Factors That Must Not Be Neglected
29.
In the third chapter of his Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii nuntiandi, the same
Pope recalled "the essential content, the living substance" of
evangelization.(60) Catechesis, too, must keep in mind each of these
factors and also the living synthesis of which they are part.(61)
I
shall therefore limit myself here simply to recalling one or two
points.(62) Anyone can see, for instance, how important it is to make
the child, the adolescent, the person advancing in faith understand "what
can be known about God"(63); to be able in a way to tell them:
"What you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you"(64); to
set forth briefly for them(65) the mystery of the Word of God become
man and accomplishing man's salvation by His Passover, that is to say, through
His death and resurrection, but also by His preaching, by the signs worked by
Him, and by the sacraments of His permanent presence in our midst. The synod
fathers were indeed inspired when they asked that care should be taken not to
reduce Christ to His humanity alone or His message to a no more than earthly
dimension, but that He should be recognized as the Son of God, the Mediator
giving us in the Spirit free access to the Father.(66)
It
is important to display before the eyes of the intelligence and of the heart,
in the light of faith, the sacrament of Christ's presence constituted by the
mystery of the Church, which is an assembly of human beings who are sinners and
yet have at the same time been sanctified and who make up the family of God
gathered together by the Lord under the guidance of those whom "the Holy
Spirit has made...guardians, to feed the Church of God."(67)
It
is important to explain that the history of the human race, marked as it is by
grace and sin, greatness and misery, is taken up by God in His Son Jesus,
"foreshadowing in some way the age which is to come."(68)
Finally,
it is important to reveal frankly the demands-demands that involve self-denial
but also joy-made by what the Apostle Paul liked to call "newness of
life,"(69) "a new creation,"(70) being in
Christ,(71) and "eternal life in Christ Jesus,"(72)
which is the same thing as life in the world but lived in accordance with the
beatitudes and called to an extension and transfiguration hereafter.
Hence
the importance in catechesis of personal moral commitments in keeping with the
Gospel and of Christian attitudes, whether heroic or very simple, to life and
the world-what we call the Christian or evangelical virtues. Hence also, in its
endeavor to educate faith, the concern of catechesis not to omit but to clarify
properly realities such as man's activity for his integral
liberation,(73) the search for a society with greater solidarity and
fraternity, the fight for justice and the building of peace.
Besides,
it is not to be thought that this dimension of catechesis is altogether new. As
early as the patristic age, St. Ambrose and St. John Chrysostom-to quote only
them-gave prominence to the social consequences of the demands made by the
Gospel. Close to our own time, the catechism of St. Pius X explicitly listed
oppressing the poor and depriving workers of their just wages among the sins
that cry to God for vengeance.(74) Since Rerum novarum especially, social
concern has been actively present in the catechetical teaching of the Popes and
the Bishops. Many synod fathers rightly insisted that the rich heritage of the
Church's social teaching should, in appropriate forms, find a place in the
general catechetical education of the faithful.
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