First Experience of
the Church
39. The
mission to educate demands that Christian parents should present to their
children all the topics that are necessary for the gradual maturing of their
personality from a Christian and ecclesial point of view. They will therefore
follow the educational lines mentioned above, taking care to show their
children the depths of significance to which the faith and love of Jesus Christ
can lead. Furthermore, their awareness that the Lord is entrusting to them the
growth of a child of God, a brother or sister of Christ, a temple of the Holy
Spirit, a member of the Church, will support Christian parents in their task of
strengthening the gift of divine grace in their children's souls.
The
Second Vatican Council describes the content of Christian education as follows:
"Such an education does not merely strive to foster maturity...in the
human person. Rather, its principal aims are these: that as baptized persons
are gradually introduced into a knowledge of the mystery of salvation, they may
daily grow more conscious of the gift of faith which they have received; that
they may learn to adore God the Father in spirit and in truth (cf. Jn. 4:23), especially through liturgical worship; that they
may be trained to conduct their personal life in true righteousness and
holiness, according to their new nature (Eph. 4:22-24), and thus grow to
maturity, to the stature of the fullness of Christ (cf. Eph. 4:13), and devote
themselves to the upbuilding of the Mystical Body.
Moreover, aware of their calling, they should grow accustomed to giving witness
to the hope that is in them (cf. 1 Pt. 3:15), and to promoting the Christian
transformation of the world."(102)
The Synod
too, taking up and developing the indications of the Council, presented the
educational mission of the Christian family as a true ministry through which
the Gospel is transmitted and radiated, so that family life itself becomes an
itinerary of faith and in some way a Christian initiation and a school of
following Christ. Within a family that is aware of this gift, as Paul VI wrote,
"all the members evangelize and are evangelized."(103)
By virtue
of their ministry of educating, parents are, through the witness of their
lives, the first heralds of the Gospel for their children. Furthermore, by
praying with their children, by reading the word of God with them and by
introducing them deeply through Christian initiation into the Body of
Christ-both the Eucharistic and the ecclesial Body-they become fully parents,
in that they are begetters not only of bodily life but also of the life that
through the Spirit's renewal flows from the Cross and Resurrection of Christ.
In order
that Christian parents may worthily carry out their ministry of educating, the
Synod Fathers expressed the hope that a suitable catechism for families would
be prepared, one that would be clear, brief and easily assimilated by all. The
Episcopal Conferences were warmly invited to contribute to producing this
catechism.
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