To All Peoples, In
Spite of Difficulties
35. The
mission ad gentes faces an enormous task, which is in no way
disappearing. Indeed, both from the numerical standpoint of demographic increase
and from the socio-cultural standpoint of the appearance of new relationships,
contacts and changing situations the mission seems destined to have ever wider
horizons. The task of proclaiming Jesus Christ to all peoples appears to be
immense and out of all proportion to the Church's human resources.
The difficulties
seem insurmountable and could easily lead to discouragement, if it were a
question of a merely human enterprise. In certain countries missionaries are
refused entry. In others, not only is evangelization forbidden but conversion
as well, and even Christian worship. Elsewhere the obstacles are of a cultural
nature: passing on the Gospel message seems irrelevant or incomprehensible, and
conversion is seen as a rejection of one's own people and culture.
36. Nor
are difficulties lacking within the People of God; indeed these
difficulties are the most painful of all. As the first of these difficulties
Pope Paul VI pointed to "the lack of fervor [which] is all the more
serious because it comes from within. It is manifested in fatigue,
disenchantment, compromise, lack of interest and above all lack of joy and
hope."56 Other great obstacles to the Church's missionary work
include past and present divisions among Christians,57
dechristianization within Christian countries, the decrease of vocations to the
apostolate, and the counterwitness of believers and Christian communities
failing to follow the model of Christ in their lives. But one of the most
serious reasons for the lack of interest in the missionary task is a widespread
indifferentism, which, sad to say, is found also among Christians. It is based
on incorrect theological perspectives and is characterized by a religious
relativism which leads to the belief that "one religion is as good as
another." We can add, using the words of Pope Paul VI, that there are also
certain "excuses which would impede evangelization. The most insidious of
these excuses are certainly the ones which people claim to find support for in
such and such a teaching of the Council."58
In this regard, I earnestly
ask theologians and professional Christian journalists to intensify the service
they render to the Church's mission in order to discover the deep meaning of
their work, along the sure path of "thinking with the Church" (sentire
cum Ecclesia).
Internal and external
difficulties must not make us pessimistic or inactive. What counts, here as in
every area of Christian life, is the confidence that comes from faith, from the
certainty that it is not we who are the principal agents of the Church's
mission, but Jesus Christ and his Spirit. We are only co-workers, and when we
have done all that we can, we must say: "We are unworthy servants; we have
only done what was our duty" (Lk
17:10).
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