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Background
to the Special Assembly
2. In my
Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio Adveniente, I set out a programme for
the Church to welcome the Third Millennium of Christianity, a programme centred
on the challenges of the new evangelization. An important feature of that plan
was the holding of continental Synods so that Bishops could address the
question of evangelization according to the particular situation and needs of
each continent. This series of Synods, linked by the common theme of the new
evangelization, has proved an important part of the Church's preparation for
the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000.
In that
same letter, referring to the Special Assembly for Asia of the Synod of
Bishops, I noted that in that part of the world "the issue of the
encounter of Christianity with ancient local cultures and religions is a
pressing one. This is a great challenge for evangelization, since religious
systems such as Buddhism or Hinduism have a clearly soteriological
character".2 It is indeed a mystery why the Saviour of the world,
born in Asia, has until now remained largely unknown to the people of the
continent. The Synod would be a providential opportunity for the Church in Asia
to reflect further on this mystery and to make a renewed commitment to the
mission of making Jesus Christ better known to all. Two months after the
publication of Tertio Millennio Adveniente, speaking to the Sixth
Plenary Assembly of the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences, in Manila,
the Philippines, during the memorable Tenth World Youth Day celebrations, I
reminded the Bishops: "If the Church in Asia is to fulfil its providential
destiny, evangelization as the joyful, patient and progressive preaching of the
saving Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ must be your absolute
priority".3
The
positive response of the Bishops and of the particular Churches to the prospect
of a Special Assembly for Asia of the Synod of Bishops was evident throughout
the preparatory phase. The Bishops communicated their desires and opinions at
every stage with frankness and a penetrating knowledge of the continent. They did
so in full awareness of the bond of communion which they share with the
universal Church. In line with the original idea of Tertio Millennio
Adveniente and following the proposals of the Pre-Synodal Council which
evaluated the views of the Bishops and the particular Churches on the Asian
continent, I chose as the Synod's theme: Jesus Christ the Saviour and his
Mission of Love and Service in Asia:"That they may have Life and have it
abundantly" (Jn 10:10). Through this particular formulation of
the theme, I hoped that the Synod might "illustrate and explain more fully
the truth that Christ is the one Mediator between God and man and the sole
Redeemer of the world, to be clearly distinguished from the founders of other
great religions".4 As we approach the Great Jubilee, the Church in
Asia needs to be able to proclaim with renewed vigour: Ecce natus est nobis
Salvator mundi, "Behold the Saviour of the World is born to us",
born in Asia!
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