At the Service of Revelation and Conversion
52.
The first question of a general kind that presents itself here concerns the
danger and the temptation to mix catechetical teaching unduly with overt or
masked ideological views, especially political and social ones, or with
personal political options. When such views get the better of the-central
message to be transmitted, to the point of obscuring it and putting it in
second place or even using it to further their own ends, catechesis then becomes
radically distorted. The synod rightly insisted on the need for catechesis to
remain above one-sided divergent trends-to avoid "dichotomies"-even
in the field of theological interpretation of such questions. It is on the
basis of revelation that catechesis will try to set its course, revelation as
transmitted by the universal magisterium of the Church, in its solemn or
ordinary form. This revelation tells of a creating and redeeming God, Whose Son
has come among us in our flesh and enters not only into each individual's
personal history but into human history itself, becoming its center.
Accordingly, this revelation tells of the radical chance of man and the
universe, of all that makes up the web of human life under the influence of the
Good News of Jesus Christ. If conceived in this way, catechesis goes beyond
every form of formalistic moralism, although it will include true Christian
moral teaching. Chiefly, it goes beyond any kind of temporal, social or
political "messianism." It seeks to arrive at man's innermost being.
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