11. The mystery of
Christ as the basis of the Church's mission and of Christianity
The Second Vatican Council
did immense work to form that full and universal awareness by the Church of
which Pope Paul VI wrote in his first Encyclical. This awareness - or rather
self-awareness - by the Church is formed a "in dialogue"; and before
this dialogue becomes a conversation, attention must be directed to "the
other", that is to say: the person with whom we wish to speak. The
Ecumenical Council gave a fundamental impulse to forming the Church's
self-awareness by so adequately and competently presenting to us a view of the
terrestrial globe as a map of various religions. It showed furthermore that
this map of the world's religions has superimposed on it, in previously unknown
layers typical of our time, the phenomenon of atheism in its various forms,
beginning with the atheism that is programmed, organized and structured as a
political system.
With regard to religion,
what is dealt with is in the first place religion as a universal phenomenon
linked with man's history from the beginning, then the various non-Christian
religions, and finally Christianity itself. The Council document on
non-Christian religions, in particular, is filled with deep esteem for the
great spiritual values, indeed for the primacy of the spiritual, which in the
life of mankind finds expression in religion and then in morality, with direct
effects on the whole of culture. The Fathers of the Church rightly saw in the
various religions as it were so many reflections of the one truth, "seeds
of the Word"67, attesting that, though the routes taken may be
different, there is but a single goal to which is directed the deepest
aspiration of the human spirit as expressed in its quest for God and also in
its quest, through its tending towards God, for the full dimension of its
humanity, or in other words for the full meaning of human life. The Council
gave particular attention to the Jewish religion, recalling the great spiritual
heritage common to Christians and Jews. It also expressed its esteem for the
believers of Islam, whose faith also looks to Abraham68.
The opening made by the
Second Vatican Council has enabled the Church and all Christians to reach a
more complete awareness of the mystery of Christ, "the mystery hidden for
ages"69 in God, to be revealed in time in the Man Jesus Christ,
and to be revealed continually in every time. In Christ and through Christ God
has revealed himself fully to mankind and has definitively drawn close to it;
at the same time, in Christ and through Christ man has acquired full awareness
of his dignity, of the heights to which he is raised, of the surpassing worth
of his own humanity, and of the meaning of his existence.
All of us who are Christ's
followers must therefore meet and unite around him. This unity in the various
fields of the life, tradition, structures and discipline of the individual Christian Churches and ecclesial Communities
cannot be brought about without effective work aimed at getting to know each
other and removing the obstacles blocking the way to perfect unity. However, we
can and must immediately reach and display to the world our unity in
proclaiming the mystery of Christ, in revealing the divine dimension and also
the human dimension of the Redemption, and in struggling with unwearying perseverance for the dignity that each human
being has reached and can continually reach in Christ, namely the dignity of
both the grace of divine adoption and the inner truth of humanity, a truth
which - if in the common awareness of the modern world it has been given such
fundamental importance - for us is still clearer in the light of the reality
that is Jesus Christ.
Jesus Christ is the stable
principle and fixed centre of the mission that God himself has entrusted to
man. We must all share in this mission and concentrate all our forces on it,
since it is more necessary than ever for modern mankind. If this mission seems
to encounter greater opposition nowadays than ever before, this shows that
today it is more necessary than ever and, in spite of the opposition, more
awaited than ever. Here we touch indirectly on the mystery of the divine
"economy" which linked salvation and grace with the Cross. It was not
without reason that Christ said that "the kingdom of heaven has suffered
violence, and men of violence take it by force"70 and moreover
that "the children of this world are more astute... than are the children
of líght"71. We gladly accept this
rebuke, that we may be like those "violent people of God "that we
have so often seen in the history of the Church and still see today, and that
we may consciously join in the great mission of revealing Christ to the world,
helping each person to find himself in Christ, and helping the contemporary
generations of our brothers and sisters, the peoples, nations, States, mankind,
developing countries and countries of opulence - in short, helping everyone to
get to know "the unsearchable riches of Christ"72, since
these riches are for every individual and are everybody's property.
|