Directing Attention
Toward the South and the East
40. Today
missionary activity still represents the greatest challenge for the Church. As
the end of the second millennium of the redemption draws near, it is clear that
the peoples who have not yet received an initial proclamation of Christ
constitute the majority of mankind. The results of missionary activity in
modern times are certainly positive. The Church has been established on every
continent; indeed today the majority of believers and particular churches is to
be found no longer in Europe but on the continents which missionaries have
opened up to the faith.
The fact remains however that
the "ends of the earth" to which the Gospel must be brought are
growing ever more distant. Tertullian's saying, that the Gospel has been
proclaimed to all the earth and to all peoples,67 is still very far
from being a reality. The mission ad gentes is still in its infancy. New
peoples appear on the world scene, and they too have a right to receive the
proclamation of salvation. Population growth in non-Christian countries of the
South and the East is constantly increasing the number of people who remain
unaware of Christ's redemption.
We need therefore to direct
our attention toward those geographical areas and cultural settings which still
remain uninfluenced by the Gospel. All who believe in Christ should feel, as an
integral part of their faith, an apostolic concern to pass on to others its
light and joy. This concern must become, as it were, a hunger and thirst to
make the Lord known, given the vastness of the non-Christian world.
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