A Complex and Ever
Changing Religious Picture
32. Today
we face a religious situation which is extremely varied and changing. Peoples
are on the move; social and religious realities which were once clear and well
defined are today increasingly complex. We need only think of certain phenomena
such as urbanization, mass migration, the flood of refugees, the
dechristianization of countries with ancient Christian traditions, the
increasing influence of the Gospel and its values in overwhelmingly
non-Christian countries, and the proliferation of messianic cults and religious
sects. Religious and social upheaval makes it difficult to apply in practice
certain ecclesial distinctions and categories to which we have become
accustomed. Even before the Council it was said that some Christian cities and
countries had become "mission territories"; the situation has
certainly not improved in the years since then.
On the other hand,
missionary work has been very fruitful throughout the world, so that there are
now well-established churches, sometimes so sound and mature that they are able
to provide for the needs of their own communities and even send personnel to
evangelize in other churches and territories. This is in contrast to some
traditionally Christian areas which are in need of re-evangelization. As a
result, some are questioning whether it is still appropriate to speak of specific
missionary activity or specifically "missionary" areas, or
whether we should speak instead of a single missionary situation, with
one single mission, the same everywhere. The difficulty of relating this
complex and changing reality to the mandate of evangelization is apparent in
the "language of mission." For example, there is a certain hesitation
to use the terms "mission" and "missionaries," which are
considered obsolete and as having negative historical connotations. People
prefer to use instead the noun "mission" in the singular and the
adjective "missionary" to describe all the Church's activities.
This uneasiness denotes a
real change, one which has certain positive aspects. The so-called return or
"repatriation" of the missions into the Church's mission, the
insertion of missiology into ecclesiology, and the integration of
both areas into the Trinitarian plan of salvation, have given a fresh impetus
to missionary activity itself, which is not considered a marginal task for the
Church but is situated at the center of her life, as a fundamental commitment
of the whole People of God. Nevertheless, care must be taken to avoid the risk
of putting very different situations on the same level and of reducing, or even
eliminating, the Church's mission and missionaries ad gentes. To say
that the whole Church is missionary does not preclude the existencec of a
specific mission ad gentes, just as saying that all Catholics must be
missionaries not only does not exclude, but actually requires that there be
persons who have a specific vocation to be "life-long missionaries ad
gentes."
|