Catechesis and Theology
61.
In this context, it seems important to me that the connection between
catechesis and theology should be well understood.
Obviously
this connection is profound and vital for those who understand the
irreplaceable mission of theology in the service of Faith. Thus it is no
surprise that every stirring in the field of theology also has repercussions in
that of catechesis. In this period immediately after the Council, the Church is
living through an important but hazardous time of theological research. The
same must be said of hermeneutics with respect to exegesis.
Synod
fathers from all continents dealt with this question in very frank terms: they
spoke of the danger of an "unstable balance" passing from theology to
catechesis and they stressed the need to do something about this difficulty.
Pope Paul VI himself had dealt with the problem in no less frank terms in the
introduction to his Solemn Profession of Faith(108) and in the
apostolic exhortation marking the fifth anniversary of the close of the Second
Vatican Council.(109)
This
point must again be insisted on. Aware of the influence that their research and
their statements have on catechetical instruction, theologians and exegetes
have a duty to take great care that people do not take for a certainty what on
the contrary belongs to the area of questions of opinion or of discussion among
experts. Catechists for their part must have the wisdom to pick from the field
of theological research those points that can provide light for their own
reflection and their teaching, drawing, like the theologians, from the true
sources, in the light of the magisterium. They must refuse to trouble the minds
of the children and young people, at this stage of their catechesis, with
outlandish theories, useless questions and unproductive discussions, things
that St. Paul often condemned in his pastoral letters.(110)
The
most valuable gift that the Church can offer to the bewildered and restless
world of our time is to form within it Christians who are confirmed in what is essential
and who are humbly joyful in their faith. Catechesis will teach this to them,
and it will itself be the first to benefit from it: "The man who wishes to
understand himself thoroughly-and not just in accordance with immediate,
partial, often superficial, and even illusory standards and measures of his
being- must come to Christ with his unrest and uncertainty, and even his
weakness and sinfulness, his life and death. He must, so to speak, enter into
Christ with all his own self, he must `appropriate' Christ and assimilate the
whole of the reality of the Incarnation and redemption in order to find
himself."(111)
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