12.
Need for inculturation. Like all forms
of evangelization, catechesis too is called to bring the gospel into the heart
of the different cultures. The process of inculturation takes time, as it is a
deep, gradual and all-embracing process. Through it, as Pope John Paul II
explains, "the Church makes the gospel incarnate in different cultures
and at the same time introduces peoples, together with their cultures, into her
own community; she transmits to them her own values, at the same time taking
the good elements that already exist in them and renewing them from within".
Catechists, like all missionary personnel,
will play an active part in this process. They should be specifically prepared
for it, with courses on the elements of cultural anthropology and on their own
culture, and should be aware of the guidelines that the Church has laid down on
this matter and which may be summarized as follows:
- The gospel message, though it can never be
identified with any one culture, is necessarily incarnated in cultures. From
its very beginnings it was incarnated in certain specific cultures, and one
must take account of this if one is not to deprive the new Churches of values
which are now the patrimony of the universal Church.
- The gospel is a force for renewal, and can
rectify elements in cultures which do not conform to it.
- The local ecclesial communities, which are
the primary subjects of inculturation, live out their daily experience of faith
and charity in a particular culture, and the Bishop should indicate the best
ways to bring out the positive values in that culture. The experts give
incentive and support.
- Inculturation is genuine when it is guided
by two principles: it must be founded on the word of God, revealed in the
Scriptures, and must follow the Church's tradition and the guidance of the
Magisterium; and it must never go against the Church unity that was willed by
the Lord.
- Popular piety, understood as an expression
of Catholic devotion colored by local values, traditions and attitudes, when
purified of defects caused by ignorance and superstition, expresses the wisdom
of God's people and is a privileged form of inculturation of the gospel.
Following the above directives, catechists
should contribute to inculturation by fitting into the overall pastoral plan
drawn up by the competent authorities and avoiding adventures into particular
experiments that might upset the faithful. They should be convinced that the
gospel is strong enough to penetrate any culture and enrich and strengthen it
from within.
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