necessary, but according to the spirit of their founder;
whether their members are involved as totally as possible in the mission
effort; and whether their type of life is a witness to the Gospel
accommodated to the character and condition of the people.
Now since, under the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, secular institutes are daily increasing in the Church, their
activity, under the authority of the bishop, could be fruitful in the
missions in many ways as a sign of complete dedication to the
evangelization of the world.
41. Laymen cooperate in the Church's
work of evangelization; as witnesses and at the same time as living
instruments, they share in her saving mission;(10) especially if they have
been called by God and have been accepted by the bishop for this work.
In those lands which are already
Christian, laymen cooperate in the work of evangelization by nurturing in
themselves and in others a knowledge and love of the missions; by
stimulating vocations in their own family, in Catholic associations, and
in the schools; by offering subsidies of every kind, that they may offer
to others that gift of Faith which they have received gratis.
But in mission lands, let laymen,
whether foreigners or autochthonous, teach in schools, administer temporal
goods cooperate in parish and diocesan activities, and organize and
promote various forms of the lay apostolate, in order that the faithful of
the young churches may be able to take part as soon as possible in the
life of the Church.(11)
Lastly, let laymen gladly offer socio -
economic cooperation to peoples on the way of development. This
cooperation is all the more to be praised, the more it concerns itself
with founding institutes which touch on the basic structures of social
life, or which are oriented to the training of those who bear the
responsibility for the government.
Worthy of special praise are those
laymen who, in universities or in scientific institutes, promote by their
historical and scientific religious research the knowledge of peoples and
of religions; thus helping the heralds of the Gospel, and preparing for
the dialogue with non - Chistians.
They should cooperate in a brotherly
spirit with other Christians, with non - Christians, and with members of
international organizations, aways having before their eyes the fact that
"the building up of the earthly city should have its foundation in the
Lord, and should be directed towards Him."(12)
To be equal to all these tasks, laymen
need the necessary technical and spiritual preparation, which should be
given in institutes destined for this; so that their lives may be a
witness for Christ among non - Christians, according to the words of the
Apostle: "Do not be a stumbling - block to Jews and Greeks and to the
Church of God, even as I myself in all things please all men, not seeking
what is profitable to myself but to the many, that they may be saved." (1
Cor. 10:32-33).
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