Jesus
Christ, the “good news” and the prime evangelizer
67. Jesus
Christ is the “good news” of salvation made known to people yesterday, today
and for ever; but he is also the first and greatest evangelizer. (247)
The Church must make the crucified and risen Christ the center of her pastoral
concern and her evangelizing activity. “Everything planned in the Church must
have Christ and his Gospel as its starting-point”. (248) Therefore,
“the Church in America must speak increasingly of Jesus Christ, the human face
of God and the divine face of man. It is this proclamation that truly makes an
impact on people, awakens and transforms hearts, in a word, converts. Christ
must be proclaimed with joy and conviction, but above all by the witness of
each one's life”. (249)
Individual
Christians will be able to carry out their mission effectively to the extent
that they make the life of the Son of God made man the perfect model for their
work of spreading the Gospel. The simplicity of his manner and his choices must
be normative for everyone in the work of evangelization. In this perspective,
the poor will certainly be considered among the first to be evangelized,
following the example of Christ, who said of himself: “The Spirit of the Lord .
. . has anointed me to preach good news to the poor” (Lk 4:18). (250)
As I have
already noted, love for the poor must be preferential, but not exclusive. The
Synod Fathers observed that it was in part because of an approach to the
pastoral care of the poor marked by a certain exclusiveness that the pastoral
care for the leading sectors of society has been neglected and many people have
thus been estranged from the Church. (251) The damage done by the
spread of secularism in these sectors — political or economic, union-related,
military, social or cultural — shows how urgent it is that they be evangelized,
with the encouragement and guidance of the Church's Pastors, who are called by
God to care for everyone. They will be able to count on the help of those who —
fortunately still numerous — have remained faithful to Christian values. In
this regard the Synod Fathers have recognized “the commitment of many leaders
to building a just and fraternal society”. (252) With their support,
Pastors will face the not easy task of evangelizing these sectors of society.
With renewed fervor and updated methods, they will announce Christ to leaders,
men and women alike, insisting especially on the formation of consciences on
the basis of the Church's social doctrine. This formation will act as the best
antidote to the not infrequent cases of inconsistency and even corruption
marking socio-political structures. Conversely, if this evangelization of the
leadership sector is neglected, it should not come as a surprise that many who
are a part of it will be guided by criteria alien to the Gospel and at times
openly contrary to it.
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