V.
EVERYBODY NEEDS TO BE CATECHIZED
The Importance of Children and the Young
35.
The theme designated by my predecessor Paul VI for the fourth general assembly
of the synod of Bishops was: "Catechesis in our time, with special
reference to the catechesis of children and young people." The increase in
the number of young people is without doubt a fact charged with hope and at the
same time with anxiety for a large part of the contemporary world. In certain
countries, especially those of the Third World, more than half of the
population is under 25 or 30 years of age. This means millions and millions of
children and young people preparing for their adult future. And there is more
than just the factor of numbers: recent events, as well as the daily news, tell
us that, although this countless multitude of young people is here and there
dominated by uncertainty and fear, seduced by the escapism of indifference or
drugs, or tempted by nihilism and violence, nevertheless it constitutes in its
major part the great force that amid many hazards is set on building the
civilization of the future.
In
our pastoral care we ask ourselves: How are we to reveal Jesus Christ, God made
man, to this multitude of children and young people, reveal Him not just in the
fascination of a first fleeting encounter but through an acquaintance, growing
deeper and clearer daily, with Him, His message, the plan of God that He has
revealed, the call He addresses to each person, and the kingdom that He wishes
to establish in this world with the "little flock"(87) of
those who believe in Him, a kingdom that will be complete only in eternity? How
are we to enable them to know the meaning, the import, the fundamental
requirements, the law of love, the promises and the hopes of this kingdom?
There
are many observations that could be made about the special characteristics that
catechesis assumes at the different stages of life.
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