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Christian
Life as Proclamation
23. The
more the Christian community is rooted in the experience of God which flows
from a living faith, the more credibly it will be able to proclaim to others
the fulfilment of God's Kingdom in Jesus Christ. This will result from
faithfully listening to the word of God, from prayer and contemplation, from celebrating
the mystery of Jesus in the sacraments, above all in the Eucharist, and from
giving example of true communion of life and integrity of love. The heart of
the particular Church must be set on the contemplation of Jesus Christ,
God-made-Man, and strive constantly for a more intimate union with him whose
mission she continues. Mission is contemplative action and active
contemplation. Therefore, a missionary who has no deep experience of God in
prayer and contemplation will have little spiritual influence or missionary
success. This is an insight drawn from my own priestly ministry and, as I have
written elsewhere, my contact with representatives of the non-Christian
spiritual traditions, particularly those of Asia, has confirmed me in the view
that the future of mission depends to a great extent on contemplation.
108 In Asia, home to great religions where individuals and entire
peoples are thirsting for the divine, the Church is called to be a praying
Church, deeply spiritual even as she engages in immediate human and social
concerns. All Christians need a true missionary spirituality of prayer and
contemplation.
A
genuinely religious person readily wins respect and a following in Asia.
Prayer, fasting and various forms of asceticism are held in high regard.
Renunciation, detachment, humility, simplicity and silence are considered great
values by the followers of all religions. Lest prayer be divorced from human
promotion, the Synod Fathers insisted that "the work of justice, charity
and compassion is interrelated with a genuine life of prayer and contemplation,
and indeed it is this same spirituality that will be the wellspring of all our
evangelizing work".109 Fully convinced of the importance of
authentic witnesses in the evangelization of Asia, the Synod Fathers stated:
"The Good News of Jesus Christ can only be proclaimed by those who are
taken up and inspired by the love of the Father for his children, manifested in
the person of Jesus Christ. This proclamation is a mission needing holy men and
women who will make the Saviour known and loved through their lives. A fire can
only be lit by something that is itself on fire. So, too, successful
proclamation in Asia of the Good News of salvation can only take place if
Bishops, clergy, those in the consecrated life and the laity are themselves on
fire with the love of Christ and burning with zeal to make him known more
widely, loved more deeply and followed more closely".110
Christians who speak of Christ must embody in their lives the message that they
proclaim.
In this
regard, however, a particular circumstance in the Asian context demands
attention. The Church realizes that the silent witness of life still
remains the only way of proclaiming God's Kingdom in many places in Asia where
explicit proclamation is forbidden and religious freedom is denied or
systematically restricted. The Church consciously lives this type of witness,
seeing it as the "taking up of her cross" (cf. Lk 9:23), all
the while calling upon and urging governments to recognize religious freedom as
a fundamental human right. The words of the Second Vatican Council are worth
repeating here: "the human person has a right to religious freedom. Such
freedom consists in this, that all should have such immunity from coercion by
individuals, or by social groups, or by any human power, that no one should be
forced to act against his conscience in religious matters, nor prevented from
acting according to his conscience, whether in private or in public, whether
alone or in association with others, within due limits".111 In
some Asian countries, this statement still has to be acknowledged and put into
effect.
Clearly,
then, the proclamation of Jesus Christ in Asia presents many complex aspects,
both in content and in method. The Synod Fathers were keenly aware of the
legitimate variety of approaches to the proclamation of Jesus, provided that
the faith itself is respected in all its integrity in the process of
appropriating and sharing it. The Synod noted that "evangelization today
is a reality that is both rich and dynamic. It has various aspects and
elements: witness, dialogue, proclamation, catechesis, conversion, baptism,
insertion into the ecclesial community, the implantation of the Church,
inculturation and integral human promotion. Some of these elements proceed
together, while some others are successive steps or phases of the entire
process of evangelization".112 In all evangelizing work, however,
it is the complete truth of Jesus Christ which must be proclaimed. Emphasizing
certain aspects of the inexhaustible mystery of Jesus is both legitimate and
necessary in gradually introducing Christ to a person, but this cannot be
allowed to compromise the integrity of the faith. In the end, a person's
acceptance of the faith must be grounded on a sure understanding of the person
of Jesus Christ, as presented by the Church in every time and place, the Lord
of all who is "the same yesterday, today and for ever" (Heb 13:8).
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