CHAPTER IV THE VARIOUS FORMS OF THE
APOSTOLATE
15.
The laity can engage in their apostolic activity either as individuals or
together as members of various groups or associations.
16.
The individual apostolate, flowing generously from its source in a truly Christian
life (cf. John 4:14), is the origin and condition of the whole lay apostolate,
even of the organized type, and it admits of no substitute.
Regardless
of status, 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. This type of apostolate is useful at
all times and places, but in certain circumstances it is the only one
appropriate and feasible.
There are
many forms of the apostolate whereby the laity build up the Church, sanctify
the world, and give it life in Christ. A particular form of the individual
apostolate as well as a sign specially suited to our times is the testimony of
the whole lay life arising from faith, hope, and charity. It manifests Christ
living in those who believe in Him. Then by the apostolate the spoken and
written word, which is utterly necessary under certain circumstances, lay
people announce Christ, explain and spread His teaching in accordance with
one's status and ability, and faithfully profess it.
Furthermore,
in collaborating as citizens of this world, in whatever pertains to the
upbuilding and conducting of the temporal order, the laity must seek in the
light of faith loftier motives of action in their family, professional,
cultural, and social life and make them known to others when the occasion
arises. Doing this, they should be aware of the fact that they are cooperating
with God the creator, redeemer, and sanctifier and are giving praise to Him.
Finally,
the laity should vivify their life with charity and express it as best they can
in their works.
They
should all remember that they can reach all men and contribute to the salvation
of the whole world by public worship and prayer as well as by penance and
voluntary acceptance of the labors and hardships of life whereby they become
like the suffering Christ (cf. 2 Cor. 4:10; Col. 1:24).
17.
There is a very urgent need for this individual apostolate in those regions
where the freedom of the Church is seriously infringed. In these trying
circumstances, the laity do what they can to take the place of priests, risking
their freedom and sometimes their life to teach Christian doctrine to those
around them, training them in a religious way of life and a Catholic way of
thinking, leading them to receive the sacraments frequently and developing in
them piety, especially Eucharistic devotion.1 While the sacred synod
heartily thanks God for continuing also in our times to raise up lay persons of
heroic fortitude in the midst of persecutions, it embrace them with fatherly
affection and gratitude.
The
individual apostolate has a special field in areas where Catholics are few in
number and widely dispersed. Here the laity who engage in the apostolate only
as individuals, whether for the reasons already mentioned or for special
reasons including those deriving also from their own professional activity,
usefully gather into smaller groups for serious conversation without any more
formal kind of establishment or organization, so that an indication of the
community of the Church is always apparent to others as a true witness of love.
In this way, by giving spiritual help to one another through friendship and the
communicating of the benefit of their experience, they are trained to overcome
the disadvantages of excessively isolated life and activity and to make their
apostolate more productive.
18.
The faithful are called to engage in the apostolate as individuals in the
varying circumstances of their life. They should remember, nevertheless, that
man is naturally social and that it has pleased God to unite those who believe
in Christ into the people of God (cf. 1 Peter 2:5-10) and into one body (cf. 1
Cor. 12:12). The group apostolate of Christian believers then happily
corresponds to a human and Christian need and at the same time signifies the
communion and unity of the Church in Christ, who said, "Where two or three
are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt.
18:20).
For this
reason the faithful should participate in the apostolate by way of united
effort.2 They should be apostles both in their family communities and
in their parishes and dioceses, which themselves express the community nature of
the apostolate, as well as in the informal groups which they decide to form
among themselves.
The group
apostolate is very important also because the apostolate must often be
performed by way of common activity both the Church communities and the various
spheres. For the associations established for carrying on the apostolate in
common sustain their members, form them for the apostolate, and rightly
organize and regulate their apostolic work so that much better results can be
expected than if each member were to act on his own.
In the
present circumstances, it is quite necessary that, in the area of lay activity,
the united and organized form of the apostolate be strengthened. In fact, only
the pooling of resources is capable of fully achieving all the aims of the
modern apostolate and firmly protecting its interests.3 Here it is
important that the apostolate encompass even the common attitudes and social
conditions of those for whom it is designed. Otherwise those engaged in the
apostolate are often unable to bear up under the pressure of public opinion or
of social institutions.
19.
There is a great variety of associations in the apostolate.4 Some set
before themselves the broad apostolic purpose of the Church; others aim to
evangelize and sanctify in a special way. Some purpose to infuse a Christian
spirit into the temporal order; others bear witness to Christ in a special way
through works of mercy and charity.
Among
these associations, those which promote and encourage closer unity between the
concrete life of the members and their faith must be given primary
consideration. Associations are not ends unto themselves; rather they should
serve the mission of the Church to the world. Their apostolic dynamism depends
on their conformity with the goals of the Church as well as on the Christian
witness and evangelical spirit of every member and of the whole association.
Now, in
view of the progress of social institutions and the the fast-moving pace of
modern society, the global nature of the Church's mission requires that
apostolic enterprises of Catholics should more and more develop organized forms
in the international sphere. Catholic international organizations will more
effectively achieve their purpose if the groups comprising them, as well as
their members, are more closely united to these international organizations.
Maintaining
the proper relationship to Church authorities,5 the laity have the
right to found and control such associations6 and to join those already
existing. Yet the dispersion of efforts must be avoided. This happens when new
associations and projects are promoted without a sufficient reason, or if
antiquated associations or methods are retained beyond their period of
usefulness. Nor is it always fitting to transfer indiscriminately forms of the
apostolates that have been used in one nation to other nations.7
20.
Many decades ago the laity in many nations began to dedicate themselves
increasingly to the apostolate. They grouped themselves into various kinds of
activities and societies which, while maintaining a closer union with the
hierarchy, pursued and continue to pursue goals which are properly apostolic.
Of these associations, or even among similar and older institutions, those are
specially noteworthy which followed different methods of operation and yet
produced excellent results for Christ's kingdom. These societies were
deservedly recommended and promoted by the popes and many bishops, from whom
they received the title of "Catholic Action," and were often
described as the collaboration of the laity in the apostolate of the
hierarchy.8
Whether
these forms of the apostolate have the name of "Catholic Action" or
some other title, they exercise an apostolate of great value for our times and
consist in the combination and simultaneous possession of the following
characteristics:
a) The
immediate aim of organizations of this kind is the Church's apostolic aim, that
is, the evangelization and sanctification of men and the formation of a
Christian conscience among them so that they can infuse the spirit of the
Gospel into various communities and departments of life.
b )
Cooperating with the hierarchy in their own way, the laity contribute the
benefit of their experience to, and assume responsibility for the direction of
these organizations, the consideration of the conditions in which the pastoral
activity of the Church is to be conducted, and the elaboration and execution of
the plan of things to be done.
c) The
laity act together in the manner of an organic body so that the community of
the Church is more fittingly symbolized and the apostolate rendered more
effective.
d)
Whether they offer themselves spontaneously or are invited to action and direct
cooperation with the apostolate of the hierarchy, the laity function under the
higher direction of the hierarchy itself, and the latter can sanction this
cooperation by an explicit mandate.
Organizations
in which, in the opinion of the hierarchy, the ensemble of these
characteristics is realized, must be considered to be Catholic Action even
though they take on various forms and titles because of the needs of different
regions and peoples.
The most
holy council earnestly recommends these associations, which surely answer the
needs of the apostolate of the Church among many peoples and countries, and
invites the clergy and laity working in them to develop the above-mentioned
characteristics to an ever greater degree and to cooperate at all times with
all other forms of the apostolate in a fraternal manner in the Church.
21.
All associations of the apostolate must be given due appreciation. Those,
however, which the hierarchy have praised or recommended as responsive to the
needs of time and place, or have ordered to be established as particularly
urgent, must be held in highest esteem by priests, Religious, and laity and
promoted according to each one's ability. Among these associations, moreover,
international associations or groups of Catholics must be specially appreciated
at the present time.
22.
Deserving of special honor and commendation in the Church are those lay people,
single or married, who devote themselves with professional experience, either
permanently or temporarily, to the service of associations and their
activities. There is a source of great joy for the Church in the fact that
there is a daily increase in the number of lay persons who offer their personal
service to apostolic associations and activities, either within the limits of
their own nation or in the international field or especially in Catholic
mission communities and in regions where the Church has only recently been
implanted.
The
pastors of the Church should gladly and gratefully welcome these lay persons
and make sure that the demands of justice, equity, and charity relative to
their status be satisfied to the fullest extent, particularly as regards proper
support for them and their families. They should also take care to provide for
these lay people the necessary formation, spiritual consolation, and incentive.
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