The Young
39.
With youth comes the moment of the first great decisions. Although the young
may enjoy the support of the members of their family and their friends, they
have to rely on themselves and their own conscience and must ever more
frequently and decisively assume responsibility for their destiny. Good and
evil, grace and sin, life and death will more and more confront one another
within them, not just as moral categories but chiefly as fundamental options which
they must accept or reject lucidly, conscious of their own responsibility. It
is obvious that a catechesis which denounces selfishness in the name of
generosity, and which without any illusory over-simplification presents the
Christian meaning of work, of the common good, of justice and charity, a
catechesis on international peace and on the advancement of human dignity, on
development, and on liberation, as these are presented in recent documents of
the Church,(88) fittingly completes in the minds of the young the good
catechesis on strictly religious realities which is never to be neglected.
Catechesis then takes on considerable importance, since it is the time when the
Gospel can be presented, understood and accepted as capable of giving meaning
to life and thus of inspiring attitudes that would have no other explanation,
such as self-sacrifice, detachment, forbearance, justice, commitment,
reconciliation, a sense of the Absolute and the unseen. All these are traits
that distinguish a young person from his or her companions as a disciple of
Jesus Christ.
Catechesis
thus prepares for the important Christian commitments of adult life. For
example, it is certain that many vocations to the priesthood and religious life
have their origin during a well-imparted catechesis in infancy and adolescence.
From
infancy until the threshold of maturity, catechesis is thus a permanent school
of the faith and follows the major stages of life, like a beacon lighting the
path of the child, the adolescent and the young person.
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