The
Lay Faithful and Their Secular Character
15.
The newness of the Christian life is the foundation and title for equality
among all the baptized in Christ, for all the members of the People of God:
"As members, they share a common dignity from their rebirth in Christ,
they have the same filial grace and the same vocation to perfection. They
possess in common one salvation, one hope and one undivided charity"(28).
Because of the one dignity flowing from Baptism, each member of the lay
faithful, together with ordained ministers and men and women religious, shares
a responsibility for the Church's mission.
But
among the lay faithful this one baptismal dignity takes on a manner of life
which sets a person apart, without, however, bringing about a separation from
the ministerial priesthood or from men and women religious. The Second Vatican
Council has described this manner of life as the "secular character":
"The secular character is properly and particularly that of the lay
faithful"(29).
To
understand properly the lay faithful's position in the Church in a complete,
adequate and specific manner it is necesary to come to a deeper theological
understanding of their secular character in light of God's plan of salvation
and in the context of the mystery of the Church.
Pope
Paul VI said the Church "has an authentic secular dimension, inherent to
her inner nature and mission, which is deeply rooted in the mystery of the Word
Incarnate, and which is realized in different forms through her
members"(30).
The
Church, in fact, lives in the world, even if she is not of the world (cf. Jn
17:16). She is sent to continue the redemptive work of Jesus Christ, which
"by its very nature concerns the salvation of humanity, and also involves
the renewal of the whole temporal order"(31).
Certainly
all the members of the Church are sharers in this secular dimension but in
different ways. In particular the sharing of the lay faithful has
its own manner of realization and function, which, according to the Council, is
"properly and particularly" theirs. Such a manner is designated with
the expression "secular character"(32).
In
fact the Council, in describing the lay faithful's situation in the secular
world, points to it above all, as the place in which they receive their call
from God: "There they are called by God"(33). This "place"
is treated and presented in dynamic terms: the lay faithful "live in the
world, that is, in every one of the secular professions and occupations. They
live in the ordinary circumstances of family and social life, from which the
very fabric of their existence is woven"(34). They are persons who live an
ordinary life in the world: they study, they work, they form relationships as
friends, professionals, members of society, cultures, etc. However, the Council
considers their condition not simply an external and environmental framework,
but as a reality destined to find in Jesus Christ the fullness of its
meaning(35). Indeed it leads to the affirmation that "the Word made
flesh willed to share in human fellowship ... He sanctified those human ties,
especially family ones, from which social relationships arise, willingly
submitting himself to the laws of his country. He chose to lead the life of an
ordinary craftsman of his own time and place"(36).
The
"world" thus becomes the place and the means for the lay faithful to
fulfill their Christian vocation, because the world itself is
destined to glorify God the Father in Christ. The Council is able then to
indicate the proper and special sense of the divine vocation which is directed
to the lay faithful. They are not called to abandon the position that they have
in the world. Baptism does not take them from the world at all, as the apostle
Paul points out: "So, brethren, in whatever state each was called, there
let him remain with God" (1 Cor 7:24). On the contrary, he
entrusts a vocation to them that properly concerns their situation in the
world. The lay faithful, in fact, "are called by God so that they, led by
the spirit of the Gospel, might contribute to the sanctification of the world,
as from within like leaven, by fulfilling their own particular duties. Thus,
especially in this way of life, resplendent in faith, hope and charity they
manifest Christ to others"(37).Thus for the lay faithful, to be present
and active in the world is not only an anthropological and sociological
reality, but in a specific way, a theological and ecclesiological reality as
well. In fact, in their situation in the world God manifests his plan and
communicates to them their particular vocation of "seeking the Kingdom of
God by engaging in temporal affairs and by ordering them according to the plan
of God"(38).
Precisely
with this in mind the Synod Fathers said: "The secular character of the
lay faithful is not therefore to be defined only in a sociological sense, but
most especially in a theological sense. The term secular must be
understood in light of the act of God the creator and redeemer, who has handed
over the world to women and men, so that they may participate in the work of
creation, free creation from the influence of sin and sanctify themselves in
marriage or the celibate life, in a family, in a profession and in the various
activities of society"(39).
The
lay faithful's position in the Church, then, comes to be fundamentally
defined by their newness in Christian life and distinguished by their secular
character(40).
The
images taken from the gospel of salt, light and leaven, although
indiscriminately applicable to all Jesus' disciples, are specifically applied
to the lay faithful. They are particularly meaningful images because they speak
not only of the deep involvement and the full participation of the lay faithful
in the affairs of the earth, the world and the human community, but also and
above all, they tell of the radical newness and unique character of an
involvement and participation which has as its purpose the spreading of the
Gospel that brings salvation.
|