All the Laity Are
Missionaries by baptism
71.
Recent popes have stressed the importance of the role of the laity in
missionary activity.144 In the Exhortation Christifideles Laici,
I spoke explicitly of the Church's "permanent mission of bringing the Gospel
to the multitudes - the millions and millions of men and women - who as yet do
not know Christ the Redeemer of humanity," 145 and of the
responsibility of the lay faithful in this regard. The mission ad gentes
is incumbent upon the entire People of God. Whereas the foundation of a new
church requires the Eucharist and hence the priestly ministry, missionary
activity, which is carried out in a wide variety of ways, is the task of all
the Christian faithful.
It is clear that from the
very origins of Christianity, the laity - as individuals, families, and entire
communities - shared in spreading the faith. Pope Pius XII recalled this fact
in his first encyclical on the missions,146 in which he pointed out
some instances of lay missions. In modern times, this active participation of
lay men and women missionaries has not been lacking. How can we forget the
important role played by women: their work in the family, in schools, in
political, social and cultural life, and especially their teaching of Christian
doctrine? Indeed, it is necessary to recognize - and it is a title of honor -
that some churches owe their origins to the activity of lay men and women
missionaries.
The Second Vatican Council
confirmed this tradition in its description of the missionary character of the
entire People of God and of the apostolate of the laity in
particular,147 emphasizing the specific contribution to missionary
activity which they are called to make.148 The need for all the
faithful to share in this responsibility is not merely a matter of making the
apostolate more effective, it is a right and duty based on their baptismal
dignity, whereby "the faithful participate, for their part, in the
threefold mission of Christ as Priest, Prophet and King."149
Therefore, "they are bound by the general obligation and they have the
right, whether as individuals or in associations, to strive so that the divine
message of salvation may be known and accepted by all people throughout the
world. This obligation is all the more insistent in circumstances in which only
through them are people able to hear the Gospel and to know Christ."
150 Furthermore, because of their secular character, they especially
are called "to seek the kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and
ordering these in accordance with the will of God."151
72. The
sphere in which lay people are present and active as missionaries is very
extensive. "Their own field...is the vast and complicated world of
politics, society and economics..."152 on the local, national and
international levels. Within the Church, there are various types of services,
functions, ministries and ways of promoting the Christian life. I call to mind,
as a new development occurring in many churches in recent times, the rapid
growth of "ecclesial movements" filled with missionary dynamism. When
these movements humbly seek to become part of the life of local churches and
are welcomed by bishops and priests within diocesan and parish structures, they
represent a true gift of God both for new evangelization and for missionary
activity properly so-called. I therefore recommend that they be spread, and
that they be used to give fresh energy, especially among young people, to the Christian
life and to evangelization, within a pluralistic view of the ways in which
Christians can associate and express themselves.
Within missionary activity,
the different forms of the lay apostolate should be held in esteem, with
respect for their nature and aims. Lay missionary associations, international
Christian volunteer organizations, ecclesial movements, groups and solidarities
of different kinds - all these should be involved in the mission ad gentes
as cooperators with the local churches. In this way the growth of a mature and
responsible laity will be fostered, a laity whom the younger churches are
recognizing as "an essential and undeniable element in the plantatio
Ecclesiae."153
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