Councils and
Missionary Activity
13. The ministry of catechesis draws ever
fresh energy from the councils. The Council of Trent is a noteworthy example of
this. It gave catechesis priority in its constitutions and decrees. It lies at
the origin of the Roman Catechism, which is also known by the name of that
council and which is a work of the first rank as a summary of Christian
teaching and traditional theology for use by priests. It gave rise to a
remarkable organization of catechesis in the Church. It aroused the clergy to
their duty of giving catechetical instruction. Thanks to the work of holy
theologians such as St. Charles Borromeo, St. Robert Bellarmine and St. Peter
Canisius, it involved the publication of catechisms that were real models for
that period. May the Second Vatican Council stir up in our time a like
enthusiasm and similar activity.
The missions are also a special area for the
application of catechesis. The People of God have thus continued for almost
2,000 years to educate themselves in the faith in ways adapted to the various
situations of believers and the many different circumstances in which the
Church finds herself.
Catechesis is intimately bound up with the
whole of the Church's life. Not only her geographical extension and numerical
increase, but even more, her inner growth and correspondence with God's plan
depend essentially on catechesis. It is worthwhile pointing out some of the
many lessons to be drawn from the experiences in Church history that we have
just recalled.
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