New Forms of
Missionary Cooperation
82.
Today, cooperation includes new forms - not only economic assistance, but also
direct participation. New situations connected with the phenomenon of mobility
demand from Christians an authentic missionary spirit.
International tourism has
now become a mass phenomenon. This is a positive development if tourists
maintain an attitude of respect and a desire for mutual cultural enrichment,
avoiding ostentation and waste, and seeking contact with other people. But
Christians are expected above all to be aware of their obligation to bear
witness always to their faith and love of Christ. Firsthand knowledge of the
missionary life and of new Christian communities also can be an enriching
experience and can strengthen one's faith. Visiting the missions is
commendable, especially on the part of young people who go there to serve and
to gain an intense experience of the Christian life.
Reasons of work nowadays
bring many Christians from young communities to areas where Christianity is
unknown and at times prohibited or persecuted. The same is true of members of
the faithful from traditionally Christian countries who work for a time in
non-Christian countries. These circumstances are certainly an opportunity to
live the faith and to bear witness to it. In the early centuries, Christianity
spread because Christians, traveling to or settling in regions where Christ had
not yet been proclaimed, bore courageous witness to their faith and founded the
first communities there.
More numerous are the
citizens of mission countries and followers of non-Christian religions who
settle in other nations for reasons of study or work, or are forced to do so
because of the political or economic situations in their native lands. The
presence of these brothers and sisters in traditionally Christian countries is
a challenge for the ecclesial communities, and a stimulus to hospitality, dialogue,
service, sharing, witness and direct proclamation. In Christian countries,
communities and cultural groups are also forming which call for the mission ad
gentes, and the local churches, with the help of personnel from the
immigrants' own countries and of returning missionaries, should respond
generously to these situations.
Missionary cooperation can
also involve leaders in politics, economics, culture and journalism, as well as
experts of the various international bodies. In the modern world it is becoming
increasingly difficult to determine geographical or cultural boundaries. There
is an increasing interdependence between peoples, and this constitutes a
stimulus for Christian witness and evangelization.
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