Lay
faithful and the renewal of the Church
44. “The
teaching of the Second Vatican Council on the unity of the Church as the People
of God gathered into the unity of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit
stresses that Baptism confers upon all who receive it a dignity which includes
the imitation and following of Christ, communion with one another and the
missionary mandate”. (156) The lay faithful should thus be conscious of
their baptismal dignity. For their part, Pastors should have a profound respect
“for the witness and evangelizing work of lay people who, incorporated into the
People of God through a spirituality of communion, lead their brothers and
sisters to encounter the living Jesus Christ. The renewal of the Church in
America will not be possible without the active presence of the laity.
Therefore, they are largely responsible for the future of the Church”.
(157)
There are
two areas in which lay people live their vocation. The first, and the one best
suited to their lay state, is the secular world, which they are called to shape
according to God's will. (158) “Their specific activity brings the
Gospel to the structures of the world; 'working in holiness wherever they are,
they consecrate the world itself to God'”. (159) Thanks to the lay
faithful, “the presence and mission of the Church in the world is realized in a
special way in the variety of charisms and ministries which belong to the
laity. Secularity is the true and distinctive mark of the lay person and of lay
spirituality, which means that the laity strive to evangelize the various
sectors of family, social, professional, cultural and political life. On a
continent marked by competition and aggressiveness, unbridled consumerism and
corruption, lay people are called to embody deeply evangelical values such as
mercy, forgiveness, honesty, transparency of heart and patience in difficult
situations. What is expected from the laity is a great creative effort in
activities and works demonstrating a life in harmony with the Gospel”.
(160)
America
needs lay Christians able to assume roles of leadership in society. It is
urgent to train men and women who, in keeping with their vocation, can influence
public life, and direct it to the common good. In political life, understood in
its truest and noblest sense as the administration of the common good, they can
find the path of their own sanctification. For this, they must be formed in the
truths and values of the Church's social teaching, and in the basic notions of
a theology of the laity. A deeper knowledge of Christian ethical principles and
moral values will enable them to be exponents of these in their own particular
setting, proclaiming them even where appeals are made to the so-called
“neutrality of the State”. (161)
There is
a second area in which many lay faithful are called to work, and this can be
called “intra-ecclesial”. A good number of lay people in America legitimately
aspire to contribute their talents and charisms “to the building of the
ecclesial community as delegates of the word, catechists, visitors to the sick
and the imprisoned, group leaders, etc.” (162) The Synod Fathers
expressed the hope that the Church would recognize some of these works as lay
ministries, with a basis in the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation, without
compromising the specific ministries proper to the Sacrament of Orders. This is
a large and complex issue and some time ago I established a Commission to study
it; (163) in this regard the offices of the Holy See have from time to
time provided guidelines. (164) There is a need to promote positive
cooperation by properly trained lay men and women in different activities within
the Church, while avoiding any confusion with the ordained ministries and the
activities proper to the Sacrament of Orders, so that the common priesthood of
the faithful remains clearly distinguished from that of the ordained.
In this
respect, the Synod Fathers recommended that the works entrusted to lay people
be clearly “distinct from those which constitute steps on the way to the
ordained ministry” (165) and which are carried out by candidates for
the priesthood before ordination. It was also noted that these lay works
“should be undertaken only by men and women who have received the necessary
training in accordance with clearly defined criteria: a stable presence, a real
readiness to serve a determined group of persons, and the duty of accountability
to their Pastor”. (166) In any event, while the intra-ecclesial
apostolate of lay people needs to be promoted, care must be taken to ensure
that it goes hand in hand with the activity proper to the laity, in which their
place cannot be taken by priests: the area of temporal realities.
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