ARTICLE
3: Forming a Christian Community
15.
The Holy Spirit, who calls all men to Christ by the seeds of the Lord and by
the preaching of the Gospel, stirs up in their: hearts a submission to the
faith Who in the womb of the baptismal font, He begets to a new life those who
believe in Christ, He gathers them into the one People of God which is "a
chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased people" (1
Peter 2:9).8
Therefore,
let the missionaries, God's coworkers, ( cf. 1 Cor. 3:9), raise up
congregations of the faithful such that, walking worthy of the vocation to
which they have been called (cf. Eph. 4:1), they may exercise the priestly,
prophetic, and royal office which God has entrusted to them. In this way, the
Christian community will be a sign of God's presence in the world: for by
reason of the eucharistic sacrifice, this community is ceaselessly on the way
with Christ to the Father;9 carefully nourished on the word of God10 it bears
witness to Christ;11 and finally, it walks in charity and is fervent with the
apostolic spirit.12
The
Christian community should from the very start be so formed that it call
provide nor its necessities insofar as this is possible.
This
congregation of the faithful, endowed with the riches of its own nation's
culture, should be deeply rooted in the people. Let families flourish which are
imbued with the spirit of the Gospel13 and let them be assisted by good
schools; let associations and groups be organized by means of which the lay
apostolate will be able to permeate the whole of society with the spirit of the
Gospel. Lastly, let charity shine out between Catholics of different rites.14
The
ecumenical spirit should be nurtured in the neophytes, who should take into
account that the brethren who believe in Christ are Christ's disciples, reborn
in baptism, sharers with the People of God in very many good things. Insofar as
religious conditions allow, ecumenical activity - should be furthered in such a
way that, excluding any appearance of indifference or confusion on the one
hand, or of unhealthy rivalry on the other, Catholics should cooperate in a
brotherly spirit with their separated brethren, among to the norms of the
Decree on Ecumenism, making before the nations a common profession of faith,
insofar as their beliefs are common, in God and in Jesus Christ, and
cooperating in social and in technical projects as well as in cultural and
religious ones. Let them cooperate especially for the sake of Christ, their common
Lord: let His Name be the bond that unites them! This cooperation should be
undertaken not only among private persons, but also, subject to approval by the
local Ordinary, among churches or ecclesial communities and their works.
The
Christian faithful gathered together out of all nations into the Church
"are not marked off from the rest of men by their government, nor by their
language, nor by their political institutions,"15 and so they should live
for God and Christ in a respectable way of their own national life. As good
citizens, they should be true and effective patriots, all together avoiding
racial prejudice and hypernationalism, and should foster a universal love for
man.
To obtain
all these things, the most important and therefore worthy of special attention
are the Christian laity: namely, those who have been incorporated into Christ
and live in the world. For it is up to them, imbued with the spirit of Christ,
to be a leaven working on the temporal order from within, to dispose it always
in accordance with Christ.16
But it is
not enough that the Christian people be present and be organized in a given
nation, nor is it enough to carry out an apostolate by way of example. They are
organized for this purpose, they are present for this, to announce Christ to
their non - Christian fellow - citizens by word and example, and to aid them
toward the full reception of Christ.
Now, in
order to plant the Church and to make the Christian community grow, various
ministries are needed, which are raised up by divine calling from the midst of
the faithful congregation, and are to be carefully fostered and tended to by
all. Among these are the offices of priests, of deacons, and of catechists, and
Catholic action. Religious men and women likewise, by their prayers and by
their active work, play an indispensable role in rooting and strengthening the
Kingdom of Christ in souls, and in causing it to be spread.
16.
Joyfully the Church gives thanks for the priceless gift of the priestly calling
which God has granted to so many youths among those nations but recently
converted to Christ. For the Church drives deeper roots in any given sector of
the human family when the various faithful communities all have, from among
their members, their own ministers of salvation in the order of bishops,
priests, and deacons, serving their own brethren, so that the young churches
gradually acquire a diocesan structure with their own clergy.
What this
council has decreed concerning priestly vocations and formation, should be
religiously observed where the Church is first planted, and among the young
churches. Of great importance are the things which are said about closely
joining spiritual formation with the doctrinal and pastoral; about living a
life patterned after the Gospel without looking out for ones own comfort or
that of one's family; about cultivating a deep appreciation of the mystery of
the Church. From all this, they will be well taught to dedicate themselves
wholly to the service of the Body of Christ and to the work of the Gospel, to
cleave to their own bishop as his faithful co - workers, and to cooperate with
their colleagues.17
To attain
this general end, the whole training of the students should be planned in the
light of the mystery of salvation as it is revealed in the Scriptures. This
mystery of Christ and of man's salvation they can discover and live in the
liturgy.18
These
common requirements of priestly training, including the pastoral and practical
ones prescribed by the council19 should be combined with an attempt to make
contact with their own particular national way of thinking and acting.
Therefore, let the minds of the students be kept open and attuned to an
acquaintance and an appreciation of their own nation's culture. In their
philosophical and theological studies, let them consider the points of contact
which mediate between the traditions and religion of their homeland on the one
hand and the Christian religion on the other.20 Likewise, priestly training
should have an eye to the pastoral needs of that region; and the students
should learn the history, aim, and method of the Church's missionary activity,
and the special social, economic, and cultural conditions of their own people.
Let them be educated in the ecumenical spirit, and duly prepared for fraternal
dialogue with non - Christians.21 All this demands that studies for the
priesthood be undertaken, so far as possible, in association and living
together with their own people.22 Finally, let care be taken that students are
trained in ordinary ecclesiastical and financial administration.
Moreover,
suitable priests should be chosen, after a little pastoral practice, to pursue
higher studies in universities, even abroad and especially in Rome as well as
in other institutes of learning. In this way the young churches will have at
hand men from among the local clergy equipped with the learning and skill
needed for discharging more difficult ecclesiastical duties.
Where
episcopal conferences deem it opportune, the order of the diaconate should be
restored as a permanent state of life according to the norms of the
Constitution "De Ecclesia."23 For there are men who actually carry
out the functions of the deacon's office, either preaching the word of God as
catechists, or presiding over scattered Christian communities in the name of
the pastor and the bishop, or practicing charity in social or relief work. It
is only right to strengthen them by the imposition of hands which has come down
from the Apostles, and to bind them more closely to the altar, that they may
carry out their ministry more effectively because of the sacramental grace of
the diaconate.
17.
Likewise worthy of praise are the ranks of men and women catechists, well
deserving of missionary work to the nations. Imbued with the apostolic spirit,
they labor much to make an outstanding and altogether necessary contribution to
the spread of the Faith and of the Church.
In our
time, when there are so few clerics to preach the Gospel to such great numbers and
to exercise the pastoral ministry, the position of catechists is of great
importance. Therefore their training must be so accomplished and so adapted to
advances on the cultural level that as reliable coworkers of the priestly
order, they may perform their task well, though it be weighed down with new and
greater burdens.
There
should therefore be an increase in the number of schools, both on the diocesan
and on the regional levels, wherein future catechists may study Catholic
doctrine, especially in the fields of Scripture and the liturgy, as well as
catechetical method and pastoral practice; schools wherein they can develop in
themselves a Christian character, and wherein they can devote themselves
tirelessly to cultivating piety and sanctity of life. Moreover, conventions or
courses should be held in which at certain times catechists could he refreshed
in the disciplines and skills useful for their ministry and in which their
spiritual life could be nourished and strengthened. In addition, for those who
devote themselves entirely to this work, a decent standard of living should be
provided, and social security, by paying them a just wage.24
It would
be desirable for the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith to
provide special funds for the due training and support of catechists. If it
seems necessary and fitting, let a special "Opus pro Catechists" be
founded.
Moreover,
the churches should gratefully acknowledge the noble work being done by
auxiliary catechists, whose help they will need. These preside over the prayers
in their communities and teach sacred doctrine. Something suitable should be
done for their doctrinal and spiritual training. Besides, it is to be hoped
that, where it seems opportune, catechists who are duly trained should receive
a "missio canonica" in a publicly celebrated liturgical ceremony, so
that in the eyes of the people they may serve the Faith with greater authority.
18.
Right from the planting stage of the Church, the religious life should be carefully
fostered. This not only offers precious and absolutely necessary assistance to
missionary activity, but by a more inward consecration made to God in the
Church, it also clearly manifests and signifies the inner nature of the
Christian calling.25
Religious
institutes, working to plant the Church, and thoroughly Imbued with mystic
treasures with which the Church's religious tradition is adorned, should strive
to give expression to them and to hand them on, according to the nature and the
genius of each nation. Let them reflect attentively on how Christian religious
life might be able to assimilate the ascetic and contemplative traditions,
whose seeds were sometimes planted by God in ancient cultures already prior to
the preaching of the Gospel.
Various forms
of religious life are to be cultivated in the young churches, in order that
they may display various aspects of the mission of Christ and of the life of
the Church, and may devote themselves to various pastoral works, and prepare
their members to exercise them rightly. On the other hand, the bishops in their
conference should see to it that congregations pursuing the same apostolic aims
are not multiplied to the detriment of the religious life and of the
apostolate.
Worthy of
special mention are the various projects for causing the contemplative life to
take root. There are those who in such an attempt have kept the essential
element of a monastic institution, and are bent on implanting the rich
tradition of their order; there are others again who are returning to the
simpler forms of ancient monasticism. But all are studiously looking for a
genuine adaptation to local conditions. Since the contemplative life belongs to
the fullness of the Church's presence, let it be put into effect everywhere.
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