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3. Perspectives.
From the criteria
of effectiveness emerge some areas of reality (human phenomena, new subjects,
challenges) towards which it would seem our attention should be directed in an
effort to redesign our works and presence.
The first is poverty
in its various forms. The contexts in which we are living are being modified under
our very eyes. Economic, social and cultural factors are determining a new
configuration of society and of the world.
The scenario is
marked by the phenomenon of poverty. This is not just the condition of a
certain number, but the drama of the whole of humanity, a drama which is
spiritual before it is material. At world level it manifests tragic dimensions
and its effects on individuals and whole peoples are devastating. One need
think only of hunger, a scandal that has gone on for far too long, which
compromises the present and future of a people and destroys life. Or of the
exodus of thousands of refugees, victims of racial conflict, religious
discrimination and deliberately organized rivalries. Or yet again the
precarious urbanization without minimum conditions of employment, habitation,
civil services and participation which constitute the phenomenon of
marginalization.
To these can be
added, immigration, the exploitation of many weak categories and juvenile
labour, slavery of various kinds, racial discrimination, the situation of women
in many contexts, defects in the family environment, scholastic failure for
young people, unemployment, various forms of dependency, delinquency, and life
on the streets. Nor must be undervalued the lack of reasons for living and the
lack of human and spiritual perspectives which lead to well known phenomena of
compensation and escapism.
This multiplicity
of forms makes poverty a universal fact. Even wealthy and technologically
progressive societies harbour it and develop it in their midst, not only
because of immigration but also as a residue of their own system. You have only
to walk along city streets to be struck by its manifestations.
There is an
interrelationship between many forms of poverty and our style of life. The
world is becoming interdependent in both good and evil. From an economic system
which assigns second place to the value of the person as such flows the present
unemployment, the impoverishment of many and the consequent reduction of
educative possibilities. In the economic and cultural policies of one part of
the world are born new tragedies which strike large groups in an almost
anonymous manner in other parts of the planet.
There are plenty
of examples ready to hand which confirm interdependence of this kind. It is not
only a question of material goods, but of justice, solidarity, personal dignity
the concept of life and of the world.
The love of the
Church for the poor is part of its constant tradition. In contexts of the
greatest destitution, from Christian communities have arisen charismatic
persons who have faced up to widespread social scourges with opportune
initiatives. Together they manage to look after almost every category of the
poor of their time: the needy, the illiterate, the abandoned, the imprisoned
and those reduced to slavery.
Several of them
have founded communities equipped from a spiritual and practical aspect to meet
the needs of the poor with far-reaching projects. They have gone down in
history as great witnesses to the Gospel and as being among its most eloquent
proclaimers.
Apart from the
social question, a more critical view of society highlights the mechanisms
which generate destitution. The Church denounced the models of economic, social
and political organization which undervalue the worth of the person, and which
deprive him of the right to goods necessary for a fully human life and increase
want and marginalization.
The social
magisterium has been more insistent after the Council, not only on account of
the dimensions being taken by poverty and a by now unchallenged perception of
its causes, but also on account of the new awareness maturing in the Church
regarding its testimony and mission.
In the context of
this general sensitization the expression "preferential option" for
the poor has been gaining ground. It is not so much a recommendation for
individual charity as a criterion for setting up the presence of Christ in our
world.
It is particularly
recommended to religious. They, in fact, because of the radical nature of their
following of Christ, represent in a more direct manner the love of the Church
and of Christ for the poor and have a rich tradition of initiatives in this
regard: "The option for the poor is inherent in the very structure of love
lived in Christ. All of Christ's disciples are therefore held to this option;
but those who wish to follow the Lord more closely, imitating his attitudes,
cannot but feel involved in a very special way. The sincerity of their response
to Christ's love will lead them to live a life of poverty and to embrace the
cause of the poor. For each Institute, according to its charism, this involves
adopting a simple and austere way of life, both as individuals and as a
community. Strengthened by this living witness and in ways consistent with
their choice of life, and maintaining their independence vis-à-vis political
ideologies, consecrated persons will be able to denounce the injustices
committed against so many sons and daughters of God, and commit themselves to
the promotion of justice in the society where they work"
At the opening of
the phase of the new evangelization the option for the poor was endorsed in
many different ways. It was emphasized that it opens the way to the
proclamation of the Gospel, renders its meaning concrete, and from it receives
light.
The heart of the
new evangelization is the Gospel of charity which takes up human problems and
situations which have need of the transforming power of love. It is a charity
which is expressed in meeting immediate needs, but is above all committed to a
long and vast social and cultural project, in which the individual is always
considered according to his vocation and dignity, in the light of what has been
revealed to us in Christ.
At the risk of
over-emphasis, I do not want to omit recalling how the option for the poor
integrates the ecclesial program for the year 2000. "From this point of
view, if we recall that Jesus came to ‘preach the good news to the poor’ (Mt
11:5; Lk 7:22), how can we fail to lay greater emphasis on the Church's
preferential option for the poor and the outcast? Indeed, it has to be said
that a commitment to justice and peace in a world like ours, marked by so many
conflicts and intolerable social and economic inequalities, is a necessary
condition for the preparation and celebration of the Jubilee. Thus, in the
spirit of the Book of Leviticus (25:8-12), Christians will have to raise their
voice on behalf of all the poor of the world"
The lengthy
process of reflection has also had the effect of clarifying the sense of the
preferential option for the poor. It does not imply any exclusion or lack of
attention to anyone, but expresses the involvement of the whole Church at this
moment of history through which the world is passing at the present time. It is
neither parallel with nor juxtaposed to evangelization, which will always
remain the first and most original task of the Church; but it is understood as
taking place within the proclamation of Christ in line with the explanation of
Paul VI in Evangelii Nuntiandi It does not consist only in immediate services,
but in the evangelization of culture and change in the structures and models of
life.
It is not the
prerogative of only certain persons, but is assumed by the Church in communion
and carried out through the complementarity of gifts, services and projects. It
is to be hoped therefore that all religious will be for the poor, that many of
them will be with and for the poor, and that those who feel so inclined will
live as do the poorest of the poor.
The different
levels at which the preferential option can be expressed require a renewed
mentality in facing the question; but they allow for many different kinds of
service: immediate assistance (which must not be undervalued), influence on
structures and the mechanisms which generate them, and the creation of a
culture of solidarity.
A second
perspective in conformity with which presence and works must be reshaped is the
response to the thirst for spirituality, the support for religious experience,
the sustaining of the search for God, the first and further evangelization of
new areas, both geographical and human (areopagi), the seeking of meaning in
life.
This is frequently
put forward in Vita Consecrata as a specific task of religious in no matter what
environment they carry out their service.
Spirituality is
not only a personal choice; it is also objective and contained in their
mission. They are invited to become guides and to multiply initiatives which
have the purpose of "inspiring in all the faithful a true longing for
holiness, a deep desire for conversion and personal renewal in a context of
ever more intense prayer and of solidarity with one’s neighbour, especially the
most needy".
It is a matter not
of an individual commitment but of a community project and an institutional
objective: "Every Institute and community should be a school of true
evangelical spirituality".
Service to the
spiritual dimension extends beyond the confines of the Christian community and
is an accompaniment and support for all who are looking for orientation.
"Because of the very nature of their choice, all who embrace the
consecrated life, men and women alike, become privileged partners in the search
for God which has always stirred the human heart and has led to the different
forms of asceticism and spirituality".
The spreading of
practical atheism, secularism, a widespread but vague religious sense, the
desire to deepen their Christian identity on the part of believers, the present
ecclesial tendency towards greater evangelical authenticity, the spaces open to
evangelization, are all an indication to us to take up the transcendent
dimension of life which many people are concerned about.
This is one of the
most serious risks we face, if not the most serious, in recent years. We are
aware that we have carried out a process of renewal of mentality, that we have
rethought the content and methods of our pastoral work, and that we have
updated the structures of community life and government. It now seems urgent
that we should speak of the life and heart of man with respect to what
constitutes the crisis of culture: the meaning and foundation of values and
hopes in which we trust.
Since in a process
of this kind the lead is given by someone who has had the relevant experience
and by a group able to become involved, religious are asked for their personal
experience of God, of which they have become conscious, have sought after and
given deeper study, and in which they are able to initiate others, young and
adult. Initiatives, structures, subjects and processes are multiple and provide
space for a great variety of charisms.
A third
perspective for the reshaping of our presence and work is the mission of
communion which is entrusted to consecrated persons, not only by silent witness
but through specific activity.
This includes
communion in the Church, union between Christians (the ecumenical movement),
interreligious dialogue, reconciliation and peace and concord among men, the
overcoming of discrimination, the ability to live together in the same area
with mutual acceptance.
Strong in the
personal experience of fellowship which is a gift of God, consecrated persons,
as individuals and communities, are called upon to extend, strengthen or
re-create communion: they become "experts in communion", the leaven
of unity, workers of reconciliation.
We may skip, as
being already well known, the role of communion to which religious are called
in the universal Church and in those particular Churches where there may be new
expressions in a more visible insertion through specialized services, and in
accentuating the sense of universality which is well suited to religious
institutes.
The mission of
communion refers to relationships between consecrated persons themselves.
"Mindful of the spiritual friendship which often united founders and
foundresses during their lives, consecrated persons, while remaining faithful
to the character of their own Institute, are called to practise a fraternity
which is exemplary and which will serve to encourage the other members of the
Church in the daily task of bearing witness to the Gospel".
New practical
examples of insistence in this matter are not hard to find. To the active
participation in the organisms of animation, communication and coordination,
"in trying to discern God’s plan in this troubled moment of history in
order better to respond to it with appropriate works of the apostolate",
there is also the possibility of establishing systematic forms of collaboration
between different institutes for deciding on initiatives which require a
convergence of competence and resources. This has already been tried out with
study centres. The complexity of the present context and the new demands of
evangelization lead not only to agreement on aims and methods but also to the
development of certain initiatives in collaboration.
Still within the
notion of ecclesial communion, but going further still, religious are invited
to start up extensive "movements", "aggregations" or
"families" of and with the laity. The motivating factor could be the
desire to participate in the spirit and mission of the Institute in the case of
"those close to it or associates", a common cultural or social
interest (peace, ecology, human rights, volunteer work, etc.), or a concrete
initiative in which all work together. In such aggregations religious take part
sincerely in activities in favour of just causes, make a specific contribution
of reflection and bear witness to solidarity.
In the human
community or locality, considered in either strict or broader terms
(neighbourhood, town, country, world) the need emerges to remake social
relationships against anonymity and the ghetto mentality, aspirations for
peace, the desire for reconciliation and for worthy and reassuring coexistence.
To the old kinds of strife now present in new forms (family, social and
political) can be added others typical of our time, such as cultural
extraneity, marginalization, fundamentalism of various kinds, multiplicity of
opposing opinions, and manifestations of racism. They often end up in real or
psychological watertight compartments, rejection and negligence. Similar
tendencies are found all over the world but are concentrated in certain places.
To designate our
presence as that of craftsmen and experts in communion means that we know how
to create times and motives for aggregation, to mediate in daily conflicts, to
foster civilizing structures and circumstances, to be peacemakers in the strong
sense of the word, to concentrate on the quality of relationships, to work for
the elimination of social or ethnic prejudice, to become ever more capable of
dialogue with different mentalities and to encourage initiatives in this sense
even on a large scale.
For this purpose
it is hoped that some will be moved to set up communities of an international
or intercultural nature which, as they gather experience, will become workshops
for the acceptance and exploitation of different situations and points of view.
The Apostolic
Exhortation Vita Consecrata has seen religious life as a privileged place for
dialogue between the great religions, because at its origin there is an option
which, in general terms, is shared by all deeply religious persons. This
therefore is a mentality to be acquired, a practice to be given effect wherever
religious find themselves, and a setting for communities with specific
objectives.
As a final
perspective we may include active presence in the elaboration of culture. This
can be expressed in other ways to make the meaning clear: education of
conscience, humanization, quality of life. At the root of many of the evils of
our time are to be found characteristics of current culture, and in particular
those stemming from the means of social communication and the new ideologies.
Recent encyclicals denounce a split between conscience and ethical sense,
between the concept of life and truth, between the possession of goods and
solidarity. It is a matter of thinking and realizing life and civilization from
the perspective of the ultimate sense, which is that of the Gospel, and intervening
in the processes of history.
Various
indications lead in this direction: the problem of truth and ethics touched on
in three Letters of John Paul II (Evangelium Vitae, Veritatis Splendor, Ratio
et Fides), the areopagi indicated in Vita Consecrata (education, social
communication), the frequent references to a culture of peace, of life, of
nature, of solidarity, of male and female complementarity.
To me seems
eloquent the reminder of Vita Consecrata of a sustained cultural commitment on
the part of religious, not only as qualified specialists at a high-level but as
evangelical observers of habits and mentality, willing and prepared to enter
into dialogue, "educators" of the person. That could be a constant
element in the shaping of every new work, and could also provide space for
specialized initiatives.
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