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III. THE CATECHIST'S ATTITUDE TO SOME
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
11.
Service to the community as a whole and
to particular groups. There are various groups in the community that may
require the services of catechists: young people and adults, men and women,
students and workers, Catholics, other Christians and non-Christians. It is not
the same thing to be a catechist for catechumens preparing for baptism as to be
community leader for a village of Catholics, with responsibility for various
pastoral activities, or to be a religion teacher in a school, or to be charged
with preparing people for the sacraments, or to be assigned to pastoral work in
an inner-city area, etc.
Catechists will try to promote communication
and communion between the members of the community, and will devote themselves
to the groups committed to their care, trying to understand their particular
needs so as to help them as much as possible. As the needs differ from group to
group, so the training of catechists will have to be adapted for the groups
envisaged. It would be useful, therefore, for catechists to know in advance the
sort of work they will be called to and make acquaintance with the groups
concerned. Some useful suggestions in connection with this have already been
offered by the Magisterium, especially in the General Catechetical Directory,
nos. 77-97, and the Apostolic Exhortation Catechesi Tradendae, nos.
34-35.
Special attention should be paid to the sick
and aged, because their physical and psychological weakness calls for
greater charity and concern.
The sick should be helped to understand the
redemptive value of the cross, in union with Jesus, who took upon himself the
weight of our infirmities (cf. Mt 8:17; Is 53:4). Catechists
should visit them frequently, offering them the comfort of God's word and, when
commissioned to do so, the Eucharist.
The aged too should be followed with special
care, for they have an important role in the community, as Pope John Paul II
recognizes when he calls them "witnesses of the tradition of faith (cf.
Ps 44:1; Ex 12:26-27), teachers of wisdom (cf. Sir 6:34; 8:11-12), workers of
charity". Families should be encouraged to keep their elderly members
with them, to "bear witness to the past and instil wisdom in the young".
The aged should feel the support of the whole community and should be helped to
bear in faith their inevitable limitations and, in certain cases, their
solitude. Catechists will prepare them for their meeting with the Lord and help
them experience the joy that comes from our hope in eternal life .
Catechists will also show sensitivity in
dealing with people in difficult situations such as those in irregular
marriages, the children of broken marriages, etc. They must be able to share in
and express the immense compassion of the heart of Jesus (cf. Mt 9:36; Mk
6:34; 8:2; Lk 7:13).
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