Catechesis
26.
In the vast area in which the church has the mission of operating through
dialogue, the pastoral ministry of penance and reconciliation is directed to
the members of the body of the church principally through an adequate
catechesis concerning the two distinct and complementary realities to which the
synod fathers gave a particular importance and which they emphasized in some of
the concluding propositions: These are penance and reconciliation. Catechesis
is therefore the first means to be used.
At
the basis of the synod's very opportune recommendation is a fundamental
presupposition; What is pastoral is not opposed to what is doctrinal. Nor can
pastoral action prescind from doctrinal content, from which in fact it draws
its substance and real validity. Now if the church is the pillar and bulwark of
the truth'(132) and is placed in the world as mother and teacher, how
could she neglect the task of teaching the truth which constitutes a path of
life?
From
the pastors of the church one expects, first of all, catechesis on
reconciliation. This must be founded on the teaching of the Bible, especially
the New Testament, on the need to rebuild the covenant with God in Christ the
redeemer and reconciler. And in the light of this new communion and friendship,
and as an extension of it, it must be founded on the teaching concerning the
need to be reconciled with one's brethren, even if this means interrupting the
offering of the sacrifice.(133) Jesus strongly insists on this theme of
fraternal reconciliation: for example, when he invites us to turn the other
cheek to the one who strikes us, and to give our cloak too to the one who has
taken our coat,(134) or when he instills the law of forgiveness:
forgiveness(135) which each one receives in the measure that he or she
foresee forgiveness to be offered even to enemies,(136) forgiveness to
be granted seventy times seven times,(137) which means in practice
without any limit. On these conditions, which are realizable only in a
genuinely evangelical climate, it is possible to have a true reconciliation
between individuals, families, communities, nations and peoples. From these
biblical data on reconciliation there will naturally derive a theological
catechesis, which in its synthesis will also integrate the elements of psychology,
sociology and the other human sciences which can serve to clarify situations,
describe problems accurately and persuade listeners or readers to make concrete
resolutions.
The
pastors of the church are also expected to provide catechesis on penance. Here
too the richness of the biblical message must be its source. With regard to
penance this message emphasizes particularly its value for conversion, which is
the term that attempts to translate the word in the Greek text,
metanoia,(138) which literally means to allow the spirit to be
overturned in order to make it turn toward God. These are also the two
fundamental elements which emerge from the parable of the son who was lost and
found: his "coming to himself"(139) and his decision to return
to his father. There can be no reconciliation unless these attitudes of
conversion come first, and catechesis should explain them with concepts and
terms adapted to people's various ages and their differing cultural, moral and
social backgrounds.
This
is a first value of penance and it extends into a second: Penance also means
repentance. The two meanings of metanoia appear in the significant instruction
given by Jesus: "If your brother repents (returns to you), forgive him;
and if he sins against you seven times in the day, and turns to you seven times
and says, 'I repent,' you must forgive him."(140) A good
catechesis will show how repentance, just like conversion, is far from being a
superficial feeling but a real overturning of the soul.
A
third value is contained in penance, and this is the movement whereby the
preceding attitudes of conversion and repentance are manifested externally:
This is doing penance. This meaning is clearly perceptible in the term
metanoia, as used by John the Baptist in the texts of the
synoptics.(141) To do penance means above all to restablish the balance
and harmony broken by sin, to change direction even at the cost of sacrifice.
A
catechesis on penance, therefore, and one that is as complete and adequate as
possible, is absolutely essential at a time like ours when dominant attitudes
in psychology and social behavior are in such contrast with the threefold value
just illustrated. Contemporary man seems to find it harder than ever to
recognize his own mistakes and to decide to retrace his steps and begin again
after changing course. He seems very reluctant to say "I repent" or
"I am sorry." He seems to refuse instinctively and often irresistibly
anything that is penance in the sense of a sacrifice accepted and carried out
for the correction of sin. In this regard I would like to emphasize that the
church's penitential discipline, even though it has been mitigated for some
time, cannot be abandoned without grave harm both to the interior life of
individual Christians and of the ecclesial community and also to their capacity
for missionary influence. It is not uncommon for non-Christians to be surprised
at the negligible witness of true penance on the part of Christ's followers. It
is clear, however, that Christian penance will only be authentic if it is
inspired by love and not by mere fear; if it consists in a serious effort to
crucify the " old man " so that the " new" can be born by
the power of Christ; if it takes as its model Christ, who though he was innocent
chose the path of poverty, patience, austerity and, one can say, the
penitential life.
As
the synod recalled, the pastors of the church are also expected to provide
catechesis on conscience and its formation. This too is a very relevant topic
in view of the fact that in the upheavals to which our present culture is
subjected this interior sanctuary, man's innermost self, his conscience, is too
often attacked, put to the test, confused and obscured. Valuable guidelines for
a wise catechesis on conscience can be found both in the doctors of the church
and in the theology of the Second Vatican Council, and especially in the
documents on the church in the modern world(142) and on religious
liberty.(143) Along these same lines, Pope Paul VI often reminded us of
the nature and role of conscience in our life.(144) I myself, following
his footsteps, miss no opportunity to throw light on this most lofty element of
man's greatness and dignity,(145) this "sort of moral sense which leads
us to discern what is good and what is evil...like an inner eye, a visual
capacity of the spirit, able to guide our steps along the path of good."
And I have reiterated the need to form one's conscience, lest it become "a
force which is destructive of the true humanity of the person, rather than that
holy place where God reveals to him his true good."(146)
On
other points too, of no less relevance for reconciliation, one looks to the
pastors of the church for catechesis.
On
the sense of sin, which, as I have said, has become considerably weakened in
our world.
On
temptation and temptations: The Lord Jesus himself, the Son of God, "who
in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without
sin,"(147) allowed himself to be tempted by the evil
one(148) in order to show that, like himself, his followers too would
be subjected to temptation, and in order to show how one should behave when
subjected to temptation. For those who beseech the Father not to be tempted
beyond their own strength(149) and not to succumb to
temptation,(150) and for those who do not expose themselves to
occasions of sin, being subjected to temptation does not mean that they have
sinned; rather it is an opportunity for growing in fidelity and consistency
through humility and watchfulness.
Catechesis
is also expected on fasting: This can be practiced in old forms and new as a
sign of conversion, repentance and personal mortification and, at the same
time, as a sign of union with Christ crucified and of solidarity with the
starving and suffering.
Catechesis
on almsgiving: This is a means of making charity a practical thing by sharing
what one possesses with those suffering the consequences of poverty.
Catechesis
on the intimate connection which links the overcoming of divisions in the world
with perfect communion with God and among people, which is the eschatological
purpose of the church.
Catechesis
on the concrete circumstances in which reconciliation has to be achieved (in the
family, in the civil community, in social structures) and particularly
catechesis on the four reconciliations which repair the four fundamental rifts;
reconciliation of man with God, with self, with the brethren and with the whole
of creation.
Nor
can the church omit, without serious mutilation of her essential message, a
constant catechesis on what the traditional Christian language calls the four
last things of man: death, judgment (universal and particular), hell and
heaven. In a culture which tends to imprison man in the earthly life at which
he is more or less successful, the pastors of the church are asked to provide a
catechesis which will reveal and illustrate with the certainties of faith what
comes after the present life: beyond the mysterious gates of death, an eternity
of joy in communion with God or the punishment of separation from him. Only in
this eschatological vision can one realize the exact nature of sin and feel
decisively moved to penance and reconciliation.
Pastors
who are zealous and creative never lack opportunities for imparting this broad
and varied catechesis, taking into account the different degrees of education
and religious formation of those to whom they speak. Such opportunities are
often given by the biblical readings and the rites of the Mass and the
sacraments, as also by the circumstances of their celebration. For the same
purpose many initiatives can be taken such as sermons, lectures, discussions,
meetings, courses of religious education, etc., as happens in many places. Here
I wish to point out in particular the importance and effectiveness of the
old-style popular missions for the purposes of such catechesis. If adapted to
the peculiar needs of the present time, such missions can be, today as
yesterday, a useful instrument of religious education also regarding penance
and reconciliation.
In
view of the great relevance of reconciliation based on conversion in the
delicate field of human relationships and social interaction at all levels,
including the international level, catechesis cannot fail to inculcate the
valuable contribution of the church's social teaching. The timely and precise
teaching of my predecessors from Pope Leo XIII onward, to which was added the
substantial contribution the pastoral constitution Gaudium et Spes of the
Second Vatican Council and the contributions of the different episcopates
elicited by various circumstances in their respective countries, has made up an
ample and solid body of doctrine. This regards the many different needs
inherent in the life of the human community, in relationships between
individuals, families, groups in their different spheres and in the very
constitution of a society that intends to follow the moral law, which is the
foundation of civilization.
At
the basis of this social teaching of the church there is obviously to be found
the vision which the church draws from the word of God concerning the rights
and duties of individuals, the family and the community; concerning the value
of liberty and the nature of justice, concerning the primacy of charity,
concerning the dignity of the human person and the exigencies of the common
good to which politics and the economy itself must be directed. Upon these
fundamental principles of the social magisterium, which confirm and repropose
the universal dictates of reason and of the conscience of peoples, there rests
in great part the hope for a peaceful solution to many social conflicts and, in
short, the hope for universal reconciliation.
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