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POST-SYNODAL
APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION
CHRISTIFIDELES LAICI
OF
HIS HOLINESS
JOHN PAUL II
ON THE VOCATION AND THE MISSION
OF THE LAY FAITHFUL
IN THE CHURCH AND IN THE WORLD
To Bishops
To Priests and Deacons
To Women and Men Religious
and to All the Lay Faithful
INTRODUCTION
1. THE LAY MEMBERS of Christ's Faithful People (Christifideles Laici),
whose "Vocation and Mission in the Church and in the World Twenty
Years after the Second Vatican Council" was the topic of the 1987
Synod of Bishops, are those who form that part of the People of God which
might be likened to the labourers in the vineyard mentioned in Matthew's
Gospel: "For the Kingdom of heaven is like a householder who went
out early in the morning to hire labourers for his vineyard. After agreeing
with the labourers for a denarius a day, he sent them into his vineyard" (Mt
20:1-2).
The gospel parable sets before our eyes the Lord's vast vineyard and
the multitude of persons, both women and men, who are called and sent
forth by him to labour in it. The vineyard is the whole world (cf. Mt
13:38), which is to be transformed according to the plan of God in view
of the final coming of the Kingdom of God.
You Go Into My Vineyard Too
2. "And going out about the third hour he saw others standing idle
in the marketplace; and to them he said, 'You go into the vineyard too'" (Mt
20:3-4).
From that distant day the call of the Lord Jesus "You go into my
vineyard too" never fails to resound in the course of history: it
is addressed to every person who comes into this world.
In our times, the Church after Vatican II in a renewed outpouring of
the Spirit of Pentecost has come to a more lively awareness of her missionary
nature and has listened again to the voice of her Lord who sends her
forth into the world as "the universal sacrament of salvation"(1).
You go too. The call is a concern not only of Pastors, clergy, and men
and women religious. The call is addressed to everyone: lay people as
well are personally called by the Lord, from whom they receive a mission
on behalf of the Church and the world. In preaching to the people Saint
Gregory the Great recalls this fact and comments on the parable of the
labourers in the vineyard: "Keep watch over your manner of life,
dear people, and make sure that you are indeed the Lord's labourers.
Each person should take into account what he does and consider if he
is labouring in the vineyard of the Lord"(2).
The Council, in particular, with its rich doctrinal, spiritual and pastoral
patrimony, has written as never before on the nature, dignity, spirituality,
mission and responsibility of the lay faithful. And the Council Fathers,
re-echoing the call of Christ, have summoned all the lay faithful, both
women and men, to labour in the vineyard: "The Council, then, makes
an earnest plea in the Lord's name that all lay people give a glad, generous,
and prompt response to the impulse of the Holy Spirit and to the voice
of Christ, who is giving them an especially urgent invitation at this
moment. Young people should feel that this call is directed to them in
particular, and they should respond to it eagerly and magnanimously.
The Lord himself renews his invitation to all the lay faithful to come
closer to him every day, and with the recognition that what is his is
also their own (Phil 2:5) they ought to associate themselves with him
in his saving mission. Once again he sends them into every town and place
where he himself is to come (cf. Lk 10:1)"(3).
You go into my vineyard too. During the Synod of Bishops, held in Rome,
1-30 October 1987, these words were re-echoed in spirit once again. Following
the path marked out by the Council and remaining open to the light of
the experience of persons and communities from the whole Church, the
Fathers, enriched by preceding Synods, treated in a specific and extensive
manner the topic of the vocation and mission of the lay faithful in the
Church and in the world.
In this assembly of bishops there was not lacking a qualified representation
of the lay faithful, both women and men, which rendered a valuable contribution
to the Synod proceedings. This was publicly acknowledged in the concluding
homily: "We give thanks that during the course of the Synod we have
not only rejoiced in the participation of the lay faithful (both men
and women auditors), but even more so in that the progress of the Synodal
discussions has enabled us to listen to those whom we invited, representatives
of the lay faithful from all parts of the world, from different countries,
and to profit from their experience, their advice and the suggestions
they have offered out of love for the common cause"(4).
In looking over the years following the Council the Synod Fathers have
been able to verify how the Holy Spirit continues to renew the youth
of the Church and how he has inspired new aspirations towards holiness
and the participation of so many lay faithful. This is witnessed, among
other ways, in the new manner of active collaboration among priests,
religious and the lay faithful; the active participation in the Liturgy,
in the proclamation of the Word of God and catechesis; the multiplicity
of services and tasks entrusted to the lay faithful and fulfilled by
them; the flourishing of groups, associations and spiritual movements
as well as a lay commitment in the life of the Church; and in the fuller
and meaningful participation of women in the development of society.
At the same time, the Synod has pointed out that the post-conciliar
path of the lay faithful has not been without its difficulties and dangers.
In particular, two temptations can be cited which they have not always
known how to avoid: the temptation of being so strongly interested in
Church services and tasks that some fail to become actively engaged in
their responsibilities in the professional, social, cultural and political
world; and the temptation of legitimizing the unwarranted separation
of faith from life, that is, a separation of the Gospel's acceptance
from the actual living of the Gospel in various situations in the world.
In the course of its work, the Synod made constant reference to the
Second Vatican Council, whose teaching on the lay faithful, after twenty
years, has taken on a surprisingly contemporary character and at times
has carried prophetic significance: such teaching has the capacity of
enlightening and guiding the responses that today must be given to new
situations. In reality, the challenge embraced by the Synod Fathers has
been that of indicating the concrete ways through which this rich "theory" on
the lay state expressed by the Council can be translated into authentic
Church "practice". Some situations have made themselves felt
because of a certain "novelty" that they have, and in this
sense they can be called post-conciliar, at least chronologically: to
these the Synod Fathers have rightly given a particular attention in
the course of their discussion and reflection. Among those situations
to be recalled are those regarding the ministries and Church services
entrusted at present and in the future to the lay faithful, the growth
and spread of new "movements" alongside other group forms of
lay involvement, and the place and role of women both in the Church and
in society.
At the conclusion of their work, which proceeded with great commitment,
competence and generosity, the Synod Fathers made known to me their desires
and requested that at an opportune time, a conclusive papal document
on the topic of the lay faithful be offered to the Universal Church(5).
This Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation intends to take into account
all the richness of the Synod work, from the Lineamenta to the Instrumentum
Laboris, from the introductory report, the presentations of individual
bishops and lay persons to the summary reports after discussion in the
Synod hall, from the discussions and reports of the "small groups" to
the final "Propositions" and the concluding "Message".
For this reason the present document is not something in contradistinction
to the Synod, but is meant to be a faithful and coherent expression of
it, a fruit of collegiality. As such, the Council of the General Secretariat
of the Synod of Bishops and the Secretariat itself have contributed to
its final form.
This Exhortation intends to stir and promote a deeper awareness among
all the faithful of the gift and responsibility they share, both as a
group and as individuals, in the communion and mission of the Church.
The Pressing Needs of the World Today: "Why do you stand here idle
all day?"
3. The basic meaning of this Synod and the most precious fruit desired
as a result of it, is the lay faithful's hearkening to the call of Christ
the Lord to work in his vineyard, to take an active, conscientious and
responsible part in the mission of the Church in this great moment in
history, made especially dramatic by occurring on the threshold of the
Third Millennium.
A new state of affairs today both in the Church and in social, economic,
political and cultural life, calls with a particular urgency for the
action of the lay faithful. If lack of commitment is always unacceptable,
the present time renders it even more so. It is not permissible for anyone
to remain idle.
We continue in our reading of the gospel parable: "And about the
eleventh hour he went out and found others standing; and he said to them,
'Why do you stand here idle all day?'. They said to him, 'Because no
one has hired us'. He said to them, 'You go into the vineyard too'"(
Mt 20:6-7).
Since the work that awaits everyone in the vineyard of the Lord is so
great there is no place for idleness. With even greater urgency the "householder" repeats
his invitation: "You go into my vineyard too".
The voice of the Lord clearly resounds in the depths of each of Christ's
followers, who through faith and the sacraments of Christian initiation
is made like to Jesus Christ, is incorporated as a living member in the
Church and has an active part in her mission of salvation. The voice
of the Lord also comes to be heard through the historic events of the
Church and humanity, as the Council reminds us: "The People of God
believes that it is led by the Spirit of the Lord, who fills the whole
world. Moved by this faith it tries to discern authentic signs of God's
presence and purpose in the events, the needs, and the longings which
it shares with other people of our time. For faith throws a new light
on all things and makes known the full ideal to which God has called
each individual, and thus guides the mind towards solutions which are
fully human"(6).
It is necessary, then, to keep a watchful eye on this our world, with
its problems and values, its unrest and hopes, its defeats and triumphs:
a world whose economic, social, political and cultural affairs pose problems
and grave difficulties in light of the description provided by the Council
in the Pastoral Constitution, Gaudium et Spes.(7)This, then, is the vineyard;
this is the field in which the faithful are called to fulfill their mission.
Jesus wants them, as he wants all his disciples, to be the "salt
of the earth" and the "light of the world" (cf. Mt 5:13-14).
But what is the actual state of affairs of the "earth" and
the "world", for which Christians ought to be "salt" and "light"?
The variety of situations and problems that exist in our world is indeed
great and rapidly changing. For this reason it is all the more necessary
to guard against generalizations and unwarranted simplifications. It
is possible, however, to highlight some trends that are emerging in present-day
society. The gospel records that the weeds and the good grain grew together
in the farmer's field. The same is true in history, where in everyday
life there often exist contradictions in the exercise of human freedom,
where there is found, side by side and at times closely intertwined,
evil and good, injustice and justice, anguish and hope.
Secularism and the Need for Religion
4. How can one not notice the ever-growing existence of religious indifference
and atheism in its more varied forms, particularly in its perhaps most
widespread form of secularism? Adversely affected by the impressive triumphs
of continuing scientific and technological development and above all,
fascinated by a very old and yet new temptation, namely, that of wishing
to become like God (cf. Gen 3:5) through the use of a liberty without
bounds, individuals cut the religious roots that are in their hearts;
they forget God, or simply retain him without meaning in their lives,
or outrightly reject him, and begin to adore various "idols" of
the contemporary world.
The present-day phenomenon of secularism is truly serious, not simply
as regards the individual, but in some ways, as regards whole communities,
as the Council has already indicated: "Growing numbers of people
are abandoning religion in practice"(8). At other times I myself
have recalled the phenomenon of de-Christianization that strikes long-standing
Christian people and which continually calls for a re-evangelization.
Human longing and the need tor religion, however, are not able to be
totally extinguished. When persons in conscience have the courage to
face the more serious questions of human existence-particularly questions
related to the purpose of life, to suffering and to dying-they are unable
to avoid making their own the words of truth uttered by Saint Augustine: "You
have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until
they rest in you"(9).In the same manner the present-day world bears
witness to this as well, in ever-increasing and impressive ways, through
an openness to a spiritual and transcendent outlook towards life, the
renewed interest in religious research, the return to a sense of the
sacred and to prayer, and the demand for freedom to call upon the name
of the Lord.
The Human Person: A Dignity Violated and Exalted
5. We furthermore call to mind the violations to which the human person
is subjected. When the individual is not recognized and loved in the
person's dignity as the living image of God (cf. Gen 1:26), the human
being is exposed to more humiliating and degrading forms of "manipulation",
that most assuredly reduce the individual to a slavery to those who are
stronger. "Those who are stronger" can take a variety of names:
an ideology; economic power, political and inhumane systems, scientific
technocracy or the intrusiveness of the mass-media. Once again we find
ourselves before many persons, our sisters and brothers, whose fundamental
rights are being violated, owing to their exceedingly great capacity
for endurance and to the clear injustice of certain civil laws: the right
to life and to integrity, the right to a house and to work, the right
to a family and responsible parenthood, the right to participation in
public and political life, the right to freedom of conscience and the
practice of religion.
Who is able to count the number of babies unborn because they have been
killed in their mothers' wombs, children abandoned and abused by their
own parents, children who grow without affection and education? In some
countries entire populations are deprived of housing and work, lacking
the means absolutely essential for leading a life worthy of a human being,
and are deprived even of those things necessary for their sustenance.
There are great areas of poverty and of misery, both physical and moral,
existing at this moment on the periphery of great cities. Entire groups
of human beings have been seriously afflicted.
But the sacredness of the human person cannot be obliterated, no matter
how often it is devalued and violated because it has its unshakable foundation
in God as Creator and Father. The sacredness of the person always keeps
returning, again and again.
The sense of the dignity of the human person must be pondered and reaffirmed
in stronger. terms. A beneficial trend is advancing and permeating all
peoples of the earth, making them ever more aware of the dignity of the
individual: the person is not at all a "thing" or an "object" to
be used, but primarily a responsible "subject", one endowed
with conscience and freedom, called to live responsibly in society and
history, and oriented towards spiritual and religious values.
It has been said that ours is the time of "humanism": paradoxically,
some of its atheistic and secularistic forms arrive at a point where
the human person is diminished and annihilated; other forms of humanism,
instead, exalt the individual in such a manner that these forms become
a veritable and real idolatry. There are still other forms, however,
in line with the truth, which rightly acknowledge the greatness and misery
of individuals and manifest, sustain and foster the total dignity of
the human person.
The sign and fruit of this trend towards humanism is the growing need
for participation, which is undoubtedly one of the distinctive features
of present-day humanity, a true "sign of the times" that is
developing in various fields and in different ways: above all the growing
need for participation regarding women and young people, not only in
areas of family and academic life, but also in cultural, economic, social
and political areas. To be leading characters in this development, in
some ways to be creators of a new, more humane culture, is a requirement
both for the individual and for peoples as a whole(10).
Conflict and Peace
6. Finally, we are unable to overlook another phenomenon that is quite
evident in present-day humanity: perhaps as never before in history,
humanity is daily buffeted by conflict. This is a phenomenon which has
many forms, displayed in a legitimate plurality of mentalities and initiatives,
but manifested in the fatal opposition of persons, groups, categories,
nations and blocks of nations. This opposition takes the form of violence,
of terrorism, and of war. Once again, but with proportions enormously
widespread, diverse sectors of humanity today, wishing to show their "omnipotence",
renew the futile experience of constructing the "Tower of Babel" (cf.
Gen 11:1-9), which spreads confusion, struggle, disintegration and oppression.
The human family is thus in itself dramatically convulsed and wounded.
On the other hand, totally unsupressible is that human longing experienced
by individuals and whole peoples for the inestimable good of peace in
justice. The gospel beatitude: "Blessed are the peacemakers" (Mt
5:9) finds in the people of our time a new and significant resonance:
entire populations today live, suffer and labour to bring about peace
and justice. The participation by so many persons and groups in the life
of society is increasingly pursued today as the way to make a desired
peace become a reality.
On this road we meet many lay faithful generously committed to the social
and political field, working in a variety of institutional forms and
those of a voluntary nature in service to the least.
Jesus Christ, the Hope of Humanity
7. This, then, is the vast field of labour that stands before the labourers
sent forth by the "householder" to work in his vineyard.
In this field the Church is present and working, every one of us, Pastors,
priests, deacons, religious and lay faithful. The adverse situations
here mentioned deeply affect the Church: they in part condition the Church,
but they do not crush her, nor even less overcome her, because the Holy
Spirit, who gives her life, sustains her in her mission.
Despite every difficulty, delay and contradiction caused by the limits
of human nature, by sin and by the Evil One, the Church knows that all
the forces that humanity employs for communion and participation find
a full response in the intervention of Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of
man and of the world.
The Church knows that she is sent forth by him as "sign and instrument
of intimate union with God and of the unity of all the human race"(11).
Despite all this, then, humanity is able to hope. Indeed it must hope:
the living and personal Gospel, Jesus Christ himself, is the "good
news" and the bearer of joy that the Church announces each day,
and to whom the Church bears testimony before all people.
The lay faithful have an essential and irreplaceable role in this announcement
and in this testimony: through them the Church of Christ is made present
in the various sectors of the world, as a sign and source of hope and
of love.
CHAPTER I
I AM THE VINE AND YOU ARE THE BRANCHES
The Dignity of the Lay Faithful in the Church as Mystery
The Mystery of the Vine
8. The Sacred Scriptures use the image of the vine in various ways.
In a particular case, the vine serves to express the Mystery of the People
of God. From this perspective which emphasizes the Church's internal
nature, the lay faithful are seen not simply as labourers who work in
the vineyard, but as themselves being a part of the vineyard. Jesus says, "I
am the vine, you are the branches" (Jn 15:5).
The prophets in the Old Testament used the image of the vine to describe
the chosen people. Israel is God's vine, the Lord's own work, the joy
of his heart: "I have planted you a choice vine" (Jer 2:21); "Your
mother was like a vine in a vineyard transplanted by the water, fruitful
and full of branches by reason of abundant water" (Ez 19:10); "My
beloved had a vineyard on a very fertile hill. He dug it and cleared
it of stones and planted it with choice vines ..."((Is 5:1-2).
Jesus himself once again takes up the symbol of the vine and uses it
to illustrate various aspects of the Kingdom of God: "A man planted
a vineyard, and set a hedge around it, and dug a pit for the winepress,
and built a tower and let it out to tenants and went into another country" (Mk
12:1; cf. Mt 21:28 ff.).
John the Evangelist invites us to go further and leads us to discover
the mystery of the vine: it is the figure and symbol not only of the
People of God, but of Jesus himself. He is the vine and we, his disciples,
are the branches. He is the "true vine", to which the branches
are engrafted to have life (cf. Jn 15:1 ff.).
The Second Vatican Council, making reference to the various biblical
images that help to reveal the mystery of the Church, proposes again
the image of the vine and the branches: "Christ is the true vine
who gives life and fruitfulness to the branches, that is, to us. Through
the Church we abide in Christ, without whom we can do nothing (Jn 15:1-5)"(12).
The Church herself, then, is the vine in the gospel. She is mystery because
the very life and love of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are the gift
gratuitously offered to all those who are born of water and the Holy
Spirit (cf. Jn 3:5), and called to relive the very communion of God and
to manifest it and communicate it in history (mission): "In that
day", Jesus says, "you will know tkat I am in my Father and
you in me, and I in you" (Jn 14:20).
Only from inside the Church's mystery of communion is the "identity" of
the lay faithful made known, and their fundamental dignity revealed.
Only within the context of this dignity can their vocation and mission
in the Church and in the world be defined.
Who are the Lay Faithful
9. The Synod Fathers have rightly pointed to the need for a definition
of the lay faithful's vocation and mission in positive terms, through
an in-depth study of the teachings of the Second Vatican Council in light
of both recent documentation from the Magisterium and the lived experience
of the Church, guided as she is by the Holy Spirit(13).
In giving a response to the question "Who are the lay faithful",
the Council went beyond previous interpretations which were predominantly
negative. Instead it opened itself to a decidedly positive vision and
displayed a basic intention of asserting the full belonging of the lay
faithful to the Church and to its mystery.
At the same time it insisted on the unique character of their vocation,
which is in a special way to "seek the Kingdom of God by engaging
in temporal affairs and ordering them according to the plan of God"(14). "The
term 'lay faithful'" -we read in the Constitution on the Church,
Lumen Gentium-" is here understood to mean all the faithful except
those in Holy Orders and those who belong to a religious state sanctioned
by the Church. Through Baptism the lay faithful are made one body with
Christ and are established among the People of God. They are in their
own way made sharers in the priestly, prophetic and kingly office of
Christ. They carry out their own part in the mission of the whole Christian
people with respect to the Church and the world"(15).
Pius XII once stated: "The Faithful, more precisely the lay faithful,
find themselves on the front lines of the Church's life; for them the
Church is the animating principle for human society. Therefore, they
in particular, ought to have an ever-clearer consciousness not only of
belonging to the Church, but of being the Church, that is to say, the
community of the faithful on earth under the leadership of the Pope,
the head of all, and of the Bishops in communion with him. These are
the Church ..."(16).
According to the Biblical image of the vineyard, the lay faithful, together
with all the other members of the Church, are branches engrafted to Christ
the true vine, and from him derive their life and fruitfulness.
Incorporation into Christ through faith and Baptism is the source of
being a Christian in the mystery of the Church. This mystery constitutes
the Christian's most basic "features" and serves as the basis
for all the vocations and dynamism of the Christian life of the lay faithful
(cf. Jn 3:5). In Christ who died and rose from the dead, the baptized
become a "new creation" (Gal 6:15; 2 Cor 5:17), washed clean
from sin and brought to life through grace.
Therefore, only through accepting the richness in mystery that God gives
to the Christian in Baptism is it possible to come to a basic description
of the lay faithful.
Baptism and the "Newness" of Christian Life
10. It is no exaggeration to say that the entire existence of the lay
faithful has as its purpose to lead a person to a knowledge of the radical
newness of the Christian life that comes from Baptism, the sacrament
of faith, so that this knowledge can help that person live the responsibilities
which arise from that vocation received from God. In arriving at a basic
description of the lay faithful we now more explicitly and directly consider
among others the following three fundamental aspects: Baptism regenerates
us in the life ot the Son of God; unites us to Christ and to his Body,
the Church; and anoints us in the Holy Spirit, making us spiritual temples.
Children in the Son
11. We here recall Jesus' words to Nicodemus: "Truly, truly, I
say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter
the kingdom of God"(Jn 3:5). Baptism, then, is a rebirth, a regeneration.
In considering this aspect of the gift which comes from Baptism, the
apostle Peter breaks out into song: "Blessed be the God and Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ! By his great mercy we have been born anew to
a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead,
and to an inheritance which is imperishable, undefiled and unfading"(
1 Pt 1:3-4). And he calls Christians those who have been "born anew,
not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding
word of God" (1 Pt 1:23).
With Baptism we become children of God in his only-begotten Son, Jesus
Christ. Rising from the waters of the Baptismal font, every Christian
hears again the voice that was once heard on the banks of the Jordan
River: "You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased" (Lk
3:22). From this comes the understanding that one has been brought into
association with the beloved Son, becoming a child of adoption (cf. Gal
4:4-7) and a brother or sister of Christ. In this way the eternal plan
of the Father for each person is realized in history: "For those
whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of
his Son, in order that he might be the first-born among many brethren" (Rom
8:29).
It is the Holy Spirit who constitutes the baptized as Children of God
and members of Christ's Body. St. Paul reminds the Christians of Corinth
of this fact: "For by one Spirit we are all baptized into one body" (1
Cor 12:13), so that the apostle can say to the lay faithful: "Now
you are the body of Christ and individually members of it" (1 Cor
12:27); "And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his
Son into our hearts" (Gal 4:6; cf. Rom 8:15-16).
We Are One Body in Christ
12 . Regenerated as "Children in the Son", the baptized are
inseparably joined together as "members of Christ and members of
the body of the Church", as the Council of Florence teaches(17).
Baptism symbolizes and brings about a mystical but real incorporation
into the crucified and glorious body of Christ. Through the sacrament
Jesus unites the baptized to his death so as to unite the recipient to
his resurrection (cf. Rom 6:3-5). The "old man" is stripped
away for a reclothing with "the new man", that is, with Jesus
himself: "For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put
on Christ" (Gal 3:27; cf. Eph 4:22-24; Col 3:9-10). The result is
that "we, though many, are one body in Christ" (Rom 12:5).
In the words of Saint Paul we find again the faithful echo of the teaching
of Jesus himself, which reveals the mystical unity of Christ with his
disciples and the disciples with each other, presenting it as an image
and extension of that mystical communion that binds the Father to the
Son and the Son to the Father in the bond of love, the Holy Spirit (cf.
Jn 17:21). Jesus refers to this same unity in the image of the vine and
the branches: "I am the vine, you the branches" (Jn 15:5),
an image that sheds light not only on the deep intimacy of the disciples
with Jesus but on the necessity of a vital communion of the disciples
with each other: all are branches of a single vine.
Holy and Living Temples of the Spirit
13. In another comparison, using the image of a building, the apostle
Peter defines the baptized as "living stones" founded on Christ,
the "corner stone", and destined to "be raised up into
a spiritual building" (1 Pt 2:5 ff.). The image introduces us to
another aspect of the newness of Christian life coming from Baptism and
described by the Second Vatican Council: "By regeneration and the
anointing of the Holy Spirit, the baptized are consecrated into a spiritual
house"(18).
The Holy Spirit "anoints" the baptized, sealing each with
an indelible character (cf. 2 Cor 1:21-22), and constituting each as
a spiritual temple, that is, he fills this temple with the holy presence
of God as a result of each person's being united and likened to Jesus
Christ.
With this spiritual "unction", Christians can repeat in an
individual way the words of Jesus: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon
me, because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has
sent me to proclaim release to captives and recovering of sight to the
blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable
year of the Lord" (Lk 4:18-19; cf. Is 61:1-2). Thus with the outpouring
of the Holy Spirit in Baptism and Confirmation, the baptized share in
the same mission of Jesus as the Christ, the Saviour-Messiah.
Sharers in the Priestly, Prophetic and Kingly Mission of Jesus Christ
14. Referring to the baptized as "new born babes", the apostle
Peter writes: "Come to him, to that living stone, rejected by men
but in God's sight chosen and precious; and like living stones be yourselves
built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood to offer spiritual
sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ ... you are a chosen
race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God's own people, that you may
declare the wonderful deeds of him who called you out of darkness into
his marvelous light" (1 Pt 2:4-5, 9).
A new aspect to the grace and dignity coming from Baptism is here introduced:
the lay faithful participate, for their part, in the threefold mission
of Christ as Priest, Prophet and King. This aspect has never been forgotten
in the living tradition of the Church, as exemplified in the explanation
which St. Augustine offers for Psalm 26:"David was anointed king.
In those days only a king and a priest were anointed. These two persons
prefigured the one and only priest and king who was to come, Christ (the
name "Christ" means "anointed"). Not only has our
head been anointed but we, his body, have also been anointed ... therefore
anointing comes to all Christians, even though in Old Testament times
it belonged only to two persons. Clearly we are the Body of Christ because
we are all "anointed" and in him are "christs", that
is, "anointed ones", as well as Christ himself, "The Anointed
One". In a certain way, then, it thus happens that with head and
body the whole Christ is formed"(19).
In the wake of the Second Vatican Council(20), at the beginning of my
pastoral ministry, my aim was to emphasize forcefully the priestly, prophetic
and kingly dignity of the entire People of God in the following words: "He
who was born of the Virgin Mary, the carpenter's Son -as he was thought
to be-Son of the living God (confessed by Peter), has come to make us
'a kingdom of priests' The Second Vatican Council has reminded us of
the mystery of this power and of the fact that the mission of Christ
-Priest, Prophet-Teacher, King-continues in the Church. Everyone, the
whole People of God, shares in this threefold mission"(21).
With this Exhortation the lay faithful are invited to take up again
and reread, meditate on and assimilate with renewed understanding and
love, the rich and fruitful teaching of the Council which speaks of their
participation in the threefold mission of Christ(22). Here in summary
form are the essential elements of this teaching.
The lay faithful are sharers in the priestly mission, for which Jesus
offered himself on the cross and continues to be offered in the celebration
of the Eucharist for the glory of God and the salvation of humanity.
Incorporated in Jesus Christ, the baptized are united to him and to his
sacrifice in the offering they make of themselves and their daily activities
(cf. Rom 12:1, 2). Speaking of the lay faithful the Council says: "For
their work, prayers and apostolic endeavours, their ordinary married
and family life, their daily labour, their mental and physical relaxation,
if carried out in the Spirit, and even the hardships of life if patiently
borne-all of these become spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through
Jesus Christ (cf. 1 Pt 2:5). During the celebration of the Eucharist
these sacrifices are most lovingly offered to the Father along with the
Lord's body. Thus as worshipers whose every deed is holy, the lay faithful
consecrate the world itself to God"(23).
Through their participation in the prophetic mission of Christ, "who
proclaimed the kingdom of his Father by the testimony of his life and
by the power of his world"(24), the lay faithful are given the ability
and responsibility to accept the gospel in faith and to proclaim it in
word and deed, without hesitating to courageously identify and denounce
evil. United to Christ, the "great prophet" (Lk 7:16), and
in the Spirit made "witnesses" of the Risen Christ, the lay
faithful are made sharers in the appreciation of the Church's supernatural
faith, that "cannot err in matters of belief"(25) and sharers
as well in the grace of the word (cf. Acts 2:17-18; Rev 19:10). They
are also called to allow the newness and the power of the gospel to shine
out everyday in their family and social life, as well as to express patiently
and courageously in the contradictions of the present age their hope
of future glory even "through the framework of their secular life"(26).
Because the lay faithful belong to Christ, Lord and King of the Universe,
they share in his kingly mission and are called by him to spread that
Kingdom in history. They exercise their kingship as Christians, above
all in the spiritual combat in which they seek to overcome in themselves
the kingdom of sin (cf. Rom 6:12), and then to make a gift of themselves
so as to serve, in justice and in charity, Jesus who is himself present
in all his brothers and sisters, above all in the very least (cf. Mt
25:40).
But in particular the lay faithful are called to restore to creation
all its original value. In ordering creation to the authentic well-being
of humanity in an activity governed by the life of grace, they share
in the exercise of the power with which the Risen Christ draws all things
to himself and subjects them along with himself to the Father, so that
God might be everything to everyone (cf. 1 Cor 15:28; Jn 12:32).
The participation of the lay faithful in the threefold mission of Christ
as Priest, Prophet and King finds its source in the anointing of Baptism,
its further development in Confirmation and its realization and dynamic
sustenance in the Holy Eucharist. It is a participation given to each
member of the lay faithful individually, in as much as each is one of
the many who form the one Body of the Lord: in fact, Jesus showers his
gifts upon the Church which is his Body and his Spouse. In such a way
individuals are sharers in the threefold mission of Christ in virtue
of their being members of the Church, as St. Peter clearly teaches, when
he defines the baptized as "a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a
holy nation, God's own people" (1 Pt 2:9). Precisely because it
derives from Church communion, the sharing of the lay faithful in the
threefold mission of Christ requires that it be lived and realized in
communion and for the increase of communion itself. Saint Augustine writes: "As
we call everyone 'Christians' in virtue of a mystical anointing, so we
call everyone 'priests' because all are members of only one priesthood"(27).
The Lay Faithful and Their Secular Character
15. The newness of the Christian life is the foundation and title for
equality among all the baptized in Christ, for all the members of the
People of God: "As members, they share a common dignity from their
rebirth in Christ, they have the same filial grace and the same vocation
to perfection. They possess in common one salvation, one hope and one
undivided charity"(28). Because of the one dignity flowing from
Baptism, each member of the lay faithful, together with ordained ministers
and men and women religious, shares a responsibility for the Church's
mission.
But among the lay faithful this one baptismal dignity takes on a manner
of life which sets a person apart, without, however, bringing about a
separation from the ministerial priesthood or from men and women religious.
The Second Vatican Council has described this manner of life as the "secular
character": "The secular character is properly and particularly
that of the lay faithful"(29).
To understand properly the lay faithful's position in the Church in
a complete, adequate and specific manner it is necesary to come to a
deeper theological understanding of their secular character in light
of God's plan of salvation and in the context of the mystery of the Church.
Pope Paul VI said the Church "has an authentic secular dimension,
inherent to her inner nature and mission, which is deeply rooted in the
mystery of the Word Incarnate, and which is realized in different forms
through her members"(30).
The Church, in fact, lives in the world, even if she is not of the world
(cf. Jn 17:16). She is sent to continue the redemptive work of Jesus
Christ, which "by its very nature concerns the salvation of humanity,
and also involves the renewal of the whole temporal order"(31).
Certainly all the members of the Church are sharers in this secular
dimension but in different ways. In particular the sharing of the lay
faithful has its own manner of realization and function, which, according
to the Council, is "properly and particularly" theirs. Such
a manner is designated with the expression "secular character"(32).
In fact the Council, in describing the lay faithful's situation in the
secular world, points to it above all, as the place in which they receive
their call from God: "There they are called by God"(33). This "place" is
treated and presented in dynamic terms: the lay faithful "live in
the world, that is, in every one of the secular professions and occupations.
They live in the ordinary circumstances of family and social life, from
which the very fabric of their existence is woven"(34). They are
persons who live an ordinary life in the world: they study, they work,
they form relationships as friends, professionals, members of society,
cultures, etc. However, the Council considers their condition not simply
an external and environmental framework, but as a reality destined to
find in Jesus Christ the fullness of its meaning(35). Indeed it leads
to the affirmation that "the Word made flesh willed to share in
human fellowship ... He sanctified those human ties, especially family
ones, from which social relationships arise, willingly submitting himself
to the laws of his country. He chose to lead the life of an ordinary
craftsman of his own time and place"(36).
The "world" thus becomes the place and the means for the lay
faithful to fulfill their Christian vocation, because the world itself
is destined to glorify God the Father in Christ. The Council is able
then to indicate the proper and special sense of the divine vocation
which is directed to the lay faithful. They are not called to abandon
the position that they have in the world. Baptism does not take them
from the world at all, as the apostle Paul points out: "So, brethren,
in whatever state each was called, there let him remain with God" (1
Cor 7:24). On the contrary, he entrusts a vocation to them that properly
concerns their situation in the world. The lay faithful, in fact, "are
called by God so that they, led by the spirit of the Gospel, might contribute
to the sanctification of the world, as from within like leaven, by fulfilling
their own particular duties. Thus, especially in this way of life, resplendent
in faith, hope and charity they manifest Christ to others"(37).Thus
for the lay faithful, to be present and active in the world is not only
an anthropological and sociological reality, but in a specific way, a
theological and ecclesiological reality as well. In fact, in their situation
in the world God manifests his plan and communicates to them their particular
vocation of "seeking the Kingdom of God by engaging in temporal
affairs and by ordering them according to the plan of God"(38).
Precisely with this in mind the Synod Fathers said: "The secular
character of the lay faithful is not therefore to be defined only in
a sociological sense, but most especially in a theological sense. The
term secular must be understood in light of the act of God the creator
and redeemer, who has handed over the world to women and men, so that
they may participate in the work of creation, free creation from the
influence of sin and sanctify themselves in marriage or the celibate
life, in a family, in a profession and in the various activities of society"(39).
The lay faithful's position in the Church, then, comes to be fundamentally
defined by their newness in Christian life and distinguished by their
secular character(40).
The images taken from the gospel of salt, light and leaven, although
indiscriminately applicable to all Jesus' disciples, are specifically
applied to the lay faithful. They are particularly meaningful images
because they speak not only of the deep involvement and the full participation
of the lay faithful in the affairs of the earth, the world and the human
community, but also and above all, they tell of the radical newness and
unique character of an involvement and participation which has as its
purpose the spreading of the Gospel that brings salvation.
Called to Holiness
16. We come to a full sense of the dignity of the lay faithful if we
consider the prime and fundamental vocation that the Father assigns to
each of them in Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit: the vocation to
holiness, that is, the perfection of charity. Holiness is the greatest
testimony of the dignity conferred on a disciple of Christ.
The Second Vatican Council has significantly spoken on the universal
call to holiness. It is possible to say that this call to holiness is
precisely the basic charge entrusted to all the sons and daughters of
the Church by a Council which intended to bring a renewal of Christian
life based on the gospel(41). This charge is not a simple moral exhortation,
but an undeniable requirement arising from the mystery of the Church:
she is the choice vine, whose branches live and grow with the same holy
and life-giving energies that come from Christ; she is the Mystical Body,
whose members share in the same life of holiness of the Head who is Christ;
she is the Beloved Spouse of the Lord Jesus, who delivered himself up
for her sanctification (cf. Eph 5:25 ff.). The Spirit that sanctified
the human nature of Jesus in Mary's virginal womb (cf. Lk 1:35) is the
same Spirit that is abiding and working in the Church to communicate
to her the holiness of the Son of God made man.
It is ever more urgent that today all Christians take up again the way
of gospel renewal, welcoming in a spirit of generosity the invitation
expressed by the apostle Peter "to be holy in all conduct" (1
Pt 1:15). The 1985 Extraordinary Synod, twenty years after the Council,
opportunely insisted on this urgency: "Since the Church in Christ
is a mystery, she ought to be considered the sign and instrument of holiness...
Men and women saints have always been the source and origin of renewal
in the most difficult circumstances in the Church's history. Today we
have the greatest need of saints whom we must assiduously beg God to
raise up"(42).
Everyone in the Church, precisely because they are members, receive
and thereby share in the common vocation to holiness. In the fullness
of this title and on equal par with all other members of the Church,
the lay faithful are called to holiness: "All the faithful of Christ
of whatever rank or status are called to the fullness of Christian life
and to the perfection of charity"(43). "All of Christ's followers
are invited and bound to pursue holiness and the perfect fulfillment
of their own state of life"(44).
The call to holiness is rooted in Baptism and proposed anew in the other
Sacraments, principally in the Eucharist. Since Christians are reclothed
in Christ Jesus and refreshed by his Spirit, they are "holy".
They therefore have the ability to manifest this holiness and the responsibility
to bear witness to it in all that they do. The apostle Paul never tires
of admonishing all Christians to live "as is fitting among saints" (Eph
5:3).
Life according to the Spirit, whose fruit is holiness (cf. Rom 6:22;Gal
5:22), stirs up every baptized person and requires each to follow and
imitate Jesus Christ, in embracing the Beatitudes, in listening and meditating
on the Word of God, in conscious and active participation in the liturgical
and sacramental life of the Church, in personal prayer, in family or
in community, in the hunger and thirst for justice, in the practice of
the commandment of love in all circumstances of life and service to the
brethren, especially the least, the poor and the suffering.
The Life of Holiness in the World
17. The vocation of the lay faithful to holiness implies that life according
to the Spirit expresses itself in a particular way in their involvement
in temporal affairs and in their participation in earthly activities.
Once again the apostle admonishes us: "Whatever you do, in word
or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to
God the Father through him" (Col 3:17). Applying the apostle's words
to the lay faithful, the Council categorically affirms: "Neither
family concerns nor other secular affairs should be excluded from their
religious programme of life"(45). Likewise the Synod Fathers have
said: "The unity of life of the lay faithful is of the greatest
importance: indeed they must be sanctified in everyday professional and
social life. Therefore, to respond to their vocation, the lay faithful
must see their daily activities as an occasion to join themselves to
God, fulfill his will, serve other people and lead them to communion
with God in Christ"(46).
The vocation to holiness must be recognized and lived by the lay faithful,
first of all as an undeniable and demanding obligation and as a shining
example of the infinite love of the Father that has regenerated them
in his own life of holiness. Such a vocation, then, ought to be called
an essential and inseparable element of the new life of Baptism, and
therefore an element which determines their dignity. At the same time
the vocation to holiness is intimately connected to mission and to the
responsibility entrusted to the lay faithful in the Church and in the
world. In fact, that same holiness which is derived simply from their
participation in the Church's holiness, represents their first and fundamental
contribution to the building of the Church herself, who is the "Communion
of Saints". The eyes of faith behold a wonderful scene: that of
a countless number of lay people, both women and men, busy at work in
their daily life and activity, oftentimes far from view and quite unacclaimed
by the world, unknown to the world's great personages but nonetheless
looked upon in love by the Father, untiring labourers who work in the
Lord's vineyard. Confident and steadfast through the power of God's grace,
these are the humble yet great builders of the Kingdom of God in history.
Holiness, then, must be called a fundamental presupposition and an irreplaceable
condition for everyone in fulfilling the mission of salvation within
the Church. The Church's holiness is the hidden source and the infallible
measure of the works of the apostolate and of the missionary effort.
Only in the measure that the Church, Christ's Spouse, is loved by him
and she, in turn, loves him, does she become a mother fruitful in the
Spirit.
Again we take up the image from the gospel: the fruitfulness and the
growth of the branches depends on their remaining united to the vine. "As
the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine,
neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the branches.
He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for
apart from me you can do nothing" (Jn 15:4-5).
It is appropriate to recall here the solemn proclamation of beatification
and canonization of lay men and women which took place during the month
of the Synod. The entire People of God, and the lay faithful in particular,
can find at this moment new models of holiness and new witnesses of heroic
virtue lived in the ordinary everyday circumstances of human existence.
The Synod Fathers have said: "Particular Churches especially should
be attentive to recognizing among their members the younger men and women
of those Churches who have given witness to holiness in such conditions
(everyday secular conditions and the conjugal state) and who can be an
example for others, so that, if the case calls for it, they (the Churches)
might propose them to be beatified and canonized"(47).
At the end of these reflections intended to define the lay faithful's
position in the Church, the celebrated admonition of Saint Leo the Great
comes to mind: "Acknowledge, O Christian, your dignity!"(48).
Saint Maximus, Bishop of Turin, in addressing those who had received
the holy anointing of Baptism, repeats the same sentiments: "Ponder
the honor that has made you sharers in this mystery!"(49). All the
baptized are invited to hear once again the words of Saint Augustine: "Let
us rejoice and give thanks: we have not only become Christians, but Christ
himself... Stand in awe and rejoice: We have become Christ"(50).
The dignity as a Christian, the source of equality for all members of
the Church, guarantees and fosters the spirit of communion and fellowship,
and, at the same time, becomes the hidden dynamic force in the lay faithful's
apostolate and mission. It is a dignity, however, which brings demands,
the dignity of labourers called by the Lord to work in his vineyard: "Upon
all the lay faithful, then, rests the exalted duty of working to assure
that each day the divine plan of salvation is further extended to every
person, of every era, in every part of the earth"(51).
CHAPTER II
ALL BRANCHES OF A SINGLE VINE
The Participation of the Lay Faithtul in the Life of Church as Communion
The Mystery of Church Communion
18. Again we turn to the words of Jesus: "I am the true vine and
my Father is the vinedresser... Abide in me and I in you" (Jn 15:
1, 4).
These simple words reveal the mystery of communion that serves as the
unifying bond between the Lord and his disciples, between Christ and
the baptized: a living and life-giving communion through which Christians
no longer belong to themselves but are the Lord's very own, as the branches
are one with the vine.
The communion of Christians with Jesus has the communion of God as Trinity,
namely, the unity of the Son to the Father in the gift of the Holy Spirit,
as its model and source, and is itself the means to achieve this communion:
united to the Son in the Spirit's bond of love, Christians are united
to the Father.
Jesus continues: "I am the vine, you are the branches" (Jn
15: 5). From the communion that Christians experience in Christ there
immediately flows the communion which they experience with one another:
all are branches of a single vine, namely, Christ. In this communion
is the wonderful reflection and participation in the mystery of the intimate
life of love in God as Trinity, Father, Son and Holy Spirit as revealed
by the Lord Jesus. For this communion Jesus prays: "that they may
all be one; even as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also
may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me" (Jn
17: 21).
Such communion is the very mystery of the Church, as the Second Vatican
Council recalls in the celebrated words of Saint Cyprian: "The Church
shines forth as 'a people made one with the unity of the Father, Son
and Holy Spirit'"(52). We are accustomed to recall this mystery
of Church communion at the beginning of the celebration of the Eucharist,
when the priest welcomes all with the greeting of the Apostle Paul: "The
grace of the Lord Jesus, the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy
Spirit be with you all" (2 Cor 13:13).
After having described the distinguishing features of the lay faithful
on which their dignity rests, we must at this moment reflect on their
mission and responsibility in the Church and in the world. A proper understanding
of these aspects, however, can be found only in the living context of
the Church as communion.
Vatican II and the Ecclesiology of Communion
19. At the Second Vatican Council the Church again proposed this central
idea about herself, as the 1985 Extraordinary Synod recalls: "The
ecclesiology of communion is a central and fundamental concept in the
conciliar documents. Koinonia-communion, finding its source in Sacred
Scripture, was a concept held in great honour in the early Church and
in the Oriental Churches, and this teaching endures to the present day.
Much was done by the Second Vatican Council to bring about a clearer
understanding of the Church as communion and its concrete application
to life. What, then, does this complex word 'communion' mean? Its fundamental
meaning speaks of the union with God brought about by Jesus Christ, in
the Holy Spirit. The opportunity for such communion is present in the
Word of God and in the Sacraments. Baptism is the door and the foundation
of communion in the Church. The Eucharist is the source and summit of
the whole Christian life (cf. Lumen Gentium, 11). The Body of Christ
in the Holy Eucharist sacramentalizes this communion, that is, it is
a sign and actually brings about the intimate bonds of communion among
all the faithful in the Body of Christ which is the Church (1 Cor 10:16)"(53).
On the day after the conclusion of the Council Pope Paul VI addressed
the faithful in the following words: "The Church is a communion.
In this context what does communion mean? We refer you to the paragraph
in the Catechism that speaks of the sanctorum communionem, 'the Communion
of Saints'. The meaning of the Church is a communion of saints. 'Communion'
speaks of a double, lifegiving participation: the incorporation of Christians
into the life of Christ, and the communication of that life of charity
to the entire body of the Faithful, in this world and in the next, union
with Christ and in Christ, and union among Christians, in the Church"(54).
Vatican Council II has invited us to contemplate the mystery of the
Church through biblical images which bring to light the reality of the
Church as a communion with its inseparable dimensions: the communion
of each Christian with Christ and the communion of all Christians with
one another. There is the sheepfold, the flock, the vine, the spiritual
building, the Holy City(55). Above all, there is the image of the Body
as set forth by the Apostle Paul. Its doctrine finds a pleasing expression
once again in various passages of the Council's documents(56). In its
turn, the Council has looked again at the entire history of salvation
and has reproposed the image of the Church as the People of God: "It
has pleased God to make people holy and to save them, not merely as individuals
without any mutual bonds, but by making them into a single people, a
people which acknowledges him in truth and serves him in holiness(57)." From
its opening lines, the Constitution Lumen Gentium summarizes this doctrine
in a wonderful way: "The Church in Christ is a kind of sacrament,
that is, a sign and instrument of intimate union with God and of the
unity of all the human race"(58).
The reality of the Church as Communion is, then, the integrating aspect,
indeed the central content of the "mystery", or rather, the
divine plan for the salvation of humanity. For this purpose ecclesial
communion cannot be interpreted in a sufficient way if it is understood
as simply a sociological or a psychological reality. The Church as Communion
is the "new" People, the "messianic" People, the
People that "has, for its head, Christ... as its heritage, the dignity
and freedom of God's Children... for its law, the new commandment to
love as Christ loved us... for its goal, the kingdom of God... established
by Christ as a communion of life, love and truth"(59). The bonds
that unite the members of the New People among themselves -and first
of all with Christ-are not those of "flesh and blood", but
those of the spirit, more precisely those of the Holy Spirit, whom all
the baptized have received (cf. Joel 3:1).
In fact, that Spirit is the One who from eternity unites the one and
undivided Trinity, that Spirit who "in the fullness of time" (Gal
4:4) forever unites human nature to the Son of God, that same identical
Spirit who in the course of Christian generations is the constant and
never-ending source of communion in the Church.
An Organic Communion: Diversity and Complementarity
20. Ecclesial communion is more precisely likened to an "organic" communion,
analogous to that of a living and functioning body. In fact, at one and
the same time it is characterized by a diversity and a complementarity
of vocations and states in life, of ministries, of charisms and responsibilities.
Because of this diversity and complementarity every member of the lay
faithful is seen in relation to the whole body and offers a totally unique
contribution on behalf of the whole body.
Saint Paul insists in a particular way on the organic communion of the
Mystical Body of Christ. We can hear his rich teaching echoed in the
following synthesis from the Council: "Jesus Christ"-we read
in the Constitution Lumen Gentium-"by communicating his Spirit to
his brothers and sisters, called together from all peoples, made them
mystically into his own body. In that body, the life of Christ is communicated
to those who believe... As all the members of the human body, though
they are many, form one body, so also are the Faithful in Christ (cf.
1 Cor 12:12). Also, in the building up of Christ's body there is a diversity
of members and functions. There is only one Spirit who, according to
his own richness and the necessities of service, distributes his different
gifts for the welfare of the Church (cf. 1 Cor 12:1-11). Among these
gifts comes in the first place the grace given to the apostles to whose
authority the Spirit himself subjects even those who are endowed with
charisms (cf. 1 Cor 14). Furthermore it is this same Spirit, who through
his power and through the intimate bond between the members, produces
and urges love among the faithful. Consequently, if one member suffers
anything, all the members suffer it too, and if one member is honoured,
all members together rejoice (cf. 1 Cor 12:26)"(60).
One and the same Spirit is always the dynamic principle of diversity
and unity in the Church. Once again we read in the Constitution Lumen
Gentium, "In order that we might be unceasingly renewed in him (cf.
Eph 4:23), he has shared with us his Spirit who, existing as one and
the same being in the head and in the members, gives life to, unifies
and moves the whole body. This he does in such a way that his work could
be compared by the Fathers to the function which the soul as the principle
of life fulfills in the human body"(60). And in another particularly
significant text which is helpful in understanding not only the organic
nature proper to ecclesial communion but also its aspect of growth toward
perfect communion, the Council writes: "The Spirit dwells in the
Church and in the hearts of the Faithful, as in a temple (cf. 1 Cor 3:16;
6:19). In them he prays and bears witness that they are adopted sons
(cf. Gal 4:6; Rom 8:15-16, 26). Guiding the Church in the way of all
truth (cf. Jn 16:13) and unifying her in communion and in the works of
service, he bestows upon her varied hierarchical and charismatic gifts
and adorns her with the fruits of his grace (cf. Eph 4:11-12; 1 Cor 12:4;
Gal 5:22). By the power of the Gospel he makes the Church grow, perpetually
renews her, and leads her to perfect union with her Spouse. The Spirit
and the Bride both say to the Lord Jesus, 'Come!' (cf. Rev 22:17)"(62).
Church communion then is a gift, a great gift of the Holy Spirit, to
be gratefully accepted by the lay faithful, and at the same time to be
lived with a deep sense of responsibility. This is concretely realized
through their participation in the life and mission of the Church, to
whose service the lay faithful put their varied and complementary ministries
and charisms.
A member of the lay faithful "can never remain in isolation from
the community, but must live in a continual interaction with others,
with a lively sense of fellowship, rejoicing in an equal dignity and
common commitment to bring to fruition the immense treasure that each
has inherited. The Spirit of the Lord gives a vast variety of charisms,
inviting people to assume different ministries and forms of service and
reminding them, as he reminds all people in their relationship in the
Church, that what distinguishes persons is not an increase in dignity,
but a special and complementary capacity for service... Thus, the charisms,
the ministries, the different forms of service exercised by the lay faithful
exist in communion and on behalf of communion. They are treasures that
complement one another for the good of all and are under the wise guidance
of their Pastors"(63).
Ministries and Charisms, the Spirit's Gifts to the Church
21. The Second Vatican Council speaks of the ministries and charisms
as the gifts of the Holy Spirit which are given for the building up of
the Body of Christ and for its mission of salvation in the world(64).
Indeed, the Church is directed and guided by the Holy Spirit, who lavishes
diverse hierarchical and charismatic gifts on all the baptized, calling
them to be, each in an individual way, active and coresponsible.
We now turn our thoughts to ministries and charisms as they directly
relate to the lay faithful and to their participation in the life of
Church-Communion.
Ministries, Offices and Roles
The ministries which exist and are at work at this time in the Church
are all, even in their variety of forms, a participation in Jesus Christ's
own ministry as the Good Shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep
(cf. Jn 10:11), the humble servant who gives himself without reserve
for the salvation of all (cf. Mk 10:45). The Apostle Paul is quite clear
in speaking about the ministerial constitution of the Church in apostolic
times. In his First Letter to the Corinthians he writes: "And God
has appointed in the Church first apostles, second prophets, third teachers..." (1
Cor 12:28). In his Letter to the Ephesians we read: "But the grace
was given to each of us according to the measure of Christ's gift...
And his gifts were that some should be apostles, some prophets, some
evangelists, some pastors and teachers, to equip the saints for the work
of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until we all attain
to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to
mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ" (Eph
4:7, 11-13; cf. Rom 12:4-8). These and other New Testament texts indicate
the diversity of ministries as well as of gifts and ecclesial tasks.
The Ministries Derived from Holy Orders
22. In a primary position in the Church are the ordained ministries,
that is, the ministries that come from the Sacrament of Orders. In fact,
with the mandate to make disciples of all nations (cf. Mt 28:19), the
Lord Jesus chose and constituted the apostles-seed of the People of the
New Covenant and origin of the Hierarchy (65)-to form and to rule the
priestly people. The mission of the Apostles, which the Lord Jesus continues
to entrust to the Pastors of his people, is a true service, significantly
referred to in Sacred Scripture as "diakonia", namely, service
or ministry. The ministries receive the charism of the Holy Spirit from
the Risen Christ, in uninterrupted succession from the apostles, through
the Sacrament of Orders: from him they receive the authority and sacred
power to serve the Church, acting in persona Christi Capitis (in the
person of Christ, the Head)(66) and to gather her in the Holy Spirit
through the Gospel and the Sacraments.
The ordained ministries, apart from the persons who receive them, are
a grace for the entire Church. These ministries express and realize a
participation in the priesthood of Jesus Christ that is different, not
simply in degree but in essence, from the participation given to all
the lay faithful through Baptism and Confirmation. On the other hand,
the ministerial priesthood, as the Second Vatican Council recalls, essentially
has the royal priesthood of all the faithful as its aim and is ordered
to it(67).
For this reason, so as to assure and to increase communion in the Church,
particularly in those places where there is a diversity and complementarity
of ministries, Pastors must always acknowledge that their ministry is
fundamentally ordered to the service of the entire People of God (cf.
Heb 5:1). The lay faithful, in turn, must acknowledge that the ministerial
priesthood is totally necessary for their participation in the mission
in the Church(68).
The Ministries, Offices and Roles of the Lay Faithful
23. The Church's mission of salvation in the world is realized not only
by the ministers in virtue of the Sacrament of Orders but also by all
the lay faithful; indeed, because of their Baptismal state and their
specific vocation, in the measure proper to each person, the lay faithful
participate in the priestly, prophetic and kingly mission of Christ.
The Pastors, therefore, ought to acknowledge and foster the ministries,
the offices and roles of the lay faithful that find their foundation
in the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation, indeed, for a good many
of them, in the Sacrament of Matrimony.
When necessity and expediency in the Church require it, the Pastors,
according to established norms from universal law, can entrust to the
lay faithful certain offices and roles that are connected to their pastoral
ministry but do not require the character of Orders. The Code of Canon
Law states: " When the necessity of the Church warrants it and when
ministers are lacking, lay persons, even if they are not lectors or acolytes,
can also supply for certain of their offices, namely, to exercise the
ministry of the word, to preside over liturgical prayers, to confer Baptism,
and to distribute Holy Communion in accord with the prescriptions of
the law"(69). However, the exercise of such tasks does not make
Pastors of the lay faithful: in fact, a person is not a minister simply
in performing a task, but through sacramental ordination. Only the Sacrament
of Orders gives the ordained minister a particular participation in the
office of Christ, the Shepherd and Head, and in his Eternal Priesthood(70).
The task exercised in virtue of supply takes its legitimacy formally
and immediately from the official deputation given by the Pastors, as
well as from its concrete exercise under the guidance of ecclesiastical
authority(71).
The recent Synodal Assembly has provided an extensive and meaningful
overview of the situation in the Church on the ministries, offices and
roles of the baptized. The Fathers have manifested a deep appreciation
for the contribution of the lay faithful, both women and men, in the
work of the apostolate, in evangelization, sanctification and the Christian
animation of temporal affairs, as well as their generous willingness
to supply in situations of emergency and chronic necessity(72).
Following the liturgical renewal promoted by the Council, the lay faithful
themselves have acquired a more lively awareness of the tasks that they
fulfill in the liturgical assembly and its preparation, and have become
more widely disposed to fulfill them: the liturgical celebration, in
fact, is a sacred action not simply of the clergy, but of the entire
assembly. It is, therefore, natural that the tasks not proper to the
ordained ministers be fulfilled by the lay faithful(73). In this way
there is a natural transition from an effective involvement of the lay
faithful in the liturgical action to that of announcing the word of God
and pastoral care(74).
In the same Synod Assembly, however, a critical judgment was voiced
along with these positive elements, about a too-indiscriminate use of
the word "ministry", the confusion and the equating of the
common priesthood and the ministerial priesthood, the lack of observance
of ecclesiastical laws and norms, the arbitrary interpretation of the
concept of "supply", the tendency towards a "clericalization" of
the lay faithful and the risk of creating, in reality, an ecclesial structure
of parallel service to that founded on the Sacrament of Orders.
Precisely to overcome these dangers the Synod Fathers have insisted
on the necessity to express with greater clarity, and with a more precise
terminology(75), both the unity of the Church's mission in which all
the baptized participate, and the substantial diversity of the ministry
of Pastors which is rooted in the Sacrament of Orders, all the while
respecting the other ministries, offices and roles in the Church, which
are rooted in the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation.
In the first place, then, it is necessary that in acknowledging and
in conferring various ministries, offices and roles on the lay faithful,
the Pastors exercise the maximum care to institute them on the basis
of Baptism in which these tasks are rooted. It is also necessary that
Pastors guard against a facile yet abusive recourse to a presumed "situation
of emergency" or to "supply by necessity", where objectively
this does not exist or where alternative possibilities could exist through
better pastoral planning.
The various ministries, offices and roles that the lay faithful can
legitimately fulfill in the liturgy, in the transmission of the faith,
and in the pastoral structure of the Church, ought to be exercised in
conformity to their specific lay vocation, which is different from that
of the sacred ministry. In this regard the Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi,
that had such a great part in stimulating the varied collaboration of
the lay faithful in the Church's life and mission of spreading the gospel,
recalls that "their own field of evangelizing activity is the vast
and complicated world of politics, society and economics, as well as
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, and 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 repressed and buried,
the more these realities will be at the service of the Kingdom of God
and therefore at the service 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"(76).
In the course of Synod work the Fathers devoted much attention to the
Lectorate and the Acolytate. While in the past these ministries existed
in the Latin Church only as spiritual steps on route to the ordained
ministry, with the motu proprio of Paul VI, Ministeria Quaedam (15 August
1972), they assumed an autonomy and stability, as well as a possibility
of their being given to the lay faithful, albeit, only to men. This same
fact is expressed in the new Code of Canon Law(77). At this time the
Synod Fathers expressed the desire that "the motu proprio Ministeria
Quaedam be reconsidered, bearing in mind the present practice of local
churches and above all indicating criteria which ought to be used in
choosing those destined for each ministry"(78).
In this regard a Commission was established to respond to this desire
voiced by the Synod Fathers, specifically to provide an in-depth study
of the various theological, liturgical, juridical and pastoral consideration
which are associated with the great increase today of the ministries
entrusted to the lay faithful.
While the conclusions of the Commission's study are awaited, a more
ordered and fruitful ecclesial practice of the ministries entrusted to
the lay faithful can be achieved if all the particular Churches faithfully
respect the above mentioned theological principles, especially the essential
difference between the ministerial priesthood and the common priesthood,
and the difference between the ministries derived from the Sacrament
of Orders and those derived from the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation.
Charisms
24. The Holy Spirit, while bestowing diverse ministries in Church communion,
enriches it still further with particular gifts or promptings of grace,
called charisms. These can take a great variety of forms, both as a manifestation
of the absolute freedom of the Spirit who abundantly supplies them, and
as a response to the varied needs of the Church in history. The description
and the classification given to these gifts in the New Testament are
an indication of their rich variety. "To each is given the manifestation
of the Spirit for the common good. To one is given through the Spirit
the utterance of wisdom, and to another the utterance of knowledge according
to the same Spirit, to another faith by the same Spirit, to another gifts
of healing by the one Spirit, to another the working of miracles, to
another prophecy, to another the ability to distinguish between spirits,
to another various kinds of tongues, to another the interpretation of
tongues" (1 Cor 12:7-10; cf. 1 Cor 12:4-6, 28-31; Rom 12:6-8; 1
Pt 4:10-11).
Whether they be exceptional and great or simple and ordinary, the charisms
are graces of the Holy Spirit that have, directly or indirectly, a usefulness
for the ecclesial community, ordered as they are to the building up of
the Church, to the well-being of humanity and to the needs of the world.
Even in our own times there is no lack of a fruitful manifestation of
various charisms among the faithful, women and men. These charisms are
given to individual persons, and can even be shared by others in such
ways as to continue in time a precious and effective heritage, serving
as a source of a particular spiritual affinity among persons. In referring
to the apostolate of the lay faithful the Second Vatican Council writes: "For
the exercise of the apostolate the Holy Spirit who sanctifies the People
of God through the ministry and the sacraments gives the faithful special
gifts as well (cf. 1 Cor 12:7), 'allotting them to each one as he wills'
(cf. 1 Cor 12:11), so that each might place 'at the service of others
the grace received' and become 'good stewards of God's varied grace'
(1 Pt 4:10), and build up thereby the whole body in charity (cf. Eph
4:16)"(79).
By a logic which looks to the divine source of this giving, as the Council
recalls(80), the gifts of the Spirit demand that those who have received
them exercise them for the growth of the whole Church.
The charisms are received in gratitude both on the part of the one who
receives them, and also on the part of the entire Church. They are in
fact a singularly rich source of grace for the vitality of the apostolate
and for the holiness of the whole Body of Christ, provided that they
be gifts that come truly from the Spirit and are exercised in full conformity
with the authentic promptings of the Spirit. In this sense the discernment
of charisms is always necessary. Indeed, the Synod Fathers have stated: "The
action of the Holy Spirit, who breathes where he will, is not always
easily recognized and received. We know that God acts in all Christians,
and we are aware of the benefits which flow from charisms both for individuals
and for the whole Christian community. Nevertheless, at the same time
we are also aware of the power of sin and how it can disturb and confuse
the life of the faithful and of the community"(81).
For this reason no charism dispenses a person from reference and submission
to the Pastors of the Church. The Council clearly states: "Judgment
as to their (charisms) genuineness and proper use belongs to those who
preside over the Church, and to whose special competence it belongs,
not indeed to extinguish the Spirit, but to test all things and hold
fast to what is good (cf. 1 Thess 5:12 and 19-21)"(82), so that
all the charisms might work together, in their diversity and complementarity,
for the common good(83).
The Lay Faithful's Participation in the Life of the Church
25. The lay faithful participate in the life of the Church not only
in exercising their tasks and charisms, but also in many other ways.
Such participation finds its first and necessary expression in the life
and mission of the particular Church, in the diocese in which "the
Church of Christ, one, holy, catholic and apostolic, is truly present
and at work"(84).
The Particular Churches and the Universal Church
For an adequate participation in ecclesial life the lay faithful absolutely
need to have a clear and precise vision of the particular Church with
its primordial bond to the universal Church. The particular Church does
not come about from a kind of fragmentation of the universal Church,
nor does the universal Church come about by a simple amalgamation of
particular Churches. But there is a real, essential and constant bond
uniting each of them and this is why the universal Church exists and
is manifested in the particular Churches. For this reason the Council
says that the particular Churches "are constituted after the model
of the universal Church; it is in and from these particular Churches
that there come into being the one and unique Catholic Church"(85).
The same Council strongly encourages the lay faithful actively to live
out their belonging to the particular Church, while at the same time
assuming an ever-increasing "catholic" spirit: "Let the
lay faithful constantly foster"-we read in the Decree on the Apostolate
of Lay People- "a feeling for their own diocese, of which the parish
is a kind of cell, and be always ready at their bishops' invitation to
participate in diocesan projects. Indeed, if the needs of cities and
rural areas are to be met, lay people should not limit their cooperation
to the parochial or diocesan boundaries but strive to extend it to interparochial,
interdiocesan, national and international fields, the more so because
the daily increase in population mobility, the growth of mutual bonds,
and the ease of communication no longer allow any sector of society to
remain closed in upon itself. Thus they should be concerned about the
needs of the People of God scattered throughout the world"(86).
In this sense, the recent Synod has favored the creation of Diocesan
Pastoral Councils, as a recourse at opportune times. In fact, on a diocesan
level this structure could be the principle form of collaboration, dialogue,
and discernment as well. The participation of the lay faithful in these
Councils can broaden resources in consultation and the principle of collaboration-and
in certain instances also in decision-making - if applied in a broad
and determined manner(87).
The participation of the lay faithful in Diocesan Synods and in local
Councils, whether provincial or plenary, is envisioned by the Code of
Canon Law(88). These structures could contribute to Church communion
and the mission of the particular Church, both in its own surroundings
and in relation to the other particular Churches of the ecclesiastical
province or Episcopal Conference.
Episcopal Conferences are called to evaluate the most oportune way of
developing the consultation and the collaboration of the lay faithful,
women and men, at a national or regional level, so that they may consider
well the problems they share and manifest better the communion of the
whole Church(89).
The Parish
26. The ecclesial community, while always having a universal dimension,
finds its most immediate and visible expression in the parish. It is
there that the Church is seen locally. In a certain sense it is the Church
living in the midst of the homes of her sons and daughters(90).
It is necessary that in light of the faith all rediscover the true meaning
of the parish, that is, the place where the very "mystery" of
the Church is present and at work, even if at times it is lacking persons
and means, even if at other times it might be scattered over vast territories
or almost not to be found in crowded and chaotic modern sections of cities.
The parish is not principally a structure, a territory, or a building,
but rather, "the family of God, a fellowship afire with a unifying
spirit"(91), "a familial and welcoming home"(92), the "community
of the faithful"(93). Plainly and simply, the parish is founded
on a theological reality, because it is a Eucharistic community(94).
This means that the parish is a community properly suited for celebrating
the Eucharist, the living source for its upbuilding and the sacramental
bond of its being in full communion with the whole Church. Such suitableness
is rooted in the fact that the parish is a community of faith and an
organic community, that is, constituted by the ordained ministers and
other Christians, in which the pastor-who represents the diocesan bishop(95)-is
the hierarchical bond with the entire particular Church.
Since the Church's task in our day is so great its accomplishment cannot
be left to the parish alone. For this reason the Code of Canon Law provides
for forms of collaboration among parishes in a given territory(96) and
recommends to the bishop's care the various groups of the Christian Faithful,
even the unbaptized who are not under his ordinary pastoral care(97).
There are many other places and forms of association through which the
Church can be present and at work. All are necessary to carry out the
word and grace of the Gospel and to correspond to the various circumstances
of life in which people find themselves today. In a similar way there
exist in the areas of culture, society, education, professions, etc.
many other ways for spreading the faith and other settings for the apostolate
which cannot have the parish as their center and origin. Nevertheless,
in our day the parish still enjoys a new and promising season. At the
beginning of his pontificate, Paul VI addressed the Roman clergy in these
words: "We believe simply that this old and venerable structure
of the parish has an indispensable mission of great contemporary importance:
to create the basic community of the Christian people; to initiate and
gather the people in the accustomed expression of liturgical life; to
conserve and renew the faith in the people of today; to serve as the
school for teaching the salvific message of Christ; to put solidarity
in practice and work the humble charity of good and brotherly works"(98).
The Synod Fathers for their part have given much attention to the present
state of many parishes and have called for a greater effort in their
renewal: "Many parishes, whether established in regions affécted
by urban progress or in missionary territory, cannot do their work effectively
because they lack material resources or ordained men or are too big geographically
or because of the particular circumstances of some Christians (e.g. exiles
and migrants). So that all parishes of this kind may be truly communities
of Christians, local ecclesial authorities ought to foster the following:
a) adaptation of parish structures according to the full flexibility
granted by canon law, especially in promoting participation by the lay
faithfulinpastoral responsibilities; b) small, basic or so-called "living" communities,
where the faithful can communicate the Word of God and express it in
service and love to one another; these communities are true expressions
of ecclesial communion and centers of evangelization, in communion with
their pastors"(99). For the renewal of parishes and for a better
assurance of their effectiveness in work, various forms of cooperation
even on the institutional level ought to be fostered among diverse parishes
in the same area.
The Apostolic Commitment in the Parish
27. It is now necessary to look more closely at the communion and participation
of the lay faithful in parish life. In this regard all lay men and women
are called to give greater attention to a particularly meaningful, stirring
and incisive passage from the Council: "Their activity within Church
communities is so necessary that without it the apostolate of the Pastors
is generally unable to achieve its full effectiveness"(100).
This is indeed a particularly important affirmation, which evidently
must be interpreted in light of the "ecclesiology of communion".
Ministries and charisms, being diverse and complementary, are all necessary
for the Church to grow, each in its own way.
The lay faithful ought to be ever more convinced of the special meaning
that their commitment to the apostolate takes on in their parish. Once
again the Council authoritatively places it in relief: "The parish
offers an outstanding example of the apostolate on the community level,
inasmuch as it brings together the many human differences found within
its boundaries and draws them into the universality of the Church. The
lay faithful should accustom themselves to working in the parish in close
union with their priests, bringing to the Church community their own
and the world's problems as well as questions concerning human salvation,
all of which need to be examined together and solved through general
discussion. As far as possible the lay faithful ought to collaborate
in every apostolic and missionary undertaking sponsored by their own
ecclesial family"(101).
The Council's mention of examining and solving pastoral problems "by
general discussion" ought to find its adequate and structured development
through a more convinced, extensive and decided appreciation for "Parish
Pastoral Councils", on which the Synod Fathers have rightly insisted(102).
In the present circumstances the lay faithful have the ability to do
very much and, therefore, ought to do very much towards the growth of
an authentic ecclesial communion in their parishes in order to reawaken
missionary zeal towards nonbelievers and believers themselves who have
abandoned the faith or grown lax in the Christian life.
If indeed, the parish is the Church placed in the neighborhoods of humanity,
it lives and is at work through being deeply inserted in human society
and intimately bound up with its aspirations and its dramatic events.
Oftentimes the social context, especially in certain countries and environments,
is violently shaken by elements of disintegration and de-humanization.
The individual is lost and disoriented, but there always remains in the
human heart the desire to experience and cultivate caring and personal
relationships. The response to such a desire can come from the parish,
when, with the lay faithful's participation, it adheres to its fundamental
vocation and mission, that is, to be a "place" in the world
for the community of believers to gather together as a "sign" and "instrument" of
the vocation of all to communion, in a word, to be a house of welcome
to all and a place of service to all, or, as Pope John XXIII was fond
of saying, to be the "village fountain" to which all would
have recourse in their thirst.
The Forms of Participation in the Life of the Church
28. The lay faithful together with the clergy and women and men religious,
make up the one People of God and the Body of Christ.
Being "members" of the Church takes nothing away from the
fact that each Christian as an individual is "unique and irrepeatable".
On the contrary, this belonging guarantees and fosters the profound sense
of that uniqueness and irrepeatability, in so far as these very qualities
are the source of variety and richness for the whole Church. Therefore,
God calls the individual in Jesus Christ, each one personally by name.
In this sense, the Lord's words "You go into my vineyard too",
directed to the Church as a whole, come specially addressed to each member
individually.
Because of each member's unique and irrepeatable character, that is,
one's identity and actions as a person, each individual is placed at
the service of the growth of the ecclesial community while, at the same
time, singularly receiving and sharing in the common richness of all
the Church. This is the "Communion of Saints" which we profess
in the Creed. The good of all becomes the good of each one and the good
of each one becomes the good of all. "In the Holy Church",
writes Saint Gregory the Great, "all are nourished by each one and
each ones is nourished by all"(103).
Individual Forms of Participation
Above all, each member of the lay faithful should always be fully aware
of being a "member of the Church" yet entrusted with a unique
task which cannot be done by another and which is to be fulfilled for
the good of all. From this perspective the Council's insistence on the
absolute necessity of an apostolate exercised by the individual takes
on its full meaning: "The apostolate exercised by the individual-which
flows abundantly from a truly Christian life (cf. Jn 4: 11)-is the origin
and condition of the whole lay apostolate, even in its organized expression,
and admits no substitute. Regardless of circumstance, all lay persons
(including those who have no opportunity or possibility for collaboration
in associations) are called to this type of apostolate and obliged to
engage in it. Such an apostolate is useful at all times and places, but
in certain circumstances it is the only one available and feasible"(104).
In the apostolate exercised by the individual, great riches are waiting
to be discovered through an intensification of the missionary effort
of each of the lay faithful. Such an individual form of apostolate can
contribute greatly to a more extensive spreading of the Gospel, indeed
it can reach as many places as there are daily lives of individual members
of the lay faithful. Furthermore, the spread of the gospel will be continual,
since a person's life and faith will be one. Likewise the spread of the
gospel will be particularly incisive, because in sharing fully in the
unique conditions of the life, work, difficulties and hopes of their
sisters and brothers, the lay faithful will be able to reach the hearts
of their neighbors, friends, and colleagues, opening them to a full sense
of human existence, that is, to communion with God and with all people.
Group Forms of Participation
29. Church communion, already present and at work in the activities
of the individual, finds its specific expression in the lay faithful's
working together in groups, that is, in activities done with others in
the course of their responsible participation in the life and mission
of the Church.
In recent days the phenomenon of lay people associating among themselves
has taken on a character of particular variety and vitality. In some
ways lay associations have always been present throughout the Church's
history as various confraternities, third orders and sodalities testify
even today. However, in modern times such lay groups have received a
special stimulus, resulting in the birth and spread of a multiplicity
of group forms: associations, groups, communities, movements. We can
speak of a new era of group endeavours of the lay faithful. In fact, "alongside
the traditional forming of associations, and at times coming from their
very roots, movements and new sodalities have sprouted, with a specific
feature and purpose, so great is the richness and the versatility of
resources that the Holy Spirit nourishes in the ecclesial community,
and so great is the capacity of initiative and the generosity of our
lay people"(105).
Oftentimes these lay groups show themselves to be very diverse from
one another in various aspects, in their external structures, in their
procedures and training methods, and in the fields in which they work.
However, they all come together in an all-inclusive and profound convergence
when viewed from the perspective of their common purpose, that is, the
responsible participation of all of them in the Church'smission of carrying
forth the Gospel of Christ, the source of hope for humanity and the renewal
of society.
The actual formation of groups of the lay faithful for spiritual purposes
or for apostolic work comes from various sources and corresponds to different
demands. In fact, their formation itself expresses the social nature
of the person and for this reason leads to a more extensive and incisive
effectiveness in work. In reality, a "cultural" effect can
be accomplished through work done not so much by an individual alone
but by an individual as "a social being", that is, as a member
of a group, of a community, of an association, or of a movement. Such
work is, then, the source and stimulus leading to the transformation
of the surroundings and society as well as the fruit and sign of every
other transformation in this regard. This is particularly true in the
context of a pluralistic and fragmented society-the case in so many parts
of the world today-and in light of the problems which have become greatly
complex and difficult. On the other hand, in a secularized world, above
all, the various group forms of the apostolate can represent for many
a precious help for the Christian life in remaining faithful to the demands
of the gospel and to the commitment to the Church's mission and the apostolate.
Beyond this, the profound reason that justifies and demands the lay
faithful's forming of lay groups comes from a theology based on ecclesiology,
as the Second Vatican Council clearly acknowledged in referring to the
group apostolate as a "sign of communion and of unity of the Church
of Christ"(106).
It is a "sign" that must be manifested in relation to "communion" both
in the internal and external aspects of the various group forms and in
the wider context of the Christian community. As mentioned, this reason
based on ecclesiology explains, on one hand, the "right" of
lay associations to form, and on the other, the necessity of "criteria" for
discerning the authenticity of the forms which such groups take in the
Church.
First of all, the freedom for lay people in the Church to form such
groups is to be acknowledged. Such liberty is a true and proper right
that is not derived from any kind of "concession" by authority,
but flows from the Sacrament of Baptism, which calls the lay faithful
to participate actively in the Church's communion and mission. In this
regard the Council is quite clear: "As long as the proper relationship
is kept to Church authority, the lay faithful have the right to found
and run such associations and to join those already existing"(107).
A citation from the recently published Code of Canon Law affirms it as
well: "The Christian faithful are at liberty to found and govern
associations for charitable and religious purposes or for the promotion
of the Christian vocation in the world; they are free to hold meetings
to pursue these purposes in common"(108).
It is a question of a freedom that is to be acknowledged and guaranteed
by ecclesial authority and always and only to be exercised in Church
communion. Consequently, the right of the lay faithful to form groups
is essentially in relation to the Church's life of communion and to her
mission.
"Criteria of Ecclesiality"for Lay Groups
30. It is always from the perspective of the Church's communion and
mission, and not in opposition to the freedom to associate, that one
understands the necessity of having clear and definite criteria for discerning
and recognizing such lay groups, also called "Criteria of Ecclesiality".
The following basic criteria might be helpful in evaluating an association
of the lay faithful in the Church:
- The primacy given to the call of every Christian to holiness, as it
is manifested "in the fruits of grace which the spirit produces
in the faithful"(109) and in a growth towards the fullness of Christian
life and the perfection of charity(110).
In this sense whatever association of the lay faithful there might be,
it is always called to be more of an instrument leading to holiness in
the Church, through fostering and promoting "a more intimate unity
between the everyday life of its members and their faith"(111).
- The responsibility of professing the Catholic faith, embracing and
proclaiming the truth about Christ, the Church and humanity, in obedience
to the Church's Magisterium, as the Church interprets it. For this reason
every association of the lay faithful must be a forum where the faith
is proclaimed as well as taught in its total content.
- The witness to a strong and authentic communion in filial relationship
to the Pope, in total adherence to the belief that he is the perpetual
and visible center of unity of the universal Church(112), and with the
local Bishop, "the visible principle and foundation of unity"(113)
in the particular Church, and in "mutual esteem for all forms of
the Church's apostolate"(114).
The communion with Pope and Bishop must be expressed in loyal readiness
to embrace the doctrinal teachings and pastoral initiatives of both Pope
and Bishop. Moreover, Church communion demands both an acknowledgment
of a legitimate plurality of forms in the associations of the lay faithful
in the Church and at the same time, a willingness to cooperate in working
together.
- Conformity to and participation in the Church's apostolic goals, that
is, "the evangelization and sanctification of humanity and the Christian
formation of people's conscience, so as to enable them to infuse the
spirit of the gospel into the various communities and spheres of life"(115).
From this perspective, every one of the group forms of the lay faithful
is asked to have a missionary zeal which will increase their effectiveness
as participants in a re-evangelization.
- A commitment to a presence in human society, which in light of the
Church's social doctrine, places it at the service of the total dignity
of the person.
Therefore, associations of the lay faithful must become fruitful outlets
for participation and solidarity in bringing about conditions that are
more just and loving within society.
The fundamental criteria mentioned at this time find their verification
in the actual fruits that various group forms show in their organizational
life and the works they perform, such as: the renewed appreciation for
prayer, contemplation, liturgical and sacramental life, the reawakening
of vocations to Christian marriage, the ministerial priesthood and the
consecrated life; a readiness to participate in programmes and Church
activities at the local, national and international levels; a commitment
to catechesis and a capacity for teaching and forming Christians; a desire
to be present as Christians in various settings of social life and the
creation and awakening of charitable, cultural and spiritual works; the
spirit of detachment and evangelical poverty leading to a greater generosity
in charity towards all; conversion to the Christian life or the return
to Church communion of those baptized members who have fallen away from
the faith.
The Pastors in Service to Communion
31. The Pastors of the Church even if faced with possible and understandable
difficulties as a result of such associations and the process of employing
new forms, cannot renounce the service provided by their authority, not
simply for the well-being of the Church, but also for the well-being
of the lay associations themselves. In this sense they ought to accompany
their work of discernment with guidance and, above all, encouragement
so that lay associations might grow in Church communion and mission.
It is exceedingly opportune that some new associations and movements
receive official recognition and explicit approval from competent Church
authority to facilitate their growth on both the national and international
level. The Council has already spoken in this regard: "Depending
on its various forms and goals, the lay apostolate provides for different
types of relationships with the hierarchy... Certain forms of the lay
apostolate are given explicit recognition by the hierarchy, though in
different ways. Because of the demands of the common good of the Church,
moreover, ecclesial authority can select and promote in a particular
way some of the apostolic associations and projects which have an immediately
spiritual purpose, thereby assuming in them a special responsibility"(116).
Among the various forms of the lay apostolate which have a particular
relationship to the hierarchy, the Synod Fathers have singled out various
movements and associations of Catholic Action in which "indeed,
in this organic and stable form, the lay faithful may freely associate
under the movement of the Holy Spirit, in communion with their bishop
and priests, so that in a way proper to their vocation and with some
special method they might be of service through their faithfulness and
good works to promote the growth of the entire Christian community, pastoral
activities and infusing every aspect of life with the gospel spirit"(117).
The Pontifical Council for the Laity has the task of preparing a list
of those associations which have received the official approval of the
Holy See, and, at the same time, of drawing up, together with the Pontifical
Council for the Union of Christians, the basic conditions on which this
approval might be given to ecumenical associations in which there is
a majority of Catholics, and determining those cases in which such an
approval is not possible(118).
All of us, Pastors and lay faithful, have the duty to promote and nourish
stronger bonds and mutual esteem, cordiality and collaboration among
the various forms of lay associations. Only in this way can the richness
of the gifts and charisms that the Lord oflers us bear their fruitful
contribution in building the common house: "For the sound building
of a common house it is necessary, furthermore, that every spirit of
antagonism and conflict be put aside and that the competition be in outdoing
one another in showing honour (cf. Rom 12:10), in attaining a mutual
affection, a will towards collaboration, with patience, far-sightedness,
and readiness to sacrifice which will at times be required"(119).
So as to render thanks to God for the great gift of Church communion
which is the reflection in time of the eternal and ineffable communion
of the love of God, Three in One, we once again consider Jesus' words: "I
am the vine, you are the branches" (Jn 15:5). The awareness of the
gift ought to be accompanied by a strong sense of responsibility for
its use: it is, in fact, a gift that, like the talent of the gospel parable,
must be put to work in a life of ever-increasing communion.
To be responsible for the gift of communion means, first of all, to
be committed to overcoming each temptation to division and opposition
that works against the Christian life with its responsibility in the
apostolate. The cry of Saint Paul continues to resound as a reproach
to those who are "wounding the Body of Christ": "What
I mean is that each one of you says, 'I belong to Paul', or 'I belong
to Cephas', or 'I belong to Christ!' Is Christ divided?" (1 Cor
1: 12-13). No, rather let these words of the apostle sound a persuasive
call: " I appeal to you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ, that all of you agree and that there be no dissensions among
you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same judgment" (1
Cor 1 :10).
Thus the life of Church communion will become a sign for all the world
and a compelling force that will lead persons to faith in Christ: "that
they may all be one; even as you, Father, are in me and I in you, that
they also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent
me" (Tn 17:21). In such a way communion leads to mission, and mission
itself to communion.
CHAPTER III
I HAVE APPOINTED YOU TO GO FORTH AND BEAR FRUIT
The Coresponsibility of the Lay Faithful in the Church as Mission Mission to Communion
32. We return to the biblical image of the vine and the branches, which
immediately and quite appropriately lends itself to a consideration of
fruitfulness and life. Engrafted to the vine and brought to life, the
branches are expected to bear fruit: "He who abides in me, and I
in him, he it is that bears much fruit" (Jn 15:5). Bearing fruit
is an essential demand of life in Christ and life in the Church. The
person who does not bear fruit does not remain in communion: "Each
branch of mine that bears no fruit, he (my Father) takes away" (Jn
15: 2).
Communion with Jesus, which gives rise to the communion of Christians
among themselves, is an indispensable condition for bearing fruit: "Apart
from me you can do nothing" (Jn 15:5). And communion with others
is the most magnificent fruit that the branches can give: in fact, it
is the gift of Christ and His Spirit.
At this point communion begets communion: essentially it is likened
to a mission on behalf of communion. In fact, Jesus says to his disciples: "You
did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should
go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide" (Jn 15:16).
Communion and mission are profoundly connected with each other, they
interpenetrate and mutually imply each other, to the point that communion
represents both the source and the fruit of mission: communion gives
rise to mission and mission is accomplished in communion. It is always
the one and the same Spirit who calls together and unifies the Church
and sends her to preach the Gospel "to the ends of the earth" (Acts
1:8). On her part, the Church knows that the communion received by her
as a gift is destined for all people. Thus the Church feels she owes
to each individual and to humanity as a whole the gift received from
the Holy Spirit that pours the charity of Jesus Christ into the hearts
of believers, as a mystical force for internal cohesion and external
growth. The mission of the Church flows from her own nature. Christ has
willed it to be so: that of "sign and instrument... of unity of
all the human race"(120). Such a mission has the purpose of making
everyone know and live the "new" communion that the Son of
God made man introduced into the history of the world. In this regard,
then, the testimony of John the Evangelist defines in an undeniable way
the blessed end towards which the entire mission of the Church is directed: "That
which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you may
have fellowship with us; and our fellowship is with the Father and with
his Son Jesus Christ" (1 Jn 1:3).
In the context of Church mission, then, the Lord entrusts a great part
of the responsibility to the lay faithful, in communion with all other
members of the People of God. This fact, fully understood by the Fathers
of the Second Vatican Council, recurred with renewed clarity and increased
vigor in all the works of the Synod: "Indeed, Pastors know how much
the lay faithful contribute to the welfare of the entire Church. They
also know that they themselves were not established by Christ to undertake
alone the entire saving mission of the Church towards the world, but
they understand that it is their exalted office to be shepherds of the
lay faithful and also to recognize the latter's services and charisms
that all according to their proper roles may cooperate in this common
undertaking with one heart"(121).
Proclaiming the Gospel
33. The lay faithful, precisely because they are members of the Church,
have the vocation and mission of proclaiming the Gospel: they are prepared
for this work by the sacraments of Christian initiation and by the gifts
of the Holy Spirit.
In a very clear and significant passage from the Second Vatican Council
we read: "As sharers in the mission of Christ, priest, prophet and
king, the lay faithful have an active part to play in the life and activity
of the Church... Strengthened by their active participation in the liturgical
life of their community, they are eager to do their share in apostolic
works of that community. They lead to the Church people who are perhaps
far removed from it; they earnestly cooperate in presenting the Word
of God, especially by means of catechetical instruction; and offer their
special skills to make the care of souls and the administration of the
temporal goods of the Church more efficient"(122).
The entire mission of the Church, then, is concentrated and manifested
in evangelization. Through the winding passages of history the Church
has made her way under the grace and the command of Jesus Christ: "Go
into all the world and preach the gospel to the whole creation" (Mk
16:15) "... and lo, I am with you always, until the close of the
age" (Mt 28:20). "To evangelize", writes Paul VI, "is
the grace and vocation proper to the Church, her most profound identity"(123).
Through evangelization the Church is built up into a community of faith:
more precisely, into a community that confesses the faith in full adherence
to the Word of God which is celebrated in the Sacraments, and lived in
charity, the principle of Christian moral existence. In fact, the "good
news" is directed to stirring a person to a conversion of heart
and life and a clinging to Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour; to disposing
a person to receive Baptism and the Eucharist and to strengthen a person
in the prospect and realization of new life according to the Spirit.
Certainly the command of Jesus: "Go and preach the Gospel" always
maintains its vital value and its ever-pressing obligation. Nevertheless,
the present situation, not only of the world but also of many parts of
the Church, absolutely demands that the word of Christ receive a more
ready and generous obedience. Every disciple is personally called by
name; no disciple can withhold making a response: "Woe to me, if
I do not preach the gospel" (1 Cor 9:16).
The Hour Has Come for a Re-Evangelization
34. Whole countries and nations where religion and the Christian life
were formerly flourishing and capable of fostering a viable and working
community of faith, are now put to a hard test, and in some cases, are
even undergoing a radical transformation, as a result of a constant spreading
of an indifference to religion, of secularism and atheism. This particularly
concerns countries and nations of the so-called First World, in which
economic well-being and consumerism, even if coexistent with a tragic
situation of poverty and misery, inspires and sustains a life lived "as
if God did not exist". This indifference to religion and the practice
of religion devoid of true meaning in the face of life's very serious
problems, are not less worrying and upsetting when compared with declared
atheism. Sometimes the Christian faith as well, while maintaining some
of the externals of its tradition and rituals, tends to be separated
from those moments of human existence which have the most significance,
such as, birth, suffering and death. In such cases, the questions and
formidable enigmas posed by these situations, if remaining without responses,
expose contemporary people to an inconsolable delusion or to the temptation
of eliminating the truly humanizing dimension of life implicit in these
problems.
On the other hand, in other regions or nations many vital traditions
of piety and popular forms of Christian religion are still conserved;
but today this moral and spiritual patrimony runs the risk of being dispersed
under the impact of a multiplicity of processes, including secularization
and the spread of sects. Only a re-evangelization can assure the growth
of a clear and deep faith, and serve to make these traditions a force
for authentic freedom.
Without doubt a mending of the Christian fabric of society is urgently
needed in all parts of the world. But for this to come about what is
needed is to first remake the Christian fabric of the ecclesial community
itself present in these countries and nations.
At this moment the lay faithful, in virtue of their participation in
the prophetic mission of Christ, are fully part of this work of the Church.
Their responsibility, in particular, is to testify how the Christian
faith constitutes the only fully valid response-consciously perceived
and stated by all in varying degrees-to the problems and hopes that life
poses to every person and society. This will be possible if the lay faithful
will know how to overcome in themselves the separation of the Gospel
from life, to again take up in their daily activities in family, work
and society, an integrated approach to life that is fully brought about
by the inspiration and strength of the Gospel.
To all people of today I once again repeat the impassioned cry with
which I began my pastoral ministry: "Do not be afraid! Open, in
deed, open wide the doors to Christ!
Open to his saving power the confines of states, and systems political
and economic, as well as the vast fields of culture, civilization, and
development. Do not be afraid! Christ knows 'what is inside a person'.
Only he knows! Today too often people do not know what they carry inside,
in the deepest recesses of their soul, in their heart. Too often people
are uncertain about a sense of life on earth. Invaded by doubts they
are led into despair. Therefore-with humility and trust I beg and implore
you-allow Christ to speak to the person in you. Only he has the words
of life, yes, eternal life"(124).
Opening wide the doors to Christ, accepting him into humanity itself
poses absolutely no threat to persons, indeed it is the only road to
take to arrive at the total truth and the exalted value of the human
individual.
This vital synthesis will be achieved when the lay faithful know how
to put the gospel and their daily duties of life into a most shining
and convincing testimony, where, not fear but the loving pursuit of Christ
and adherence to him will be the factors determining how a person is
to live and grow, and these will lead to new ways of living more in conformity
with human dignity.
Humanity is loved by God! This very simple yet profound proclamation
is owed to humanity by the Church. Each Christian's words and life must
make this proclamation resound: God loves you, Christ came for you, Christ
is for you "the Way, the Truth and the Life!" (Jn 14:6).
This re-evangelization is directed not only to individual persons but
also to entire portions of populations in the variety of their situations,
surroundings and cultures. Its purpose is the formation of mature ecclesial
communities, in which the faith might radiate and fulfill the basic meaning
of adherence to the person of Christ and his Gospel, of an encounter
and sacramental communion with him, and of an existence lived in charity
and in service.
The lay faithful have their part to fulfill in the formation of these
ecclesial communities, not only through an active and responsible participation
in the life of the community, in other words, through a testimony that
only they can give, but also through a missionary zeal and activity towards
the many people who still do not believe and who no longer live the faith
received at Baptism.
In the case of coming generations, the lay faithful must offer the very
valuable contribution, more necessary than ever, of a systematic work
in catechesis. The Synod Fathers have gratefully taken note of the work
of catechists, acknowledging that they "have a task that carries
great importance in animating ecclesial communities"(125). It goes
without saying that Christian parents are the primary and irreplaceable
catechists of their children, a task for which they are given the grace
by the Sacrament of Matrimony. At the same time, however, we all ought
to be aware of the "rights" that each baptized person has to
being instructed, educated and supported in the faith and the Christian
life.
Go Into the Whole World
35. While pointing out and experiencing the present urgency for a re-evangelization,
the Church cannot withdraw from her ongoing mission of bringing the gospel
to the multitudes -the millions and millions of men and women-who as
yet do not know Christ the Redeemer of humanity. In a specific way this
is the missionary work that Jesus entrusted and again entrusts each day
to his Church.
The activity of the lay faithful, who are always present in these surroundings,
is revealed in these days as increasingly necessary and valuable. As
it stands, the command of the Lord "Go into the whole world" is
continuing to find a generous response from laypersons who are ready
to leave familiar surroundings, their work, their region or country,
at least for a determined time, to go into mission territory. Even Christian
married couples, in imitation of Aquila and Priscilla (cf. Acts 18; Rom
16:3 ff), are offering a comforting testimony of impassioned love for
Christ and the Church through their valuable presence in mission lands.
A true missionary presence is exercised even by those who for various
reasons live in countries or surroundings where the Church is not yet
established and bear witness to the faith.
However, at present the missionary concern is taking on such extensive
and serious proportions for the Church that only a truly consolidated
effort to assume responsibility by all members of the Church, both individuals
and communities, can lead to the hope for a more fruitful response.
The invitation addressed by the Second Vatican Council to the particular
Church retains all its value, even demanding at present a more extensive
and more decisive acceptance: "Since the particular Churches are
bound to mirror the universal Church as perfectly as possible, let them
be fully aware that they have been sent also to those who do not believe
in Christ"(126).
The Church today ought to take a giant step forward in her evangelization
effort, and enter into a new stage of history in her missionary dynamism.
In a world where the lessening of distance makes the world increasingly
smaller, the Church community ought to strengthen the bonds among its
members, exchange vital energies and means, and commit itself as a group
to a unique and common mission of proclaiming and living the Gospel. "So-called
younger Churches have need of the strength of the older Churches and
the older ones need the witness and impulse of the younger, so that individual
Churches receive the riches of other Churches"(127).
In this area, younger Churches are finding that an essential and undeniable
element in the founding of Churches(128) is the formation not only of
local clergy but also of a mature and responsible lay faithful: in this
way the community which itself has been evangelized goes forth into a
new region of the world so that it too might respond to the mission of
proclaiming and bearing witness to the Gospel of Christ.
The Synod Fathers have mentioned that the lay faithful can favour the
relations which ought to be established with followers of various religions
through their example in the situations in which they live and in their
activities: "Throughout the world today the Church lives among people
of various religions... All the Faithful, especially the lay faithful
who live among the people of other religions, whether living in their
native region or in lands as migrants, ought to be for all a sign of
the Lord and his Church, in a way adapted to the actual living situation
of each place. Dialogue among religions has a preeminent part, for it
leads to love and mutual respect, and takes away, or at least diminishes,
prejudices among the followers of various religions and promotes unity
and friendship among peoples"(129).
What is first needed for the evangelization of the world are those who
will evangelize. In this regard everyone, beginning with the Christian
family, must feel the responsibility to foster the birth and growth of
vocations, both priestly and religious as well as in the lay state, specifically
directed to the missions. This should be done by relying on every appropriate
means, but without ever neglecting the privileged means of prayer, according
to the very words of the Lord Jesus: "The harvest is plentiful,
but the labourers are few; pray therefore the Lord of the harvest to
send out labourers into his harvest!" (Mt 9:37, 38).
To Live the Gospel Serving the Person and Society
36. In both accepting and proclaiming the Gospel in the power of the
Spirit the Church becomes at one and the same time an "evangelizing
and evangelized" community, and for this very reason she is made
the servant of all. In her the lay faithful participate in the mission
of service to the person and society. Without doubt the Church has the
Kingdom of God as her supreme goal, of which "she on earth is its
seed and beginning"(130), and is therefore totally consecrated to
the glorification of the Father. However, the Kingdom is the source of
full liberation and total salvation for all people: with this in mind,
then, the Church walks and lives, intimately bound in a real sense to
their history.
Having received the responsibility of manifesting to the world the mystery
of God that shines forth in Jesus Christ, the Church likewise awakens
one person to another, giving a sense of one's existence, opening each
to the whole truth about the individual and of each person's final destiny(131).
From this perspective the Church is called, in virtue of her very mission
of evangelization, to serve all humanity. Such service is rooted primarily
in the extraordinary and profound fact that "through the Incarnation
the Son of God has united himself in some fashion to every person"(132).
For this reason the person "is the primary route that the Church
must travel in fulfilling her mission: the individual is the primary
and fundamental way for the Church, the way traced out by Christ himself,
the way that leads in variably through the mystery of the Incarnation
and Redemption"(133).
The Second Vatican Council, repeatedly and with a singular clarity and
force, expressed these very sentiments in its documents. We again read
a particularly enlightening text from the Constitution Gaudium et Spes: "Pursuing
the saving purpose which is proper to her, the Church not only communicates
divine life to all, but in some way casts the reflected light of that
divine life over the entire earth. She does this most of all by her healing
and elevating impact on the dignity of the human person, by the way in
which she strengthens the bonds of human society, and imbues the daily
activity of people with a deeper sense and meaning. Thus, through her
individual members and the whole community, the Church believes she càn
contribute much to make the family of man and its history more human"(134).
In this work of contributing to the human family, for which the whole
Church is responsible, a particular place falls to the lay faithful,
by reason of their "secular character", obliging them, in their
proper and irreplaceable way, to work towards the Christian animation
of the temporal order.
Promoting the Dignity of the Person
37. To rediscover and make others rediscover the inviolable dignity
of every human person makes up an essential task, in a certain sense,
the central and unifying task of the service which the Church, and the
lay faithful in her, are called to render to the human family.
Among all other earthly beings, only a man or a woman is a "person",
a conscious and free being and, precisely for this reason, the "center
and summit" of all that exists on the earth(135).
The dignity of the person is the most precious possession of an individual.
As a result, the value of one person transcends all the material world.
The words of Jesus, "For what does it profit a man, to gain the
whole world and to forfeit his life?" (Mk 8:36) contain an enlightening
and stirring statement about the individual: value comes not from what
a person "has" even if the person possessed the whole world!-as
much as from what a person "is": the goods of the world do
not count as much as the good of the person, the good which is the person
individually.
The dignity of the person is manifested in all its radiance when the
person's origin and destiny are considered: created by God in his image
and likeness as well as redeemed by the most precious blood of Christ,
the person is called to be a "child in the Son" and a living
temple of the Spirit, destined for the eternal life of blessed communion
with God. For this reason every violation of the personal dignity of
the human being cries out in vengeance to God and is an offence against
the Creator of the individual.
In virtue of a personal dignity the human being is always a value as
an individual, and as such demands being considered and treated as a
person and never, on the contrary, considered and treated as an object
to be used, or as a means, or as a thing.
The dignity of the person constitutes the foundation of the equality
of all people among themselves. As a result all forms of discrimination
are totally unacceptable, especially those forms which unfortunately
continue to divide and degrade the human family, from those based on
race or economics to those social and cultural, from political to geographic,
etc. Each discrimination constitutes an absolutely intolerable injustice,
not so much for the tensions and the conflicts that can be generated
in the social sphere, as much as for the dishonour inflicted on the dignity
of the person: not only to the dignity of the individual who is the victim
of the injustice, but still more to the one who commits the injustice.
Just as personal dignity is the foundation of equality of all people
among themselves, so it is also the foundation of participation and solidarity
of all people among themselves: dialogue and communion are rooted ultimately
in what people "are", first and foremost, rather than on what
people "have".
The dignity of the person is the indestructible property of every human
being. The force of this affirmation is based on the uniqueness and irrepeatibility
of every person. From it flows that the individual can never be reduced
by all that seeks to crush and to annihilate the person into the anonymity
that comes from collectivity, institutions, structures and systems. As
an individual, a person is not a number or simply a link in a chain,
nor even less, an impersonal element in some system. The most radical
and elevating affirmation of the value of every human being was made
by the Son of God in his becoming man in the womb of a woman, as we continue
to be reminded each Christmas(136).
Respecting the Inviolable Right to Life
38. In effect the acknowledgment of the personal dignity of every human
being demands the respect, the defence and the promotion of therights
of the human person. It is a question of inherent, universal and inviolable
rights. No one, no individual, no group, no authority, no State, can
change-let alone eliminate-them because such rights find their source
in God himself.
The inviolability of the person which is a reflection of the absolute
inviolability of God, fínds its primary and fundamental expression
in the inviolability of human life. Above all, the common outcry, which
is justly made on behalf of human rights-for example, the right to health,
to home, to work, to family, to culture- is false and illusory if the
right to life, the most basic and fundamental right and the condition
for all other personal rights, is not defended with maximum determination.
The Church has never yielded in the face of all the violations that
the right to life of every human being has received, and continues to
receive, both from individuals and from those in authority. The human
being is entitled to such rights, in every phase of development, from
conception until natural death; and in every condition, whether healthy
or sick, whole or handicapped, rich or poor. The Second Vatican Council
openly proclaimed: "All offences against life itself, such as every
kind of murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia and willful suicide; all
violations of the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation,
physical and mental torture, undue psychological pressures; all offences
against human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary
imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution, the selling of women
and children, degrading working conditions where men are treated as mere
tools for profit rather than free and responsible persons; all these
and the like are certainly criminal: they poison human society; and they
do more harm to those who practice them than those who suffer from the
injury. Moreover, they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator"(137).
If, indeed, everyone has the mission and responsibility of acknowledging
the personal dignity of every human being and of defending the right
to life, some lay faithful are given a particular title to this task:
such as parents, teachers, healthworkers and the many who hold economic
and political power.
The Church today lives a fundamental aspect of her mission in lovingly
and generously accepting every human being, especially those who are
weak and sick. This is made all the more necessary as a "culture
of death" threatens to take control. In fact, "the Church family
believes that human life, even if weak and suffering, is always a wonderful
gift of God's goodness. Against the pessimism and selfishness which casts
a shadow over the world, the Church stands for life: in each human life
she sees the splendour of that 'Yes', that 'Amen', which is Christ himself
(cf. 2 Cor 1:19; Rev 3:14). To the 'No' which assails and afflicts the
world, she replies with this living 'Yes', this defending of the human
person and the world from all who plot against life"(138). It is
the responsibility of the lay faithful, who more directly through their
vocation or their profession are involved in accepting life, to make
the Church's "Yes" to human life concrete and efficacious.
The enormous development of biological and medical science, united to
an amazing power in technology, today provides possibilities on the very
frontier of human life which imply new responsibilities. In fact, today
humanity is in the position not only of "observing" but even "exercising
a control over" human life at its very beginning and in its first
stages of development.
The moral conscience of humanity is not able to turn aside or remain
indifferent in the face of these gigantic strides accomplished by a technology
that is acquiring a continually more extensive and profound dominion
over the working processes that govern procreation and the first phases
of human life. Today as perhaps never before in history or in this field,
wisdom shows itselt to be the only firm basis to salvation, in that persons
engaged in scientific research and in its application are always to act
with intelligence and love, that is, respecting, even remaining in veneration
of, the inviolable dignity of the personhood of every human being, from
the first moment of life's existence. This occurs when science and technology
are committed with licit means to the defence of life and the cure of
disease in its beginnings, refusing on the contrary-even for the dignity
of research itself-to perform operations that result in falsifying the
genetic patrimony of the individual and of human generative power(139).
The lay faithful, having responsibility in various capacities and at
different levels of science as well as in the medical, social, legislative
and economic fields must courageously accept the "challenge" posed
by new problems in bioethics. The Synod Fathers used these words: "Christians
ought to exercise their responsibilities as masters of science and technology,
and not become their slaves ... In view of the moral challenges presented
by enormous new technological power, endangering not only fundamental
human rights but the very biological essence of the human species, it
is of utmost importance that lay Christians with the help of the universal
Church-take up the task of calling culture back to the principles of
an authentic humanism, giving a dynamic and sure foundation to the promotion
and defence of the rights of the human being in one's very essence, an
essence which the preaching of the Gospel reveals to all(140).
Today maximum vigilance must be exercised by everyone in the face of
the phenomenon of the concentration of power and technology. In fact
such a concentration has a tendency to manipulate not only the biological
essence but the very content of people's consciences and life styles,
thereby worsening the condition of entire peoples by discrimination and
marginization.
Free to Call Upon the Name of the Lord
39. Respect for the dignity of the person, which implies the defence
and promotion of human rights, demands the recognition of the religious
dimension of the individual. This is not simply a requirement "concerning
matters of faith", but a requirement that finds itself inextricably
bound up with the very reality of the individual. In fact, the individual's
relation to God is a constitutive element of the very "being" and "existence" of
an individual: it is in God that we "live, move and have our being" (Acts
17:28). Even if not all believe this truth, the many who are convinced
of it have the right to be respected for their faith and for their life-choice,
individual and communal, that flows from that faith. This is the right
of freedom of conscience and religious freedom, the effective acknowledgment
of which is among the highest goods and the most serious duties of every
people that truly wishes to assure the good of the person and society. "Religious
freedom, an essential requirement of the dignity of every person, is
a cornerstone of the structure of human rights, and for this reason an
irreplaceable factor in the good of individuals and of the whole of society,
as well as of the personal fulfilment of each individual. It follows
that the freedom of individuals and of communities to profess and practice
their religion is an essential element for peaceful human coexistence
... The civil and social right to religious freedom, inasmuch as it touches
the most intimate sphere of the spirit, is a point of reference for the
other fundamental rights and in some way becomes a measure of them"(141).
The Synod did not forget the many brothers and sisters that still do
not enjoy such a right and have to face difficulties, marginization,
suffering, persecution, and oftentimes death because of professing the
faith. For the most part, they are brothers and sisters of the Christian
lay faithful. The proclamation of the Gospel and the Christian testimony
given in a life of suffering and martyrdom make up the summit of the
apostolic life among Christ's disciples, just as the love for the Lord
Jesus even to the giving of one's life constitutes a source of extraordinary
fruitfulness for the building up of the Church. Thus the mystic vine
bears witness to its earnestness in the faith, as expressed by Saint
Augustine: "But that vine, as predicted by the prophets and even
by the Lord himself, spread its fruitful branches in the world, and becomes
the more fruitful the more it is watered by the blood of martyrs"(142).
The whole Church is profoundly grateful for this example and this gift.
These sons and daughters give reason for renewing the pursuit of a holy
and apostolic life. In this sense the Fathers at the Synod have made
it their special duty "to give thanks to those lay people who, despite
their restricted liberty, live as tireless witnesses of faith in faithful
union with the Apostolic See, although they may be deprived of sacred
ministers. They risk everything, even life. In this way the lay faithful
bear witness to an essential property of the Church: God's Church is
born of God's grace, which is expressed in an excellent way in martyrdom"(143).
Without doubt, all that has been said until now on the subject of respect
for personal dignity and the acknowledgment of human rights concerns
the responsibility of each Christian, of each person. However, we must
immediately recognize how such a problem today has a world dimension:
in fact, it is a question which at this moment affects entire groups,
indeed entire peoples, who are violently being denied their basic rights.
Those forms of unequal development among the so-called different "Worlds" were
openly denounced in the recent Encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis.
Respect for the human person goes beyond the demands of individual morality.
Instead, it is a basic criterion, an essential element, in the very structure
of society, since the purpose of the whole of socíety itself is
geared to the human person.
Thus, intimately connected with the responsibility of service to the
person, is the responsibility to serve society, as the general task of
that Christian animation of the temporal order to which the lay faithful
are called as their proper and specific role.
The Family: Where the Duty to Society Begins
40. The human person has an inherent social dimension which calls a
person from the innermost depths of self to communion with others and
to the giving of self to others: "God, who has fatherly concern
for everyone has willed that all people should form one family and treat
one another in a spirit of brotherhood"(144). Thus society as a
fruit and sign of the social nature of the individual reveals its whole
truth in being a community of persons.
Thus the result is an interdependence and reciprocity between the person
and society: all that is accomplished in favour of the person is also
a service rendered to society, and all that is done in favour of society
redounds to the benefit of the person. For this reason the duty of the
lay faithful in the apostolate of the temporal order is always to be
viewed both from its meaning of service to the person founded on the
individual's uniqueness and irrepeatibility as well as on the meaning
of service to all people which is inseparable from it.
The first and basic expression of the social dimension of the person,
then, is the married couple and the family: "But God did not create
man a solitary being. From the beginning 'male and female he created
them' (Gen 1:27). This partnership of man and woman constitutes the first
form of communion between persons"(145). Jesus is concerned to restore
integral dignity to the married couple and solidity to the family (Mt
19:3-9).Saint Paul shows the deep rapport between marriage and the mystery
of Christ and the Church (cf. Eph 5:22-6:4; Col 3:18-21; 1 Pt 3:1-7).
The lay faithful's duty to society primarily begins in marriage and
in the family. This duty can only be fulfilled adequately with the conviction
of the unique and irreplaceable value that the family has in the development
of society and the Church herself.
The family is the basic cell of society. It is the cradle of life and
love, the place in which the individual "is born" and "grows".
Therefore a primary concern is reserved for this community, especially,
in those times when human egoism, the anti-birth campaign, totalitarian
politics, situations of poverty, material, cultural and moral misery,
threaten to make these very springs of life dry up. Furthermore, ideologies
and various systems, together with forms of uninterest and indifference,
dare to take over the role in education proper to the family.
Required in the face of this is a vast, extensive and systematic work,
sustained not only by culture but also by economic and legislative means,
which will safeguard the role of family in its task of being the primary
place of "humanization" for the person and society.
It is above all the lay faithful's duty in the apostolate to make the
family aware of its identity as the primary social nucleus, and its basic
role in society, so that it might itself become always a more active
and responsible place for proper growth and proper participation in social
life. In such a way the family can and must require from all, beginning
with public authority, the respect for those rights which in saving the
family, will save society itself.
All that is written in the Exhortation Familiaris Consortio about participation
in the development of society(146) and all that the Holy See, at the
invitation of the 1980 Synod of Bishops, has formulated with the "Charter
of Rights for the Family", represent a complete and coordinated
working programme for all those members of the lay faithful who, in various
capacities, are interested in the values and the needs of the family.
Such a programme needs to be more opportunely and decisively realized
as the threats to the stability and fruitfulness of the family become
more serious and the attempt to reduce the value of the family and to
lessen its social value become more pressing and coordinated.
As experience testifies, whole civilizations and the cohesiveness of
peoples depend above all on the human quality of their families. For
this reason the duty in the apostolate towards the family acquires an
incomparable social value. The Church, for her part, is deeply convinced
of it, knowing well that "the path to the future passes through
the family"(147)
Charity: The Soul and Sustenance of Solidarity
41. Service to society is expressed and realized in the most diverse
ways, from those spontaneous and informal to those more structured, from
help given to individuals to those destined for various groups and communities
of persons.
The whole Church as such, is directly called to the service of charity: "In
the very early days the Church added the agape to the Eucharistic Supper,
and thus showed herself to be wholly united around Christ by the bond
of charity. So too, in all ages, she is recognized by this sign of love,
and while she rejoices in the undertakings of others, she claims works
of charity as her own inalienable duty and right. For this reason, mercy
to the poor and the sick, works of charity and mutual aid intended to
relieve human needs of every kind, are held in special honour in the
Church"(148). Charity towards one's neighbor, through contemporary
forms of the traditional spiritual and corporal works of mercy, represent
the most immediate, ordinary and habitual ways that lead to the Christian
animation of the temporal order, the specific duty of the lay faithful.
Through charity towards one's neighbor, the lay faithful exercise and
manifest their participation in the kingship of Christ, that is, in the
power of the Son of man who "came not to be served but to serve" (Mk
10:45). They live and manifest such a kingship in a most simple yet exalted
manner, possible for everyone at all times because charity is the highest
gift offered by the Spirit for building up the Church (cf. 1 Cor 13:13)
and for the good of humanity. In fact, charity gives life and sustains
the works of solidarity that look to the total needs of the human being.
The same charity, realized not only by individuals but also in a joint
way by groups and communities, is and will always be necessary. Nothing
and no one will be able to substitute for it, not even the multiplicity
of institutions and public initiatives forced to give a response to the
needs-oftentimes today so serious and widespread-of entire populations.
Paradoxically such charity is made increasingly necessary the more that
institutions become complex in their organization and pretend to manage
every area at hand. In the end such projects lose their effectiveness
as a result of an impersonal functionalism, an overgrown bureaucracy,
unjust private interests and an all-too-easy and generalized disengagement
from a sense of duty.
Precisely in this context various forms of volunteer work which express
themselves in a multiplicity of services and activities continue to come
about and to spread, particularly in organized society. If this impartial
service be truly given for the good of all persons, especially the most
in need and forgotten by the social services of society itself, then,
volunteer work can be considered an important expression of the apostolate,
in which lay men and women have a primary role.
Public Life: for Everyone and by Everyone
42. A charity that loves and serves the person is never able to be separated
from justice. Each in its own way demands the full, effective acknowledgment
of the rights of the individual, to which society is ordered in all its
structures and institutions(149).
In order to achieve their task directed to the Christian animation of
the temporal order, in the sense of serving persons and society, the
lay faithful are never to relinquish their participation in "public
life", that is, in the many different economic, social, legislative,
administrative and cultural areas, which are intended to promote organically
and institutionally the common good. The Synod Fathers have repeatedly
affirmed that every person has a right and duty to participate in public
life, albeit in a diversity and complementarity of forms, levels, tasks
and responsibilities. Charges of careerism, idolatry of power, egoism
and corruption that are oftentimes directed at persons in government,
parliaments, the ruling classes, or political parties, as well as the
common opinion that participating in politics is an absolute moral danger,
does not in the least justify either skepticism or an absence on the
part of Christians in public life.
On the contrary, the Second Vatican Council's words are particularly
significant: "The Ckurch regards as worthy of praise and consideration
the work of those who, as a service to others, dedicate themselves to
the public good of the state and undertake the burdens of this task"(150).
Public life on behalf of the person and society finds its basic standard
in the pursuit of the common good, as the good of everyone and as the
good of each person taken as a whole, which is guaranteed and offered
in a fitting manner to people, both as individuals and in groups, for
their free and responsible acceptance. "The political community"-we
read in the Constitution Gaudium et Spes-"exists for that common
good in which the community finds its full justification and meaning,
and from which it derives its basic, proper and lawful arrangement. The
common good embraces the sum total of all those conditions of social
life by which individuals, families, and organizations can achieve more
thoroughly their own fulfilment"(151). Furthermore, public life
on behalf of the person and society finds its continuous line of action
in the defence and the promotion of justice, understood to be a "virtue",
an understanding which requires education, as well as a moral "force" that
sustains the obligation to foster the rights and duties of each and everyone,
based on the personal dignity of each human being.
The spirit of service is a fundamental element in the exercise of political
power. This spirit of service, together with the necessary competence
and efficiency, can make "virtuous" or "above criticism" the
activity of persons in public life which is justly demanded by the rest
of the people. To accomplish this requires a fullscale battle and a determination
to overcome every temptation, such as the recourse to disloyalty and
to falsehood, the waste of public funds for the advantage of a few and
those with special interests, and the use of ambiguous and illicit means
for acquiring, maintaining and increasing power at any cost.
The lay faithful given a charge in public life certainly ought to respect
the autonomy of earthly realities properly understood, as we read in
the Constitution Gaudium et Spes: "It is of great importance, especially
in a pluralistic society, to work out a proper vision of the relationship
between the political community and the Church, and to distinguish clearly
between the activities of Christians, acting individually or collectively,
in their own name as citizens guided by the dictates of a Christian conscience,
and their activity in communion with their Pastors in the name of the
Church. The Church by reason of her role and competence, is not identified
with any political community nor bound by ties to any political system.
She is at once the sign and the safeguard of the transcendental dimension
of the human person"(152).At the same time-and this is felt today
as a pressing responsibility-the lay faithful must bear witness to those
human and gospel values that are intimately connected with political
activity itself, such as liberty and justice, solidarity, faithful and
unselfish dedication for the good of all, a simple life-style, and a
preferential love for the poor and the least. This demands that the lay
faithful always be more animated by a real participation in the life
of the Church and enlightened by her social doctrine. In this they can
be supported and helped by the nearness of the Christian community and
their Pastors(153).
The manner and means for achieving a public life which has true human
development as its goal is solidarity. This concerns the active and responsible
participation of all in public life, from individual citizens to various
groups, from labour unions to political parties. All of us, each and
everyone, are the goal of public life as well as its leading participants.
In this environment, as I wrote in the Encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis,
solidarity "is not a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress
at the misfortunes of so many people, both near and far. On the contrary,
it is a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common
good, that is to say, to the good of all and of each individual because
we are all really responsible for all"(154).
Today political solidarity requires going beyond single nations or a
single block of nations, to a consideration on a properly continental
and world level.
The fruit of sound political activity, which is so much desired by everyone
but always lacking in advancement, is peace. The lay faithful cannot
remain indifferent or be strangers and inactive in the face of all that
denies and compromises peace, namely, violence and war, torture and terrorism,
concentration camps, militarization of public life, the arms race, and
the nuclear threat. On the contrary, as disciples of Jesus Christ, "Prince
of Peace" (Is 9:5) and "Our Peace" (Eph 2:14), the lay
faithful ought to take upon themselves the task of being "peacemakers" (Mt
5:9), both through a conversion of "heart", justice and charity,
all of which are the undeniable foundation of peace(155).
The lay faithful in working together with all those that truly seek
peace and themselves serving in specific organizations as well as national
and international institutions, ought to promote an extensive work of
education intended to defeat the ruling culture of egoism, hate, the
vendetta and hostility, and thereby to develop the culture of solidarity
at every level. Such solidarity, in fact, "is the way to peace and
at the same time to development"(156).From this perspective the
Synod Fathers have invited Christians to reject as unacceptable all forms
of violence, to promote attitudes of dialogue and peace and to commit
themselves to establish a just international and social order(157).
Placing the Individual at the Center of Socio-Economic Life
43. Service to society on the part of the lay faithful finds its essence
in the socio-economic question, which depends on the organization of
work.
Recently recalled in the Encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, is the
seriousness of present problems as they relate to the subject of development
and a proposed solution according to the social doctrine of the Church.
I warmly desire to again refer its contents to all, in particular, to
the lay faithful.
The basis for the social doctrine of the Church is the principle of
the universal destination of goods. According to the plan of God the
goods of the earth are offered to all people and to each individual as
a means towards the development of a truly human life. At the service
of this destination of goods is private property, which -precisely for
this purpose-possesses an intrinsic social function. Concretely the work
of man and woman represents the most common and most immediate instrument
for the development of economic life, an instrument that constitutes
at one and the same time a right and a duty for every individual.
Once again, all of this comes to mind in a particular way in the mission
of the lay faithful. The Second Vatican Council formulates in general
terms the purpose and criterion of their presence and their action: "In
the socio-economic realm the dignity and total vocation of the human
person must be honoured and advanced along with the welfare of society
as a whole, for man is the source, the center, and the purpose of all
socio-economic life"(158).
In the context of the tranformations taking place in the world of economy
and work which are a cause of concern, the lay faithful have the responsibility
of being in the forefront in working out a solution to the very serious
problems of growing unemployment; to fight for the most opportune overcoming
of numerous injustices that come from organizations of work which lack
a proper goal; to make the workplace become a community of persons respected
in their uniqueness and in their right to participation; to develop new
solidarity among those that participate in a common work; to raise up
new forms of entrepreneurship and to look again at systems of commerce,
finance and exchange of technology.
To such an end the lay faithful must accomplish their work with professional
competence, with human honesty, and with a Christian spirit, and especially
as a way of their own sanctification(159), according to the explicit
invitation of the Council: "By work an individual ordinarily provides
for self and family, is joined in fellowship to others, and renders them
service; and is enabled to exercise genuine charity and be a partner
in the work of bringing divine creation to perfection. Moreover, we know
that through work offered to God an individual is associated with the
redemptive work of Jesus Christ, whose labour with his hands at Nazareth
greatly ennobled the dignity of work"(160).
Today in an ever-increasingly acute way, the so-called "ecological" question
poses itself in relation to socio-economic life and work Certainly humanity
has received from God himself the task of "dominating" the
created world and "cultivating the garden" of the world. But
this is a task that humanity must carry out in respect for the divine
image received, and, therefore, with intelligence and with love, assuming
responsibility for the gifts that God has bestowed and continues to bestow.
Humanity has in its possession a gift that must be passed on to future
generations, if possible, passed on in better condition. Even these future
generations are the recipients of the Lord's gifts: "The dominion
granted to humanity by the Creator is not an absolute power, nor can
one speak of a freedom to 'use and misuse', or to dispose of things as
one pleases. The limitation imposed from the beginning by the Creator
himself and expressed symbolically by the prohibition not to 'eat of
the fruit of the tree' (cf. Gen 2:16-17) shows clearly enough that, when
it comes to the natural world, we are subject not only to biological
laws but also to moral ones, which cannot be violated with impunity.
A true concept of development cannot ignore the use of the things of
nature, the renewability of resources and the consequences of haphazard
industrialization-three considerations which alert our consciences to
the moral dimension of development"(161).
Evangelizing Culture and the Cultures of Humanity
44. Service to the individual and to human society is expressed and
finds its fulfilment through the creation and the transmission of culture,
which especially in our time constitutes one of the more serious tasks
of living together as a human family and of social evolution. In light
of the Council, we mean by "culture" all those "factors
which go to the refining and developing of humanity's diverse spiritual
and physical endowments. It means the efforts of the human family to
bring the world under its control through its knowledge and its labour;
to humanize social life both in the family and in the whole civic community
through the improvement of customs and institutions; to express through
its works the great spiritual experiences and aspirations of all peoples
throughout the ages; finally, to communicate and to preserve them to
be an inspiration for the progress of many, indeed of the whole human
race"(162). In this sense, culture must be held as the common good
of every people, the expression of its dignity, liberty and creativity,
and the testimony of its course through history. In particular, only
from within and through culture does the Christian faith become a part
of history and the creator of history.
The Church is fully aware of a pastoral urgency that calls for an absolutely
special concern for culture in those circumstances where the development
of a culture becomes disassociated not only from Christian faith but
even from human values(163), as well as in those situations where science
and technology are powerless in giving an adequate response to the pressing
questions of truth and well-being that burn in people's hearts. For this
reason the Church calls upon the lay faithful to be present, as signs
of courage and intellectual creativity, in the privileged places of culture,
that is, the world of education-school and university-in places of scientific
and technological research, the areas of artistic creativity and work
in the humanities. Such a presence is destined not only for the recognition
and possible purification of the elements that critically burden existing
culture, but also for the elevation of these cultures through the riches
which have their source in the Gospel and the Christian faith. The extensive
treatment by the Second Vatican Council of the rapport between the Gospel
and culture represents a constant historic fact and at the same time
serves as a working ideal of particular and immediate urgency. It is
a challenging programme given as a pastoral responsibility to the entire
Church, but in a specific way to the lay faithful in her. "The good
news of Christ continually renews the life and culture of fallen humanity;
it combats and removes the error and evil which flow from the attraction
of sin which are a perpetual threat. She never ceases to purify and to
elevate the morality of peoples... In this way the Church carries out
her mission and in that very act she stimulates and makes her contribution
to human and civic culture. By her action, even in its liturgical forms,
she leads people to interior freedom"(164).
Some particularly significant citations from Paul VI's Exhortation Evangelii
Nuntiandi merit recollection here: "The Church evangelizes when
she seeks to convert, solely through the divine power of the message
she proclaims (cf. Rom 1:16; 1 Cor 1:18; 2:4), both the personal and
collective consciences of people, the activities in which they engage,
and the lives and concrete milieux which are theirs. Strata of humanity
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 challenging, 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. All this could be expressed in the following words:
What matters is to evangelizehumanity's culture and the cultures of the
human family... 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"(165).
The privileged way at present for the creation and transmission of culture
is the means of social communications(166). The world of the massmedia
represents a new frontier for the mission of the Church, because it is
undergoing a rapid and innovative development and has an extensive worldwide
influence on the formation of mentality and customs. In particular, the
lay faithful's responsibility as professionals in this field, exercised
both by individual right and through community initiatives and institutions,
demands a recognition of all its values, and demands that it be sustained
by more adequate resource materials, both intellectual and pastoral.
The use of these instruments by professionals in communication and their
reception by the public demand both a work of education in a critical
sense, which is animated by a passion for the truth, and a work of defence
of liberty, respect for the dignity of individuals, and the elevation
of the authentic culture of peoples which occurs through a firm and courageous
rejection of every form of monopoly and manipulation.
However, the pastoral responsibility among the lay faithful does not
stop with this work of defence. It extends to everyone in the world of
communications, even to those professional people of the press, cinema,
radio, television and theatre. These also are called to proclaim the
gospel that brings salvation.
CHAPTER IV
LABOURERS IN THE LORD'S VINEYARD
Good Stewards of God's Varied Grace
The Variety of Vocations
45. According to the gospel parable, the "householder" calls
the labourers for his vineyard at various times during the day: some
at dawn, others about nine in the morning, still others about midday
and at three, the last, around five (cf. Mt 20:1 ff.). In commenting
on these words of the gospel, Saint Gregory the Great makes a comparison
between the various times of the call and the different stages in life: "It
is possible to compare the different hours", he writes, "to
the various stages in a person's life. According to our analogy the morning
can certainly represent childhood. The third hour, then, can refer to
adolescence; the sun has now moved to the height of heaven, that is,
at this stage a person grows in strength. The sixth hour is adulthood,
the sun is in the middle of the sky, indeed at this age the fullness
of vitality is obvious. Old age represents the ninth hour, because the
sun starts its descent from the height of heaven, thus the youthful vitality
begins to decline. The eleventh hour represents those who are most advanced
in years... The labourers, then, are called and sent forth into the vineyard
at different hours, that is to say, one is led to a holy life during
childhood, another in adolescence, another in adulthood and another in
old age"(167).
We can make a further application of the comments of Saint Gregory the
Great to the extraordinary variety of ways the Church becomes "present" in
life; one and all are called to work for the coming of the Kingdom of
God according to the diversity of callings and situations, charisms and
ministries. This variety is not only linked to age, but also to the difference
of sex and to the diversity of natural gifts, as well as to careers and
conditions affecting a person's life. It is a variety that makes the
riches of the Church more vital and concrete.
Young People, Children and Older People
Youth, the Hope of the Church
46. The Synod wished to give particular attention to the young. And
rightly so. In a great many countries of the world, they represent half
of entire populations, and often constitute in number half of the People
of God itself living in those countries. Simply from this aspect youth
make up an exceptional potential and a great challenge for the future
of the Church. In fact the Church sees her path towards the future in
the youth, beholding in them a reflection of herself and her call to
that blessed youthfulness which she constantly enjoys as a result of
Christ's Spirit. In this sense the Council has defined youth as "the
hope of the Church"(168).
In the letter of 31 March 1985 to young men and women in the world we
read: "The Church looks to the youth, indeed the Church in a special
way looks at herself in the youth, in all of you and in each of you.
It has been so from the beginning, from apostolic times. The words of
St. John in his First Letter can serve as special testimony: 'I am writing
to you, young people, because you have overcome the evil one. I write
to you, children, because you know the Father... I write to you, young
people, because you are strong and the word of God abides in you (1 Jn
2:13 ff.)... In our generation, at the end of the Second Millennium after
Christ, the Church also sees herself in the youth"(169).
Youth must not simply be considered as an object of pastoral concern
for the Church: in fact, young people are and ought to be encouraged
to be active on behalf of the Church as leading characters in evangelization
and participants in the renewal of society.(170) Youth is a time of an
especially intensive discovery of a "self" and "a choice
of life". It is a time for growth which ought to progress "in
wisdom, age and grace before God and people" (Lk 2:52).
The Synod Fathers have commented: "The sensitivity of young people
profoundly affects their perceiving of the values of justice, nonviolence
and peace. Their hearts are disposed to fellowship, friendship and solidarity.
They are greatly moved by causes that relate to the quality of life and
the conservation of nature. But they are troubled by anxiety, deceptions,
anguishes and fears of the world as well as by the temptations that come
with their state"(171).
The Church must seek to rekindle the very special love displayed by
Christ towards the young man in the Gospel: "Jesus, looking upon
him, loved him" (Mk 10:21). For this reason the Church does not
tire of proclaiming Jesus Christ, of proclaiming his Gospel as the unique
and satisfying response to the most deep-seated aspirations of young
people, as illustrated in Christ's forceful and exalted personal call
to discipleship ("Come and follow me." Mk 10:21), that brings
about a sharing in the filial love of Jesus for his Father and the participation
in his mission for the salvation of humanity.
The Church has so much to talk about with youth, and youth have so much
to share with the Church. This mutual dialogue, by taking place with
great cordiality, clarity and courage, will provide a favorable setting
for the meeting and exchange between generations, and will be a source
of richness and youthfulness for the Church and civil society. In its
message to young people the Council said: "The Church looks to you
with confidence and with love... She is the real youthfulness of the
world... Look upon the Church and you will find in her the face of Christ"(172).
Children and the Kingdom of Heaven
47. Children are certainly the object of the Lord Jesus' tender and
generous love. To them he gave his blessing, and, even more, to them
he promised the Kingdom of heaven (cf. Mt 19:13-15; Mk 10:14). In particular
Jesus exalted the active role that little ones have in the Kingdom of
God. They are the eloquent symbol and exalted image of those moral and
spiritual conditions that are essential for entering into the Kingdom
of God and for living the logic of total confidence in the Lord: "Truly
I say to you, unless you turn and become like children. vou will never
enter the Kingdom of heaven. Whoever humbles himself like this child,
he is the greatest in the Kingdom of heaven" (Mt 18, 3-5; cf. Lk
9:48).
Children are a continual reminder that the missionary fruitfulness of
the Church has its life-giving basis not in human means and merits, but
in the absolute gratuitous gift of God. The life itself of innocence
and grace of many children, and even the suffering and oppression unjustly
inflicted upon them are in virtue of the Cross of Christ a source of
spiritual enrichment for them and for the entire Church. Everyone ought
to be more conscious and grateful for this fact.
Furthermore, it must be acknowledged that valuable possibilities exist
even in the life's stages of infancy and childhood, both for the building
up of the Church and for making society more humane. How often the Council
referred to the beneficial and constructive affects for the family, "the
domestic Church", through the presence of sons and daughters: "Children
as living members of the family, contribute in their in their own way
to the sanctification of their parents"(173). The Council's words
must also be repeated about children in relation to the local and universal
Church. John Gerson, a great theologian and educator of the 15th Century,
had already emphasized this fact in stating that "children and young
people are in no way a negligible part of the Church"(174).
Older People and the Gift of Wisdom
48. I now address older people, oftentimes unjustly considered as unproductive,
if not directly an insupportable burden. I remind older people that the
Church calls and expects them to continue to exercise their mission in
the apostolic and missionary life. This is not only a possibility for
them, but it is their duty even in this time in their life when age itself
provides opportunities in some specific and basic way.
The Bible delights in presenting the older person as the symbol of someone
rich in wisdom and fear of the Lord (cf. Sir 25:4-6). In this sense the "gift" of
older people can be specifically that of being the witness to tradition
in the faith both in the Church and in society (cf. Ps 44: 2; Ex 12:26-27),
the teacher of the lessons of life (cf. Sir 6:34; 8:11-12), and the worker
of charity.
At this moment the growing number of older people in different countries
worldwide and the expected retirement of persons from various professions
and the workplace provides older people with a new opportunity in the
apostolate. Involved in the task is their determination to overcome the
temptation of taking refuge in a nostalgia in a never-to-return past
or fleeing from present responsibility because of difficulties encountered
in a world of one novelty after another. They must always have a clear
knowledge that one's role in the Church and society does not stop at
a certain age at all, but at such times knows only new ways of application.
As the Psalmist says: "They still bring forth fruit in old age,
they are ever full of sap and green, to show that the Lord is upright" (Ps
92:15-16). I repeat all that I said during the celebration of the Older
People's Jubilee: "Arriving at an older age is to be considered
a privilege: not simply because not everyone has the good fortune to
reach this stage in life, but also, and above all, because this period
provides real possibilities for better evaluating the past, for knowing
and living more deeply the Paschal Mystery, for becoming an example in
the Church for the whole People of God... Despite the complex nature
of the problems you face: a strength that progressively diminishes, the
insufficiencies of social organizations, official legislation that comes
late, or the lack of understanding by a self-centered society, you are
not to feel yourselves as persons underestimated in the life of the Church
or as passive objects in a fast-paced world, but as participants at a
time of life which is humanly and spiritually fruitful. You still have
a mission to fulfill, a contribution to make. According to the divine
plan, each individual human being lives a life of continual growth, from
the beginning of existence to the moment at which the last breath is
taken"(175).
Women and Men
49. The Synod Fathers gave special attention to the status and role
of women, with two purposes in mind: to themselves acknowledge and to
invite all others to once again acknowledge the indispensable contribution
of women to the building up of the Church and the development of society.
They wished as well to work on a more specific analysis of women's participation
in the life and mission of the Church.
Making reference to Pope John XXIII, who saw women's greater consciousness
of their proper dignity and their entrance into public life as signs
of our times(176), the Synod Fathers, when confronted with the various
forms of discrimination and marginization to which women are subjected
simply because they are women, time and time again strongly affirmed
the urgency to defend and to promote the personal dignity of woman, and
consequently, her equality with man.
If anyone has this task of advancing the dignity of women in the Church
and society, it is women themselves, who must recognize their responsibility
as leading characters. There is still much effort to be done, in many
parts of the world and in various surroundings, to destroy that unjust
and deleterious mentality which considers the human being as a thing,
as an object to buy and sell, as an instrument for selfish interests
or for pleasure only. Women themselves, for the most part, are the prime
victims of such a mentality. Only through openly acknowledging the personal
dignity of women is the first step taken to promote the full participation
of women in Church life as well as in social and public life. A more
extensive and decisive response must be given to the demands made in
the Exhortation Familiaris Consortio concerning the many discriminations
of which women are the victims: "Vigorous and incisive pastoral
action must be taken by all to overcome completely these forms of discrimination
so that the image of God that shines in all human beings without exception
may be fully respected"(177). Along the same lines, the Synod Fathers
stated: "As an expression of her mission the Church must stand firmly
against all forms of discrimination and abuse of women"(178). And
again: "The dignity of women, gravely wounded in public esteem,
must be restored through effective respect for the rights of the human
person and by putting the teaching of the Church into practice"(179).
In particular when speaking of active and responsible participation
in the life and mission of the Church, emphasis should be placed on what
has already been stated and clearly urged by the Second Vatican Council: "Since
in our days women are taking an increasingly active share in the whole
life of society, it is very important that they participate more widely
also in the various fields of the Church's apostolate"(180).
The awareness that women with their own gifts and tasks have their own
specific vocation, has increased and been deepened in the years following
the Council and has found its fundamental inspiration in the Gospel and
the Church's history. In fact, for the believer the Gospel, namely, the
word and example of Jesus Christ, remains the necessary and decisive
point of reference. In no other moment in history is this fact more fruitful
and innovative.
Though not called to the apostolate of the Twelve, and thereby, to the
ministerial priesthood, many women, nevertheless, accompanied Jesus in
his ministry and assisted the group of Apostles (cf. Lk 8:2-3), were
present at the foot of the Cross (cf. Lk 23:49), assisted at the burial
of Christ (cf. Lk 23:55) received and transmitted the message of resurrection
on Easter morn (cf. Lk 24:1-10), and prayed with the apostles in the
Cenacle awaiting Pentecost (cf. Acts 1:14).
From the evidence of the Gospel, the Church at its origin detached herself
from the culture of the time and called women to tasks connected with
spreading the gospel. In his letters the Apostle Paul even cites by name
a great number of women for their various functions in service of the
primitive Christian community (cf. Rom 16:1-15; Phil 4:2-3; Col 4:15
and 1 Cor 11:5; 1 Tim 5:16). "If the witness of the Apostles founds
the Church", stated Paul VI, "the witness of women contributes
greatly towards nourishing the faith of Christian communities"(181).
Both in her earliest days and in her successive development the Church,
albeit in different ways and with diverse emphases, has always known
women who have exercised an oftentimes decisive role in the Church herself
and accomplished tasks of considerable value on her behalf. History is
marked by grand works, quite often lowly and hidden, but not for this
reason any less decisive to the growth and the holiness of the Church.
It is necessary that this history continue, indeed that it be expanded
and intensified in the face of the growing and widespread awareness of
the personal dignity of woman and her vocation, particularly in light
of the urgency of a "re-evangelization" and a major effort
towards "humanizing" social relations.
Gathering together the pronouncements of the Second Vatican Council,
which reflect the Gospel's message and the Church's history, the Synod
Fathers formulated, among others, this precise "recommendation": "It
is necessary that the Church recognize all the gifts of men and women
for her life and mission, and put them into practice"(182). And
again, "This Synod proclaims that the Church seeks the recognition
and use of all the gifts, experiences and talents of men and women to
make her mission effective (cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Instruction on Christian Freedom and Liberation, 72)"(183).
Anthropological and Theological Foundations
50. The condition that will assure the rightful presence of woman in
the Church and in society is a more penetrating and accurate consideration
of the anthropological foundation for masculinity and femininity with
the intent of clarifying woman's personal identity in relation to man,
that is, a diversity yet mutual complementarity, not only as it concerns
roles to be held and functions to be performed, but also, and more deeply,
as it concerns her make-up and meaning as a person.
The Synod Fathers have deeply felt this requirement, maintaining that "the
anthropological and theological foundations for resolving questions about
the true significance and dignity of each sex require deeper study"(184).
Through committing herself to a reflection on the anthropological and
theological basis of femininity, the Church enters the historic process
of the various movements for the promotion of woman, and, in going to
the very basic aspect of woman as a personal being, provides her most
precious contribution. But even before this the Church intends, in such
a way, to obey God, who created the individual "in his image", "male
and female he created them" (Gen 1:27) and who intended that they
would accept the call of God to come to know, reverence and live his
plan. It is a plan that "from the beginning" has been indelibly
imprinted in the very being of the human person-men and women-and, therefore,
in the make-up, meaning and deepest workings of the individual. This
most wise and loving plan must be explored to discover all its richness
of content-a richness that "from the beginning" came to be
progressively manifested and realized in the whole history of salvation,
and was brought to completion in "the fullness of time", when "God
sent his Son, born of a woman" (Gal 4:4). That "fullness" continues
in history: God's plan for woman is read and is to be read within the
context of the faith of the Church, and also, in the lives lived by so
many Christian women today. Without forgetting the help that can come
from different human sciences and cultures, researchers because of an
informed discernment, will be able to help gather and clarify the values
and requirements that belong to the enduring essential aspects of women
and those bound to evolve in history. The Second Vatican Council reminds
us: "The Church maintains that beneath all changes there are many
realities which do not change; these find their ultimate foundation in
Christ, who is the same yesterday, and today, and forever (cf. Heb 13:8)"(185).
The Apostolic Letter on the Dignity and Vocation of Woman gives much
attention to the anthropological and theological foundation of woman's
dignity as a person. The document seeks to again treat and develop the
catechetical reflections of the Wednesday General Audiences devoted over
a long period of time to the "theology of the body", while
at the same time fulfilling a promise made in the Encyclical Redemptoris
Mater(186) and serving as a response to the request of the Synod Fathers.
May the reading of the Apostolic Letter Mulieris Dignitatem, in particular,
as a biblical theological meditation, be an incentive for everyone, both
women and men, and especially for those who devote their lives to the
human sciences and theological disciplines, to pursue on the basis of
the personal dignity of man and woman and their mutual relationship,
a critical study to better and more deeply understand the values and
specific gifts of femininity and masculinity, not only in the surroundings
of social living but also and above all in living as Christians and as
members of the Church.
This meditation on the anthropological and theological foundations of
women ought to enlighten and guide the Christian response to the most
frequently asked questions, oftentimes so crucial, on the "place" that
women can have and ought to have in the Church and in society.
It is quite clear from the words and attitude of Christ, which are normative
for the Church, that no discrimination exists on the level of an individual's
relation to Christ, in which "there is neither male nor female;
for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal 3:28) and on the level
of participation in the Church's life of grace and holiness, as Joel's
prophecy fulfilled at Pentecost wonderfully attests: "I will pour
out my spirit on all flesh; your sons and daughters shall prophecy" (Joel
3:1; cf. Acts 2:17 ff). As the Apostolic Letter on the Dignity and Vocation
of Woman reads: "Both women and men ... are equally capable of receiving
the outpouring of divine truth and love in the Holy Spirit. Both receive
his salvific and sanctifying 'visits'"(187).
Mission in the Church and in the World
51. In speaking about participation in the apostolic mission of the
Church, there is no doubt that in virtue of Baptism and Confirmation,
a woman-as well as a man-is made a sharer in the threefold mission of
Jesus Christ, Priest, Prophet and King, and is thereby charged and given
the ability to fulfill the fundamental apostolate of the Church: evangelization.
However, a woman is called to put to work in this apostolate the "gifts" which
are properly hers: first of all, the gift that is her very dignity as
a person exercised in word and testimony of life, gifts therefore, connected
with her vocation as a woman.
In her participation in the life and mission of the Church a woman cannot
receive the Sacrament of Orders, and therefore, cannot fulfil the proper
function of the ministerial priesthood. This is a practice that the Church
has always found in the expressed will of Christ, totally free and sovereign,
who called only men to be his apostles(188); a practice that can be understood
from the rapport between Christ, the Spouse, and his Bride, the Church(189).
Here we are in the area of function, not of dignity and holiness. In
fact, it must be maintained: "Although the Church possesses a 'hierarchical'
structure, nevertheless this structure is totally ordered to the holiness
of Christ's members"(190).
However, as Paul VI has already said, "We cannot change what our
Lord did, nor his call to women; but we can recognize and promote the
role of women in the mission of evangelization and in the life of the
Christian community(191).
Above all the acknowledgment in theory of the active and responsible
presence of woman in the Church must be realized in practice. With this
in mind this Exhortation addressed to the lay faithful with its deliberate
and repeated use of the terms "women and men", must be read.
Furthermore the revised Code of Canon Law contains many provisions on
the participation of women in the life and mission of the Church: they
are provisions that must be more commonly known and, according to the
diverse sensibilities of culture and opportuneness in a pastoral situation,
be realized with greater timeliness and determination.
An example comes to mind in the participation of women on diocesan and
parochial Pastoral Councils as well as Diocesan Synods and particular
Councils. In this regard the Synod Fathers have written: "Without
discrimination women should be participants in the life of the Church,
and also in consultation and the process of coming to decisions"(192).And
again: "Women, who already hold places of great importance in transmitting
the faith and offering every kind of service in the life of the Church,
ought to be associated in the preparation of pastoral and missionary
documents and ought to be recognized as cooperators in the mission of
the church in the family, in professional life and in the civil community"(193).
In the more specific area of evangelization and catechesis the particular
work that women have in the transmission of the faith, not only in the
family but also in the various educational environments, is to be more
strongly fostered. In broader terms, this should be applied in all that
regard embracing the Word of God, its understanding and its communication,
as well as its study, research and theological teaching.
While she is to fulfill her duty to evangelize, woman is to feel more
acutely her need to be evangelized. Thus, with her vision illumined by
faith (cf. Eph 1:18), woman is to be able to distinguish what truly responds
to her dignity as a person and to her vocation from all that, under the
pretext of this "dignity" and in the name of "freedom" and "progress",
militates against true values. On the contrary, these false values become
responsible for the moral degradation of the person, the environment
and society. This same "discernment", made possible and demanded
from Christian women's participation in the prophetic mission of Christ
and his Church, recurs with continued urgency throughout history. This "discernment",
often mentioned by the Apostle Paul, is not only a matter of evaluating
reality and events in the light of faith, but also involves a real decision
and obligation to employ it, not only in Church life but also in human
society.
It can be said that the problems of today's world already cited in the
second part of the Council's Constitution Gaudium et Spes, which remain
unresolved and not at all affected by the passage of time, must witness
the presence and commitment of women with their irreplaceable and customary
contributions.
In particular, two great tasks entrusted to women merit the attention
of everyone.
First of all, the task of bringing full dignity to the conjugal lite
and to motherhood. Today new possibilities are opened to women for a
deeper understanding and a richer realization of human and Christian
values implied in the conjugal life and the experience of motherhood.
Man himself-husband and father-can be helped to overcome forms of absenteeism
and of periodic presence as well as a partial fulfilment of parental
responsibilities-indeed he can be involved in new and significant relations
of interpersonal communion-precisely as a result of the intelligent,
loving and decisive intervention of woman.
Secondly, women have the task of assuring the moral dimension of culture,
the dimension, namely of a culture worthy of the person, of an individual
yet social life. The Second Vatican Council seems to connect the moral
dimension of culture with the participation of the lay faithful in the
kingly mission of Christ: "Let the lay faithful by their combined
efforts remedy the institutions and conditions of the world when the
latter are an inducement to sin, that all such things may be conformed
to the norms of justice, and may favor the practice of virtue rather
than hindering it. By so doing, they will infuse culture and human works
with a moral value"(194).
As women increasingly participate more fully and responsibly in the
activities of institutions which are associated with safeguarding the
basic duty to human values in various communities, the words of the Council
just quoted point to an important field in the apostolate of women: in
all aspects of the life of such communities, from the socio-economic
to the sociopolitical dimension, the personal dignity of woman and her
specific vocation ought to be respected and promoted. Likewise this should
be the case in living situations not only affecting the individual but
also communities, not only in forms left to personal freedom and responsibility,
but even in those guaranteed by just civil laws.
"It is not good for man to be alone: let us make him a helper fit
for him" (Gen 2:18). God entrusted the human being to woman. Certainly,
every human being is entrusted to each and every other human being, but
in a special way the human being is entrusted to woman, precisely because
the woman in virtue of her special experience of motherhood is seen to
have a specific sensitivity towards the human person and all that constitutes
the individual's true welfare, beginning with the fundamental value of
life. How great are the possibilities and responsibilities of woman in
this area, at a time when the development of science and technology is
not always inspired and measured by true wisdom, with the inevitable
risk of "de-humanizing" human life, above all when it would
demand a more intense love and a more generous acceptance.
The participation of women in the life of the Church and society in
the sharing of her gifts is likewise the path necessary of her personal
fulfillment-on which so many justly insist today-and the basic contribution
of woman to the enrichment of Church communion and the dynamism in the
apostolate of the People of God.
From this perspective the presence also of men, together with women,
ought to be considered.
The Presence and Collaboration of Men Together with Women
52. Many voices were raised in the Synod Hall expressing the fear that
excessive insistence given to the status and role of women would lead
to an unacceptable omission, that, in point, regarding men. In reality,
various sectors in the Church must lament the absence or the scarcity
of the presence of men, some of whom abdicate their proper Church responsibilities,
allowing them to be fulfilled only by women. Such instances are participation
in the liturgical prayer of the Church, education and, in particular,
catechesis of their own sons and daughters and other children, presence
at religious and cultural meetings, and collaboration in charitable and
missionary initiatives.
Therefore, the coordinated presence of both men and women is to be pastorally
urged so that the participation of the lay faithful in the salvific mission
of the Church might be rendered more rich, complete and harmonious.
The fundamental reason that requires and explains the presence and the
collaboration of both men and women is not only, as it was just emphasized,
the major source of meaning and efficacy in the pastoral action of the
Church, nor even less is it the simple sociological fact of sharing a
life together as human beings, which is natural for man and woman. It
is, rather, the original plan of the Creator who from the "beginning" willed
the human being to be a "unity of the two", and willed man
and woman to be the prime community of persons, source of every other
community, and, at the same time, to be a "sign" of that interpersonal
communion of love which constitutes the mystical, intimate life of God,
One in Three.
Precisely for this reason, the most common and widespread way, and at
the same time, fundamental way, to assure this coordinated and harmonious
presence of men and women in the life and mission of the Church, is the
fulfilment of the tasks and responsibilities of the couple and the Christian
family, in which the variety of diverse forms of life and love is seen
and communicated: conjugal, paternal and maternal, filial and familial.
We read in the Exhortation Familiaris Consortio: "Since the Christian
family is a community in which the relationships are renewed by Christ
through faith and the sacraments, the family's sharing in the Church's
mission should follow a community pattern: the spouses together as a
couple, the parents and children as a family, must live their service
to the Church and to the world ... The Christian family also builds up
the Kingdom of God in history through the everyday realities that concern
and distinguish its state of life: it is thus in the love between husband
and wife and between members of the family-a love lived out in all its
extraordinary richness of values and demands: totality, oneness, fidelity
and fruitfulness-that the Christian family's participation in the prophetic,
priestly and kingly mission of Jesus Christ and of his Church finds expression
and realization"(195).
From this perspective, the Synod Fathers have recalled the meaning that
the Sacrament of Matrimony ought to assume in the Church and society
in order to illuminate and inspire all the relations between men and
women. In this regard they have emphasized an " urgent need for
every Christian to live and proclaim the message of hope contained in
the relation between man and woman. The Sacrament of Matrimony, which
consecrates this relation in its conjugal form and reveals it as a sign
of the relation of Christ with his Church, contains a teaching of great
importance for the Church's life-a teaching that ought to reach today's
world through the Church; all those relations between man and woman must
be imbued by this spirit. The Church should even more fully rely on the
riches found here"(196). These same Fathers have rightly emphasized
that "the esteem for virginity and reverence for motherhood must
be respectively restored"(197), and still again they have called
for the development of diverse and complementary vocations in the living
context of Church communion and in the service of its continued growth.
The Sick and the Suffering
53. People are called to joy. Nevertheless, each day they experience
many forms of suffering and pain. The Synod Fathers in addressing men
and women affected by these various forms of suffering and pain used
the following words in their final Message: "You who are the abandoned
and pushed to the edges of our consumer society; you who are sick, people
with disabilities, the poor and hungry, migrants and prisoners, refugees,
unemployed, abandoned children and old people who feel alone; you who
are victims of war and all kinds of violence: the Church reminds you
that she shares your suffering. She takes it to the Lord, who in turn
associates you with his redeeming Passion. You are brought to life in
the light of his resurrection. We need you to teach the whole world what
love is. We will do everything we can so that you may find your rightful
place in the Church and in society"(198).
In the context of such a limitless world as human suffering, We now
turn our attention to all those struck down by sickness in its various
forms: sickness is indeed the most frequent and common expression of
human suffering.
The Lord addresses his call to each and every one. Even the sick are
sent forth as labourers into the Lord's vineyard: the weight that wearies
the body's members and dissipates the soul's serenity is far from dispensing
a person from working in the vineyard. Instead the sick are called to
live their human and Christian vocation and to participate in the growth
of the Kingdom of God in a new and even more valuable manner. The words
of the apostle Paul ought to become their approach to life or, better
yet, cast an illumination to permit them to see the meaning of grace
in their very situation: "In my flesh I complete what is lacking
in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church" (Col
1:24). Precisely in arriving at this realization, the apostle is raised
up in joy: "I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake" (Col
1:24). In the same way many of the sick can become bearers of the "joy
inspired by the Holy Spirit in much affliction" (1 Thes 1:6) and
witnesses to Jesus' resurrection. A handicapped person expressed these
sentiments in a presentation in the Synod Hall: "It is very important
to make clear that Christians who live in situations of illness, pain
and old age are called by God not only to unite their suffering to Christ's
Passion but also to receive in themselves now, and to transmit to others,
the power of renewal and the joy of the risen Christ (cf. 2 Cor 4:10-11;
1 Pt 4:13; Rom 8:18 ff)"(199).
On the Church's part-as it reads in the Apostolic Letter Salvifici Doloris-"Born
in the mystery of Redemption in the Cross of Christ, the Church has to
try to meet man in a special way on the path of suffering. In this meeting
man 'becomes the way for the Church', and this is one of the most important
ways"(200). At this moment the suffering individual is the way of
the Church because that person is, first of all, the way of Christ Himself,
who is the Good Samaritan who "does not pass by", but "has
compassion on him, went to him ... bound up his wounds ... took care
of him" (Lk 10:32-34).
From century to century the Christian community in revealing and communicating
its healing love and the consolation of Jesus Christ has reenacted the
gospel parable of the Good Samaritan in caring for the vast multitude
of persons who are sick and suffering. This came about through the untiring
commitment of all those who have taken care of the sick and suffering
as a result of science and the medical arts as well as the skilled and
generous service of healthcare workers. Today there is an increase in
the presence of lay women and men in Catholic hospital and healthcare
institutions. At times the lay faithful's presence in these institutions
is total and exclusive. It is to just such people-doctors, nurses, other
healthcare workers, volunteers-that the call becomes the living signof
Jesus Christ and his Church in showing love towards the sick and suffering.
Renewed Pastoral Action
54. It is necessary that this most precious heritage, which the Church
has received from Jesus Christ, "Physician of the body and the spirit"(201),
must never diminish but always must come to be more valued and enriched
through renewal and decisive initiatives of pastoral activity for and
with the sick and suffering. This activity must be capable of sustaining
and fostering attention, nearness, presence, listening, dialogue, sharing,
and real help toward individuals in moments when sickness and suffering
sorely test not only faith in life but also faith in God and his love
as Father.
One of the basic objectives of this renewed and intensified pastoral
action, which must involve all components of the ecclesial community
in a coordinated way, is an attitude which looks upon the sick person,
the bearer of a handicap, or the suffering individual, not simply as
an object of the Church's love and service, but as an active and responsible
participant in the work of evangelization and salvation. From this perspective
the Church has to let the good news resound within a society and culture,
which, having lost the sense of human suffering, "censors" all
talk on such a hard reality of life. Thegood news is the proclamation
that suffering can even have a positive meaning for the individual and
for society itself, since each person is called to a form of participation
in the salvific suffering of Christ and in the joy of resurrection, as
well as, thereby, to become a force for the sanctification and building
up of the Church.
The proclamation of this good news gains credibility when it is not
simply voiced in words, but passes into a testimony of life, both in
the case of all those who lovingly care for the sick, the handicapped
and the suffering, as well as the suffering themselves who are increasingly
made more conscious and responsible of their place and task within and
on behalf of the Church.
In order that "the civilization of love" can flourish and
produce fruit in this vast world of human pain, I invite all to reread
and meditate on the Apostolic Letter, Salvifici Doloris, from which I
am pleased to again propose the lines from its conclusion: "There
should come together in spirit beneath the Cross of Calvary all suffering
people who believe in Christ, and particularly those who suffer because
of their faith in him who is the Crucified and Risen One, so that the
offering of their sufferings may hasten the fulfilment of the prayer
of the Saviour himself that all may be one. Let there also gather beneath
the Cross all people of good will, for on this Cross is the 'Redeemer
of Man', the Man of Sorrows, who has taken upon himself the physical
and moral sufferings of the people of all times, so that in love they
may find the salvific meaning of their sorrow and valid answers to all
their questions.
Together with Mary, Mother of Christ, who stood beneath the Cross, we
pause beside all the crosses of contemporary man and we ask all of you
who suffer to support us. We ask precisely you who are weak to become
a source of strength for the Church and humanity. In the terrible battle
between the forces of good and evil revealed to our eyes by our modern
world, may your sufferings in union with the Cross of Christ be victorious"(202).
The States of Life and Vocations
55. All the members of the People of God -clergy, men and women religious,
the lay faithful-are labourers in the vineyard. At one and the same time
they all are the goal and subjects of Church communion as well as of
participation in the mission of salvation. Every one of us possessing
charisms and ministries, diverse yet complementary, works in the one
and the same vineyard of the Lord.
Simply in being Christians, even before actually doing the works of
a Christian, all are branches of the one fruitful vine which is Christ.
All are living members of the one Body of the Lord built up through
the power of the Spirit. The significance of "being" a Christian
does not come about simply from the life of grace and holiness which
is the primary and more productive source of the apostolic and missionary
fruitfulness of Holy Mother Church. Its meaning also arises from the
state of life that characterizes the clergy, men and women religious,
members of secular institutes and the lay faithful.
In Church Communion the states of life by being ordered one to the other
are thus bound together among themselves. They all share in a deeply
basic meaning: that of being the manner of living out the commonly shared
Christian dignity and the universal call to holiness in the perfection
of love. They are different yet complementary, in the sense that each
of them has a basic and unmistakable character which sets each apart,
while at the same time each of them is seen in relation to the other
and placed at each other's service.
Thus the lay state of life has its distinctive feature in its secular
character. It fulfills an ecclesial service in bearing witness and, in
its own way recalling for priests, women and men religious, the significance
of the earthly and temporal realities in the salvific plan of God. In
turn, the ministerial priesthood represents in different times and places,
the permanent guarantee of the sacramental presence of Christ, the Redeemer.
The religious state bears witness to the eschatological character of
the Church, that is, the straining towards the Kingdom of God that is
prefigured and in some way anticipated and experienced even now through
the vows of chastity, poverty and obedience.
All the states of life, whether taken collectively or individually in
relation to the others, are at the service of the Church's growth. While
different in expression they are deeply united in the Church's "mystery
of communion" and are dynamically coordinated in its unique mission.
Thus in the diversity of the states of life and the variety of vocations
this same, unique mystery of the Church reveals and experiences anew
the infinite richness of the mystery of Jesus Christ. The Fathers were
fond of referring to the Church as a field of a pleasing and wonderful
variety of herbs, plants, flowers and fruits. Saint Ambrose writes: "A
field produces many fruits, but the one which has an abundance of both
fruits and flowers is far better. The field of holy Church is fruitful
in both one and the other. In this field there are the priceless buds
of virginity blossoming forth, widowhood stands out boldly as the forest
in the plain; elsewhere the rich harvest of weddings blessed by the Church
fills the great granary of the world with abundant produce, and the wine-presses
of the Lord Jesus overflow with the grapes of a productive vine, enriches
Christian marriages"(203).
The Various Vocations in the Lay State
56. The Church's rich variety is manifested still further from within
each state of life. Thus within the lay state diverse "vocations" are
given, that is, there are different paths in the spiritual life and the
apostolate which are taken by individual members of the lay faithful.
In the field of a "commonly shared" lay vocation "special" lay
vocations flourish. In this area we can also recall the spiritual experience
of the flourishing of diverse forms of secular institutes that have developed
recently in the Church. These offer the lay faithful, and even priests,
the possibility of professing the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity
and obedience through vows or promises, while fully maintaining one's
lay or clerical state(204). In this regard the Synod Fathers have commented, "The
Holy Spirit stirs up other forms of self-giving to which people who remain
fully in the lay state devote themselves"(205).
We can conclude by reading a beautiful passage taken from Saint Francis
de Sales, who promoted lay spirituality so well(206). In speaking of "devotion",
that is, Christian perfection or "life according to the Spirit",
he presents in a simple yet insightful way the vocation of all Christians
to holiness while emphasizing the specific form with which individual
Christians fulfill it: "In creation God commanded the plants to
bring forth their fruits, each one after its kind. So does he command
all Christians, who are the living plants of his Church, to bring forth
the fruits of devotion, each according to his character and vocation.
Devotion must be exercised in different ways by the gentleman, the workman,
the servant, the prince, the widow, the maid and the married woman. Not
only this, but the practice of devotion must also be adapted to the strength,
the employment, and the duties of each one in particular ... It is an
error, or rather a heresy, to try to banish the devout life from the
regiment of soldiers, the shop of the mechanic, the court of princes,
or the home of married folk. It is true, Philothea, that a purely contemplative,
monastic and religious devotion cannot be exercised in such ways of life.
But besides these three kinds of devotion, there are several others adapted
to bring to perfection those who live in the secular state"(207).
Along the same line the Second Vatican Council states: "This lay
spirituality should take its particular character from the circumstances
of one's state in life (married and familylife, celibacy, widowhood),
from one's state of health and from one's professional and social activity.
All should not cease to develop earnestly the qualities and talents bestowed
on them in accord with these conditions of life and should make use of
the gifts which they have received from the Holy Spirit"(208).
What has been said about the spiritual vocation can also be said-and
to a certain degree with greater reason-of the infinite number of ways
through which all members of the Church are employed as labourers in
the vineyard of the Lord, building up the Mystical Body of Christ. Indeed
as a person with a truly unique lifestory, each is called by name, to
make a special contribution to the coming of the Kingdom of God. No talent,
no matter how small, is to be hidden or left unused (cf. Mt 25:24-27).
In this regard the apostle Peter gives us a stern warning: "As
each has received a gift, employ it for one another, as good stewards
of God's varied grace" (1 Pt 4:10).
CHAPTER V
THAT YOU BEAR MUCH FRUIT
The Formation of the Lay Faithful in the Lay State
A Continual Process of Maturation
57. The gospel image of the vine and the branches reveals to us another
fundamental aspect of the lay faithful's life and mission: the call to
growth and a continual process of maturation, of always bearing much
fruit.
As a diligent vinedresser, the Father takes care of his vine. God's
solicitude is so ardently called upon by Israel, that she prays: "Turn
again, O God of hosts! / Look down from heaven, and see; / have regard
for this vine, / the stock which your right hand has planted" (Ps
80:15-16). Jesus himself speaks of the Father's work: "I am the
true vine, and my Father is the vinedresser. Every branch of mine that
bears no fruit, he takes away. and every branch that does bear fruit,
he prunes that it may bear more fruit" (Jn 15:1-2).
The vitality of the branches depends on their remaining attached to
the vine, which is Jesus Christ: "He who abides in me and I in him
bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing" (Jn 15:5).
People are approached in liberty by God who calls everyone to grow,
develop and bear fruit. A person cannot put off a response nor cast off
personal responsibility in the matter. The solemn words of Jesus refer
to this exalted and serious responsibility: "If a man does not abide
in me, he is cast forth as a branch and withers; and the branches are
gathered, thrown into the fire and burned" (Jn 15:6).
In this dialogue between God who offers his gifts, and the person who
is called to exercise responsibility, there comes the possibility, indeed
the necessity, of a total and ongoing formation of the lay faithful,
as the Synod Fathers have rightly emphasized in much of their work. After
having described Christian formation as "a continual process in
the individual of maturation in faith and a likening to Christ, according
to the will of the Father, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit",
they have clearly affirmed that the formation of the lay faithful must
be placed among the priorities of a diocese. It ought to be so placed
within the plan of pastoral action that the efforts of the whole community
(clergy, lay faithful and religious) converge on this goal"(209).
To Discover and Live One's Vocation and Mission
58. The fundamental objective of the formation of the lay faithful is
an ever-clearer discovery of one's vocation and the ever-greater willingness
to live it so as to fulfil one's mission.
God calls me and sends me forth as a labourer in his vineyard. He calls
me and sends me forth to work for the coming of his Kingdom in history.
This personal vocation and mission defines the dignity and the responsibility
of each member of the lay faithful and makes up the focal point of the
whole work of formation, whose purpose is the joyous and grateful recognition
of this dignity and the faithful and generous living-out of this responsibility.
In fact, from eternity God has thought of us and has loved us as unique
individuals. Every one of us he called by name, as the Good Shepherd "calls
his sheep by name" (Jn 10:3). However, only in the unfolding of
the history of our lives and its events is the eternal plan of God revealed
to each of us. Therefore, it is a gradual process; in a certain sense,
one that happens day by day.
To be able to discover the actual will of the Lord in our lives always
involves the following: a receptive listening to the Word of God and
the Church, fervent and constant prayer, recourse to a wise and loving
spiritual guide, and a faithful discernment of the gifts and talents
given by God, as well as the diverse social and historic situations in
which one lives.
Therefore, in the life of each member of the lay faithful there are
particularly significant and decisive moments for discerning God's call
and embracing the mission entrusted by Him. Among these are the periods
of adolescence and young adulthood. No one must forget that the Lord,
as the master of the labourers in the vineyard, calls at every hour of
life so as to make his holy will more precisely and explicitly known.
Therefore, the fundamental and continuous attitude of the disciple should
be one of vigilance and a conscious attentiveness to the voice of God.
It is not a question of simply knowing what God wants from each of us
in the various situations of life. The individual must do what God wants,
as we are reminded in the words that Mary, the Mother of Jesus, addressed
to the servants at Cana: "Do whatever he tells you" (Jn 2:5).
However, to act in fidelity to God's will requires a capability for acting
and the developing of that capability. We can rest assured that this
is possible through the free and responsible collaboration of each of
us with the grace of the Lord which is never lacking. Saint Leo the Great
says: "The one who confers the dignity will give the strength!"(210).
This, then, is the marvelous yet demanding task awaiting all the lay
faithful and all Christians at every moment: to grow always in the knowledge
of the richness of Baptism and faith as well as to live it more fully.
In referring to birth and growth as two stages in the Christian life
the apostle Peter makes the following exhortation: "Like newborn
babes, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up to
salvation" (1 Pt 2:2).
A Total Integrated Formation for Living an Integrated Life
59. In discovering and living their proper vocation and mission, the
lay faithful must be formed according to the union which exists from
their being members of the Church and citizens of human society.
There cannot be two parallel lives in their existence: on the one hand,
the so-called "spiritual" life, with its values and demands;
and on the other, the so-called "secular" life, that is, life
in a family, at work, in social relationships, in the responsibilities
of public life and in culture. The branch, engrafted to the vine which
is Christ, bears its fruit in every sphere of existence and activity.
In fact, every area of the lay faithful's lives, as different as they
are, enters into the plan of God, who desires that these very areas be
the "places in time" where the love of Christ is revealed and
realized for both the glory of the Father and service of others. Every
activity, every situation, every precise responsibility-as, for example,
skill and solidarity in work, love and dedication in the family and the
education of children, service to society and public life and the promotion
of truth in the area of culture-are the occasions ordained by Providence
for a "continuous exercise of faith, hope and charity"(211).
The Second Vatican Council has invited all the lay faithful to this
unity of life by forcefully decrying the grave consequences in separating
faith from life, and the gospel from culture: "The Council exhorts
Christians, as citizens of one city and the other, to strive to perform
their earthly duties faithfully in response to the spirit of the Gospel.
They are mistaken who, knowing that we have here no abiding city but
seek one which is to come, think that they may therefore shirk their
earthly responsibilities; for they are forgetting that by faith itself
they are more than ever obliged to measure up to these duties, each according
to one's vocation ... This split between the faith which many profess
and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious errors
of our age"(212).
Therefore, I have maintained that a faith that does not affect a person's
culture is a faith "not fully embraced, not entirely thought out,
not faithfully lived"(213).
Various Aspects of Formation
60. The many interrelated aspects of a totally integrated formation
of the lay faithful are situated within this unity of life.
There is no doubt that spiritual formation ought to occupy a privileged
place in a person's life. Everyone is called to grow continually in intimate
union with Jesus Christ, in conformity to the Father's will, in devotion
to others in charity and justice. The Council writes: "This life
of intimate union with Christ in the Church is nourished by spiritual
helps available to all the faithful, especially by active participation
in the liturgy. Lay people should so make use of these helps in such
a way that, while properly fulfilling their secular duties in the ordinary
conditions of life, they do not disassociate union with Christ from that
life, but through the very performance of their tasks according to God's
will, may they actually grow in it"(214).
The situation today points to an ever-increasing urgency for a doctrinal
formation of the lay faithful, not simply in a better understanding which
is natural to faith's dynamism but also in enabling them to "give
a reason for their hoping" in view of the world and its grave and
complex problems. Therefore, a systematic approach to catechesis, geared
to age and the diverse situations of life, is an absolute necessity,
as is a more decided Christian promotion of culture, in response to the
perennial yet always new questions that concern individuals and society
today.
This is especially true for the lay faithful who have responsibilities
in various fields of society and public life. Above all, it is indispensable
that they have a more exact knowledge -and this demands a more widespread
and precise presentation-of the Church's social doctrine, as repeatedly
stressed by the Synod Fathers in their presentations. They refer to the
participation of the lay faithful in public life, in the following words: "But
for the lay faithful to take up actively this noble purpose in political
matters, it is not enough to exhort them. They must be offered a proper
formation of a social conscience, especially in the Church's social teaching,
which contains principles - of reflection, criteria for judging and practical
directives (cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction
of Christian Freedom and Liberation, 72), and which must be present in
general catechetical instruction and in specialized gatherings, as well
as in schools and universities. Nevertheless, this social doctrine of
the Church is dynamic; that is, adapted to circumstances of time and
place. It is the right and duty of Pastors to propose moral principles
even concerning the social order and of all Christians to apply them
in defence of human rights Nevertheless, active participation in political
parties is reserved to the lay faithful"(215).
The cultivation of human values finds a place in the context of a totally
integrated formation, bearing a particular significance for the missionary
and apostolic activities of the lay faithful. In this regard the Council
wrote: "(the lay faithful) should also hold in high esteem professional
skill, family and civic spirit, and the virtues related to social behaviour,
namely, honesty, a spirit of justice, sincerity, courtesy, moral courage;
without them there is no true Christian life"(216).
In bringing their lives into an organic synthesis, which is, at one
and the same time, the manifestation of the unity of "who they are" in
the Church and society as well as the condition for the effective fulfilment
of their mission, the lay faithful are to be guided interiorly and sustained
by the Holy Spirit, who is the Spirit of unity and fullness of life.
Collaborators with God the Teacher
61. Where are the lay faithful formed? What are the means of their formation?
Who are the persons and the communities called upon to assume the task
of a totally integrated formation of the lay faithful?
Just as the work of human education is intimately connected with fatherhood
and motherhood, so Christian formation finds its origin and its strength
in God the Father who loves and educates his children. Yes, God is the
first and great teacher of his People, as it states in the striking passage
of the Song of Moses: "He found him in a desert land / and in the
howling waste of the wilderness; / he encircled him, he cared for him,
he kept him as the apple of his eye. / Like an eagle that stirs up its
nest, that flutters over its young, spreading out its wings, catching
them, bearing them on its pinions, / the Lord alone did lead him, and
there was no foreign God with him" (Deut 32:10-12; cf. 8:5).
God's work in forming his people is revealed and fulfilled in Jesus
Christ the Teacher, and reaches to the depths of every individual's heart
as a result of the living presence of the Spirit. Mother Church is called
to take part in the divine work of formation, both through a sharing
of her very life, and through her various pronouncements and actions.
It is thus that the lay faithful are formed by the Church andin the Church
in a mutual communion and collaboration of all her members: clergy, religious
and lay faithful. Thus the whole ecclesial community, in its diverse
members, receives the fruitfulness of the Spirit and actively cooperates
towards that end. With this in mind Methodius of Olympo wrote: "Those
not yet perfected are carried and formed by those more perfect, as in
the womb of a mother, until the time they are generated and brought forth
for the greatness and beauty of virtue"(217). This happened with
Saint Paul, who was carried and brought forth in the Church by those
who were perfected (in the person of Ananias) and, then Paul in his turn,
became perfected and fruitful in bringing forth many children.
First of all the Church is a teacher, in which the Pope takes the "primary" role
in the formation of the lay faithful. As successor of Saint Peter, he
has the ministry of "confirming his brothers in the faith",
instructing all believers in the essential content of vocation and mission
in light of the Christian faith and membership in the Church. Therefore,
not simply the words coming directly from him, but also those transmitted
by the various departments of the Holy See call for a loving and receptive
hearing by the lay faithful.
The one and universal Church is present in various parts of the world,
in and through the particular Churches. In each of them the Bishop in
his person has a responsibility towards the lay faithful, in forming
the animation and guidance of their Christian life through the proclamation
of the Word and the celebration of the Eucharist and the Sacraments.
Situated and at work within the particular Church or diocese is the
Parish which has the essential task of a more personal and immediate
formation of the lay faithful. In fact, because it is in the position
to reach more easily individual persons and singular groups, the parish
is called to instruct its members in hearing God's Word, in liturgical
and personal dialogue with God, in the life of fraternal charity, and
in allowing a more direct and concrete perception of the sense of ecclesial
communion and responsibility in the Church's mission.
Internal to the parish, especially if vast and territorially extensive,
small Church communities, where present, can be a notable help in the
formation of Christians, by providing a consciousness and an experience
of ecclesial communion and mission which are more extensive and incisive.
The Synod Fathers have said that a post-baptismal catechesis in the form
of a catechumenate can also be helpful by presenting again some elements
from the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults with the purpose of allowing
a person to grasp and live the immense, extraordinary richness and responsibility
received at Baptism(218).
In the formation that the lay faithful receive from their diocese and
parish, especially concerning communion and mission, the help that diverse
members of the Church can give to each other is particularly important.
This mutual help also aids in revealing the mystery of the Church as
Mother and Teacher. Priests and religious ought to assist the lay faithful
in their formation. In this regard the Synod Fathers have invited priests
and candidates for Orders to "be prepared carefully so that they
are ready to foster the vocation and mission of the lay faithful"(219).
In turn, the lay faithful themselves can and should help priests and
religious in the course of their spiritual and pastoral journey.
Other Places for Formation
62 . The Christian family, as the "domestic Church", also
makes up a natural and fundamental school for formation in the faith:
father and mother receive from the Sacrament of Matrimony the grace and
the ministry of the Christian education of their children, before whom
they bear witness and to whom they transmit both human and religious
values. While learning their first words, children learn also the praise
of God, whom they feel is near them as a loving and providential Father;
while learning the first acts of love, children also learn to open themselves
to others, and through the gift of self receive the sense of living as
a human being. The daily life itself of a truly Christian family makes
up the first "experience of Church", intended to find confirmation
and development in an active and responsible process of the children's
introduction into the wider ecclesial community and civil society. The
more that Christian spouses and parents grow in the awareness that their "domestic
church" participates in the life and mission of the universal Church,
so much the more will their sons and daughters be able to be formed in
a "sense of the Church" and will perceive all the beauty of
dedicating their energies to the service of the Kingdom of God.
Schools and Catholic universities, as well as centers of spiritual renewal
which are becoming ever more widespread in these days, are also important
places for formation. In the present social and historical context which
is marked by an extensively deep cultural involvement, the Synod Fathers
have emphasized that parents' participation in school life-besides being
always necessary and without substitution-is no longer enough. What is
needed is to prepare the lay faithful to dedicate themselves to the work
of rearing their children as a true and proper part of Church mission.
What is needed is to constitute and develop this "formation community" which
is together comprised of parents, teachers, clergy, women and men religious
and representatives of youth. In order that the school can suitably fulfill
its natural function in formation, the lay faithful ought to feel charged
to demand from everyone and for everyone a true freedom in education,
even through opportune civil legislation(220).
The Synod Fathers expressed words of esteem and encouragement to all
those lay faithful, both women and men, who with a civic and Christian
spirit, fulfill a task which is involved in the education of children
both in schools and institutes of formation. In addition they have emphasized
the urgent need in various schools, whether Catholic or not, for teachers
and professors among the lay faithful to be true witnesses of the gospel,
through their example of life, their professional competence and uprightness,
their Christian inspired teaching, preserving always-as is obvious-the
autonomy of various sciences and disciplines. It is of singular importance
that scientific and technological research done by the faithful be correct
from the standpoint of service to an individual in the totality of the
context of one's values and needs: to these lay faithful the Church entrusts
the task of allowing all to better understand the intimate bond that
exists between faith and science, between the gospel and human culture(221).
"This Synod"-we read in the proposition-"appeals to the
prophetic task of Catholic schools and universities, and praises teachers
and professors, now lay people for the most part, for their dedication
to maintaining institutes of Catholic education that can form men and
women in whom the new commandment is enfleshed. The simultaneous presence
of clergy, the lay faithful and men and women religious, offers students
a vivid image of the Church and makes recognition of its riches easier
(cf. Congregation for Catholic Education, Concerning the Lay Educator,
Witness of Faith in the Schools)"(222).
Groups, associations and movements also have their place in the formation
of the lay faithful. In fact they have the possibility, each with its
own method, of oflfering a formation through a deeply shared experience
in the apostolic life, as well as having the opportunity to integrate,
to make concrete and specific the formation that their members receive
from other persons and communities.
The Reciprocal Formation Received and Given by All
63. Formation is not the privilege of a few, but a right and duty of
all. In this regard the Synod Fathers have said: "Possibilities
of formation should be proposed to all, especially the poor, who can
also be a source of formation for all"; and they added: "Suitable
means to help each person fulfill a full, human and Christian vocation
should be applied to formation"(223).
For the purpose of a truly incisive and effective pastoral activity
the formation of those who will form others is to be developed through
appropriate courses or suitable schools. Forming those who, in turn,
will be given the responsibility for the formation of the lay faithful,
constitutes a basic requirement of assuring the general and widespread
formation of all the lay faithful.
According to the explicit invitation of the Synod Fathers special attention
ought to be devoted to the local culture in the work of formation: "The
formation of Christians will take the greatest account of local human
culture, which contributes to formation itself, and will help to discern
the value, whether implanted in tradition or proposed in modern affairs.
Attention should be paid to diverse cultures which can exist in one and
the same people or nation at the same time. The Church, the mother and
teacher of peoples, should strive to safeguard, where the need exists,
the culture of a less numerous people living in large nations when the
situation exists"(224).
In the work of formation some convictions reveal themselves as particularly
necessary and fruitful. First of all, there is the conviction that one
cannot offer a true and effective formation to others if the individual
has not taken on or developed a personal responsibility for formation:
this, in fact, is essentially a "formation of self".
In addition, there is the conviction that at one and the same time each
of us is the goal and principle of formation: the more we are formed
and the more we feel the need to pursue and deepen our formation, still
more will we be formed and be rendered capable of forming others.
It is particularly important to know that the work of formation, while
having intelligent recourse to the means and methods available from human
science, is made more effective the more it is open to the action of
God. Only the branch which does not fear being pruned by the heavenly
vinedresser can bear much fruit for the individual and for others.
An Appeal and A Prayer
64. At the conclusion of this post-Synodal document I once again put
forward the invitation of "the householder", proposed in the
gospel: You go into my vineyard too. It can be said that the significance
of the Synod on the vocation and mission of the lay faithful might very
well consist in this call of the Lord which he addresses to eueryone,
yet, in a particular way to the lay faithful, both women and men.
The happenings at the Synod have been a great spiritual experience for
all the participants. The experience has been that of a Church under
the light and the power of the Spirit, intent on discerning and embracing
the renewed call of her Lord so that she can again propose to today's
world, the mystery of her communion and the dynamism of her mission of
salvation, especially, by centering on the specific place and role of
the lay faithful. This Exhortation, then, intends to urge the most abundant
possible fruitfulness from this Synod in every part of the Church worldwide.
This will come about as a result of an effective hearkening to the Lord's
call by the entire People of God, in particular, by the lay faithful.
Therefore I make a strong appeal to one and all, Pastors and faithful,
never to become tired of maintaining-indeed always taking an active part
to fix deeply in one's mind, heart and life-an ecclesial consciousness,
which is ever mindful of what it means to be members of the Church of
Jesus Christ, participants in her mystery of communion and in her dynamism
in mission and the apostolate.
It is of particular importance that all Christians be aware that through
Baptism they have received an extraordinary dignity: through grace we
are called to be children loved by the Father, members incorporated in
Christ and his Church, living and holy temples of the Spirit. With deep
emotion and gratitude, we again hear the words of John the Evangelist: "See
what love the Father has given us, that we should be called children
of God; and so we are" (1 Jn 3:1).
While this "Christian newness of life" given to the members
of the Church, constitutes for all the basis of their participation in
the priestly, prophetic and kingly mission of Christ and of their vocation
to holines in love, it receives expression and is fulfilled in the lay
faithful through the "secular character" which is "uniquely
and properly" theirs.
Besides imparting an awareness of a commonly shared Christian dignity,
an ecclesial consciousness brings a sense of belonging to the mystery
of the Church as Communion. This is a basic and undeniable aspect of
the life and mission of the Church. For one and all the earnest prayer
of Jesus at the Last Supper, "That all may be one" (Jn 17-21),
ought to become daily a required and undeniable programme of life and
action.
A real sense of Church communion, the gift of the Spirit that urges
our free and generous response, will bring forth as its precious fruit,
in the "one and catholic" Church the continuing value of the
rich variety of vocations and conditions of life, charisms, ministries,
works, and responsibilities, as well as a more demonstrable and decisive
collaboration of groups, associations and movements of the lay faithful
in keeping with the accomplishment of the commonly shared salvific mission
of the Church herself. This communion is already in itself the first
great sign in the world of the presence of Christ, the Saviour. At the
same time, it promotes and stimulates the proper apostolic and missionary
action of the Church.
The whole Church, Pastors and lay faithful alike, standing on the threshold
of the Third Millennium, ought to feel more strong]y the Church's responsibility
to obey the command of Christ, "Go into all the world and preach
the gospel to the whole creation" (Mk 16:15), and take up anew the
missionary endeavour. A great venture, both challenging and wonderful,
is entrusted to the Church-that of a re-evangelization, which is so much
needed by the present world. The lay faithful ought to regard themselves
as an active and responsible part of thisventure, called as they are
to proclaim and to live the gospel in service to the person and to society
while respecting the totality of the values and needs of both.
Since the Synod of Bishops was celebrated last October during the Marian
Year, its work was entrusted in a very special way to the intercession
of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Redeemer. I too entrust
the spiritual fruitfulness of the Synod to her prayerful intercession.
Therefore, along with the Synod Fathers, the lay faithful present at
the Synod and all the other members of the People of God, I have recourse
at the end of this post-Synodal document to the Virgin Mary. At this
moment this appeal becomes a prayer:
O Most Blessed Virgin Mary,
Mother of Christ and Mother of the Church, With joy and wonder we seek
to make our own your Magnificat, joining you in your hymn of thankfulness
and love.
With you we give thanks to God,
" whose mercy
is from generation to generation",
for the exalted vocation
and the many forms of mission
entrusted to the lay faithful.
God has called each of them by name
to live his own communion of love
and holiness
and to be one
in the great family of God's children.
He has sent them forth
to shine with the light of Christ
and to communicate the fire of the Spirit
in every part of society
through their life
inspired by the gospel.
O Virgin of the Magnificat,
fill their hearts
with a gratitude and enthusiasm
for this vocation and mission.
With humility and magnanimity
you were the "handmaid of the Lord";
give us your unreserved willingness
for service to God
and the salvation of the world.
Open our hearts
to the great anticipation
of the Kingdom of God
and of the proclamation of the Gospel
to the whole of creation.
Your mother's heart
is ever mindful of the many dangers
and evils which threaten
to overpower men and women
in our time.
At the same time your heart also takes notice
of the many initiatives
undertaken for good,
the great yearning for values,
and the progress achieved
in bringing forth
the abundant fruits of salvation.
O Virgin full of courage,
may your spiritual strength
and trust in God inspire us,
so that we might know
how to overcome all the obstacles
that we encounter
in accomplishing our mission.
Teach us to treat the affairs
of the world
with a real sense of Christian responsibility
and a joyful hope
of the coming of God's Kingdom, and
of a "new heaven and a new earth".
You who were gathered in prayer
with the Apostles in the Cenacle,
awaiting the coming
of the Spirit at Pentecost,
implore his renewed outpouring
on all the faithful, men and women alike,
so that they might more fully respond
to their vocation and mission,
as branches engrafted to the true vine,
called to bear much fruit
for the life of the world.
O Virgin Mother,
guide and sustain us
so that we might always live
as true sons and daughters
of the Church of your Son.
Enable us to do our part
in helping to establish on earth
the civilization of truth and love,
as God wills it,
for his glory.
Amen
Given at Rome, in St. Peter's, on 30 December, the Feast of the Holy
Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, in the year 1988, the eleventh of my
Pontificate.
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