IV
40.
The Christian faithful, members of a
living organism, cannot remain aloof and think that they have done their duty
when they have satisfied their own spiritual needs; every individual must give
his assistance to those who are working for the increase and propagation of
God's kingdom. Our predecessor Pius XII reminded all of their common duty in
these words: "A principal note of the Church is catholicity; consequently,
a man is no true member of the Church unless he is likewise a true member of
the entire body of Christian believers and is filled with an ardent desire to
see her take root and flourish in every land."70
The
Duty of Teaching the Faith
41. In this matter,
therefore, all Christians must compete in pious rivalry, and give constant
proof of their concern for the spiritual well-being of other people by
defending their Faith and teaching it to those who either do not know it at
all, or do not know it well enough and therefore misjudge it. It is necessary
that priests, families, and local apostolic organizations instill this
religious duty in the young, from early childhood and adolescence, even in
newly established Christian communities. Nor is there a dearth of favorable
opportunities for stressing, in a suitable and effective manner, this duty of
an apostolate: as for example, the preparation of children or newly baptized
adults for the sacrament of Confirmation, through which "new strength is
granted to the faithful courageously to guard and defend their Mother Church
and the Faith they received from her.''71 This preparation is
especially suited for populations who have in their local customs special
initiation rites, through which adolescents are officially received into their
tribal groups.
Catechists
42. We cannot neglect here
to give credit to the work of catechetical organizations, which, in the course
of the long history of the Catholic missions, have always given them special,
necessary help. There was never a time when catechists were not excellent assistants
to missionaries, sharing their labors and relieving them. Our predecessors have
openly affirmed that "for the propagation of the Gospel, it is important
that their numbers be multiplied,"72 and have stated that their
function was "perhaps the most shining example of the apostolate to be
carried out by the laity."73 We, too, while again giving
catechists Our warmest praise, exhort them to meditate even more attentively on
the happiness of soul which this work brings, and never to cease from making
the greatest efforts, under the guidance of the ecclesiastical hierarchy, to
cultivate better the study of religion and their own spiritual formation.
Catechists must learn from the hierarchy not only the rudimentary elements of
the Faith, but also the practice of virtue and a fervent, sincere love for
Christ. Instrumental in the establishment and subsequent abundant growth of new
Christian communities is the care devoted to increasing the numbers of those
who effectively help the ecclesiastical hierarchy, and to perfecting their
formation for any other labors they may have to perform in order to carry out
their task in the most effective and perfect manner.
Catholic
Action
43. In Our first
Encyclical Letter, We already recalled various important reasons which make it
imperative, in our time, to recruit in all parts of the world "the laity
to the ranks of a peaceful militia, Catholic Action, so that the laity should
cooperate in the apostolate of the hierarchy."74 We commented on
this with the following words: "It gives Us great comfort that, over the
years, in lands that are still mission territories, these valuable aides to
bishops and priests have worked so hard for the success of their
projects."75 And now, impelled "by the love of
Christ,"76 We wish to renew urgently the exhortations and appeals
of Our predecessor Pius XII: "It is necessary that laymen give their
generous, zealous, and active cooperation, joining the clergy in their
apostolic work and swelling to large numbers the ranks of Catholic
Action."77 The bishops of mission countries endeavored to do their
best to carry out the directives of the Supreme Pontiff, together with the
regular and religious clergy, and the most generous and well-trained laymen; We
can state that splendid successes in this field are being achieved all over the
earth.
Adaptation
to Local Conditions
44. However, it is
necessary-and We can never warn sufficiently of this-that this form of apostolate
be carefully adapted to local conditions and needs. What has been done in one
country cannot be carried over indiscriminately to another. The people
concerned, submitting in all things to the directives of the ecclesiastical
hierarchy and willingly obeying their pastors, must beware of defeating the
purposes of the apostolate by carrying the burden of an excessive number of
activities. For thus they thwart valuable efforts and dissipate valuable energy
through compartmentalized and overly specialized projects, which, while
satisfactory elsewhere, may be less useful where different conditions and needs
prevail. In Our first encyclical, We also promised to deal with the subject of
Catholic Action in more detail and at greater length; when We do, We trust that
the mission territories will receive additional support and a new incentive. In
the meantime, let everyone work in perfect harmony and with supernatural
inspiration, in the certainty that only thus will they be able to say that they
are serving the divine cause and the common good of their people.
Training
for Leadership
45. Catholic Action is an
association of laymen "who are entrusted with certain duties, which
involve executive responsibilities, to be carried out in submission to the
hierarchy";78 thus laymen do hold executive offices therein. For
this reason it is necessary to train men who are capable of enkindling
different organizations with apostolic zeal and insuring their most efficient
operation; men and women, We say, who in order to be worthy of managerial and
executive roles in these organizations, entrusted to them by the ecclesiastical
hierarchy, must furnish convincing proof that they possess a solid Christian
formation, both intellectual and moral, in order that "they may impart to
others what, with the help of God's grace, they have won for
themselves."79
The
Christian School
46. It can rightly be said
that the natural seat and, as it were, the training ground, where these lay
executives of Catholic Action are prepared for their functions, is the
Christian school; and this school will achieve its purposes, and fulfill its
task, only insofar as its teachers, whether priests, religious, or laymen,
educate and turn out true Christians.
Schools
of the Apostolate
47. Everyone is aware of
the great importance, present and future, of the mission country schools, and
of how much effort and work the Church has devoted to establishing schools of every
description and level and to defending their existence and well-being. It is
obviously difficult to add to school curricula a program of formation for
Catholic Action executives, and therefore it will often be necessary to resort
to extracurricular methods to bring together the most promising youths, and
train them in the theory and practice of the apostolate. The local ordinaries
must, therefore, use their prudent judgment in assessing the best ways and
means for opening schools of the apostolate, in which, obviously, the type of
instruction will be different from that in ordinary schools. Sometimes the task
will be to preserve from false doctrine children and adolescents who must
attend non-Catholic schools; in any event, it will always be necessary to
balance the humanistic and technological education offered by the public
schools with a formation based on spiritual values, so that the schools may not
turn out falsely educated men, swollen with arrogance, who can hurt the Church
and their own people instead of helping them. Their spiritual education must
always be commensurate with their intellectual development, and must be planned
to make them lead a life inspired by Catholic principles in their particular
social and professional environments; in time, they must be able to take their
places in Catholic organizations. To this end, if Catholic youths should be
forced to leave their communities and attend public schools in other towns and
cities, it will be expedient to open social centers and boarding houses, in
which Christian life and morals are safely preserved, and the talents and
energies of the young people are directed toward lofty apostolic ideals. By
thus entrusting to the schools the special and highly useful tasks of preparing
Catholic Action executives, We do not, however, intend to exempt families from
their responsibilities, or to minimize in any way their influence, which at
times equips them even better for nurturing apostolic fervor in the souls of
their children, for instructing them in Christian precepts, and for preparing
them for action. The home is, in fact, an excellent and irreplaceable school.
Problems
in Public Life
48. The "good
fight"80 in the cause of the Faith is fought not only in the
secrecy of the individual conscience or in the privacy of the home, but also in
public life in all of its forms. In all the different parts of the world there
exist nowadays problems of various kinds. There is no solution to these
problems in exclusively human advice nor in principles which are often in
contrast with the precepts of Christian law. Several mission countries are now
"undergoing such speedy changes in social, economic, and political life
that their entire future appears to depend on the outcome of those changes."81
Indeed, problems which some countries have already solved or are solving with
the help of their experience and traditions, are urgently in need of solution
in other countries. There the problems are beset by serious dangers, inasmuch
as they could be approached with deplorable levity, by resorting to certain
doctrines which disregard, or even oppose, the religious values of individuals
and nations. In order to safeguard both their private interests and those of
the Church, Catholics must not ignore such problems, or wait until they are
given the wrong solutions, which would thereafter require a much greater
expenditure of energy in order to correct them and would place further
obstacles in the path of the propagation of the Christian religious in the
world.
Christians
in Public Life
49. The laymen of mission
countries exert their most direct and effective influence in the field of
public activity, and it is necessary that Christian communities take urgent,
timely measures to bring laymen into the public life of their countries for the
common good-men who not only acquit themselves creditably in their professions
and trades, but are also an asset to the Church which re-created them in her
grace. Thus may their pastors praise them with the words which we read in the
writings of St. Basil: "I thanked the Most Holy God for the fact that,
even though busily attending to public affairs, you did not neglect the
interests of the Church: on the contrary, each one of you has been solicitous
of her affairs just as though they had been your own private affairs, and,
indeed, as though your life depended on it."82
50. Particularly in the
held of education, in organized public welfare, in trade unions, and in public
administration, will the talents of local Catholic experts play a paramount
role, if they, following the duty imposed by their consciences-a duty whose
neglect would be traitorous-base their thinking and action on Christian
principles. These, as we learn from experience acquired in the course of many
centuries, possess the highest power and influence for the pursuit of the
common good.
Aid
to Missions from Catholic Groups
51. Everybody knows how
the mutual assistance which is exchanged among Catholic organizations
established all over the world can be-as Our predecessor Pius XII has pointed
out-of great use and much value to the apostolate of the laity in mission
territories. On the educational plane, these organizations can help by devising
Christian solutions to current problems, especially social problems, in the
newly established nations; on the apostolic plane, they can help by recruiting
and organizing a body of laymen, willing to serve under Christ's banner. We
know that this has been done, and is being done, by lay missionaries who chose
to leave their countries, either temporarily or for life, in order to
contribute, by manifold activities, to the social and religious welfare of
mission countries. Let us pray fervently to God that the numbers of these
generous Christians be multiplied, and that God's support will never be absent
in their difficulties and labors, which they are meeting with truly apostolic
spirit. The Secular Institutes will be able to give the local laity in mission
territories generous and loyal help, if, by their example, they attract
imitators, and if they place their talents and work, promptly and willingly, at
the disposal of the local ordinaries, in order to speed the growing-up process
of the new Christian communities.
Lay
Help From Afar
52. We appeal especially
to all Catholic laymen everywhere who are distinguishing themselves in their
professions and in public life to consider seriously how they can help their
newly acquired brethren in the Faith, even without leaving their countries.
They can do this by giving them the benefit of their advice, their experience,
and their technical assistance; they can, without too much labor or grave
inconvenience, sometimes give them help that will be decisive. Good men will
surely find a way to fulfill this fatherly desire of Ours. They will make Our
wish known to those whom they find favorably disposed, in order first to arouse
good will, and then to channel it into the most suitable work.
Students
from Abroad
53. Our immediate
predecessor exhorted the bishops "with the same affectionate interest that
shares work with others in fraternal harmony and excludes all selfish
considerations" to provide for the spiritual assistance of young Catholics
who come to their dioceses from mission countries to study and to acquire the
necessary experience for assuming leadership in their own nations.83
All of you, Venerable Brethren, are aware of the intellectual and moral dangers
to which they will be exposed in a society which is not only different from
their own but also, alas, may be unfavorable ground for the growth of their
Faith, and not capable of attracting them to the practice of Christian virtue.
Each one of you, moved by the missionary spirit which is a conscientious duty
of all pastors, will meet this situation with the greatest charity and zeal,
using the most suitable means. It will not be difficult for you to find these
students and entrust them to the care of priests and laymen who are equipped
for this task. It should not be difficult to assuage their spiritual needs,
and, last but not least, to have them experience the sweet consolations of
Christian charity in which we are all brothers, ministering to one another's
welfare. Therefore, to the many kinds of help which you are now giving the
missions, add this particular one, which brings close to your hearts those
regions of the world which, although far away, are entrusted to your care.
54. To these students We
would like not only to reveal the affection We feel for them, but also to
exhort them, urgently and lovingly, to carry their heads high and proud, marked
with the sign of Jesus' blood and with the sacred chrism; We would like to
exhort them during their stay abroad never to bypass an opportunity not only to
acquire the right professional training but also to achieve perfection in their
religious education. Although they will be exposed to dangers and evils, they
will nevertheless have a wonderful opportunity to share in many spiritual
advantages while living in Catholic countries, if all the faithful remember
that, whoever and wherever they are, they must be a good example to others and
bring mutual edification to one another.
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