Catholic cultural centres
32. Wherever it has been possible to create them, Catholic cultural centres
are an enormous pastoral help in the sphere of culture. Very much part of their
culture, they can tackle urgent and complex problems encountered in
evangelizing culture and inculturating faith. They start with points of contact
which come from a largely open debate with all those who create, work in and
promote culture, in accordance with the spirit of the Apostle (I Thess 5:21-22).
Catholic cultural centres are a rich and varied phenomenon, whether it is a
question of names (Cultural centres or circles, academies, university
institutions, houses of formation), of orientation (theological, ecumenical,
scientific, educational, artistic etc...), of chosen themes (cultural trends, values,
intercultural or inter-religious dialogue, science, art etc...), or of the
activities undertaken (conferences, debates, courses, seminars, publications,
libraries, artistic and cultural events, exhibitions etc...). The very concept
of a «Catholic cultural centre» brings together the variety and the richness of
the different situations in a country: there are institutions linked with an
ecclesiastical body (parish, diocese, Bishops' Conference, religious order
etc...) as well as initiatives on the part of Catholics which are private, but
still in communion with the Church. All these centres offer cultural activities
with a constant concern for the relationship between faith and culture, in the
form of dialogue, scientific research, formation, and the promotion of a
culture which faith inspires and makes fruitful, refreshing and powerful. They
draw attention to the cultural projects and achievements of Catholic artists,
writers, scientists, philosophers, theologians, economists and journalists, and
promote enthusiastic personal commitment to values enriched by faith in Christ.
ACatholic cultural centres offer to the Church the possibility of presence
and action in the field of cultural change. They constitute in effect public
forums which allow the Church to make widely known, in creative dialogue,
Christian convictions about man, woman, family, work, economy, society,
politics, international life, the environment» (Ecclesia in Africa,
103).
The Pontifical Council for Culture has recently published its first list of
such centres, based mainly on information received from Bishops'
Conferences.(25) This first international document on Catholic cultural
centres should facilitate contact between them and improve pastoral care for
culture, especially if it is used in conjunction with up-to-date communications
technology.
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