CONGREGATION FOR THE CLERGY
GENERAL DIRECTORY FOR CATECHESIS
ABBREVIATIONS
I
BIBLICAL ABBREVIATIONS
Old Testament
Gen: Genesis
Ex: Exodus
Lev: Leviticus
Num: Numbers
Deut: Deuteronomy
Josh: Joshua
Judg: Judges
Ruth: Ruth
1 Sam: 1 Samuel
2 Sam: 2 Samuel
1 Kings: 1 Kings
2 Kings: 2 Kings
1 Chron: 1 Chronicles
2 Chron: 2 Chronicles
Ezra: Ezra
Neh: Nehemiah
Tob: Tobit
Jud: Judith
Estherd: Esther
Job: Job
Ps: Psalms
Prov: Proverbs
Eccles: Ecclesiastes
Song: Song of Solomon
Wis: Wisdom
Sir: Sirach (Ecclesiasticus)
Is: Isaiah
Jer: Jeremiah
Lam: Lamentations
Bar: Baruch
Ezek: Ezekiel
Dan: Daniel
Hos: Hosea
Joel: Joel
Amos: Amos
Obad: Obadiah
Jon: Jonah
Mic: Micah
Nahum: Nahum
Hab: Habakkuk
Zeph: Zephaniah
Hag: Haggai
Zech: Zechariah
Mal: Malachi
1 Mac: 1 Maccabees
2 Mac: 2 Maccabees
New Testament
Mt: Matthew
Mk: Mark
Lk: Luke
Jn: John
Acts: Acts of the Apostles
Rom: Romans
1 Cor: 1 Corinthians
2 Cor: 2 Corinthians
Gal: Galatians
Eph: Ephesians
Phil: Philippians
Col: Colossians
1 Thess: 1 Thessalonians
2 Thess: 2 Thessalonians
1 Tim: 1 Timothy
2 Tim: 2 Timothy
Tit: Titus
Philem: Philemon
Heb: Hebrews
Jas: James
1 Pet: 1 Peter
2 Pet: 2 Peter
1 Jn: 1 John
2 Jn: 2 John
3 Jn: 3 John
Jude: Jude
Rev: Revelation (Apocalypse)
II
DOCUMENTS OF THE MAGISTERIUM
AA: Second Vatican Council, Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity, Apostolicam
Actuositatem (18 November, 1965)
AG: Second Vatican Council, Decree on missionary activity in the Church Ad
Gentes (7 December 1965)
CA: John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Centesimus Annus (1 May 1991):
AAS 83 (1991) pp. 793-867
CD: Second Vatican Council, Decree on the pastoral office of Bishops in the
Church Christus Dominus (28 October 1965)
CCC: Catechism of the Catholic Church (11 October 1992)
CCL: Corpus Christianorum, Latin series (Turnholt 1953 ff.)
CIC: Codex Iuris Canonici (25 January 1983)
ChL: John Paul II, Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation, Christifedeles
Laici (30 December 1988): AAS 81 (1989) pp. 393-521
COINCATI: International Council for Catechesis, Adult Catechesis in the
Christian Community, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1990
CSEL: Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum (Wn 1866 ff.)
CT: John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Catechesi Tradendae (16
October 1979): AAS 71 (1979), pp. 1277-1340.
DCG (1971): Sacred Congregation for the Clergy, General Catechetical
Directory, Ad normam decreti (11 April 1971): AAS 64 (1972). pp. 97-176
DH: Second Vatican Council, Declaration on Religious Liberty, Dignitatis
Humanae (7 December 1965)
DM: John Paul II, Encyclical Letter, Dives in Misericordia (30
November 1980): AAS 72 (1980) pp. 1177-1232
DV: Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei
Verbum (18 November 1965)
DS: H. Denzinger-A Schönmetzer, Enchiridion Symbolorum Definitionum
et Declarationum de Rebus Fidei et Morum, Editio XXXV, Rome 1973
EA: John Paul II, Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Africa
(14 September 1995): AAS 88 (1996) pp. 5-82
EN: Paul VI, Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi (8 December
1975): AAS 58 (1976) pp. 5-76
EV: John Paul II, Ecyclical Letter, Evangelium Vitae (25 March
1995): AAS 87 (1995) pp. 401-522
FC: John Paul II, Post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Familaris Consortio
(22 November 1981): AAS 73 (1981) pp. 81-191
FD: John Paul II, Apostolic Constitution Fidei Depositum (11 October
1992) AAS 86 (1994) pp. 113-118
GCM: Congregation for the Evagelization of Peoples, Guide for
Catechists. Document of vocational, formative and promotional orientation of
Catechists in the territories depedent on the Congregation for the
Evangelization of Peoples (3 December, 1993), Vatican City 1993
GE: Second Vatican Council, Declaration on Education, Gravissimum
Educationis (28 October 1965)
GS: Second Vatican Council, Pastoral Constitution The Church in the Modern
World. Gaudium et Spes (7 December 1965)
LC: Cogregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction Libertatis
Conscientia (22 March 1986): AAS 79 (1987) pp. 554-599
LE: John Paul II, Encyclical letter Laborem Exercens (14 September
1981), AAS 73 (1981), pp. 577-647
LG: Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen
Gentium (21 November 1944)
MM: John XXIII, Encyclical Letter, Mater et Magistra (15 May 1961):
AAS 53 (1961) pp. 401-464
MPD: Synod of Bishops, Message to the People of God, Cum iam ad exitum
on catechesis in our times (28 October 1977) Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis
1977
NA: Second Vatican Council, Decree on the relationship of the Church with
non-Christian Religions, Nostra Aetate (28 October 1965)
PB: John Paul II, Apostolic Costitution Pastor Bonus (28 June 1988)
AAS 80 (1988), pp. 841-930
PG: Patrologiae Cursus completus, Series Graeca ed Jacques P. Migne,
Paris 1857 ff.
PL: Patrologiae Cursus completus, Seiries Latina, ed. Jacques P.
Migne, Paris 1844 ff.
PO: Second Vatican Council, Decree on Priestly Life and Ministry Presbyterorum
Ordinis (7 December 1965)
PP: Paul VI, Encyclical Letter Populorum Progressio (26 March 1967)
AAS 59 (1967), pp. 257-299.
RH: John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Redemptor Hominis (4 March
1979): AAS 71 (1979), pp. 257-324
RCIA: Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum, Rite of Christian
Initiationis of Adults (R.C.I.A.) Editio Typica, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis
1972
RM: John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio (7 December
1990): AAS 83 (1991), pp. 249-340
SC: Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy Sacrosanctum
Concilium (4 December 1963)
SYNOD 1985: Synod of Bishops (extraordinary meeting of 1985) Final Report
Ecclesia sub verbo Dei mysteria Christi celebrans pro salute mundi (7
December 1985), Vatican City 1985
SCh: Sources Chrétiennes, Collectio, Paris 1946 ff.
SRS: John Paul II, Ecyclical letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (30
December 1987) AAS 80 (1988), pp. 513-586
TMA: John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation, Tertio Millennio Adveniente
(10 November 1994): AAS 87 (1995) pp. 5-41
UR: Second Vatican Council, Decree on Ecumenism Unitatis Redintegratio
(21 November 1964)
UUS: John Paul II, Ecyclical Lettter Ut Unum Sint (25 May 1995): AAS
87 (1995) pp. 921-982.
VS: John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Veritatis Splendor (6 August
1993): AAS 85 (1993). pp. 1133-1228.
PREFACE
1. The Second Vatican Council prescribed that a "Directory for the
catechetical instruction of the Christian people"(1) be drawn up. The
Congregation for the Clergy, in execution of this conciliar mandate, availed
itself of a special commission of experts, and consulted the various Episcopal
Conferences, throughout the world, which made numerous suggestions and
observations on the subject. The text prepared was revised by an ad hoc
theological Commission and by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
The General Catechetical Directory was definitively approved by Pope
Paul VI on 18 March 1971 and promulgated on 11 April 1971.
2. The thirty-year period between the conclusion of the Second Vatican
Council and the threshold of the third millennium is without doubt most
providential for the orientation and promotion of catechesis. It has been a time
in which the evangelizing vigour of the original ecclesial community has in some
ways re-emerged. It has also seen a renewal of interest in the teaching of the
Fathers and has made possible a return to the catechumenate. Since 1971, the
General Catechetical Directory has oriented the particular Churches in their
renewal of catechesis and has acted as a point of reference for content and
pedagogy, as well as for methodology.
The course of catechesis during this same period has been characterized
everywhere by generous dedication, worthy initiatives and by positive results
for the education and growth in the faith of children, young people and adults.
At the same time, however, there have been crises, doctrinal inadequacies,
influences from the evolution of global culture and ecclesial questions derived
from outside the field of catechesis which have often impoverished its quality.
3. The Magisterium of the Church, throughout these years, has never ceased
to exercise its pastoral solicitude for catechesis. Numerous Bishops and
Episcopal Conferences in all parts of the world have devoted considerable
attention to catechesis by means of catechisms and pastoral guidelines, by
promoting the formation of their priests and by encouraging catechetical
research. Efforts such as these have proved fruitful and have contributed much
to catechetical praxis in the particular Churches. The Rite of Christian
Initiation of Adults, published by the Congregation for Divine Worship on 6
January 1972, has proved especially useful for catechetical renewal.
Mention must also be made in a particular way of the ministry of Pope Paul
VI, who shepherded the Church in the immediate post-conciliar period. In his
regard, Pope John Paul II has said: "... through his gestures, his
preaching, his authoritative interpretation of the Second Vatican Council —
considered by him to have been the great catechism of modern times — and
through the whole of his life, my venerable predecessor Paul VI served the
Church's catechesis in a particularly exemplary fashion".(2)
4. The reflections of the General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops of
October 1974 on the theme of Evangelization in the Contemporary World constitute
a decisive milestone for catechesis. The propositions subsequently drawn up by
the Synod were presented to Pope Paul VI, who promulgated the post-synodal
Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi of 8 December 1975. This
document enunciates, amongst other things, a particularly important principle,
namely, that of catechesis as a work of evangelization in the context of the
mission of the Church. Henceforth catechesis would be considered as one of the
enduring concerns of the Church's missionary mandate for our times.
The final General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, convoked by Pope Paul VI
in October 1977, proposed catechesis to its participants as the theme for
analysis and reflection. This Synod saw "in catechetical renewal a precious
gift of the Holy Spirit to the contemporary Church".(3)
5. Taking up this catechetical heritage in 1978, Pope John Paul II set out
his first orientations for catechesis in the Apostolic Exhortation Catechesi
Tradendae of 16 October 1979. This Exhortation forms a cohesive unity with
Evangelii Nuntiandi and fully locates catechesis within the context of
evangelization.
Throughout his entire pontificate, Pope John Paul II has continually
proposed a constant magisterium of the highest catechetical value. From amongst
his discourses, his letters, his written teaching, particular emphasis must be
given to the twelve Encyclicals, from Redemptor Hominis to Ut Unum
Sint. These Encyclicals constitute in themselves a synthetic corpus of
coherent doctrine with regard to the renewal of ecclesial life desired by the
Second Vatican Council.
Of particular catechetical value, amongst these documents of the Petrine
ministry of Pope John Paul II, the following are of special importance: Redemptor
Hominis (4 March 1979), Dives in Misericordia (30 November 1980),
Dominum et Vivificantem (18 May 1986) and Redemptoris Missio (7
December 1990), in which last, the permanent validity of the Church's missionary
mandate is re-affirmed.
6. On the other hand the General Assemblies of the Synod of Bishops, both
ordinary and extraordinary, have been particularly important for catechesis. In
this respect mention must be made of the Synods of 1980 and 1987 which dealt
with the mission of the family and the vocation of the laity. Following the work
of these Synods, Pope John Paul II promulgated the respective Apostolic
Exhortations Familiaris Consortio (22 November 1981) and Christifideles
Laici (30 December 1987). The Extraordinary Synod of Bishops of 1985 was
also of decisive importance for the catechesis of our times and for the future.
On that occasion, following a review of the previous twenty years of the
application of the Second Vatican Council the Synodal Fathers proposed to the
Holy Father a universal catechism for the Catholic Church. The proposal was most
favourably received and made his own by Pope John Paul II. After a long and
complex process of elaboration the Catechism of the Catholic Church was
presented to the bishops and the Particular Churches by the Apostolic
Constitution Fidei Depositum of the 11 October 1992.
7. The publication of the Catechism together with the aforementioned
interventions of the Magisterium necessitated a revision of the General
Catechetical Directory so as to adapt this valuable theologico-pastoral
instrument to new situations and needs. It is in service of the entire Church
that the Holy See now seeks to collate this heritage and to organize it
systematically in order to make it available for catechetical purposes.
The work of revising the General Catechetical Directory undertaken
by the Congregation for the Clergy, was conducted by a group of Bishops and
experts in theology and catechesis. In the revision of the General Directory,
its original inspiration and content were respected. Episcopal Conferences and
several experts were consulted as were the principal catechetical institutes and
centres.
In its present form the General Directory for Catechesis seeks to
arrive at a balance between two principal requirements:
– on the one hand the contextualization of catechesis in evangelization
as envisaged by Evangelii Nuntiandi;
– on the other the appropriation of the content of the faith as
presented in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
8. The General Directory for Catechesis, while retaining the basic
structure of that of 1971, is divided as follows:
– The Introduction takes its starting point from faith and
trust in the power of the Gospel seed, and proposes guidelines for interpreting
and understanding human and ecclesial conditions. These are intended to assist
mission.
– Part One(4) has three chapters and roots catechesis above all
in the conciliar Constitution Dei Verbum, placing it in the context of
evangelization as seen in Evangelii Nuntiandi and Catechesi
Tradendae, and proposes, moreover, to clarify the nature of catechesis;
– Part Two(5) contains two chapters, the first of which, under
the title Norms and Criteria for presenting the Gospel message in
Catechesis, puts forward afresh the entire content of the corresponding
chapter of the previous text from a new and enriched perspective; the second
chapter, which is completely new, serves to present the Catechism of the
Catholic Church as a reference point for the transmission of the faith in
catechesis and for the preparation of catechisms at local level; this chapter
also outlines those fundamental principles to be employed in the redaction of
catechisms in particular and local Churches;
– Part Three(6) has also been revised to formulate the main
elements of a pedagogy of the faith inspired by divine pedagogy; while this
question is primarily a theological one, it also involves the human sciences;
– Part Four(7) is entitled Those to be catechized; in
five short chapters attention is given to the diverse situations and contexts of
those to whom catechesis is directed, to matters arising from socio-religious
situations, and in particular, to the question of inculturation;
– Part Five(8) focuses on the centrality of the particular
Church and on its primordial duty to promote, organize, oversee and co-ordinate
all catechetical activities; of particular significance is the description of
the roles proper to the various agents involved in catechesis (who, of course,
are always dependent on the Pastors of the particular Churches) and of the
requirements necessary for their respective formation;
– The Conclusion advocates an intensification of catechetical
activity in our times, and concludes with an appeal to faith in the action of
the Holy Spirit and in the efficacy of the word of God sown in love.
9. The object of this Directory is clearly the same as that pursued by the
1971 Directory. It attempts to provide those fundamental theologico-pastoral
principles drawn from the Church's Magisterium, particularly those inspired by
the Second Vatican Council, which are capable of better orienting and
coordinating the pastoral activity of the ministry of the word and, concretely,
catechesis.(9) The basic intention of the Directory was (and remains) that of
offering reflections and principles, rather than immediate applications or
practical directives. This method has been adopted principally for the reason
that defects and errors in catechetical material can be avoided only if the
nature and end of catechesis, as well as the truths and values which must be
transmitted, are correctly understood from the outset.(10)
The concrete application of these principles and pronouncements by means of
guidelines, national, regional or diocesan directories, catechisms and other
ways deemed suitable for the effective promotion of catechesis is something
which pertains to the specific competence of the various Episcopates.
10. It is evident that not all parts of the Directory have the same
importance. Those dealing with Divine Revelation, the nature of catechesis, the
criteria governing the proclamation of the Gospel message are universally valid.
Those, however, referring to present circumstances, to methodology and to the
manner of adapting catechesis to diverse age groups and cultural contexts are to
be understood rather as indications or guidelines.(11)
11. The Directory is addressed principally to the Bishops, Episcopal
Conferences and, in a general way, in accordance with their competence, to those
who have responsibility for catechesis. Clearly it will be of use in forming
those preparing for ordination to the Priesthood, in the continuing formation of
priests and in the formation of catechists.
The immediate end of the Directory is to assist in the composition of
catechetical directories and catechisms. Numerous notes and references have been
included in this Directory, at the suggestion of many Bishops, which may be
useful in drawing up such catechetical aids.
12. Since the Directory is intended for the use of particular Churches,
whose pastoral needs vary greatly, it is obvious that only common or
intermediate concerns could be taken into account. This is true also of the
sections dealing with the organization of catechesis at different levels. Due
note should be made of this observation while using the Directory. As has been
already noted in the 1971 Directory, what may appear insufficient in areas where
catechesis and catechetical resources have reached a high standard, may perhaps
seem excessive in areas where catechesis has not yet undergone such development.
13. It is hoped that the publication of this document, testimony of the
Apostolic See's solicitude for catechetical ministry, will be received and
carefully studied in the context of the pastoral needs of each particular
Church. It is to be hoped that it will promote future study and deepen research
so as to respond to the needs of catechesis and the norms and directives of the
Church's Magisterium.
Finally, brethren, pray for us, that the word of the Lord may speed on, and
triumph as it did among you (2 Thess 3:1).
From the Vatican, 15 August 1997
Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
+ Darío Castrillón Hoyos Archbishop Emeritus
of Bucamaramga Pro-Prefect
+ Crescenzio Sepe Titular Archbishop of Grado Secretary
INTRODUCTION
Preaching the Gospel in the
contemporary world
"Behold! A sower went out to sow. As he sowed some seed fell along
the path, and the birds came and devoured it. Other seed fell on rocky ground,
where it had not much soil, and immediately it sprang up, since it had no depth
of soil; and when the sun rose it was scorched, and since it had no root it
withered away. Other seed fell among thorns which grew up and choked it, and it
yielded no grain. And other seeds fell into good soil and brought forth grain,
growing up and increasing, and yielding thirty fold, sixty fold, and a hundred
fold" (Mk 4:3-8).
14. The purpose of this Introduction is to foster in pastors and catechists
a greater consciousness of the necessity to keep in mind the field in which the
seed is sown, and to do so with the perspective of faith and mercy. The
interpretation of the contemporary world presented here is obviously dependant
on contingent historical circumstances.
"Behold! A sower going out to sow" (Mk 4,3)
15. The parable of the sower going out to sow is the source of inspiration
for evangelization. The seed is the word of God (Lk 8:11). The sower is
Jesus Christ. Two thousand years ago he proclaimed the Gospel in Palestine and
sent the disciples to sow the Gospel in the world. Today, Jesus Christ, present
in the Church through his Spirit, continues to scatter the word of the Father
ever more widely in the field of the world. The conditions of the soil into
which it falls vary greatly. The Gospel "falls by the wayside" (Lk
4,4) when it is not really heard; it falls on "stony soil" without
taking root; it falls "amongst the thorns" (Lk 4:2) where it
is quickly choked by the cares and troubles that weigh upon the hearts of men.
Nonetheless, some seed falls "on good soil" (Mk 4:8) that is
among men and women who are open to a personal relationship with God and who are
in solidarity with their neighbour. This seed brings forth fruit in great
abundance. Jesus, in the parable of the sower, proclaims the Good News that the
Kingdom of God is near, notwithstanding the problems in the soil, the tensions,
conflicts and difficulties of the world. The Gospel seed makes fertile the
history of mankind and promises a rich harvest. Jesus also cautions, however,
that the word of God grows only in a well disposed heart.
Looking at the world from the standpoint of faith
16. The Church continues to sow the Gospel in God's field. Christians, in
the most diverse social situations, perceive the world with the same eyes with
which Jesus contemplated the society of his time. The disciple of Jesus Christ
deeply shares the "joys and hopes, the sadness and the anxieties of the men
today".(12) He gazes upon human history and participates in it, not only
from the standpoint of reason but also from that of faith. In the light of faith
the world appears at once "created and sustained by the love of the
Creator, which has been freed from the slavery of sin by Christ, who was
crucified and rose".(13) The Christian knows that every human event—indeed
all reality—is marked by the creative activity of God which communicates
goodness to all beings; the power of sin which limits and numbs man; and the
dynamism which bursts forth from the Resurrection of Christ, the seed renewing
believers is the hope of a definitive "fulfilment".(14) A world-view
not incorporating these three elements cannot be authentically Christian. Hence
the importance of a catechesis capable of initiating catechumens and those to be
catechized into a "theological reading of modern problems".(15)
The field that is the world
17. The Church, Mother of mankind, above all, sees with profound sorrow "an
innumerable multitude of men and women, children, adults and old people and
unique human beings, who suffer misery".(16)
By means of catechesis, in which due emphasis is given to her social
teaching, the Church (17) desires to stir Christian hearts "to the cause of
justice" (18) and to a "preferential option or love for the poor",(19)
so that her presence may really be light that shines and salt that cures.
Human rights
18. The Church, in her analysis of the soil of the world, is acutely
conscious of everything that injures the dignity of the human person. She is
aware that all human rights (20) spring from this dignity, the constant object
of Christian concern and commitment. For this reason, she looks beyond mere "social
and economic indices" (21) to embrace also cultural and religious factors.
What interests the Church is above all the integral development of the human
person and of all peoples.(22) She notes with joy that "a beneficial trend
is advancing and permeating peoples of the earth, making them ever more aware of
the dignity of the individual".(23) Her vigorous insistence on respect for
human rights and her decisive rejection of all their violations are clear
expressions of that consciousness. The right to life, work, education, the
foundation of a family, participation in public life, and to religious liberty
are, today, demanded more than ever.
19. In many places, however, human rights are clearly violated,(24) in
apparent contradiction of the dignity proper to the human person. Such
violations feed other forms of poverty beyond the material level: they
contribute to a cultural and religious impoverishment which equally concerns the
Church. The negation or restriction of human rights impoverishes the human
person and entire peoples at least as much as, if not more than, material
privation itself.(25) The evangelizing activity of the Church in this field of
human rights has, as its undeniable objective, the task of revealing the
inviolable dignity of every human person. In a certain sense, "it is the
central and unifying task of service which the Church, and the lay faithful in
her, are called to render to the human family".(26) Catechesis must prepare
them for this task.
Culture and cultures
20. The sower knows that the seed falls on specific soils and that it must
absorb all the elements that enable it to bear fruit.(27) He also knows that
some of these elements can prejudice the germination of the seed and indeed the
very harvest itself.
The Constitution Gaudium et Spes underlines the importance of
science and technology for the birth and development of modern culture. The
scientific mentality, which derives from them, profoundly modifies "culture
and ways of thinking",(28) with consequent human and religious
repercussions. Modern man is deeply influenced by this scientific and
experimental method.
Nevertheless, there is today a growing realization that such a mentality is
incapable of explaining everything. Scientists themselves acknowledge that the
rigour of experimental method must be complemented by some other method of
knowing, if a profound understanding of the human being is ever to be attained.
Linguistic theory, for example, shows that symbolic thought affords an approach
to the mystery of the human person which would otherwise remain inaccessible. A
rationalism which does not dichotomize man but which integrates his affective
dimension, unifies him and gives fuller meaning to his life, is thus
indispensable.
21. Together with this "more universal form of culture",(29) there
is a growing desire to esteem anew autochthonous cultures. The question posed by
the Second Vatican Council is still valid: "What is to be done to prevent
increased exchange between cultures (which ought to lead to genuine and fruitful
dialogue between groups and nations) from disturbing the life of communities,
overthrowing traditional wisdom and endangering the character proper to each
people".(30)
– In many places there is an acute awareness that traditional cultures
are being assailed by powerful external forces and by alien imitations of
imported life-styles, with the result that the identity and values proper to
peoples are thus being gradually eroded.
– Similarly acknowledged is the widespread influence of the
communications media, which out of economic or ideological interest, often
imposes a vision of life which does not respect the cultural distinctiveness of
the peoples whom they address.
Thus, with inculturation, evangelization encounters one of its greatest
challenges. In the light of the Gospel, the Church must appropriate all the
positive values of culture and of cultures (31) and reject those elements which
impede development of the true potential of persons and peoples.
Religious and moral factors
22. Amongst the elements which make up the cultural heritage of a people,
religious and moral factors are of particular interest to the sower. There is in
contemporary culture a persistent spread of religious indifference: "Many
however of our contemporaries ...either do not at all perceive, or else
explicitly reject, this intimate and vital bond of man to God".(32)
Atheism, understood as a negation of God, "must therefore be regarded
as one of the most serious problems of our time".(33) While it can take
various forms, it often appears today under the guise of secularism, which
consists in an excessively autonomous view of man and of the world "according
to which it is entirely self-explanatory without any reference to God".(34)
In the specifically religious sphere there are signs of "a return to the
sacred",(35) of a new thirst for transcendent reality and for the divine.
The contemporary world acknowledges in a more comprehensive and vital way "the
renewed interest in religious research".(36) Certainly this phenomenon "is
not without ambiguity".(37) The widespread growth of sects and new
religious movements and the revival of "fundamentalism" (38) are
factors of serious concern for the Church and require careful analysis
23. The moral situation of today is on a par with its religious situation.
There is an evident obscuring of the ontological truth of the human person—as
though the denial of God meant an interior breakdown of the aspirations of the
human being.(39) In many places this contributes to the rise of an "ethical
relativism which would remove any sure moral reference point from political and
social life".(40) Evangelization encounters a privileged field of activity
in the religious and moral sphere. Indeed the primordial mission of the Church
is to proclaim God and to be his witness before the world. This involves making
known the true face of God and his loving plan of salvation for man, as it has
been revealed in Jesus Christ. To prepare such witnesses, it is necessary for
the Church to develop a profoundly religious catechesis, nourished on the
Gospel, which will deepen man's encounter with God and forge a bond of permanent
communion with Him.
The Church in the world
The faith of Christians
24. The disciples of Jesus are scattered in the world as leaven but, as in
every age, they are not immune from the influences of human situations. It is
therefore necessary to enquire into the current situation of the faith of
Christians. Catechetical renewal, developed in the Church over the last decades,
continues to bear very welcome fruit.(41) The catechesis of children, of young
people and of adults has given rise to a type of Christian who is conscious of
his faith and who acts consistently with it in his life. In such Christians this
catechesis has encouraged:
– a new and vital experience of God as merciful Father;
– a more profound rediscovery of Jesus Christ, not only in his divinity
but also in his humanity;
– a sense of co-responsibility on the part of all for the mission of
the Church in the world;
– and a raising of consciousness with regard to the social obligations
of the faith.
25. Nonetheless, in considering today's religious situation, the Church is
also obliged to take into account the extent to which Christians "have been
shaped by the climate of secularism and ethical relativism?" (42) A prime
category requiring examination is that of the "many people who have been
baptized but lead lives entirely divorced from Christianity".(43) This in
fact constitutes a mass of "non-practising Christians" (44) even
though in many hearts religious feeling has not been completely lost.
Re-awakening these to the faith is a real challenge for the Church. Then there
are "the simple people" (45) who express themselves, at times with
sincere religious feeling and deep rooted "popular devotion".(46)
They possess a certain faith, "but know little even of its fundamental
principles".(47) There are, moreover, numerous other Christians, often
highly educated, whose religious formation amounts solely to that which they
received in childhood. These also need to re-examine and develop their faith "from
a different standpoint".(48)
26. There is also a certain number of baptized Christians who, desiring to
promote dialogue with various cultures and other religious confessions, or on
account of a certain reticence on their part to live in contemporary society as
believers, fail to give explicit and courageous witness in their lives to the
faith of Jesus Christ. These concrete situations of the Christian faith call
urgently on the sower to develop a new evangelization,(49) especially in
those Churches of long-standing Christian tradition where secularism has made
greater inroads. In this new context of evangelization, missionary proclamation
and catechesis, especially of the young and of adults, is an evident priority.
The internal life of the ecclesial community
27. It is important to consider also the very life of the ecclesial
community which is its innermost quality. Firstly, it is necessary to see how
the Second Vatican Council has been accepted in the Church, and how it has borne
fruit. The great conciliar documents have not remained a dead letter: their
effects are widely acknowledged. The four constitutions (Sacrosanctum
Concilium, Lumen Gentium, Dei Verbum and Gaudium et Spes) have
indeed enriched the Church. In fact:
– liturgical life is more profoundly understood as the source and
summit of ecclesial life;
– the people of God has acquired a keener awareness of the "common
priesthood" (50) founded on Baptism, and is rediscovering evermore the
universal call to holiness and a livelier sense of mutual service in charity;
– the ecclesial community has acquired a livelier sense of the word of
God. Sacred Scripture, for example, is read, savoured and meditated upon more
intensely;
– the mission of the Church in the world is perceived in a new way: on
the basis of interior renewal, the Second Vatican Council has opened Catholics
to the demands of evangelization as necessarily linked to dialogue with the
world, to human development, to different cultures and religions as well
as to the urgent quest for Christian unity.
28. It must be recognized, however, that in the midst of this richness there
also occur "difficulties about the acceptance of the Council".(51)
Despite so comprehensive and profound an ecclesiology, the sense of belonging to
the Church has weakened and "a certain disaffection towards the Church is
frequently noted".(52) Thus the Church is often regarded in a
one-dimensional way as a mere institution and deprived of her mystery. In some
instances tendentious positions have been adopted and set in opposition to the
interpretation and application of the renewal sought in the Church by the Second
Vatican Council. Such ideologies and conduct have led to divisions which damage
that witness of communion indispensable to evangelization. The evangelizing
activity of the Church, catechesis included, must tend all the more decisively
toward solid ecclesial cohesion. To this end it is urgent that an authentic
ecclesiology of communion,(53) be promoted and deepened in order to arouse in
Christians a deep ecclesial spirituality.
The situation of catechesis: its vitality and difficulties
29. The vitality of catechesis in recent years has been amply demonstrated
by many positive aspects. Amongst others the following must be highlighted:
– the great number of priests, religious and laity who devote
themselves with enthusiasm to catechesis, one of the most important ecclesial
activities.
– the missionary character of contemporary catechesis and its ability
to secure adherence to the faith on the part of catechumens and those to be
catechized in a world in which religious sense is obscured must also be
underlined: in this dynamic there is an acute awareness that catechesis must
have a catechumenal style, as of integral formation rather than mere
information; it must act in reality as a means of arousing true conversion; (54)
– consonant with what has been said, concerning the expanding role of
adult catechesis (55) the catechetical programmes of many particular Churches
assume extraordinary importance. This option appears to be a priority in the
pastoral planning of many dioceses, and also plays a central role in many
ecclesial groups and movements;
– promoted no doubt by recent directions of the Magisterium,
catechetical thought, has gained much in our times in terms of quality and
profundity. In this sense many local Churches already have at their disposal
suitable and opportune pastoral programmes.
30. It is necessary, however, to examine with particular attention some
problems so as to identify their solutions:
– the first concerns the conception of catechesis as a school of faith,
an initiation and apprenticeship in the entire Christian life of which
catechists do not yet have a full understanding.
– with regard to the fundamental direction of catechesis, catechetical
activity is still usually impregnated with the idea of ?Revelation': however,
the conciliar concept of 'Tradition' is much less influential as an inspiration
for catechesis: in much catechesis, indeed, reference to Sacred Scripture is
virtually exclusive and unaccompanied by sufficient reference to the Church's
long experience and reflection,(56) acquired in the course of her
two-thousand-year history. The ecclesial nature of catechesis, in this case,
appears less clearly; the inter-relation of Sacred Scripture, Tradition and the
Magisterium, each according to "its proper mode" (57) does not yet
harmoniously enrich a catechetical transmission of the faith;
– Concerning the object of catechesis, which always seeks to promote
communion with Jesus Christ, it is necessary to arrive at a more balanced
presentation of the entire truth of the mystery of Christ. Often, emphasis is
given only to his humanity without any explicit reference to his divinity; at
other times, less frequently today, emphasis is so exclusively placed on his
divinity that the reality of the mystery of the Incarnate Word is no longer
evident; (58)
– Various problems exist with regard to the content of catechesis:
there are certain doctrinal lacunae concerning the truth about God and
man; about sin and grace and about eschatology; there is a need for a more solid
moral formation; presentations of the history of the Church are inadequate; and
too little importance is given to her social teaching; in some regions there has
been a proliferation of catechisms and texts, the products of particular
initiatives whose selective tendencies and emphases are so differing as to
damage that convergence necessary for the unity of the faith; (59)
– "Catechesis is intrinsically bound to every liturgical and
sacramental action" (60) Frequently however, the practice of catechetics
testifies to a weak and fragmetary link with the liturgy: limited attention to
liturgical symbols and rites, scant use of the liturgical fonts, catechetical
courses whith little or no connection with the liturgical year; the
marginalization of liturgical celebrations in catechetical programs;
– Concerning pedagogy, after a period in which excessive insistence on
the value of method and techniques was promoted by some, sufficient attention is
still not given to the demands and to the originality of that pedagogy which is
proper to the faith. It remains easy to fall into a 'content-method' dualism,
with resultant reductionism to one or other extreme; with regard to the
pedagogical dimension the requisite theological discernment has not always been
exercised; (61)
– Regarding differences between cultures in the service of the faith,
it is difficult to know how to transmit the Gospel within the cultural horizons
of the peoples to whom it is proclaimed, in such a way that it can be really
perceived as Good News for the lives of people and of society; (62)
– Formation for the apostolate and for mission is one of the
fundamental tasks of catechesis. Neverthless while there is a new sensitivity to
the formation of the laity for Christian witness, for inter religious dialogue,
and for their secular obligations, education for missionary activity "ad
gentes" still seems weak and inadequate. Frequently, ordinary catechesis
gives only marginal and inconsistent attention to the missions.
The sowing of the Gospel
31. Having tested the ground, the sower sends out his workers to proclaim
the Gospel through all the world and to that end shares with them the power of
his Spirit. At the same time he shows them how to read the signs of the times
and asks of them that special preparation which is necessary to carry out the
sowing.
How to read the signs of the times
32. The voice of the Spirit, which Jesus, on behalf of the Father, has
communicated to his disciples "resounds in the very events of history".(63)
Behind the changing data of present situations and in the deep motives of
evangelization, it is necessary to discover "what may be genuine signs of
the presence or the purpose of God".(64)
Such analysis, however, must always be done in the light of faith. Availing
herself of the human sciences,(65) which are always necessary, the Church seeks
to discover the meaning of the present situation within the perspective of the
history of salvation. Her judgements on reality are always a diagnosis of the
need for mission.
Some challenges for catechesis
33. In order to express its vitality and to be efficacious, catechesis today
needs to undertake the following challenges and directions:
– Above all it needs to present itself as a valid service to
evangelization of the Church with an accent on missionary character;
– It should address itself to those who have been and continue to be
its privileged recipients: children, adolescents, young people and adults;
– Based on the example of catechesis in the patristic era, it needs to
form the personality of the believer and therefore be a true and proper school
of Christian pedagogy;
– It needs to announce the essential mysteries of Christianity,
promoting the trinitarian experience of life in Christ as the center of the life
of faith;
– It needs to consider as its primary task the preparation and
formation of catechists in the deep riches of the faith.
PART ONE
CATECHESIS IN THE CHURCH'S MISSION OF EVANGELIZATION
Catechesis in the Church's mission of evangelization
"Go into all the world; and preach the Gospel to the whole creation"
(Mk 16:15). "Go, therefore make disciples of all nations;
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you" (Mt
28:19-20). "You are witnesses of these things" (Lk
24:48); "But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon
you, and you shall be my witnesses... to the end of the earth" (Acts
1:8).
The missionary mandate of Jesus
34. Jesus Christ, after his Resurrection together with the Father sent the
Holy Spirit in order that he might accomplish from within the work of salvation
and that he might animate his disciples to continue the mission to the whole
world.
He was the first and supreme evangelizer. He proclaimed the Kingdom of
God,(66) as the urgent and definitive intervention of God in history, and
defined this proclamation "the Gospel", that is, the Good
News. To this Gospel, Jesus devoted his entire earthly life: he made known the
joy of belonging to the Kingdom,(67) its demands, its magna carta,(68)
the mysteries which it embraces,(69) the life of fraternal charity of those who
enter it (70) and its future fulfilment.(71)
The meaning and purpose of Part One
35. This first part intends to define the proper character of catechesis.
Its first chapter, with regard to theology, recalls briefly the concept of
Revelation as set forth in the conciliar constitution Dei Verbum. It determines
in a specific manner the way in which the ministry of the word is to be
conceived. The concepts word of God, Gospel, Kingdom of God, and Tradition,
in this dogmatic constitution, are fundamental to the meaning of catechesis.
Together with these, the concept of evangelization is an indispensable point of
reference for catechesis. The same dynamic is presented with new and profound
precision in the Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi.
The second chapter situates catechesis within the context of evangelization
and relates it to other forms of the ministry of the word of God. Thanks to this
rapport one more easily discovers the proper character of catechesis.
The third chapter presents a more direct analysis of catechesis in itself:
its ecclesial nature, its binding objective of communion with Jesus Christ, its
tasks and the catechumenal idea by which it is inspired.
The term catechesis has undergone a semantic evolution during the twenty
centuries of the Church's history. In this Directory the concept of catechesis
takes its inspiration from the post-conciliar Magisterial documents, principally
from Evangelii Nuntiandi, Catechesi Tradendae and Redemptoris Missio.
The concept of catechesis which one has, profoundly conditions the selection
and organization of its contents (cognitive, experiential, behavioural),
identifies those to whom it is addressed and defines the pedagogy to be employed
in accomplishing its objectives.
CHAPTER I
Revelation and its transmission through
evangelization
"Blessed be the God and Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ, who has
blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places... for
he has made known to us in all wisdom and insight the mystery of his will,
according to his purpose which he set forth in Christ as a plan for the fullness
of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth"
(Eph 1:3-10).
The revelation of God's providential plan
36. "God who creates and conserves all things by his Word, offers to
men a constant evidence of himself in created things".(72) Man, who by his
nature and his vocation is capable of knowing God, when he listens to this
message of creation is able to arrive at the certainty of the existence of God,
as the cause and end of all things and as the one who is able to reveal himself
to man.
The Constitution Dei Verbum of the Second Vatican Council describes
Revelation as that act by which God manifests himself personally to man. God
truly reveals himself as one who desires to communicate himself, making the
human person a participant in his divine nature.(73) In this way God
accomplishes his plan of love.
"It pleased God, in his goodness and wisdom, to reveal himself and to
make known the mystery of his will [to men]...in order to invite and receive
them into communion with himself".(74)
37. The "providential plan" (75) of the Father, fully revealed in
Jesus Christ, is realized by the power of the Holy Spirit. This implies:
– the Revelation of God, of his "innermost truth",(76) of his
"secret",(77) of the true vocation and dignity of the human person;
(78)
– the offer of salvation to all men, as a gift of God's grace and
mercy,(79) which implies freedom from evil, sin and death; (80)
– the definitive call to gather into the family of God all of his
scattered children, thus realizing a fraternal union amongst men.(81)
Revelation: deeds and words
38. God, in his greatness, uses a pedagogy (82) to reveal himself to the
human person: he uses human events and words to communicate his plan; he does so
progressively and in stages,(83) so as to draw even closer to man. God, in fact,
operates in such a manner that man comes to knowledge of his salvific plan by
means of the events of salvation history and the inspired words which accompany
and explain them.
"This economy of Revelation is realized by deeds and words, which are
intrinsically bound up with each other. As a result,
– the works performed by God in the history of Salvation show forth and
bear out the doctrine and realities signified by the words,
– the words, for their part, proclaim the works, and bring to light the
mystery they contain".(84)
39. Evangelization too which transmits Revelation to the world, is also
brought about in words and deeds. It is at once testimony and proclamation, word
and sacrament, teaching and task. Catechesis, for its part, transmits the words
and deeds of Revelation; it is obliged to proclaim and narrate them and, at the
same time, to make clear the profound mysteries they contain. Moreover, since
Revelation is a source of light for the human person, catechesis not only
recalls the marvels worked by God in the past, but also, in the light of the
same Revelation, it interprets the signs of the times and the present life of
man, since it is in these that the plan of God for the salvation of the world is
realized.(85)
Jesus Christ: mediator and fullness of Revelation
40. God revealed himself progressively to man, through the prophets and
through salvific events, until he brought to completion his self-revelation by
sending his own Son: (86)
"[Jesus Christ] completed and perfected Revelation, he did this by way
of his presence and self manifestation—by words and works, signs and
miracles, but above all by his death and glorious resurrection from the dead,
and finally by sending the Spirit of truth".(87)
Jesus Christ is not merely the greatest of the prophets but is the eternal
Son of God, made man. He is, therefore, the final event towards which all the
events of salvation history converge.(88) He is indeed "the Father's one,
perfect and unsurpassable Word".(89)
41. The ministry of the word must always give prominence to this wonderful
characteristic, proper to the economy of Revelation: the Son of God enters human
history, assumes human life and death, and brings about the new and definitive
covenant between God and man. It is the task of catechesis to show who Jesus
Christ is, his life and ministry, and to present the Christian faith as the
following of his person.(90) Consequently, it must base itself constantly on the
Gospels, which "are the heart of all the Scriptures 'because they are our
principal source for the life and teaching of the Incarnate Word, our Saviour'".(91)
The fact that Jesus Christ is the fullness of Revelation is the foundation
for the "Christocentricity" (92) of catechesis: the mystery of Christ,
in the revealed message, is not another element alongside others, it is rather
the centre from which all other elements are structured and illuminated.
The transmission of Revelation by the Church, the work of the Holy
Spirit
42. The Revelation of God, culminating in Jesus Christ, is destined for all
mankind: "He (God) desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge
of the truth" (1 Tim 2,4) (93) In virtue of his universal salvific
will, God has ordained that Revelation should be transmitted to all peoples and
to all generations and should remain always in its entirety.
43. To fulfil this divine plan, Jesus Christ founded the Church, built on
the Apostles. He gave them the Holy Spirit from the Father and sent them to
preach the Gospel to the whole world. The Apostles, by words, deeds and
writings, faithfully discharged this task.(94)
This Apostolic Tradition is perpetuated in the Church by means of the Church
herself. The entire Church, pastors and faithful, is responsible for its
conservation and transmission. The Gospel is conserved whole and entire in the
Church: the disciples of Jesus Christ contemplate it and meditate upon it
unceasingly; they live it out in their everyday lives; they proclaim it in their
missionary activity. As the Church lives the Gospel she is continually made
fruitful by the Holy Spirit. The Spirit causes her to grow constantly in her
understanding of the Gospel, prompts her and sustains the task of proclaiming
the Gospel in every corner of the world.(95)
44. The integral conservation of Revelation, the word of God contained in
Tradition and Scripture, as well as its continuous transmission, are guaranteed
in their authenticity. The Magisterium of the Church, sustained by the Holy
Spirit and endowed with "the sure charism of truth",(96) exercises the
function of "authentically interpreting the word of God".(97)
45. The Church, "universal sacrament of salvation", born of the
Holy Spirit, transmits Revelation through evangelization; she announces the Good
News of the salvific plan of the Father and in the sacraments, communicates his
Diving gifts.
To God who reveals himself is due this obedience of faith by which man
adhers to the "Gospel of the grace of God". (Acts 20,24) with
full assent of the intellect and of the will. Guided by faith, by means of the
gift of the Spirit, man succeeds in attaining to contemplate and to delight in
the God of love, who in Christ has revealed the riches of his glory.(98)
Evangelization (99)
46. The Church "exists in order to evangelize" (100) that is "the
carrying forth of the Good News to every sector of the human race so that by its
strength it may enter into the hearts of men and renew the human race".
(101)
The missionary mandate of Jesus to evangelize has various aspects,
all of which, however, are closely connected with each other: "proclaim",
(Mk 16,15) "make disciples and teach", (102) "be
my witnesses", (103) "baptize", (104) "do
this in memory of me", (Lk 22,19) "love one another"
(Jn 15,12) Proclamation, witness, teaching, sacraments, love of
neighbour: all of these aspects are the means by which the one Gospel is
transmitted and they constitute the essential elements of evangelization itself.
Indeed they are so important that, at times, there is a tendency to identify
them with the action of evangelization. However, "no such definition can be
accepted for that complex, rich and dynamic reality which is called
evangelization". (105) There is the risk of impoverishing it or even of
distorting it. Evangelization, on the contrary, must develop its "totality"
(106) and completely incorporate its intrinsic bipolarity: witness
andproclamation, (107) word and sacrament, (108) interior change and social
transformation. (109) Those who evangelize have a "global vision"
(110) of evangelization and identify with the overall mission of the Church.
(111)
The process of evangelization
47. The Church, while ever containing in herself the fullness of the means
of salvation, always operates "by slow stages". (112) The conciliar
decree Ad Gentes clarifies well the dynamic of the process of
evangelization: Christian witness, dialogue and presence in charity (11-12), the
proclamation of the Gospel and the call to conversion (13), the catechumenate
and Christian Initiation (14), the formation of the Christian communities
through and by means of the sacraments and their ministers (1518). (113) This is
the dynamic for establishing and building up the Church.
48. Accordingly, in conformity with this, evangelization must be viewed as
the process by which the Church, moved by the Spirit, proclaims and spreads the
Gospel throughout the entire world. Evangelization:
– is urged by charity, impregnating and transforming the whole
temporal order, appropriating and renewing all cultures; (114)
– bears witness (115) amongst peoples of the new way of being
and living which characterizes Christians;
– proclaims explicitly the Gospel, through "first
proclamation", (116) calling to conversion. (117)
– initiates into the faith and the Christian life, by means of "catechesis"
(118) and the "sacraments of Christian initiation", (119) those who
convert to Jesus Christ or those who take up again the path of following him,
incorporating both into the Christian community; (120)
– constantly nourishes the gift of communion (121) amongst the
faithful by means of continuous education in the faith (homilies and other forms
of catechesis), the sacraments and the practice of charity;
– continuously arouses mission, (122) sending all the disciples
of Christ to proclaim the Gospel, by word and deed throughout the whole world.
49. The process of evangelization, (123) consequently, is structured in
stages or "essential moments": (124) missionary activity directed
toward non-believers and those who live in religious indifference; initial
catechetical activity for those who choose the Gospel and for those who need to
complete or modify their initiation; pastoral activity directed toward the
Christian faithful of mature faith in the bosom of the Christian community.
(125) These moments, however, are not unique: they may be repeated, if
necessary, as they give evangelical nourishment in proportion to the spiritual
growth of each person or of the entire community.
The ministry of the word in evangelization
50. The ministry of the word (126) is a fundamental element of
evangelization. The presence of Christianity amongst different human groups and
its living witness must be explained and justified by the explicit proclamation
of Jesus Christ the Lord. "There is no true evangelization if the name, the
teaching, the life, the promises, the Kingdom and the mystery of Jesus of
Nazareth, the Son of God, are not proclaimed". (127) Those who are already
disciples of Jesus Christ also require to be constantly nourished by the word of
God so that they may grow in their Christian life. (128)
The ministry of the word, within the context of evangelization, transmits
Revelation, through the Church, by using human words. These, however, always
refer to works: to those which God has done and continues to do, especially in
the liturgy; to the witness of Christians; to the transforming action which
these Christians achieve, together with so many men of good will, throughout the
world. This human word of the Church is the means used by the Holy Spirit to
continue dialogue with humanity. He is, in fact, the principle agent of the
ministry of the word, the one through whom "the living voice of the Gospel
rings out in the Church—and through her in the world". (129)
The ministry of the word is exercised in "different forms". (130)
The Church, since apostolic times, (131) in her desire to offer the word of God
in the most appropriate manner, has realized this ministry in the most varied of
ways. (132) All of these, however, perform the essential and fundamental
functions of the ministry of the word itself.
Functions and forms of the ministry of the word
51. The following are the principal functions of the ministry of the word:
– Called together and called to faith
This function is the most immediate expression of the missionary mandate of
Jesus. It is realized through "the primary proclamation", directed to
non-believers; those who have chosen unbelief, those Christians who live on the
margins of Christianlife, those who follow other religions. (133) The religious
awakening of the children of Christian families, is also an eminent form of this
function.
– Initiation
Those who are moved by grace to decide to follow Jesus are "introduced
into the life of faith, of the liturgy and of the charity of the People of God".
(134) The Church achieves this function fundamentally by catechesis, in close
relation with the sacraments of initiation, whether these are about to be
received or have already been received. Important forms include: the catechesis
of non-baptized adults in the catechumenate, the catechesis of baptized adults
who wish to return to the faith, or of those who need to complete their
initiation; the catechesis of children and of the young, which of itself has the
character of initiation. Christian education in families and religious
instruction in schools also have an initiatory function.
– Continuous education in the faith
In many regions this is also called "permanent catechesis".
(135)
It is intended for those Christians who have been initiated in the basic
elements of the Christian faith, but who need constantly to nourish and deepen
their faith throughout their lives. This function is accomplished through a
great variety of forms: "systematic and occasional, individual and
community, organized and spontaneous". (136)
– The liturgical function
The ministry of the word also has a liturgical function since,
when realized within the context of a sacred action, it is an integral part of
that action. (137) It takes different forms but amongst them the most important
is the homily. Other forms in the liturgical context include celebrations of the
word and instruction received during the administration of the sacraments. On
the other hand, mention must also be made of the immediate preparation for
reception of the different sacraments, the celebration of sacramentals and above
all of the participation of the faithful in the Eucharist, as a primary means of
education in the faith.
– The theological function
This seeks to develop understanding of the faith and is to be situated in
the dynamic of "fides quaerens intellectum", that is, of
belief which seeks to understand. (138) Theology, in order to fulfil this
function, needs to confront philosophical forms of thought, various forms of
humanism and the human sciences, and dialogue with them. It is articulated
whenever: "the systematic treatment and the scientific investigation of the
truths of the Faith" (139) are promoted.
52. The important forms of the ministry of the Word are: the first
annoucement or missionary preaching, pre and post baptismal catechesis, the
liturgical forms and the theological forms. Then, it often happens, for pastoral
reasons, that important forms of the ministry of the word must assume more than
one function. Catechesis, for example, together with its initiatory forms, has
frequently to discharge tasks of mission. The same homily, depending on
circumstances, can take on both the functions of convocation and of integral
initiation.
Conversion and faith
53. In proclaiming the Good News of Revelation to the world, evangelization
invites men and women to conversion and faith. (140) The call of Jesus, "Repent
and believe in the Gospel", (Mk 1,15) continues to resound today by
means of the Church's work of evangelization. The Christian faith is, above all,
conversion to Jesus Christ, (141) full and sincere adherence to his person and
the decision to walk in his footsteps. (142) Faith is a personal encounter with
Jesus Christ making, of oneself a disciple of him. This demands a permanent
commitment to think like him, to judge like him and to live as he lived. (143)
In this way the believer unites himself to the community of disciples and
appropriates the faith of the Church. (144)
54. This "Yes" to Jesus Christ, who is the fullness of the
revelation of the Father is twofold: a trustful abandonment to God and a loving
assent to all that he has revealed to us. This is possible only by means of the
action of the Holy Spirit. (145)
"By faith man freely commits his entire self completely to God, making
the full submission of his intellect and will to God who reveals, and willingly
assenting to the Revelation given by him". (146)
"To believe has thus a double reference: to the person and to the
truth; to the truth, by trust in the person who bears witness to it". (147)
55. Faith involves a change of life, a "metanoia", (148)
that is a profound transformation of mind and heart; it causes the believer to
live that conversion. (149) This transformation of life manifests itself at all
levels of the Christian's existence: in his interior life of adoration and
acceptance of the divine will, in his action, participation in the mission of
the Church, in his married and family life; in his professional life; in
fulfilling economic and social responsibilities.
Faith and conversion arise from the "heart", that is, they
arise from the depth of the human person and they involve all that he is. By
meeting Jesus Christ and by adhering to him the human being sees all of his
deepest aspirations completely fulfilled. He finds what he had always been
seeking and he finds it superabundantly. (150) Faith responds to that "waiting",
(151) often unconscious and always limited in its knowledge of the truth about
God, about man himself and about the destiny that awaits him. It is like pure
water (152) which refreshes the journey of man, wandering in search of his home.
Faith is a gift from God. It can only be born in the intimacy of Man's heart as
a fruit of that "grace [which] moves and assists him", (153) and as a
completely freeresponse to the promptings of the Holy Spirit who moves the heart
and turns it toward God, and who "makes it easy for all to accept and
believe the truth". (154) The Blessed Virgin Mary lived these dimensions of
faith in the most perfect way. The Church "venerates in Mary the purest
realization of faith". (155)
The process of continuing conversion
56. Faith is a gift destined to grow in the hearts of believers. (156)
Adhering to Jesus Christ, in fact, sets in motion a process of continuing
conversion, which lasts for the whole of life. (157) He who comes to faith is
like a new born child, (158) who, little by little, will grow and change into an
adult, tending towards the state of the "perfect man", (159) and to
maturity in the fullness of Christ. From a theological viewpoint, several
important moments can be identified in the process of faith and conversion:
a) Interest in the Gospel. The first moment is one in which,
in the heart of the non believer or of the indifferent or of those who practise
other religions, there is born, as a result of its first proclamation, an
interest in the Gospel, yet without any firm decision. This first movement of
the human spirit towards faith, which is already a fruit of grace, is identified
by different terms: "propensity for the faith", (160) "evangelic
preparation", (161) inclination to believe, "religious quest".
(162) The Church calls those who show such concern "sympathizers".
(163)
b) Conversion. This first moment of interest in the Gospel
requires a period of searching (164) to be transformed into a firm option. The
option for faith must be a considered and mature one. Such searching, guided by
the Holy Spirit and the proclamation of the Kerygma, prepares the way
for conversion which is certainly "initial", (165) but brings with it
adherence to Christ and the will to walk in his footsteps. This "fundamental
option" is the basis for the whole Christian life of the Lord's disciple.
(166)
c) Profession of faith. Abandonment of self to Jesus Christ
arouses in believers a desire to know him more profoundly and to identify with
him. Catechesis initiates them in knowledge of faith and apprenticeship in the
Christian life, thereby promoting a spiritual journey which brings about a "progressive
change in outlook and morals". (167) This is achieved in sacrifices and in
challenges, as well as in the joys which God gives in abundance. The disciple of
Jesus Christ is then ready to make an explicit, living and fruitful profession
of faith. (168)
d) Journeying towards perfection. The basic maturity which
gives rise to the profession of faith is not the final point in the process of
continuing conversion. The profession of baptismal faith is but the foundation
of a spiritual building which is destined to grow. The baptized, moved always by
the Spirit, nourished by the sacraments, by prayer and by the practise of
charity, and assisted by multiple forms of ongoing education in the faith, seeks
to realize the desire of Christ: "Be perfect as your heavenly Father is
perfect". (169) This is the call to the fullness of perfection which is
addressed to all the baptized.
57. The ministry of the word is at the service of this process of full
conversion. The first proclamation of the Gospel is characterized by the call
to faith; catechesis by giving a foundation to conversion and providing
Christian life with a basic structure; while ongoing education in the faith, in
which the place of the homily must be underlined, is characterized by being the
necessary nourishment of which every baptized adult has need in order to live.
(170)
Socio-religious situations and evangelization
58. The evangelization of the world finds itself placed in a very
diversified and changing religious panorama, in which it is possible to
distinguish three basic situations (171) requiring particular and precise
responses.
a) The situation of those "peoples, groups and socio-cultural
contexts in which Christ and his Gospel are not known, or which lack Christian
communities sufficiently mature to be able to incarnate the faith in their own
environment and proclaim it to other groups". (172) This situation requires
a "mission ad gentes", (173) where missionary activity is
concentrated preferably toward young people and adults. Its particular
characteristic consists in the fact that it is directed to non-Christians and
invites them to conversion. In this context catechesis is usually developed
within the baptismal catechumenate.
b) There are, moreover, situations in which, in a definite
socio-cultural context, "there are Christian communities with adequate and
solid ecclesial structures. They are fervent in their faith and in Christian
living. They bear witness to the Gospel in their surroundings and have a sense
of commitment to the Universal mission". (174) These communities demand an
intense "pastoral action of the Church" since they are made up of
people and families of profound Christian outlook. In such contexts it is vital
that catechesis for children, adolescents and young people develop various
processes of well articulated Christian initiation which permit these to arrive
at adulthood with mature faith which makes evangelizers of those who have been
evagelized. Also in these situations adults are also in need of different types
of Christian formation.
c) In many countries of established Christian tradition and
sometimes in younger Churches there exists "an intermediate situation",
(175) where "entire groups of the baptized have lost a living sense of the
faith, or even no longer consider themselves members of the Church and live a
life far removed from Christ and his Gospel". (176) Such situations require
"a new evangelization". The peculiar nature of this situation is found
in the fact that missionary activity is directed towards the baptized of all
ages, who live in a religious context in which Christian points of reference are
perceived purely exteriorly. Here primary proclamation and basic catechesis are
priorities.
The mutual connection between the activities of evangelization which
correspond to these socio-religious situations.
59. These socio-religious situations obviously differ from each other and it
is wrong to regard them as equal. Such diversity, which has always existed in
the Church's mission, acquires in today's changing world a new significance.
Indeed, increasingly different situations oftentimes co-exist in the same
territory. In many of the great cities, for example, a situation requiring "missio
ad gentes" can co-exist along with one which requires "new
evangelization". Together with these there can be present in a dynamic way
Christian missionary communities sustained by "comprehensive pastoral
activity". Very often today, local Churches are obliged to address the
entire panorama of these religious situations. "The boundaries between
pastoral care of the faithful, new evangelization and specific missionary
activity are not clearly definable, and it is unthinkable to create barriers
between them or to put them into water-tight compartments". (177) In fact, "each
of them influences, stimulates and assists the others". (178)
In order, therefore, to arrive at a mutual enrichment between the various
activities of evangelization which can co-exist, it is useful to remember that:
– Mission ad gentes, regardless of the zone or context in which
it is realized, is the missionary responsibility most specifically entrusted to
the Church by Jesus and thus the exemplary model for all her missionary
activity. New evangelization cannot supplant or be substituted for 'the mission
ad gentes,' which continues to be the paradigm and primary task of
missionary activity. (179)
– "The model for all catechesis is the baptismal catechumenate
when, by specific formation, an adult converted to belief is brought to explicit
profession of baptismal faith during the Paschal Vigil". (180) This
catechumenal formation should inspire the other forms of catechesis in both
their objectives and in their dynamism.
– "Catechesis for adults, since it deals with persons who are
capable of an adherence that is fully responsible, must be considered the chief
form of catechesis. All the other forms, which are indeed always necessary, are
in some way oriented to it". (181) This implies that the catechesis of
other age groups should have it for a point of reference and should be expressed
in conjunction with it, in a coherent catechetical programme suitable to meet
the pastoral needs of dioceses.
In this way catechesis, situated in the context of the Church's mission of
evangelization and seen as an essential moment of that mission, receives from
evangelization a missionary dynamic which deeply enriches it and defines its own
identity. The ministry of catechesis appears, then, as a fundamental ecclesial
service for the realization of the missionary mandate of Jesus.
CHAPTER II
Catechesis in the process of evangelization
"Things what we have heard and known, that our fathers have told
us. We will not hide them from their chidren, but tell to the coming generation,
the glorious deeds of the Lord, and his might, and the wonders he has wrought"
(Ps 78:3-4). "He (Apollos) had been instructed in the Way
of the Lord and being fervent in spirit he spoke and taught accurately in the
things concerning Jesus" (Acts 18:25).
60. In this chapter the relationship of catechesis with the other elements
of evagelization, of which it is itself an integral part, is demonstrated. Thus,
firstly, the relationship of catechesis with the primary proclamation, which is
realized in mission, is described. There follows an examination of the close
connection between catechesis and the sacraments of Christian initiation. Then
is perceived the fundamental role of catechesis in the ordinary life of the
Church and its role as continuing teacher in the faith. Special consideration is
given to the relationship between catechesis and the teaching of religion in
schools, since both activities are profoundly inter-connected, and, together
with education in the Christian home, are basic to the formation of children and
young people.
Primary or first proclamation and catechesis
61. Primary proclamation is addressed to non-believers and those living in
religious indifference. Its functions are to proclaim the Gospel and to call to
conversion. Catechesis, "distinct from the primary proclamation of the
Gospel", (182) promotes and matures initial conversion, educates the
convert in the faith and incorporates him into the Christian community. The
relationship between these two forms of the ministry of the word is, therefore,
a relationship of complementary distinction. Primary proclamation, which every
Christian is called to perform, is part of that "Go" (183)
which Jesus imposes on his disciples: it implies, therefore, a going-out, a
haste, a message. Catechesis, however, starts with the condition indicated by
Jesus himself: "whosoever believes", (184) whosoever converts,
whosoever decides. Both activities are essential and mutually complementary: go
and welcome, proclaim and educate, call and incorporate.
62. Nevertheless in pastoral practice it is not always easy to define the
boundaries of these activities. Frequently, many who present themselves for
catechesis truly require genuine conversion. Because of this the Church usually
desires that the first stage in the catechetical process be dedicated to
ensuring conversion. (185) In the "missio ad gentes", this
task is normally accomplished during the 'pre-catechumenate'. (186) In the
context of "new evangelization" it is effected by means of a "kerygmatic
catechesis", sometimes called "pre-catechesis", (187) because it
is based on the precatechumenate and is proposed by the Gospel and directed
towards a solid option of faith. Only by starting with conversion, and therefore
by making allowance for the interior disposition of "whoever believes",
can catechesis, strictly speaking, fulfil its proper task of education in the
faith. (188)
The fact that catechesis, at least initially, assumes a missionary
objective, does not dispense a particular Church from promoting an
institutionalized programme of primary proclamation to execute more directly
Jesus's missionary command. Catechetical renewal should be based thus on prior
missionary evangelization.
Catechesis at the service of christian initiation
Catechesis, an essential "moment" in the process of
evangelization
63. The Apostolic Exhortation Catechesi Tradendae places catechesis
firmly within the Church's mission and notes that evangelization is a rich,
complex and dynamic reality which comprises essential but different "moments".
"Catechesis", it adds, "is one of these moments—a very
remarkable one—in the whole process of evangelization". (189) This is
to say that there are activities which "prepare" (190) for catechesis
and activities which "derive" from it (191) The "moment" of
catechesis is that which corresponds to the period in which conversion to Jesus
Christ is formalized, and provides a basis for first adhering to him. Converts,
by means of "a period of formation, an apprenticeship in the whole
Christian life", (192) are initiated into the mystery of salvation and an
evangelical style of life. This means "initiating the hearers into the
fullness of Christian life". (193)
64. In discharging in different ways the initiatory function of the ministry
of the word, catechesis lays the foundation for the building of the faith. (194)
Other functions of the same ministry will continue to build, at different
levels, on that foundation.
Initiatory catechesis is thus the necessary link between missionary activity
which calls to faith and pastoral activity which continually nourishes the
Christian community. This is not, therefore, an optional activity, but basic
and fundamental for building up the personality of the individual disciple, as
it is for the whole Christian community. Without it, missionary activity lacks
continuity and is sterile, while pastoral activity lacks roots and becomes
superficial and confused: any misfortune could cause the collapse of the entire
building. (195)
In truth, "the inner growth [of the Church] and her correspondence with
God's plan depend essentially on catechesis". (196) In this sense
catechesis must always be considered a priority in evangelization.
Catechesis, at the service of Christian initiation
65. Faith, by means of which man responds to the proclamation of the Gospel,
requires Baptism. The close connection between the two realities is rooted in
the will of Christ himself, who commanded his apostles to make disciples of all
nations and to baptize them. "The mission to baptize, and so the
sacramental mission, is implied in the mission to evangelize". (197)
Those who have converted to Jesus Christ and who have been educated in the
faith by means of catechesis, by receiving the sacraments of Christian
initiation (Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist) "are delivered from the
powers of darkness through the sacraments of Christian initiation and having
died, been buried, and risen with Christ, they receive the Spirit of adoption as
children and celebrate with the whole people of God the memorial of the Lord's
death and resurrection". (198)
66. Catechesis, is thus, a fundamental element of Christian initiation and
is closely connected with the sacraments of initiation, especially with Baptism,
"the sacrament of faith". (199) The link uniting catechesis and
Baptism is true profession of faith, which is at once an element inherent in
this sacrament and the goal of catechesis. The aim of catechetical activity
consists in precisely this: to encourage a living, explicit and fruitful
profession of faith. (200) The Church, in order to achieve this, transmits to
catechumens and those to be catechized, her living experience of the Gospel, her
faith, so that they may appropriate and profess it. Hence, "authentic
catechesis is always an orderly and systematic initiation into the revelation
that God has given of himself to humanity in Christ Jesus, a revelation stored
in the depths of the Church's memory and in Sacred Scripture, and constantly
communicated from one generation to the next by a living active traditio".
(201)
Fundamental characteristics of initiatory catechesis
67. Catechesis acquires certain characteristics in virtue of being an "essential
moment" in the process of evangelization, in the service of Christian
initiation. (202) It is:
– a comprehensive and systematic formation in the faith. The Synod of
1977 underscored the need for a "comprehensive and structured" (203)
catechesis, since catechesis is principally distinguished from other forms of
presenting the word of God by its comprehensive and vital deepening of the
mystery of Christ;
– this comprehensive formation includes more than instruction: it is an
apprenticeship of the entire Christian life, it is a "complete Christian
initiation", (204) which promotes an authentic following of Christ, focused
on his Person; it implies education in knowledge of the faith and in the life of
faith, in such a manner that the entire person, at his deepest levels, feels
enriched by the word of God; it helps the disciple of Christ to transform the
old man in order to assume his baptismal responsibilities and to profess the
faith from the "heart"; (205)
– a basic and essential formation, (206) centred on what constitutes
the nucleus of Christian experience, the most fundamental certainties of the
faith and the most essential evangelical values; it lays the foundation of the
spiritual edifice of the Christian, nurtures the roots of his faith life and
enables him to receive more solid nourishment in the ordinary life of the
Christian community.
68. In summary, initiatory catechesis, being comprehensive and systematic,
cannot be reduced to the circumstantial or the occasional. (207) As it is
formation for the Christian life it comprises but surpasses mere instruction.
(208) Being essential, it looks to what is "common" for the Christian,
without entering into disputed questions nor transforming itself into a form of
theological investigation. Finally, being initiatory, it incorporates into the
community, which lives, celebrates and bears witness to the faith. It fulfils,
at once, initiatory, educational and instructional functions. (209) This
inherent richness in the Catechumenate of non-baptized adults should serve to
inspire other forms of catechesis.
Catechesis at the service of ongoing formation in the faith
Continuing education in faith within the Christian community
69. Continuing or on-going education in the faith follows upon basic
education and presupposes it. Both fulfil two distinct but complementary
functions of the ministry of the word while serving the process of continuing
conversion. Initiatory catechesis lays the basis for the Christian life of the
followers of Jesus. The process of continuing conversion goes beyond what is
provided by basic catechesis. In order to encourage this process, it is
necessary to have a Christian community which welcomes the initiated, sustains
them and forms them in the faith: "Catechesis runs the risk of becoming
barren if no community of faith and Christian life welcomes the catechumen at a
certain stage of his catechesis". (210) The accompaniment which a community
gives to the initiated is eventually transformed into their being totally
integrated by the same community.
70. In the Christian community the disciples of Jesus Christ are nourished
at a twofold table; "that of the word of God and that of the Body of Christ".
(211) The Gospel and the Eucharist are the constant food for the journey to the
Father's House. The action of the Holy Spirit operates so that the gift of "communion"
and the task of "mission" are deepened and lived in an increasingly
intense way.
Continuing formation in the faith is directed not only to the individual
Christian, to accompany them in their journey towards holiness, but also to the
Christian community as such so that it may mature also in its interior life of
love of God and of the brethren as well as in its openness to the world as a
missionary community. The desire of Jesus and his prayer to the Father are an
unceasing appeal: "May they all be one; even as thou, Father, art in me,
and I in thee, that they may also be in us, so that the world may believe that
thou hast sent me". (212) Approaching this ideal, little by little, demands
of the community a great fidelity to the action of the Holy Spirit, the constant
nourishment of the Body and Blood of Christ and continuing education in the
faith, listening all the time to the word.
At this table of the word of God, the homily occupies a privileged position,
since it "takes up again the journey of faith put forward by catechesis and
brings it to its natural fulfilment, at the same time it encourages the Lord's
disciples to begin anew each day their spiritual journey in truth, adoration and
thanksgiving". (213)
Various forms of continuing catechesis
71. For continuing education in the faith, the ministry of the word uses
many forms of catechesis. Among these the following may be highlighted:
– The study and exploration of Sacred Scripture, read not only in the
Church but with the Church and her living faith, which helps to discover divine
truth, which it contains, in such a way as to arouse a response of faith. (214)
The "lectio divina" is an eminent form of this vital study of
Scripture.
– A Christian reading of events, which is required of the missionary
vocation of the Christian community. In this respect the study of the social
teaching of the Church is indispensable, since "its main aim is to
interpret these realities, determining their conformity with or divergence from
the lines of the Gospel teaching". (215)
– Liturgical catechesis, prepares for the sacraments by promoting a
deeper understanding and experience of the liturgy. This explains the contents
of the prayers, the meaning of the signs and gestures, educates to active
paricipation, contemplation and silence. It must be regarded as an "eminent
kind of catechesis". (216)
– Occasional catechesis which seeks to interpret determined
circumstances of personal, family, ecclesial or social life and to help live
them in the prospect offaith.(217)
– Initiatives of spiritual formation which seek to reinforce
conviction, open new prospectives and encourage perseverance in prayer and in
the duties of following Christ.
– A systematic deepening of the Christian message by means of
theological instruction, so as truly to educate in the faith, encourage growth
in understanding of it and to equip the Christian for giving the reason for his
hope in the present world. (218) In a certain sense, it is appropriate to call
such instruction "perfective catechesis".
72. It is fundamentally important that initiatory catechesis for adults,
whether baptized or not, initiatory catechesis for children and young people and
continuing catechesis are closely linked with the catechetical endeavour of the
Christian community, so that the particular Church may grow harmoniously and
that its evangelizing activity may spring from authentic sources. "It is
important also that the catechesis of children and young people, permanent
catechesis and the catechesis of adults should not be separate watertight
compartments... it is important that their perfect complementarity be fostered".
(219)
Catechesis and religious instruction in schools
The proper character of religious instruction in schools
73. Within the ministry of the word, the character proper to religious
instruction in schools and its relationship with the catechesis of children and
of young people merit special consideration.
The relationship between religious instruction in schools and catechesis is
one of distinction and complementarity: "there is an absolute necessity to
distinguish clearly between religious instruction and catechesis". (220)
What confers on religious instruction in schools its proper evangelizing
character is the fact that it is called to penetrate a particular area of
culture and to relate with other areas of knowledge. As an original form of the
ministry of the word, it makes present the Gospel in a personal process of
cultural, systematic and critical assimilation. (221)
In the cultural universe, which is assimilated by students and which is
defined by knowledge and values offered by other scholastic disciplines,
religious instruction in schools sows the dynamic seed of the Gospel and seeks
to "keep in touch with the other elements of the student's knowledge and
education; thus the Gospel will impregnate the mentality of the students in the
field of their learning, and the harmonization of their culture will be achieved
in the light of faith". (222)
It is necessary, therefore, that religious instruction in schools appear as
a scholastic discipline with the same systematic demands and the same rigour as
other disciplines. It must present the Christian message and the Christian event
with the same seriousness and the same depth with which other disciplines
present their knowledge. It should not be an accessory alongside of these
disciplines, but rather it should engage in a necessary inter-disciplinary
dialogue. This dialogue should take place above all at that level at which every
discipline forms the personality of students. In this way the presentation of
the Christian message influences the way in which the origins of the world, the
sense of history, the basis of ethical values, the function of religion in
culture, the destiny of man and his relationship with nature, are understood.
Through inter-disciplinary dialogue religious instruction in schools underpins,
activates, develops and completes the educational activity of the school. (223)
The school context and those to whom religious instruction in schools is
directed
74. Religious instruction in schools is developed in diverse scholastic
contexts, while always maintaining its proper character, to acquire different
emphases. These depend on legal and organizational circumstances, educational
theories, personal outlook of individual teachers and students as well as the
relationship between religious instruction in the schools and family or parish
catechesis.
It is not possible to reduce the various forms of religious instruction in
schools, which have developed as a result of accords between individual states
and Episcopal Conferences. It is, however, necessary that efforts be made so
that religious instruction in schools respond to its objectives and its own
characteristics. (224)
Students "have the right to learn with truth and certainty the religion
to which they belong. This right to know Christ, and the salvific message
proclaimed by Him cannot be neglected. The confessional character of religious
instruction in schools, in its various focuses, given by the Church in different
countries is an indispensible guarantee offered to families and students who
choose such education". (225)
When given in the context of the Catholic school, religious instruction is
part of and completed by other forms of the ministry of the word (catechesis,
homilies, liturgical celebration, etc.). It is indispinsible to their
pedagogical function and the basis for their existence. (226)
In the context of state schools or non-confessional schools where the civil
authorities or other circumstances impose the teaching of religion common to
both Catholics and non Catholics (227) it will have a more ecumenical character
and have a more inter-religious awareness.
In other circumstances religious instruction will have an extensively
cultural character and teach a knowledge of religions including the Catholic
religion. In this case too and expecially if presented by teachers with a
sincere respect for the Christian religion, religious instruction maintains a
true dimension of "evangelic preparation".(228)
75. The life and faith of students who receive religious instruction in
school are characterized by continuous change. Religious instruction should be
cognizant of that fact if it is to accomplish its own ends. In the case of
students who are believers, religious instruction assists them to understand
better the Christian message, by relating it to the great existential concerns
common to all religions and to every human being, to the various visions of life
particularly evident in culture and to those major moral questions which
confront humanity today.
Those students who are searching, or who have religious doubts, can also
find in religious instruction the possibility of discovering what exactly faith
in Jesus Christ is, what response the Church makes to their questions, and gives
them the opportunity to examine their own choice more deeply.
In the case of students who are non-believers, religious instruction assumes
the character of a missionary proclamation of the Gospel and is ordered to a
decision of faith, which catechesis, in its turn, will nurture and mature.
Education in the Christian family, catechesis and religious instruction at
the service of education in the faith
76. Christian education in the family, catechesis and religious instruction
in schools are, each in its own way, closely interrelated with the service of
Christian education of children, adolescents, and young people. In practice,
however, different factors must be taken into consideration in order to proceed
realistically and with pastoral prudence in the application of general
guidelines.
It is for each diocese or pastoral region to discern the diverse
circumstances which arise with regard to the existence or not of Christian
initiation of children in the context of the family, and with regard to the
formative duties which are traditionally exercised by the parish, the school
etc. Consequently the particular Church and the Episcopal Conference shall
establish proper guidelines for various situations and foster distinct but
complementary activities.
CHAPTER III
The nature, object and the duties of catechesis
"And every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory
of God the Father" (Phil 2:11).
77. Having outlined the place of catechesis in the Church's mission of
evangelization, its relationship with the various elements of evangelization,
and with other forms of the ministry of the word, this chapter examines
catechesis particularly in relation to:
– the ecclesial nature of catechesis, that is to say, the agent of
catechesis, the Church animated by the Holy Spirit;
– the fundamental object of catechesis;
– the tasks whereby this objective is achieved and which constitute its
more immediate objectives;
– the gradual nature of the catechetical process and its catechumenal
inspiration.
Moreover, in this chapter, the proper character of catechesis—already
described in the preceding chapter—is examined through the analysis of its
relationship with other ecclesial activities.
Catechesis: activity of an ecclesial nature
78. Catechesis is an essentially ecclesial act. (229) The true subject of
catechesis is the Church which, continuing the mission of Jesus the
Master and, therefore animated by the Holy Spirit, is sent to be the teacher of
the faith. The Church imitates the Mother of the Lord in treasuring the Gospel
in her heart. (230) She proclaims it, celebrates it, lives it, and she transmits
it in catechesis to all those who have decided to follow Jesus Christ. This
transmission of the Gospel is a living act of ecclesial tradition: (231)
– The Church transmits the faith which she herself lives: her
understanding of the mystery of God and his salvific plan, her vision of man's
highest vocation, the style of evangelic life which communicates the joy of the
Kingdom, the hope which pervades her and the love which she has for mankind and
all God's creatures.
– The Church transmits the faith in an active way; she sows it in the
hearts of catechumens and those to be catechized so as to nourish their
profoundest experience of life. (232) The profession of faith received by the
Church (traditio), which germinates and grows during the catechetical
process, is given back (redditio), enriched by the values of different
cultures. (233) The catechumenate is thus transformed into a centre of deepening
catholicity and a ferment of ecclesial renewal.
79. In transmitting faith and new life, the Church acts as a mother for
mankind who begets children conceived by the power of the Spirit and born of
God. (234) Precisely "because she is a mother, she is also the educator of
our faith"; (235) she is at the same time mother and teacher. Through
catechesis she feeds her children with her own faith and incorporates them as
members into the ecclesial family. As a good mother she gives them the Gospel in
all its authenticity and purity as apposite food, culturally enriched and a
response to the deepest aspirations of the human heart.
The object of catechesis: communion with Jesus Christ
80. "The definitive aim of catechesis is to put people not only in
touch, but also in communion and intimacy, with Jesus Christ". (236) All
evangelizing activity is understood as promoting communion with Jesus Christ.
Starting with the "initial" (237) conversion of a person to the Lord,
moved by the Holy Spirit through the primary proclamation of the Gospel,
catechesis seeks to solidify and mature this first adherence. It proposes to
help those who have just converted "to know better this Jesus to whom he
has entrusted himself: to know his 'mystery', the kingdom of God proclaimed by
him, the requirements and comments contained in his Gospel message, and the
paths that he has laid down for anyone who wishes to follow him". (238)
Baptism, the sacrament by which "we are configured to Christ", (239)
sustains this work of catechesis with the help of its grace.
81. Communion with Jesus Christ, by its own dynamic, leads the disciple to
unite himself with everything with which Jesus Christ himself was profoundly
united: with God his Father, who sent him into the world, and with the Holy
Spirit, who impelled his mission; with the Church, his body, for which he gave
himself up, with mankind and with his brothers whose lot he wished to share.
The object of catechesis is expressed in profession of faith in the one
God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit
82. Catechesis is that particular form of the ministry of the word which
matures initial conversion to make it into a living, explicit and fruitful
confession of faith: "Catechesis has its origin in the confession of
faith and leads to confession of faith." (240)
The profession of faith inherent in Baptism (241) is eminently Trinitarian.
The Church baptizes "in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit" (Mt 28,19) (242) the triune God to whom the
Christian entrusts his life. Initiatory catechesis—both before and after
the reception of Baptism—prepares for this decisive undertaking. Continuing
catechesis helps to mature this profession of faith, to proclaim it in the
Eucharist and to renew the commitments which it entails. It is important that
catechesis should unite well the confession of christological faith, "Jesus
is Lord", with the trinitarian confession, "I believe in the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit", in such a way that there are not
two modes of expressing the Christian faith. He who is converted to Jesus Christ
and recognizes him as Lord through the primary proclamation of the Gospel begins
a process which, aided by catechesis, necessarily leads to explicit confession
of the Trinity.
In the confession of faith in the one God, the Christian rejects all service
of any human absolute; "power, pleasure, race, ancestors, state, wealth...",
(243) and is thus liberated from the enslavement of any idol. It is the
proclamation of his will to serve God and man without any ties. In proclaiming
faith in the Trinity, which is a communion of Persons, the disciple of Jesus
Christ shows at once that the love of God and neighbour is the principle which
informs his being and his action.
83. The confession of faith is complete only in reference to the Church. All
the baptized individually proclaim the Credo, for no action can be more
personal than this. However, they recite it in the Church and through the
Church, because they do so as members of the Church. 'Credo' and 'Credimus'
necessarily imply each other. (244) In fusing his confession of faith with that
of the Church, the Christian is incorporated into her mission: to be the "universal
sacrament of salvation" for the life of the world. He who makes the
profession of faith takes on responsibilities that not infrequently provoke
persecution. In Christian history the martyrs are proclaimers and witnesses par
excellence. (245)
The tasks of catechesis accomplish its objective
84. The object of catechesis is realized by diverse, interrelated tasks.
(246) To carry them out, catechesis is certainly inspired by the manner in which
Jesus formed his disciples. He made known to them the different dimensions of
the Kingdom of God: "to you it has been given to know the secrets of the
Kingdom of heaven" (Mt 13,11). (247) He taught them to pray ("When
you pray, say Father... Lk 11,2). (248) He impressed upon them evangelic
attitudes ("learn from me for I am gentle and lowly in heart" Mt
11,29) He prepared them for mission ("He sent them on ahead of him
two by two..." Lk 10,1) (249)
The duties of catechesis correspond to education of the different dimensions
of faith, for catechesis is integral Christian formation, "open to all
the other factors of Christian life". (250) In virtue of its own
internal dynamic, the faith demands to be known, celebrated, lived and
translated into prayer. Catechesis must cultivate each of these dimensions. The
faith, however, is lived out by the Christian community and proclaimed in
mission: it is a shared and proclaimed faith. These dimensions must also be
encouraged by catechesis. The Second Vatican Council expresses these duties as
follows: "...catechetical instruction, which illumines and strengthens the
faith develops a life in harmony with the Spirit of Christ, stimulates a
conscious and fervent participation in the liturgical mystery and encourages men
to take an active part in the apostolate". (251)
Fundamental tasks of catechesis: helping to know, to celebrate and to
contemplate the mystery of Christ
85. The fundamental tasks of catechesis are:
– Promoting knowledge of the faith
Who has encountered Christ desires to know him as much as possible, as well
as to know the plan of the Father which he revealed. Knowledge of the faith (fides
quae) is required by adherence to the faith (fides qua). (252) Even
in the human order the love which one person has for another causes that person
to wish to know the other all the more. Catechesis, must, therefore, lead to "the
gradual grasping of the whole truth about the divine plan", (253) by
introducing the disciples of Jesus to a knowledge of Tradition and of Scripture,
which is "thesublime science of Christ". (254) By deepening
knowledge of the faith, catechesis nourishes not only the life of faith but
equips it to explain itself to the world. The meaning of the Creed, which is a
compendium of Scripture and of the faith of the Church, is the realization of
this task.
– Liturgical education
Christ is always present in his Church, especially in "liturgical
celebrations". (255) Communion with Jesus Christ leads to the celebration
of his salvific presence in the sacraments, especially in the Eucharist. The
Church ardently desires that all the Christian faithful be brought to that full,
conscious and active participation which is required by the very nature of the
liturgy (256) and the dignity of the baptismal priesthood. For this reason,
catechesis, along with promoting a knowledge of the meaning of the liturgy and
the sacraments, must also educate the disciples of Jesus Christ "for
prayer, for thanksgiving, for repentance, for praying with confidence, for
community spirit, for understanding correctly the meaning of the creeds...",
(257) as all of this is necessary for a true liturgical life
– Moral formation
Conversion to Jesus Christ implies walking in his footsteps. Catechesis
must, therefore, transmit to the disciples the attitudes of the Master himself.
The disciples thus undertake a journey of interior transformation, in which, by
participating in the paschal mystery of the Lord, "they pass from the old
man to the new man who has been made perfect in Christ". (258) The Sermon
on the Mount, in which Jesus takes up the Decalogue, and impresses upon it the
spirit of the beatitudes, (259) is an indispensable point of reference for the
moral formation which is most necessary today. Evangelization which "involves
the proclamation and presentation of morality", (260) displays all the
force of its appeal where it offers not only the proclaimed word but the lived
word too. This moral testimony, which is prepared for by catechesis, must always
demonstrate the social consequences of the demands of the Gospel. (261)
– Teaching to pray
Communion with Jesus Christ leads the disciples to assume the attitude of
prayer and contemplation which the Master himself had. To learn to pray with
Jesus is to pray with the same sentiments with which he turned to the Father:
adoration, praise, thanksgiving, filial confidence, supplication and awe for his
glory. All of these sentiments are reflected in the Our Father, the
prayer which Jesus taught his disciples and which is the model of all Christian
prayer. The "handing on of the Our Father" (262) is a summary
of the entire Gospel (263) and is therefore a true act of catechesis. When
catechesis is permeated by a climate of prayer, the assimilation of the entire
Christian life reaches its summit. This climate is especially necessary when the
catechumen and those to be catechized are confronted with the more demanding
aspects of the Gospel and when they feel weak or when they discover the
mysterious action of God in their lives.
Other fundamental tasks of catechesis: initiation and education in
community life and to mission
86. Catechesis prepares the Christian to live in community and to
participate actively in the life and mission of the Church. The Second Vatican
Council indicates the necessity for pastors "to form genuine Christian
communities" (264) and for catechumens "[to] learn to co-operate
actively in building up the Church and its work of evangelization". (265)
– Education for Community Life
a) Christian community life is not realized spontaneously. It is
necessary to educate it carefully. In this apprenticeship, the teaching of
Christ on community life, recounted in the Gospel of St Matthew, calls for
attitudes which it is for catechesis to inculcate: the spirit of simplicity and
humility ("unless you turn and become like little children..." Mt
18,3); solicitude for the least among the brethren ("but whoever
causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin..." Mt 18,6);
particular care for those who are alienated ("Go and search of the one
that went astray..." Mt 18,12); fraternal correction ("Go and
tell him his fault..." Mt 18,15); common prayer ("if two of
you agree on earth to ask about anything..." Mt 18,19); mutual
forgiveness ("but seventy times seven..." Mt 18,22). Fraternal
love embraces all these attitudes ("love one another; even as I have
loved you..." Jn 13,34).
b) In developing this community sense, catechesis takes special note
of the ecumenical dimension and encourages fraternal attitudes toward members of
other Christian churches and ecclesial communities. Thus catechesis in pursuing
this objective should give a clear exposition of all the Church's doctrine and
avoid formulations or expressions that might give rise to error. It also implies
"a suitable knowledge of other confessions", (266) with which there
are shared elements of faith: "the written word of God, the life of grace,
faith, hope and charity, and the other interior gifts of the Holy Spirit".
(267) Catechesis will possess an ecumenical dimension in the measure in which it
arouses and nourishes "a true desire for unity", (268) not easy
irenicism, but perfect unity, when the Lord himself wills it and by those means
by which he wishes that it should be brought about.
– Missionary initiation
a) Catechesis is also open to the missionary dimension. (269) This
seeks to equip the disciples of Jesus to be present as Christians in society
through their professional, cultural and social lives. It also prepares them to
lend their cooperation to the different ecclesial services, according to their
proper vocation. This task of evangelization originates, for the lay faithful,
in the sacraments of Christian initiation and in the secular character of their
vocation. (270) It is also important that every means should be used to
encourage vocations to the Priesthood, and to the different forms of
consecration to God in religious and apostolic life and to awaken special
missionary vocations. The evangelical attitudes which Jesus taught his disciples
when he sent them on mission are precisely those which catechesis must nourish:
to seek out the lost sheep, proclaim and heal at the same time, to be poor,
without money or knapsack; to know how to accept rejection and persecution; to
place one's trust in the Father and in the support of the Holy Spirit; to expect
no other reward than the joy of working for the Kingdom. (271)
b) In educating for this missionary sense, catechesis is also
necessary for interreligious dialogue, if it renders the faithful capable of
meaningful communication with men and women of other religions. (272) Catechesis
shows that the link between the Church and non-Christian religions is, in the
first place, the common origin and end of the human race, as well as the "many
seeds of the word which God has sown in these religions". Catechesis too
helps to reconcile and, at the same time, to distinguish between "the
proclamation of Christ" and "inter-religious dialogue". These two
elements, while closely connected, must not be confused or identified. (273)
Indeed, "dialogue does not dispencse form evangelization".(274)
Observations on the totality of these tasks
87. The tasks of catechesis, consequently, constitute a totality, rich and
varied in aspect. On this point it is opportune to make some observations.
– "All of these tasks are necessary. As the vitality of the human
body depends on the proper function of all of its organs, so also the maturation
of the Christian life requires that it be cultivated in all its dimensions:
knowledge of the faith, liturgical life, moral formation, prayer, belonging to
community, missionary spirit. When catechesis omits one of these elements, the
Christian faith does not attain full development.
– Each task realizes, in its own way, the object of catechesis. Moral
formation, for example, is essentially christological and trinitarian. It is
deeply ecclesial, while also open to social concerns. The same is true of
liturgical formation. While essentially religious and ecclesial, it also
strongly demands commitment to the evangelization of the world.
– These tasks are interdependent and develop together. Each great
catechetical theme—catechesis of God the Father, for example—has a
cognitive dimension as well as moral implications. It is interiorized in prayer
and appropriated in witness. One task echoes the other: knowledge of the faith
prepares for mission; the sacramental life gives strength for moral
transformation.
– To fulfil its tasks, catechesis avails of two principal means:
transmission of the Gospel message and experience of the Christian life. (275)
Liturgical formation, for example, must explain what the Christian liturgy is,
and what the sacraments are. It must also however, offer an experience of the
different kinds of celebration and it must make symbols, gestures, etc. known
and loved. Moral formation not only transmits the content of Christian morality,
but also cultivates active evangelical attitudes and Christian values.
– The different dimensions of faith are objects of formation, as much
of being given as received. Knowledge of the faith, liturgical life, the
following of Christ are all a gift of the Spirit which are received in prayer,
and similarly a duty of spiritual and moral study and witness. Neither aspect
may be neglected. (276)
– Every dimension of the faith, like the faith itself as a whole, must
be rooted in human experience and not remain a mere adjunct to the human person.
Knowledge of the faith is significant. It gives light to the whole of existence
and dialogues with culture. In the liturgy, all personal life becomes a
spiritual oblation. The morality of the Gospel assumes and elevates human
values. Prayer is open to all personal and social problems. (277)
As the 1971 Directory indicates, "it is very important that catechesis
retain the richness of these various aspects in such a way that one aspect is
not separated from the rest to the detriment of the others". (278)
The baptismal catechumenate: structure and progression
88. Faith, moved by divine grace and cultivated by the action of the Church,
undergoes a process of maturation. Catechesis, which is at the service of this
growth, is also a gradual activity. "Good catechesis is always done in
steps". (279) In the baptismal catechumenate, formation is articulated in
four stages:
– the pre-catechumenate, (280) characterized as the locus of
first evangelization leading to conversion and where the kerygma of the primary
proclamation is explained;
– the catechumenate, (281) properly speaking, the context of
integral catechesis beginning with "the handing on of the Gospels";
(282)
– a time of purification and illumination (283) which affords
a more intense preparation for the sacraments of initiation and in which the "the
handing on of the Creed" (284) and "the handing on of the Lord's
Prayer" take place; (285)
– a time of mystagogy, (286) characterized by the experience of
the sacraments and entry into the community.
89. These stages, which reflect the wisdom of the great catechumenal
tradition, also inspire the gradual nature of catechesis. (287) In the patristic
period properly, catechumenal formation was realized through biblical
catechesis, based on recounting the history of salvation; immediate preparation
for Baptism by doctrinal catechesis, explaining the Creed and the Our Father
which had just been handed on, together with their moral implications; and
through the phase following the sacraments of initiation, a period of
mystagogical catechesis which help the newly baptized to interiorize these
sacraments and incorporate themselves into the community. This patristic concept
continues to illuminate the present catechumenate and initiatory catechesis
itself. This latter, in so far as it accompanies the process of conversion, is
essentially gradual and, in so far as it is at the service of one who has
decided to follow Christ, it is eminently christocentric.
The baptismal catechumenate: inspiration for catechesis in the Church
90. Given that the missio ad gentes is the paradigm of all the
Church's missionary activity, the baptismal catechumenate, which is joined to
it, is the model of its catechizing activity. (288) It is therefore helpful to
underline those elements of the catechumenate which must inspire contemporary
catechesis and its significance.
By way of premise, however, it must be said that there is a fundamental
difference between catechumens those being catechized, (289) between the pre-baptismal
catechesis and the post-baptismal catechesis, which is respectively
imparted to them. The latter derives from the sacraments of initiation which
were received as infants, "who have been already introduced into the Church
and have been made sons of God by means of Baptism. The basis of their
conversion is the Baptism which they have already received and whose power they
must develop". (290)
91. In view of this substantial difference, some elements of the baptismal
catechumenate are now considered, as the source of inspiration for
post-baptismal catechesis.
– the baptismal catechumenate constantly reminds the whole Church of
the fundamental importance of the function of initiation and the basic factors
which constitute it: catechesis and the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and
Eucharist. The pastoral care of Christian initiation is vital for every
particular Church.
– The baptismal catechumenate is the responsibility of the entire
Christian community. Indeed "this Christian initiation which takes place
during the catechumenate should not be left entirely to the priests and
catechists, but should be the care of the entire Christian community, especially
the sponsors". (291) The institution of the catechumenate thus increases
awareness of the spiritual maternity of the Church, which she exercises in every
form of education in the faith. (292)
– The baptismal catechumenate is also completely permeated by the mystery
of Christ's Passover. For this reason, "all initiation must reveal
clearly its paschal nature. (293) The Easter Vigil, focal point of the Christian
liturgy, and its spirituality of Baptism inspire all catechesis.
– The baptismal catechumenate is also an initial locus of
inculturation. Following the example of the Incarnation of the Son of God, made
man in a concrete historical moment, the Church receives catechumens integrally,
together with their cultural ties. All catechetical activity participates in
this function of incorporating into the catholicity of the Church, authentic "seeds
of the word", scattered through nations and individuals. (294)
– Finally, the concept of the baptismal catechumenate as a process
of formation and as a true school of the faith offers post-baptismal
catechesis dynamic and particular characteristics: comprehensiveness and
integrity of formation; its gradual character expressed in definite stages; its
connection with meaningful rites, symbols, biblical and liturgical signs; its
constant references to the Christian community.
Post-baptismal catechesis, without slavishly imitating the structure of the
baptismal catechumenate, and recognizing in those to be catechized the reality
of their Baptism, does well, however, to draw inspiration from "this
preparatory school for the Christian life", (295) and to allow itself to be
enriched by those principal elements which characterize the catechumenate.
PART TWO
THE GOSPEL MESSAGE
The Gospel Message
"And this is eternal life, that they know thee the only true God,
and Jesus Christ whom thou has sent" (Jn 17:3). "Jesus
came into Galilee, preaching the Gospel of God, and saying, 'The time is
fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the Gospel'"
(Mk 1:14-15). "Now I would remind you, brethren, in what
terms I preached to you the Gospel, which you received, in which you stand, by
which you are saved, if you hold it fast—unless you believed in vain. For I
delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died
for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was
raised on the third day to life in accordance with the Scriptures" (1
Cor 15:1-4).
The meaning and purpose of Part Two
92. The Christian faith, through which a person says "Yes" to
Jesus Christ, may be analysed thus:
– as an adherence, which is given under the influence of grace, to God
who reveals himself; in this case the faith consists in believing the word of
God and committing oneself to it (fides qua);
– as the content of Revelation and of the Gospel message; in this
sense, faith is expressed in its endeavour to understand better the mystery of
the word (fides quae).
Both aspects, by their very nature, cannot be separated. Maturation and
growth in the faith require their comprehensive and coherent development. For
methodological purposes, however, they can be regarded separately. (296)
93. Part Two, considers the content of the Gospel message (fides
quae).
– The first chapter, sets out the norms and criteria which catechesis
must follow so as to find, formulate and present its contents. Indeed every form
of the ministry of the word is ordered to the presentation of the Gospel message
according to its own character.
– The second chapter examines the content of the faith as it is
presented in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which is the
doctrinal point of reference for all catechesis. It also presents some
observations which may help the assimilation and interiorization of the
Catechism and locate it within the catechetical activity of the Church. In
addition, some criteria are set out to assist particular Churches in compiling
catechisms based on the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which, while
preserving the unity of the faith, must also take into account diversity of
circumstances and cultures.
CHAPTER I
Norms and criteria for presenting the Gospel
message in catechesis
"Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord; and you shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your
might. And these words which I command you this day shall be upon your heart;
and you shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them
when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down,
and when you rise. And you shall bind them as a sign upon your hand, and they
shall be as frontlets between your eyes. And you shall write them on the
doorposts of your house and on your gates" (Dt 6:4-9). "And
the Word became flesh and dwelt among us" (Jn 1:14).
The word of God: source of catechesis
94. The source from which catechesis draws its message is the word of God:
"Catechesis will always draw its content from the living source of
the word of God transmitted in Tradition and the Scriptures, for sacred
Tradition and sacred Scripture make up a single sacred deposit of the word of
God, which is entrusted to the Church". (297)
This "deposit of faith" (298) is like the treasure of a
householder; it is entrusted to the Church, the family of God, and she
continuously draws from it things new and old. (299) All God's children,
animated by his Spirit, are nourished by this treasure of the Word. They know
that the Word is Jesus Christ, the Word made man and that his voice continues to
resound in the Church and in the world through the Holy Spirit. The Word of God,
by wondrous divine "condescension" (300) is directed toward us and
reaches us by means of human "deeds and words", "just as the Word
of the eternal Father, when he took on himself the flesh of human weakness,
became like men". (301) And so without ceasing to be the word of God, it is
expressed in human words. Although close to us, it still remains veiled, in a "kenotic"
state. Thus the Church, guided by the Holy Spirit, has to interpret the word
continually. She contemplates the word with a profound spirit of faith, "listens
to [it] devotedly, guards it with dedication and expounds it faithfully".
(302)
The source and the "sources" of the message of catechesis
(303)
95. The word of God, contained in Sacred Tradition and in Sacred
Scripture:
– is mediated upon and understood more deeply by means of the sense of
faith of all the people of God, guided by the Magisterium which teaches with
authority;
– is celebrated in the Sacred Liturgy, where it is constantly
proclaimed, heard, interiorized and explained;
– shines forth in the life of the Church, in her two-thousand-year
history, especially in Christian witness and particularly in that of the saints;
– is deepened by theological research which helps believers to advance
in their vital understanding of the mysteries of faith;
– is made manifest in genuine religious and moral values which, as "seeds
of the word", are sown in human society and diverse cultures.
96. These are all the sources, principle or subsidiary, of catechesis but
must not be understood in a narrow sense. (304) Sacred Scripture "is the
speech of God as it is put down in writing under the breath of the Holy Spirit",
(305) Sacred Tradition "transmits in its entirety the word of God which has
been entrusted to the apostles by Christ the Lord and the Holy Spirit".
(306) The Magisterium has the duty of "giving an authentic interpretation
of the word of God", (307) and in doing so fulfils, in the name of Christ,
a fundamental ecclesial service. Tradition, Scripture and the Magisterium, all
three of which are closely connected, are "each according to its own way",
(308) the principle sources of catechesis. Each of the subsidiary sources of
catechesis has its own proper language which has been shaped by a rich variety
of "documents of the faith". Catechesis is a living tradition of such
documents: (309) biblical excerpts, liturgical texts, patristic writings,
formulations of the Magisterium, creeds, testimonies of the saints and
theological reflections.
The living source of the word of God and the "sources" deriving
from it, and through which it is expressed, provide catechesis with those
criteria for the transmission of its message to all who have made their decision
to follow Jesus Christ.
Criteria for the presentation of the message
97. The criteria for presenting the Gospel message in catechesis are closely
inter-connected with each other as they spring from the same source.
– The message centred on the person of Jesus Christ (christocentricity),
by its inherent dynamic, introduces the trinitarian dimension of the same
message.
– The proclamation of the Good News of the Kingdom of God, centred on
the gift of Salvation, implies a message of liberation.
– The ecclesial character of the message reflects its
historic nature because catechesis—as with all evangelization—is
realized within "the time of the Church".
– The Gospel message seeks inculturation because the Good News
is destined for all peoples. This can only be accomplished when the Gospel
message is presented in its integrity and purity.
– The Gospel message is a comprehensive message, with its own
hierarchy of truth. It is this harmonious vision of the Gospel which converts it
into a profoundly meaningful event for the human person.
Although these criteria are valid for the entire ministry of the word, here
they are developed in relation to catechesis.
The christocentricity of the Gospel message
98. Jesus Christ not only transmits the word of God: he is the Word
of God. Catechesis is therefore completely tied to him. Thus what must
characterize the message transmitted by catechesis is, above all, its "christocentricity".
(310) This may be understood in various senses.
– It means, firstly, that "at the heart of catechesis we find, in
essence, a person, the Person of Jesus of Nazareth, the only Son of the Father,
full of grace and truth". (311) In reality, the fundamental task of
catechesis is to present Christ and everything in relation to him. This
explicitly promotes the following of Jesus and communion with him; every element
of the message tends to this.
– Secondly, christocentricity means that Christ is the "centre of
salvation history", (312) presented by catechesis. He is indeed the final
event toward which all salvation history converges. He, who came "in the
fullness of time" is "the key, the centre and end of all human history".
(313) The catechetical message helps the Christian to locate himself in history
and to insert himself into it, by showing that Christ is the ultimate meaning of
this history.
– Christocentricity, moreover, means that the Gospel message does not
come from man, but is the Word of God. The Church, and in her name, every
catechist can say with truth: "my teaching is not from myself: it comes
from the one who sent me" (John 7,16). Thus all that is transmitted
by catechesis is "the teaching of Jesus Christ, the truth that he
communicates, or more precisely, the Truth that he is". (314)
Christocentricity obliges catechesis to transmit what Jesus teaches about God,
man, happiness, the moral life, death etc. without in any way changing his
thought. (315)
The Gospels, which narrate the life of Jesus, are central to the
catechetical message. They are themselves endowed with a "catechetical
structure". (316) They express the teaching which was proposed to the first
Christian communities, and which also transmits the life of Jesus, his message
and his saving actions. In catechesis, "the four Gospels occupy a central
place because Christ Jesus is their centre". (317)
The trinitarian christocentricity of the Gospel message
99. The Word of God, incarnate in Jesus of Nazareth, Son of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, is the Word of the Father who speaks to the world through his
Spirit. Jesus constantly refers to the Father, of whom he knows he is the Only
Son, and to the Holy Spirit, by whom he knows he is anointed. He is ?the Way'
that leads to the innermost mystery of God. (318) The christocentricity of
catechesis, in order of its internal dynamic, leads to confession of faith in
God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
It is essentially a trinitarian christocentricity. Christians, at Baptism,
are configured to Christ, "One of the Trinity", (319) and constituted "sons
in the Son", in communion with the Father and the Holy Spirit. Their faith
is, therefore, radically Trinitarian. "The mystery of the Most Holy Trinity
is the central mystery of Christian faith and life". (320)
100. The trinitarian christocentricity of the Gospel message leads
catechesis to attend amongst others, to the following points.
– The internal structure of catechesis: every mode of presentation must
always be christocentric-trinitarian: "Through Christ to the Father in the
Holy Spirit". (321) "If catechesis lacks these three elements or
neglects their close relationship, the Christian message can certainly lose its
proper character". (322)
– Following the pedagogy of Jesus in revelation of the Father, of
himself as the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, catechesis shows the most intimate
life of God, starting with his salvific works for the good of humanity. (323)
The works of God reveal who he is and the mystery of his inner Being throws
light on all of his works. It is analogous with human relationships: people
reveal themselves by their actions and, the more deeply we know them, the better
we understand what they do. (324)
– The presentation of the innermost being of God, revealed by Jesus,
the mystery of being one in essence and three in Person, has vital implications
for the lives of human beings. To confess belief in one God means, that "man
should not submit his personal freedom in an absolute manner to any earthly
power". (325) It also implies that humanity, made in the image and likeness
of God who is a "communion of persons", is called to be a fraternal
society, comprised of sons and daughters of the same Father, and equal in
personal dignity. (326) The human and social implications of the Christian
concept of God are immense. The Church, in professing her faith in the Trinity
and by proclaiming it to the world, understands herself as "a people
gathered together in the unity of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit". (327)
A message proclaiming salvation
101. The message of Jesus about God is Good News for humanity. Jesus
proclaimed the Kingdom of God; (328) a new and definitive intervention by God,
with a transforming power equal and even superior to his creation of the world.
(329) In this sense, "Christ proclaims salvation as the outstanding element
and, as it were, the central point of his Good News. This is the great gift of
God which is to be considered as comprising not merely liberation from all those
things by which man is oppressed, but especially liberation from sin and from
the domination of the evil one, a liberation which incorporates that gladness
enjoyed by every man who knows God and is known by him, who sees God and who
surrenders himself trustingly to him". (330) Catechesis transmits this
message of the Kingdom, so central to the preaching of Jesus. In doing so, the
message "is gradually deepened, developed in its implicit consequences",
(331) and thus manifests its great repercussions for man and the world.
102. In its drawing out the Gospel kerygma of Jesus, catechesis underlines
the following basic aspects:
– Jesus, with the Kingdom, proclaims and reveals that God is not a
distant inaccessible Being, "a remote power without a name" (332) but
a Father, who is present among his creatures and whose power is his love. This
testimony about God as Father, offered in a simple and direct manner, is
fundamental to catechesis.
– Jesus shows, at the same time, that God, with the coming of his
Kingdom offers the gift of integral salvation, frees from sin, brings one to
communion with the Father, grants divine sonship, and in conquering death,
promises eternal life. (333) This complete salvation is at once, immanent and
eschatological, because "it has its beginning certainly in this life, but
which achieves its consummation in eternity". (334)
– Jesus, in announcing the Kingdom, proclaims the justice of God: he
proclaims God's judgement and our responsibility. The proclamation of this
judgement, with its power to form consciences, is a central element in the
Gospel, and Good News for the world: for those who suffer the denial of justice
and for those who struggle to re-instate it; for those who have known love and
existence in solidarity, because penance and forgiveness are possible, since in
the Cross of Christ we all receive redemption from sin. The call to conversion
and belief in the Gospel of the Kingdom—a Kingdom of justice, love and
peace, and in whose light we shall be judged—is fundamental for catechesis.
– Jesus declares that the Kingdom of God is inaugurated in him, in his
very person. (335) He reveals, in fact, that he himself, constituted as Lord,
assumes the realization of the Kingdom until he consigns it, upon completion, to
the Father when he comes again in glory. (336) "Here on earth the Kingdom
is mysteriously present; when the Lord comes it will enter into its perfection".
(337)
– Jesus shows, equally, that the community of his disciples, the
Church, "is, on earth, the seed and the beginning of that Kingdom"
(338) and, like leaven in the dough, what she desires is that the Kingdom of God
grow in the world like a great tree, giving shelter to all peoples and cultures.
"The Church is effectively and concretely at the service of the Kingdom".
(339)
– Finally, Jesus manifests that the history of humanity is not
journeying towards nothingness, but, with its aspects of both grace and sin, is
in him taken up by God and transformed. In its present pilgrimage towards the
Father's house, it already offers a foretaste of the world to come, where,
assumed and purified, it will reach perfection. "Accordingly,
evangelization will include a prophetic proclamation of another's life, that is
of man's sublime and eternal vocation. This vocation is at once connected with
and distinct from his present state". (340)
A message of liberation
103. The Good News of the Kingdom of God, which proclaims salvation,
includes a "message of liberation". (341) In preaching this Kingdom,
Jesus addressed the poor in a very special way: "Blessed are you poor,
yours is the kingdom of God. Blessed are you that hunger now, for you shall be
satisfied. Blessed are you that weep now, for you shall laugh" (Lk 6,20-21)
The Beatitudes of Jesus, addressed to those who suffer, are an eschatological
proclamation of the salvation which the Kingdom brings. They note that painful
experience to which the Gospel is so particularly sensitive: poverty, hunger and
the suffering of humanity. The community of the disciples of Jesus, the Church,
shares today the same sensitivity as the Master himself showed them. With great
sorrow she turns her attention to those "peoples who, as we all know, are
striving with all their power and energy to overcome all those circumstances
which compel them to live on the border line of existence: hunger, chronic
epidemics, illiteracy, poverty, injustice between nations... economic and
cultural neo-colonialism". (342) All forms of poverty, "not only
economic but also cultural and religious" (343) are a source of concern
for the Church.
As an important dimension of her mission, "the Church is duty bound—as
her bishops have insisted—to proclaim the liberation of these hundreds of
millions of people, since very many of them are her children. She has the duty
of helping this liberation, of bearing witness on its behalf and of assuring its
full development". (344)
104. To prepare Christians for this task, catechesis is attentive, amongst
other things, to the following aspects:
– it shall situate the message of liberation in the prospective of the "specifically
religious objective of evangelization", (345) since it would lose its
raison d'être "if it were divorced from the religious basis by which
it is sustained which is the kingdom of God in its full theological sense;
(346) thus, the message of liberation "cannot be confined to any restricted
sphere whether it be economic, political, social or doctrinal. It must embrace
the whole man in all his aspects and components, extending to his relation to
the absolute, even to the Absolute which is God"; (347)
– catechesis, in the ambit of moral education, shall present Christian
social morality as a demand and consequence of the "radical liberation
worked by Christ"; (348) in effect, the Good News which Christians profess
with hearts full of hope is: Christ has liberated the world and continues to
liberate it; this is the source of Christian praxis, which is the fulfilment of
the great commandment of love;
– at the same time, in the task of initiating mission, catechesis shall
arouse in catechumens and those receiving catechesis "a preferential option
for the poor", (349) which "far from being a sign of individualism or
sectarianism, makes manifest the universality of the Church's nature and
mission. This option is not exclusive" (350) but implies "a
commitment to justice, according to each individual's role, vocation and
circumstances". (351)
The ecclesial nature of the Gospel message
105. The ecclesial nature of catechesis confers on the transmitted Gospel
message an inherent ecclesial character. Catechesis originates in the Church's
confession of faith and leads to the profession of faith of the catechumen and
those to be catechized. The first official word of the Church addressed to those
about to be baptized, having called them by name, is: "What do you ask of
God's Church?" The candidates' reply is "Faith". (352)
The catechumen who has discovered the Gospel and desires to know it better,
realizes that it lives in the hearts of believers. Catechesis is nothing other
than the process of transmitting the Gospel, as the Christian community has
received it, understands it, celebrates it, lives it and communicates it in many
ways.
Hence, when catechesis transmits the mystery of Christ, the faith of the
whole people of God echoes in its message throughout the course of history: the
faith received by the Apostles from Christ himself and under the action of the
Holy Spirit; that of the martyrs who have borne witness to it and still bear
witness to it by their blood; that of the saints who have lived it and live it
profoundly; that of the Fathers and doctors of the Church who have taught it
brilliantly; that of the missionaries who proclaim it incessantly; that of
theologians who help to understand it better; that of pastors who conserve it
with zeal and love and who interpret it authentically. In truth, there is
present in catechesis the faith of all those who believe and allow themselves to
be guided by the Holy Spirit.
106. This faith, transmitted by the ecclesial community, is one. Although
the disciples of Jesus Christ form a community dispersed throughout the whole
world, and even though catechesis transmits the faith in many different cultural
idioms, the Gospel which is handed on is one. The confession of faith is the
same. There is only one Baptism: "one Lord, one Faith, one Baptism one God
and Father of us all" (Eph 4,5). Catechesis, in the Church,
therefore, is that service which introduces catechumens and those to be
catechized to the unity of the profession of faith. (353) By its very nature, it
nourishes the bond of unity (354) and brings about an awareness of belonging to
a great community which cannot be limited by space or time: "From Abel the
just to the last of the chosen ones to the end of the earth, to the close of the
age. (355)
The historical character of the mystery of salvation
107. The confession of faith of the disciples of Jesus Christ springs from a
pilgrim Church which has been sent on mission. It is not yet that of the
glorious proclamation of the journey's end; rather, it is one which corresponds
to the "times of the Church". (356) The "economy of
Salvation" has thus an historical character as it is realized in time: "...in
time past it began, made progress, and in Christ reached its highest point; in
the present time it displays its force and awaits its consummation in the future.
(357) For this reason, the Church, in transmitting today the Christian message,
begins with the living awareness which she carries of it, has a constant "memory"
of the saving events of the past and makes them known. In the light of these,
she interprets the present events of human history, where the Spirit of God is
continually renewing the face of the earth, and she awaits with faith for the
Lord's coming. In Patristic catechesis, the narration (narratio) of the
wonderful deeds of God and the awaiting (expectatio) of Christ's return
always accompanied the exposition of the mysteries of faith. (358)
108. The historical character of the Christian message requires that
catechesis attend to the following points:
– presentation of salvation history by means of Biblical catechesis so
as to make known the "deeds and the words" with which God has revealed
himself to man: the great stages of the Old Testament by which he prepared the
journey of the Gospel; (359) the life of Jesus, Son of God, born of the Virgin
Mary who by his actions and teaching brought Revelation to completion; (360)
the history of the Church which transmits Revelation: this history, read within
the perspective of faith, is a fundamental part of the content of catechesis;
– in explaining the Creed and the content of Christian morality by
means of doctrinal catechesis, the Gospel message should illuminate the 'today'
of the history of salvation; indeed, "...in this way the ministry of the
Word not only recalls the revelation of God's wonders which was made in
time...but at the same time, in the light of this revelation, interprets human
life in our age, the signs of the times, and the things of this world, for the
plan of God works in these for the salvation of men"; (361)
– it should situate the sacraments within the history of salvation by
means of a mystagogy which "...re-lives the great events of salvation
history in the 'today' of her liturgy"; (362) reference to the
historico-salvific 'today' is essential to such catechesis, and thus helps
catechumens and those to be catechized "to open themselves to this
'spiritual' understanding of the economy of Salvation..."; (363)
– the "deeds and words" of Revelation point to the
"mystery contained in them"; (364) catechesis helps to make
the passage from sign to mystery; it leads to the discovery of the mystery of
the Son of God behind his humanity; behind the history of the Church, it
uncovers the mystery of her being the "sacrament of salvation;" behind
the "signs of the times", it encounters the traces of God's presence
and plan: catechesis, thus, shall exhibit that knowledge which is typical of
faith, which "is knowledge through signs". (365)
Inculturation of the Gospel message (366)
109. The Word of God became man, a concrete man, in space and time and
rooted in a specific culture: "Christ by his incarnation committed himself
to the particular social and cultural circumstances of the men among whom he
lived". (367) This is the original "inculturation" of the word of
God and is the model of all evangelization by the Church, "called to bring
the power of the Gospel into the very heart of culture and cultures". (368)
'Inculturation' (369) of the faith, whereby in a wonderful exchange are
comprised, "all the riches of the nations which have been given to Christ
as an inheritance", (370) it is a profound and global process and a slow
journey. (371) It is not simply an external adaptation designed to make the
Christian message more attractive or superficially decorative. On the contrary,
it means the penetration of the deepest strata of persons and peoples by the
Gospel which touches them deeply, "going to the very centre and roots"
(372) of their cultures.
In this work of inculturation, however, the Christian community must
discern, on the one hand, which riches to "take" (373) up as
compatible with the faith; on the other, it must seek to "purify"
(374) and "transform" (375) those criteria, modes of thought and
lifestyles which are contrary to the Kingdom of God. Such discernment is
governed by two basic principles: "compatibility with the Gospel and
communion with the universal Church". (376) All of the people of God must
be involved in this process which "...needs to take place gradually, in
such a way that it really is an expression of the community's Christian
experience". (377)
110. In this inculturation of the faith, there are different concrete tasks
for catechesis. Amongst these mention must be made of:
– looking to the ecclesial community as the principal factor of
inculturation: an expression and efficient instrument of this task is
represented by the catechist who, with a profound religious sense, also
possesses a living social conscience and is well rooted in his cultural
environment; (378)
– drawing up local catechisms which respond to the demands of different
cultures (379) and which present the Gospel in relation to the hopes, questions
and problems which these cultures present;
– making the Catechumenate and catechetical institutes into "centres
of inculturation", incorporating, with discernment, the language, symbols,
and values of the cultures in which the catechumens and those to be catechized
live;
– presenting the Christian message in such a way as to prepare those
who are to proclaim the Gospel to be capable "of giving reasons for their
hope" (1 Pt 3,15) in cultures often pagan or post-Christian:
effective apologetics to assist the faith-culture dialogue is indispensable
today.
The integrity of the Gospel message
111. In its task of inculturating the faith, catechesis must transmit the
Gospel message in its integrity and purity. Jesus proclaimed the Gospel
integrally: "...because I have made known to you all that I have heard from
my Father" (Jn 15,15) This same integrity is demanded by Christ of
his disciples in his sending them on mission to preach the Gospel: "...and
teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you" (Mt 28,19).
A fundamental principle of catechesis, therefore, is that of safeguarding the
integrity of the message and avoiding any partial or distorted presentation: "In
order that the sacrificial offering of his or her faith should be perfect, the
person who becomes a disciple of Christ has the right to receive 'the words of
faith,' not in mutilated, falsified or diminished form but whole and entire, in
all its rigour and vigour". (380)
112. Two closely connected dimensions underlie this criterion.
– The integral presentation of the Gospel message, without
ignoring certain fundamental elements, or without operating a selectivity with
regard to the deposit of faith. (381) Catechesis, on the contrary, "must
take diligent care faithfully to present the entire treasure of the Christian
message". (382) This is accomplished, gradually, by following the example
of the divine pedagogy with which God revealed himself progressively and
gradually. Integrity must also be accompanied by adaptation. Consequently
catechesis starts out with a simple proposition of the integral structure of the
Christian message, and proceeds to explain it in a manner adapted to the
capacity of those being catechized. Without restricting itself to this initial
exposition, it gradually and increasingly proposes the Christian message more
amply and with greater explicitness, in accordance with the capacity of those
being catechized and with the proper character of catechesis. (383) These two
levels of the integral exposition of the Gospel message are called: intensive
integrity and "extensive integrity".
– The presentation of the authentic Gospel message, in all of its
purity, without reducing idemands for fear of rejection and without imposing
heavy burdens which it does not impose, since the yoke of Jesus is light. (384)
The criterion of authenticity is closely connected with that of inculturation
since the latter is concerned to "translate" (385) the essentials of
the Gospel message into a definite cultural language. There is always tension in
this necessary task: "Evangelization will lose much of its power and
efficacy if it does not take into consideration the people to whom it is
addressed.". however "it may lose its very nature and savour if on the
pretext of transposing its content into another language that content is
rendered meaningless or is corrupted... (386)
113. In the complex relationship between inculturation and the integrity of
the Christian message, the criterion to be applied is a Gospel attitude of "a
missionary openness to the integral salvation of the world". (387) This
must always unite acceptance of truly human and religious values with the
missionary task of proclaiming the whole truth of the Gospel, without falling
either into closed inflexibility or into facile accommodations which enfeeble
the Gospel and secularize the Church. Gospel authenticity excludes both of these
attitudes which are contrary to the true meaning of mission.
A comprehensive and hierarchical message
114. This message transmitted by catechetics has a "comprehensive
hierarchical character", (388) which constitutes a coherent and vital
synthesis of the faith. This is organized around the mystery of the Most Holy
Trinity, in a christocentric perspective, because this is "the source of
all the other mysteries of faith, the light that enlightens them". (389)
Starting with this point, the harmony of the overall message requires a "hierarchy
of truths", (390) in so far as the connection between each one of these and
the foundation of the faith differs. Nevertheless, this hierarchy "does not
mean that some truths pertain to Faith itself less than others, but rather that
some truths are based on others as of a higher priority and are illumined by
them". (391)
115. All aspects and dimensions of the Christian message participate in this
hierarchical system.
– The history of salvation, recounting the "marvels of God"
(mirabilia Dei), what He has done, continues to do and will do in the future for
us, is organized in reference to Jesus Christ, the "centre of salvation
history". (392) The preparation for the Gospel in the Old Testament, the
fullness of Revelation in Jesus Christ, and the time of the Church, provide the
structure of all salvation history of which creation and eschatology are its
beginning and its end.
– The Apostles' Creed demonstrates how the Church has always desired to
present the Christian mystery in a vital synthesis. This Creed is a synthesis of
and a key to reading all of the Church's doctrine, which is hierarchically
ordered around it. (393)
– The sacraments, which, like regenerating forces, spring from the
paschal mystery of Jesus Christ, are also a whole. They form "an organic
whole in which each particular sacrament has its own vital place". (394) In
this whole, the Holy Eucharist occupies a unique place to which all of the other
sacraments are ordained. The Eucharist is to be presented as the "sacrament
of sacraments". (395)
– The double commandment of love of God and neighbour is—in the
moral message—a hierarchy of values which Jesus himself established: "On
these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets" (Mt 22,40).
The love of God and neighbour, which sum up the Decalogue, are lived in the
spirit of the Beatitudes and constitute the magna carta of the Christian life
proclaimed by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount. (396)
– The Our Father gathers up the essence of the Gospel. It synthesizes
and hierarchically structures the immense riches of prayer contained in Sacred
Scripture and in all of the Church's life. This prayer, given by Jesus to his
disciples, makes clear the childlike trust and the deepest desires with which
one can turn to God. (397)
A meaningful message for the human person
116. The Word of God, in becoming man, assumed human nature in everything,
except sin. In this way Jesus Christ, who is "the image of the invisible
God", (Col 1,15) is also the perfect man. From this it follows that
"in reality it is only in the mystery of the Word made flesh that the
mystery of man truly becomes clear". (398)
Catechesis, in presenting the Christian message, not only shows who God is
and what his saving plan is, but, as Jesus himself did, it reveals man to man
and makes him more aware of his sublime vocation. (399) Revelation, in fact, "...
is not... isolated from life or artificially juxtaposed to it. It is concerned
with the ultimate meaning of life and it illumines the whole of life with the
light of the Gospel, to inspire it or to question it". (400)
The relationship between the Christian message and human experience is not a
simple methodological question. It springs from the very end of catechesis,
which seeks to put the human person in communion with Jesus Christ. In his
earthly life he lived his humanity fully: "He worked with human hands, he
thought with a human mind, he acted with a human will, and with a human heart he
loved". (401) Therefore, "Christ enables us to live in him all that he
himself lived, and he lives it in us". (402) Catechesis operates through
this identity of human experience between Jesus the Master and his disciple and
teaches to think like him, to act like him, to love like him. (403) To live
communion with Christ is to experience the new life of grace. (404)
117. For this reason, catechesis is eminently christological in presenting
the Christian message and should therefore "be concerned with making men
attentive to their more significant experiences, both personal and social; it
also has the duty of placing under the light of the Gospel, the questions which
arise from those experiences so that there may be stimulated within men a right
desire to transform their ways of life". (405) In this sense:
– in first evangelization, proper to the pre-catechumenate or to
pre-catechesis, the proclamation of the Gospel shall always be done in close
connection with human nature and its aspirations, and will show how the Gospel
fully satisfies the human heart; (406)
– in biblical catechesis, it shall help to interpret present-day human
life in the light of the experiences of the people of Israel, of Jesus Christ
and the ecclesial community, in which the Spirit of the Risen Jesus continually
lives and works;
– in explaining the Creed, catechesis shall show how the great themes
of the faith (creation, original sin, Incarnation, Easter, Pentecost,
eschatology) are always sources of life and light for the human being;
– moral catechesis, in presenting what makes life worthy of the Gospel
(407) and in promoting the Beatitudes as the spirit that must permeate the
Decalogue, shall root them in the human virtues present in the heart of man;
(408)
– liturgical catechesis shall make constant reference to the great
human experiences represented by the signs and symbols of liturgical actions
originating in Jewish and Christian culture. (409)
Methodological principle for the presentation of the message (410)
118. The norms and criteria indicated in this chapter and those concerning
the "exposition of the content of catechesis, must be applied in the
various forms of catechesis, that is to say, in biblical and liturgical
catechesis, in doctrinal summaries, in the interpretation of the conditions of
human existence and so on. (411)
From these, however, it is not possible to deduce the order that should be
observed in the exposition of catechetical content. Indeed, "it can happen
that in the present situation of catechesis reasons of method or pedagogy may
suggest that the communication of the riches of the content of catechesis should
be organized in one way rather than another". (412) It is possible to begin
with God so as to arrive at Christ, and vice versa. Equally, it is possible to
start with man and come to God, and conversely. The selection of a particular
order for presenting the message is conditioned by circumstances, and by the
faith level of those to be catechized. It will always be necessary to elaborate
with care that pedagogical method which is most appropriate to the circumstances
of an ecclesial community or of those to whom catechesis is specifically
addressed. Hence derives the need to investigate correctly in order to find
those means which best respond to different situations.
It is a matter for Bishops to draw up more particular norms for this and to
apply them by means of Catechetical Directories and catechisms which cater for
different ages and cultural conditions, as well as in other ways deemed more
appropriate. (413)
CHAPTER II
"This is our faith this is the faith of
the Church"
"All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness" (2 Thess
2:15). "So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the tradition
which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter" (2
Thess 2:15).
119. This chapter reflects on the content of catechesis as presented by the
Church in the syntheses of faith which are officially drawn up and presented in
her catechisms. The Church has always used formulations of faith which, in short
forms, contain the essentials of what she believes and lives: New Testament
texts, creeds or professions of faith, liturgical formulas, Eucharistic prayers.
At a later period, it was considered useful to provide more ample explicitations
of the faith in organic synthesis, through the catechisms compiled in numerous
local Churches in recent centuries. In two historical moments, at the Council of
Trent and in our own times, it was considered opportune to furnish a
comprehensive presentation of the faith in a catechism of a universal nature,
which would serve as a reference point for catechesis throughout the Church. It
was with this intention that Pope John Paul II promulgated the Catechism of
the Catholic Church on 11 October 1992.
The present chapter seeks to situate these official instruments of the
Church, which is what catechisms are, in relation with catechetical activity and
praxis.
In the first place, it will reflect on the Catechism of the Catholic
Church and seek to clarify its role in the overall catechesis of the Church.
It will, then, analyse the need for local catechisms to adapt the content of the
faith to different circumstances and cultures. Some directions will be given to
assist the preparation of such catechisms. The Church, contemplating the
richness of the content of faith, which the Bishops propose to the people of God
and which they express like a "symphony" (414) celebrates, lives and
proclaims what she believes: "This is our faith, this is the faith of the
Church".
The Catechism of the Catholic Church and the General Directory for
Catechesis
120. The Catechism of the Catholic Church and the General
Catechetical Directory are two distinct but complementary instruments at the
service of the Church's catechetical activity.
– The Catechism of the Catholic Church is "a statement of
the Church's faith and of Catholic doctrine, attested to or illuminated by
Sacred Scripture, the Apostolic Tradition and the Church's Magisterium. (415)
– The General Directory for Catechesis provides "the
basic principles of pastoral theology taken from the Magisterium of the Church,
and in a special way from the Second Vatican Council by which pastoral action in
the ministry of the word can be more fittingly directed and governed".
(416)
Both instruments, each taken in accordance with its specific nature and
authority, are mutually complementary. The Catechism of the Catholic Church
is an act of the Magisterium of the Pope, by which, in our times, in virtue
of Apostolic Authority, he synthesizes normatively the totality of the Catholic
faith. He offers the Catechism of the Catholic Church, in the first
place, to the Churches as a point of reference for the authentic presentation of
the content of the faith. The Catechetical Directory, for its part,
carries that authority normally vested by the Holy See in instruments of
orientation by approving them and confirming them. It is an official aid for the
transmission of the Gospel message and for the whole of catechetical activity.
The complementary nature of both of these instruments justifies the fact, as
already mentioned in the Preface, that this General Catechetical
Directory does not devote a chapter to the presentation of the contents of
the faith, as was the case in the 1971 General Catechetical Directory
for Catechesis under the title: "The more outstanding elements
of the Christian message". (417) Such is explained by the fact that
this Directory, as far as the content of the Christian message is concerned,
simply refers to the Catechism of the Catholic Church", which is intended
as a methodological norm for its concrete application. The following exposition
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church seeks neither to summarize its
contents nor to explain this instrument of the Magisterium. It simply seeks to
facilitate a better understanding and use of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church in catechetical practice.
The catechism of the catholic Church
Nature and purpose of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
121. The Prologue to the Catechism of the Catholic Church
states its purpose: "This catechism aims at presenting an organic synthesis
of the essential and fundamental contents of Catholic doctrine, as regards both
faith and morals, in the light of the Second Vatican Council and the whole of
the Church's Tradition". (418) The Magisterium of the Church intends to
render an ecclesial service for our times with the Catechism of the Catholic
Church, recognizing that it is:
– "a valid and legitimate instrument for ecclesial communion":
(419) it desires to promote the bond of unity in the faith by helping the
disciples of Jesus Christ to make "the profession of one faith received
from the Apostles"; (420)
– "a sure norm for teaching the faith": (421) the
Catechism of the Catholic Church offers a clear response to the
legitimate right of all the baptized to know from the Church what she has
received and what she believes; it is thus an obligatory point of reference for
catechesis and for the other forms of the ministry of the word.
– "a sure and authentic reference text for teaching Catholic
doctrine and particularly for preparing local catechisms": 422 the Catechism
of the Catholic Church, in fact, "is not intended to replace the local
catechism (duly approved)" (423) but "to encourage and assist in the
writing of new local catechisms which take into account various situations and
cultures, while carefully preserving the unity of faith and fidelity to Catholic
doctrine". (424)
The nature or character proper to this document of the Magisterium consists
in the fact that it is a comprehensive synthesis of the faith and thus it is of
universal value. In this, it differs from other documents of the Magisterium,
which do not set out to present such a synthesis. It differs also from local
Catechisms, which, within the context of ecclesial communion, are destined for
the service of a particular portion of the people of God.
Structure of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
122. The Catechism of the Catholic Church is structured around four
fundamental dimensions of the Christian life: the profession of faith; the
celebration of the liturgy; the morality of the Gospel; and prayer. These four
dimensions spring from a single source, the Christian mystery. This is:
– the object of the faith (Part One);
– celebrated and communicated in liturgical actions (Part Two);
– present to enlighten and sustain the children of God in their actions
(Part Three);
– the basis of our prayer, whose supreme expression is the Our
Father, and the object of our supplication, praise and intercession (Part
Four); (425)
This four part structure develops the essential aspects of the faith:
– belief in the Triune God and in his saving plan;
– sanctification by him in the sacramental life;
– loving him with all one's heart and one's neighbour as oneself;
– prayer while waiting for the coming of his Kingdom and our meeting
with him face to face.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church thus refers to the faith as
believed, celebrated, lived and prayed. It is a call to integral Christian
education. The structure of the Catechism of the Catholic Church derives
from the profound unity of the Christian life. It maintains an explicit
interrelation between "lex orandi", "lex credendi" and
"lex vivendi". "The Liturgy itself is prayer; the
confession of faith finds its proper place in the celebration of worship. Grace,
the fruit of the sacraments, is the irreplaceable condition for Christian
living, just as participation in the Church's Liturgy requires faith. If faith
is not expressed in works it is dead and cannot bear fruit into eternal life".
(426)
Structured around the four pillars (427) which sustain the transmission of
the faith (the Creed, the Sacraments, the Decalogue, the Our Father),
the Catechism of the Catholic Church is presented as a doctrinal point
of reference for education in the four basic tasks of catechesis, (428) and for
the drawing up of local catechisms. It does not, however, impose a predetermined
configuration on the one or on the other. "The best structure for
catechesis must be one which is suitable to particular concrete circumstances
and cannot be established for the entire Church by a common catechism".
(429) Perfect fidelity to Catholic doctrine is compatible with a rich diversity
of presentation.
The inspiration of the Catechism of the Catholic Church: trinitarian
christocentricity and the nobility of the vocation of the human person
123. The axis of the Catechism of the Catholic Church is Jesus
Christ, "the Way, the Truth and the Life" (Jn 14,6). Centred
on him, it is orientated in two directions: toward God and toward the human
person.
– The mystery of the Triune God and of his economy of salvation
inspires and organizes the internal structure of the Catechism of the
Catholic Church in general and in particular. The profession of faith, the
liturgy, the morality of the Gospel and prayer in the Catechism of the
Catholic Church all have a trinitarian inspiration, which runs through the
entire work.(430)
– The mystery of the human person is presented throughout the Catechism
of the Catholic Church and specifically in some particularly significant
chapters: "Man is capable of God", "The creation of Man", "The
Son of God became Man", "The vocation of Man and life in the Spirit"...
and others. (431) This doctrine, contemplated in the light of the humanity of
Jesus, the perfect man, demonstrates the highest vocation and the ideal of
perfection to which every human person is called.
Indeed, the doctrine of the Catechism of the Catholic Church can be
distilled into the following remark of the Council: "Jesus Christ, by
revealing the mystery of the Father and of his love, fully reveals man to
himself and brings to light his most high calling". (432)
The literary genre of The Catechism of the Catholic Church
124. It is important to understand the literary genre of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church in order to foster the role which the Church's
authority gives to it in the exercise and renewal of catechetical activity in
our time. The principal characteristics of this follow:
– The Catechism of the Catholic Church is above all a
catechism; that is to say, an official text of the Church's Magisterium, which
authoritatively gathers in a precise form, and in an organic synthesis the
events and fundamental salvific truths which express the faith common to the
People of God and which constitute the indispensable basic reference for
catechesis.
– In virtue of being a catechism, the Catechism of the Catholic
Church collects all that is fundamental and common to the Christian life
without "presenting as doctrines of the faith special interpretations which
are only private opinions or the views of some theological school". (433)
– The Catechism of the Catholic Church is, moreover, a
catechism of a universal nature and is offered to the entire Church. It presents
an updated synthesis of the faith which incorporates the doctrine of the Second
Vatican Council as well as the religious and moral concerns of our times.
However, "by design this Catechism does not set out to provide the
adaptation of doctrinal presentations and the catechetical methods required by
the differences of culture, age, spiritual maturity and social and ecclesial
condition amongst all those to whom it is addressed. Such indispensable
adaptations are the responsibility of particular catechisms and, even more, of
those who instruct the faithful". (434)
The Deposit of Faith and the Catechism of the Catholic Church
125. The Second Vatican Council set as one of its principal tasks the "better
conservation and presentation of the precious deposit of Christian doctrine so
as to render it more accessible to Christ's faithful and to all men of good will".
The content of that deposit is the word of God which is safeguarded in the
Church. The Magisterium of the Church, having decided to draw up "a
reference text" for the teaching of the faith, has chosen from this
precious treasure "things new and old" which it considers suitable for
accomplishing this task. The Catechism of the Catholic Church thus
constitutes a fundamental service by encouraging the proclamation of the Gospel
and the teaching of the faith, which both draw their message from Tradition and
Sacred Scripture entrusted to the Church, so as to achieve this function with
complete authenticity. The Catechism of the Catholic Church is not the
only source of catechesis, since as an act of the Magisterium, "it is not
superior to the word of God but at its service". However it is a
particularly authentic act of interpretation of that word, such that the Gospel
may be proclaimed and transmitted in all its truth and purity.
126. In the light of this relationship between the Catechism of the
Catholic Church and the "deposit of faith", it may be
useful to clarify two questions of vital importance for catechesis:
– the relationship between Sacred Scripture and the Catechism of
the Catholic Church as points of reference for the content of catechesis;
– the relationship between the catechetical tradition of the Fathers of
the Church, with its rich content and its profound understanding of the
catechetical process, and the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Sacred Scripture, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and Catechesis
127. The Constitution Dei Verbum of the Second Vatican Council
emphasizes the fundamental importance of Sacred Scripture in the Church's life.
Together with tradition, it is the "supreme rule of faith", since it
transmits "the very word of God" and makes "to resound... the
voice of the Holy Spirit". (435) For this reason the Church desires that in
the ministry of the word, Sacred Scripture should have a pre-eminent position.
In concrete terms, catechesis should be "an authentic introduction to lectio
divina, that is, to a reading of the Sacred Scriptures done in accordance to
the Spirit who dwells in the Church". (436) "In this sense, to
describe Tradition and Scripture as sources for catechesis means that catechesis
must imbibe and permeate itself with biblical and evangelical thought, spirit
and attitudes by constant contact with them. It also means that catechesis will
be as rich and as effective only to the extent that these texts are read with
the mind and heart of the Church". (437) In this ecclesial reading of the
Scriptures, done in the light of Tradition, the Catechism of the Catholic
Church plays a most important role.
128. Sacred Scripture and the Catechism of the Catholic Church are
presented as two basic sources of inspiration for all catechetical activity in
our time.
– Sacred Scripture as, "the word of God written under the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit", (438) and the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, as a significant contemporary expression of the living
Tradition of the Church and a sure orm for teaching the faith, are called, each
in its own way and according to its specific authority, to nourish catechesis in
the Church of today.
– Catechesis transmits the content of the word of God according to the
two modalities whereby the Church possesses it, interiorizes it and lives it: as
a narration of the history of salvation and as an explicitation of the Creed.
Both Sacred Scripture and the Catechism of the Catholic Church must
inform biblical as well as doctrinal catechesis so that they become true
vehicles of the content of God's word.
– In the ordinary development of catechesis it is important that
catechumens and those to be catechized can have trust in both Sacred Scripture
and the local catechism. Catechesis, by definition, is nothing other than the
living and meaningful transmission of these "documents of faith".
(439)
The catechetical tradition of the Fathers and the Catechism of the
Catholic Church
129. The whole Tradition of the Church together with Scripture is contained
in the "deposit of faith". "The sayings of the holy
Fathers are a witness to the life-giving presence of this Tradition, showing how
its riches are poured out in the practice and life of the Church, in her belief
and in her prayer". (440) With regard to this doctrinal and pastoral
richness, some aspects merit special attention:
– the decisive importance which the fathers attribute to the baptismal
catechumenate in the structure of the particular churches;
– the gradual and progressive conception of Christian formation,
arranged in stages: (441) The fathers model the catechumenate on the divine
pedagogy; in the catechumenal process the catechumen, like the people of Israel,
goes through a journey to arrive at the promised land: Baptismal identification
with Christ. (442)
– The organization of the content of catechesis in accordance with the
stages of that process; in patristic catechesis a primary role is devoted to the
narration of the history of salvation; as Lent advanced, the Creed
and the Our Father were handed on to the catechumens together with
their meaning and moral implications; after the celebration of the sacraments of
initiation, mystagogical catechesis helped interiorize them and to savour the
experience of configuration to Christ and of communion with him.
130. The Catechism of the Catholic Church, for its part, brings to
catechesis "the great tradition of catechisms". (443) In the richness
of this tradition the following aspects deserve attention:
– The cognitive or truth dimension of the faith: this is not only
living attachment to God but also assent of intellect and will; the catechisms
constantly remind the Church of the need for the faithful to have an organic
knowledge of the faith, however simple in form;
– An education in the faith, which is well rooted in all its sources,
embraces all the different dimensions of faith profession, celebration, life and
prayer.
The wealth of the patristic tradition and the tradition of catechisms comes
together in the actual catechesis of the Church, enriching her in her own
concept of catechesis and of its contents. These traditions bring to catechesis
the seven basic elements which characterize it: the three phases in the
narration of the history of salvation (the Old Testament, the life of Jesus
Christ and the history of the Church) and the four pillars of its exposition
(the Creed, the Sacraments, the Decalogue and the Our Father).
With these seven foundation stones, both of initiatory catechesis and of
continuing Christian development, various schemes and styles may be devised, in
accordance with the different cultural situations of those to whom catechesis is
addressed.
Catechisms in the local Churches
Local Catechisms: their necessity (444)
131. The Catechism of the Catholic Church is given to all the
faithful and to those who wish to know what the Catholic Church believes. (445)
It is "meant to encourage and assist in the writing of new local
catechisms, which take into account various situations and cultures, while
carefully preserving the unity of faith and Catholic doctrine". (446)
Local catechisms, prepared or approved by diocesan Bishops or by Episcopal
Conferences, (447) are invaluable instruments for catechesis which are "called
to bring the power of the Gospel into the very heart of culture and cultures".
(448) For this reason Pope John Paul II has offered a warm encouragement "to
the Episcopal Conferences of the whole world to undertake, patiently but
resolutely, the considerable work to be accomplished, in agreement with the
Apostolic See, in order to prepare genuine catechisms which will be faithful to
the essential content of Revelation and up to date in method, and which will be
capable of educating the Christian generations of the future to a sturdy faith".
(449)
By means of local catechisms, the Church actualizes the "divine
pedagogy" (450) used by God himself in Revelation, adapting his language
to our nature with thoughtful concern. (451) In local catechisms, the Church
communicates the Gospel in a manner accessible to the human person so that it
may be really perceived as the "Good News" of salvation. Local
catechisms are palpable expressions of the wonderful "condescension"
(452) of God and of his "ineffable" (453) love for the world.
The literary genre of the local catechism
132. Three principal traits characterize every catechism adopted by a local
Church: its official character, its organic and fundamental synthesis of the
faith, and the fact that, along with Sacred Scripture, it is offered as a
reference point for catechesis.
– The local catechism is an official text of the Church. In a certain
sense, it makes visible the "handing on of the Creed" and the "handing
on of the Our Father" to catechumens and those to be baptized. For this
reason, it is an act of tradition. The official character of local
catechisms establishes a qualitative difference from other instruments which may
be useful for catechetical pedagogy (didactic texts, non-official
catechisms, catechetical guides etc.)
– Moreover, every catechism is a synthetic and basic text, in which the
events and fundamental truths of the Christian mystery are presented in an
organic way and with regard to the "hierarchy of truths". The local
catechism presents, in its organic structure, "an ensemble of the documents
of Revelation and Christian Tradition", (454) made available in the rich
diversity of "languages" in which the word of God is expressed.
– The local catechism, finally, is given as a reference point to inform
catechesis. The Sacred Scriptures and the catechism are the two basic doctrinal
texts for the process of catechesis and must always be to hand. While both of
these texts are of the greatest importance, they are not the only texts
available. Indeed, other more immediate aids are necessary. (455) It is,
therefore, a valid question to ask if an official catechism should contain
pedagogical elements or, on the contrary, should be limited to giving a
doctrinal synthesis and a presentation of sources.
In any case, the catechism, being an instrument of catechetical activity,
which is an act of communication, always reflects a certain pedagogical
inspiration and must always make apparent, in its own way, the divine pedagogy.
More purely methodological questions are obviously more appropriate to other
instruments.
Aspects of adaptation in a local catechism (456)
133. The Catechism of the Catholic Church indicates those aspects
which must be taken into account when adapting or contextualizing the organic
synthesis of the faith which every local catechism must offer. This synthesis of
the faith must exhibit the adaptations which are required by "the
differences of culture, age, spiritual maturity, and social and ecclesial
conditions among all those to whom it is addressed". (457) The Second
Vatican Council also emphatically affirms the need for adapting the Gospel
Message: "Indeed, this kind of adaptation and preaching of the revealed
word must ever be the law of all evangelization". (458) Hence:
– The local catechism must present the synthesis of the faith with
reference to the particular culture in which catechumens and those to be
catechized are immersed. It will, however, incorporate all those "original
expressions of life, of celebrations and of thought which are Christian",(459)
proper to a particular cultural tradition and are the fruits of the work and
inculturation of the local Church.
– The local catechism, "faithful to the message and to the human
person", (460) presents the Christian message in a meaningful way and is
close to the psychology and mentality of those for whom it is intended.
Consequently, it will refer clearly to the fundamental experiences of their
lives. (461)
– It shall pay attention in a special way to the concrete manner in
which religion is lived in a given society. It is not, for example, the same
thing to prepare a catechism for a society permeated by religious indifference
as it is for a profoundly religious context. (462) The relationship between
belief and science must be treated with great care in every catechism.
– Problems arising from social conditions, especially those arising
from its more profound structural elements (economics, politics, family) are a
factor in the contextualization of a catechism. Drawing inspiration from the
social teaching of the Church, the Catechism will offer criteria, motivations
and modes of action to highlight the Christian presence in these critical
situations. (463)
– Finally, the concrete ecclesial situation lived by a particular
Church shall provide the context to which a catechism must make reference.
Obviously one does not refer hereby to contingent situations, which are
addressed by other magisterial documents, but to the more permanent situation
which demands a more specific and appropriate evangelization. (464)
The creativity of local Churches in the elaboration of catechesis
134. Local Churches, in fulfilling the task of adapting, contextualizing and
inculturating the Gospel message by means of catechisms, for different ages,
situations and cultures must exercise a mature creativity. From the depositum
fidei entrusted to the Church, local Churches select, structure and express,
under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, their inner Master, all those elements
which transmit the Gospel in its complete authenticity in a given situation.
For this difficult task, the Catechism of the Catholic Church is a "point
of reference" to guarantee the unity of the faith. This present General
Catechetical Directory, for its part, offers the basic criteria which govern
the presentation of the Christian message.
135. In elaborating local catechisms it will be useful to remember the
following points:
– it is a question, above all, of elaborating genuine catechisms,
adapted and inculturated: in this sense, a distinction must be drawn between a
catechism which adapts the Christian message to different ages, situations and
cultures, and one which is a mere summary of the Catechism of the Catholic
Church and serves as an introduction to its study. These are two different
types. (465)
– Local catechisms may be diocesan, regional or national in character.
(466)
– with regard to the structuring of contents, different Episcopates
publish catechisms of various structures and configurations; as has been said,
the Catechism of the Catholic Church is proposed as a point of
doctrinal reference, but, does not impose on the entire Church a determined
structure on other catechisms: there are catechisms with a trinitarian
structure; others are planned according to the stages of salvation; others again
are organized along a biblical or theological theme (Covenant, Kingdom of God,
etc.); some are structured around an aspect of the faith, while others again
follow the liturgical year;
– with regard to the manner of expressing the Gospel message, the
creativity of a catechism will have a bearing on its formulation and content,
(467) evidently a catechism must be faithful to the deposit of faith in its
method of expressing the doctrinal substance of the Christian message:"The
individual churches—which are involved not only with men but also with
their aspirations, their wealth and their poverty, with their manner of praying
and living and their outlook on the world—must make their own the substance
of the evangelical message. Without any sacrifice of the essential truths they
must transpose this message into an idiom which will be understood by the people
they serve and those who proclaim it"; (468)
The principle to be followed in this delicate task is indicated by the
Second Vatican Council: "to seek out more efficient ways—provided the
meaning and understanding of them is safeguarded—of presenting their
teaching to modern man: for the deposit of faith is one thing, the manner of
expressing it is quite another". (469)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church and local catechisms: the symphony
of faith
136. The Catechism of the Catholic Church and local catechisms,
each, with its own specific authority, naturally, form a unity. They are a
concrete expression of the "unity of the same apostolic faith", (470)
and, at the same time, of the rich diversity of formulations of the same faith.
To those who contemplate this harmony, the Catechism of the Catholic Church
and local catechisms together express a "symphony" of faith, a
symphony inherent above all in the Catechism of the Catholic Church
which has been drawn up with the collaboration of the entire Episcopate of the
Catholic Church, a symphony harmonized with this and manifested in local
catechisms. This symphony, this "chorus of voices of the universal Church",
(471) heard in the local catechisms and faithful to the Catechism of the
Catholic Church, has a very important theological significance.
– It manifests the Catholicity of the Church: the cultural riches of
the peoples is incorporated into the expression of the faith of the one Church.
– The Catechism of the Catholic Church and local catechisms
make manifest to the ecclesial communion of which "the profession of the
one faith" (472) is one of the visible links, "in which and formed
out of which the one and unique visible Church of Christ exists". (473) The
particular Churches, "parts of the one Church of Christ", form with
the whole, the universal Church, "a peculiar relationship of mutual
interiority" (474) The unity which thus exists between the Catechism
of the Catholic Church and local catechisms makes visible this communion.
– The Catechism of the Catholic Church and local catechisms
equally express, clearly, the reality of episcopal collegiality. The Bishops,
each in his own diocese and together as a college, in communion with the
Successor of Peter, have the greatest responsibility for catechesis in the
Church. (475)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church and local catechisms, by their
profound unity and rich diversity, are called to be a renewing leaven of
catechesis in the Church. Contemplating them with her Catholic and universal
gaze, the Church, that is, the entire community of the disciples of Christ, can
say in truth: "This is our faith, this is the faith of the Church".
PART THREE
THE PEDAGOGY OF THE FAITH
The pedagogy of the faith
"Yet it was I who taught Ephraim to walk, I took them up in my
arms; but they did not know that I healed them. I lead them with cords of
compassion, with the bands of love, and I became to them as one who eases the
yoke on their jaws, and I bent down to them and fed them" (Hos
11:3-4).
"And when he was alone, those who were about him with the twelve
asked him concerning the parables. And he said to them, 'to you has been given
the secret of the kingdom of God'". "But privately to his own
disciples he explained everything" (Mk 4:10-11, 34).
"You have one Master, the Christ" (Mt 23:10)
137. Jesus gave careful attention to the formation of the disciples whom he
sent out on mission. He presented himself to them as the only teacher and, at
the same time, a patient and faithful friend. (476) He exercised real teaching "by
means of his whole life". (477) He stimulated them with opportune
questions. (478) He explained to them in a more profound manner what he had
proclaimed to the crowds. (479) He introduced them to prayer. (480) He sent them
out on a missionary apprenticeship.(481) He promised to them the Spirit of his
Father whom he sent to bring them to the complete truth, (482) and to sustain
them in inevitable moments of difficulty. (483) Jesus Christ is "the
Teacher who reveals God to Man and Man to himself, the Teacher who saves,
sanctifies and guides. He is the Teacher who lives, who speaks, rouses, moves,
redresses, judges, forgives and walks with us day by day on the path of history.
He is also the Teacher who comes and will come in glory". (484) In Jesus
Christ, Lord and Teacher, the Church finds transcendent grace, permanent
inspiration and the convincing model for all communication of the faith.
The meaning and purpose of Part Three
138. In the school of Jesus the Teacher, the catechist closely joins his
action as a responsible person with the mysterious action of the grace of God.
Catechesis is thus an exercise in "the original pedagogy of the faith".
(485)
The transmission of the Gospel through the Church remains before all else
and forever the work of the Holy Spirit and has in Revelation a fundamental
witness and norm.
This will be found in chapter one. But the Holy Spirit works through people
who receive the mission to proclaim the Gospel and whose competence and human
experience form part of the pedagogy of the faith.
Hence arises a series of questions which have been fully explored in the
history of catechesis. These are concerned with catechetical activity, its
sources, its methods, those to whom it is addressed and the process of
inculturation.
The second chapter is not intended to be an exhaustive examination of all of
these aspects but it will deal with those points which today appear to have
particular importance for the whole Church. It is the task of the various
directories and other catechetical instruments of the particular Churches to
respond to specific problems in an appropriate manner.
CHAPTER I
Pedagogy of God, source and model of the
pedagogy of the faith (486)
Pedagogy of God
. "God is treating you as sons; for what son is there whom his father
does not discipline?" (Heb 12:7) The salvation of the person, which
is the ultimate purpose of Revelation, is shown as a fruit of an original and
efficacious "pedagogy of God" throughout history. Similar to human
usage and according to the cultural categories of time, God in Scripture is seen
as a merciful Father, teacher and sage. (487) He assumes the character of the
person, the individual and the community according to the conditions in which
they are found. He liberates the person from the bonds of evil and attracts him
to himself by bonds of love. He causes the person to grow progressively and
patiently towards the maturity of a free son, faithful and obedient to his word.
To this end, as a creative and insightful teacher, God transforms events in the
life of his people into lessons of wisdom, (488) adapting himself to the diverse
ages and life situations. Thus he entrusts words of instruction and catechesis
which are transmitted from generation to generation. (489) He admonishes with
reward and punishment, trials and sufferings, which become a formative
influence. (490) Truly, to help a person to encounter God, which is the task of
the catechist, means to emphasize above all the relationship that the person has
with God so that he can make it his own and allow himself to be guided by God.
The pedagogy of Christ
140. When the fullness of time had come God sent his Son, Jesus Christ, to
humanity. He brought to the world the supreme gift of salvation by accomplishing
his redemptive mission in a manner which continued "the pedagogy of God",
with the perfection found in the newness of his Person. In his words, signs and
works during his brief but intense life, the disciples had direct experience of
the fundamental traits of the "pedagogy of Jesus", and recorded them
in the Gospels: receiving others, especially the poor, the little ones and
sinners, as persons loved and sought out by God; the undiluted proclamation of
the Kingdom of God as the good news of the truth and of the consolation of the
Father; a kind of delicate and strong love which liberates from evil and
promotes life; a pressing invitation to a manner of living sustained by faith in
God, by hope in the Kingdom and by charity to one's neighbour; the use of all
the resources of interpersonal communication, such as word, silence, metaphor,
image, example, and many diverse signs as was the case with the biblical
prophets. Inviting his disciples to follow him unreservedly and without regret,
(491) Christ passed on to them his pedagogy of faith as a full sharing in his
actions and in his destiny.
The pedagogy of the Church
141. From the her very beginnings the Church, which "in Christ, is in
the nature of a Sacrament", (492) has lived her mission as a visible and
actual continuation of the pedagogy of the Father and of the Son. She, "as
our Mother is also the educator of our faith". (493)
These are the profound reasons for which the Christian community is in
herself living catechesis. Thus she proclaims, celebrates, works, and remains
always a vital, indispensable and primary locus of catechesis.
Throughout the centuries the Church has produced an incomparable treasure of
pedagogy in the faith: above all the witness of saints and catechists; a variety
of ways of life and original forms of religious communication such as the
catechumenate, catechisms, itineraries of the Christian life; a precious
patrimony of catechetical teaching of faith culture, of catechetical
institutions and services. All of these aspects form part of the history of
catechesis and, by right, enter into the memory of the community and the praxis
of the catechist.
Divine pedagogy, action of the Holy Spirit in every Christian
142. "Blessed is the the man whom thou dost chasten, O Lord, and
whom thou dost teach out of thy law" (Ps 94:12). In the school of the
word of God, received in the Church, the disciple, thanks to the gift of the
Holy Spirit sent by Christ, grows like his Teacher "in wisdom, stature, and
in favour with God and men" (Lk 2,52). He is also assisted in
developing in himself "the divine education" received by means of
catechesis and by means of knowledge and experience. (494) In this way, by
knowing more about the mystery of salvation, by learning to adore God the
Father, and "by living in the truth according to charity", the
disciple seeks "to grow in all things towards him, who is the Head, Christ"
(Eph 4:15). The pedagogy of God can be said to be completed when the
disciple shall "become the perfect Man, fully mature with the fullness of
Christ himself" (Eph
4:13). For this reason there cannot be teachers of the faith other than
those who are convinced and faithful disciples of Christ and his Church.
Divine pedagogy and catechesis
143. Catechesis, as communication of divine Revelation, is radically
inspired by the pedagogy of God, as displayed in Christ and in the Church.
Hence, it receives its constitutive characteristics and under the guidance of
the Holy Spirit, it sets out a synthesis to encourage a true experience of
faith, and thus a filial encounter with God. In this way, catechesis:
– is a pedagogy which serves and is included in the "dialogue of
salvation" between God and the person, while giving due emphasis to the
universal end of this salvation; with regard to God it underlines divine
initiative, loving motivation, gratuity and respect for our liberty; with regard
to man it highlights the dignity of the gift received and the demand to grow
continually therein; (495)
– it accepts the principle of the progressiveness of Revelation, the
transcendence and the mysterious nature of the word of God and also its
adaptation to different persons and cultures;
– it recognizes the centrality of Jesus Christ, the Word of God made
man, who determines catechesis as "a pedagogy of the incarnation", and
through whom the Gospel is to be proposed for the life and in the life of
people;
– it values the community experience of faith, which is proper to the
people of God, the Church;
– it is rooted in inter-personal relations and makes its own the
process of dialogue;
– it conducts a pedagogy of signs, where words and deeds, teaching and
experience are interlinked; (496)
– draws its power of truth and its constant task of bearing witness to
it, since the love of God is the ultimate reason for his self-revelation, from
the inexhaustible divine love, which is the Holy Spirit. (497)
Thus catechesis takes the form of a process or a journey of following the
Christ of the Gospel in the Spirit towards the Father. It is undertaken to reach
the maturity of the faith "given as Christ allotted it" (Eph 4,7)
and according to the possibilities and the needs of everyone.
The original pedagogy of faith (498)
144. Catechesis, which is therefore active pedagogy in the faith, in
accomplishing its tasks, cannot allow itself to be inspired by ideological
considerations or purely human interests. (499) It does not confuse the salvific
action of God, which is pure grace, with the pedagogical action of man. Neither,
however, does it oppose them and separate them. The wonderful dialogue that God
undertakes with every person becomes its inspiration and norm. "Catechesis
becomes an untiring echo" of this. It continually seeks dialogue with
people in accordance with the directions offered by the Magisterium of the
Church. (500) The precise objects which inspire its methodological choices are:
– to promote a progressive and coherent synthesis between full
adherence of man to God (fides qua) and the content of the Christian
message (fides quae);
– to develop all the dimensions of faith through which it conveys faith
which is known, celebrated, lived and prayed; (501)
– to move the person to abandon himself "completely and freely to
God": (502) intelligence, will, heart and memory;
– to help the person to discern the vocation to which the Lord calls
him.
Catechesis therefore carries out a complete work of initiation, education
and teaching.
Fidelity to God and to the person (503)
145. Jesus Christ is the living and perfect relationship of God with man and
of man with God. From him the pedagogy of the faith receives "a law which
is fundamental for the whole of the Church's life", and therefore for
catechesis: "the law of fidelity to God and of fidelity to man in a single,
loving attitude". (504)
Genuine catechesis therefore is that catechesis which helps to perceive the
action of God throughout the formative journey. It encourages a climate of
listening, of thanksgiving and of prayer. (505) It looks to the free response
of persons and it promotes active participation among those to be catechized.
The "condescension" of God, (506) a school for the
person
146. God, wishing to speak to men as friends, (507) manifests in a special
way his pedagogy by adapting what he has to say by solicitous providence for our
earthly condition. (508) This implies for catechesis the never-ending task of
finding a language capable of communicating the word of God and the creed of the
Church, which is its development, in the various circumstances of those who hear
it. (509) At the same time, it maintains the certainty that, by the grace of
God, this can be done and that the Holy Spirit will give us the joy of doing it.
Therefore pedagogical instructions adequate for catechesis are those which
permit the communication of the whole word of God in the concrete existence of
people. (510)
Evangelize by educating and educate by evangelizing (511)
147. Being inspired by the pedagogy of faith, catechesis presents its
service as a designated educative journey in that, on the one hand it assists
the person to open himself to the religious dimension of life, while on the
other, it proposes the Gospel to him. It does so in such a manner as to
penetrate and transform the processes of intelligence, conscience, liberty and
action making of existence a gift after the example of Jesus Christ. Thus the
catechist knows and avails of the contribution of the sciences of education,
understood always in a Christian sense.
CHAPTER II
Elements of methodology
Diversity of methods in catechesis (1)
148. The Church, in transmitting the faith, does not have a particular
method nor any single method. Rather, she discerns contemporary methods in the
light of the pedagogy of God and uses with liberty "everything that is
true, everything that is noble, everything that is good and pure, everything
that we love and honour and everything that can be thought virtuous or worthy of
praise" (Phil 4:8). In short, she assumes those methods which are
not contrary to the Gospel and places them at its service. This is amply
confirmed in the Church's history. Many charisms of service of the word have
given rise to various methodological directions. Hence, the "variety of
methods is a sign of life and richness" as well as a demonstration of
respect for those to whom catechesis is addressed. Such variety is required by "the
age and the intellectual development of Christians, their degree of ecclesial
and spiritual maturity and many other personal circumstances".(2)
Catechetical methodology has the simple objective of education in the faith. It
avails of the pedagogical sciences and of communication, as applied to
catechesis, while also taking account of the numerous and notable acquisitions
of contemporary catechesis.
The content-method relationship in catechesis (3)
149. The principle of "fidelity to God and fidelity to man" leads
to an avoidance of any opposition or artificial separation or presumed
neutrality between method and content. It affirms, rather, their necessary
correlation and interaction. The catechist recognizes that method is at the
service of revelation and conversion (4) and that therefore it is necessary to
make use of it. The catechist knows that the content of catechesis cannot be
indifferently subjected to any method. It requires a process of transmission
which is adequate to the nature of the message, to its sources and language, to
the concrete circumstances of ecclesial communities as well as to the particular
circumstances of the faithful to whom catechesis is addressed.
Because of its intrinsic importance both in tradition and in present day
catechesis, mention must be made of the method of approaching the Bible,(5) of "documentary
pedagogy", especially of the Creed, since catechesis is a transmission of
the faith; (6) of the method of liturgical and ecclesial signs; and of methods
proper to the mass media. A good catechetical method is a guarantee of fidelity
to content.
Inductive and deductive method (7)
150. The communication of the faith in catechesis is an event of grace,
realized in the encounter of the word of God with the experience of the person.
It is expressed in sensible signs and is ultimately open to mystery. It can
happen in diverse ways, not always completely known to us. With regard to the
history of catechesis, there is common reference today to inductive method and
deductive method. Inductive method consists of presenting facts (biblical
events, liturgical acts, events in the Church's life as well as events from
daily life) so as to discern the meaning these might have in divine Revelation.
It is a method which has many advantages, because it conforms to the economy of
Revelation. It corresponds to a profound urge of the human spirit to come to a
knowledge of unintelligible things by means of visible things. It also conforms
to the characteristics of knowledge of the faith, which is knowledge by means of
signs. The inductive method does not exclude deductive method. Indeed it
requires the deductive method which explains and describes facts by proceeding
from their causes. The deductive synthesis, however, has full value, only when
the inductive process is completed.(8)
151. In reference to operative means, it has another sense: one is called "kerygmatic"
(descending), which begins with the proclamation of the message,
expressed in the principle documents of the faith (Bible, liturgy,
doctrine...) and applies it to life; the other is called "existential"
(ascending), which moves from human problems and conditions and
enlightens them with the word of God. By themselves, these are legitimate
approaches, if all factors at play have been duly observed; the mystery of grace
and human data, the understanding of faith and the process of reason.
Human experience in catechesis (9)
152. Experience has different functions in catechesis. For this reason, it
must be continuously and duly evaluated.
a) It arouses in man, interests, questions, hopes, anxieties,
reflections and judgements which all converge to form a certain desire to
transform his existence. It is a task of catechesis to make people more aware of
their most basic experiences, to help them to judge in the light of the Gospel
the questions and needs that spring from them, as well as to educate them in a
new way of life. Thus, the person becomes capable of behaving in a responsible
and active way before the gift of God.
b) Experience promotes the intelligibility of the Christian message.
This corresponds well to the actions of Jesus. He used human experiences and
situations to point to the eschatological and transcendent, as well as to show
the attitude to be adopted before such realities. From this point of view,
experience is a necessary medium for exploring and assimilating the truths which
constitute the objective content of Revelation.
c) The above functions indicate that experience, assumed by faith,
becomes in a certain manner, a locus for the manifestation and
realization of salvation, where God, consistently with the pedagogy of the
Incarnation, reaches man with his grace and saves him. The catechist must teach
the person to read his own lived experience in this regard, so as to, accept the
invitation of the Holy Spirit to conversion, to commitment, to hope, and to
discover more and more in his life God's plan for him.
153. Interpreting and illuminating experience with the data of faith is a
constant task of catechetical pedagogy—even if with difficulty. It is a
task that cannot be overlooked without falling into artificial juxtapositions or
closed understandings of the truth. It is made possible, however, by a correct
application of the correlation and interaction between profound human
experiences (10) and the revealed message. It is this which has amply borne
witness to the proclamation of the prophets, the preaching of Christ, the
teaching of the Apostles, which constitutes the basic normative criterion for
every encounter of faith and human experience in the time of the Church.
Memorization in catechesis (11)
154. Catechetics forms part of that "memory" of the Church which
vividly maintains the presence of the Lord among us.(12) Use of memory,
therefore, forms a constitutive aspect of the pedagogy of the faith since the
beginning of Christianity. To overcome the risk of a mechanical memorization,
mnemonic learning should be harmoniously inserted into the different functions
of learning, such as spontaneous reaction and reflection, moments of dialogue
and of silence and the relationship between oral and written work.(13)
In particular, as objects of memorization, due consideration must be given
to the principal formulae of the faith. These assure a more precise exposition
of the faith and guarantee a valuable common doctrinal, cultural and linguistic
patrimony. Secure possession of the language of the faith is an indispensable
condition for living that same faith. Such formulae, however, should be proposed
as syntheses after a process of explanation and should be faithful to the
Christian message. To be numbered amongst them are some of the major formulae
and texts of the Bible, of dogma, of the liturgy, as well as the commonly known
prayers of Christian tradition: (Apostles' Creed, Our Father, Hail Mary...).(14)
"The blossoms—if we may call them that—of faith and piety do
not grow in the desert places of a memoryless catechesis. What is essential is
that texts that are memorized must at the same time be taken in and gradually
understood in depth, in order to become a source of Christian life on the
personal level and on the community level".(15)
155. Again, more importantly, the learning of the formulae of the faith and
their profession must be understood in the traditional seed-bed or context of
the traditio and the redditio, for which the handing on of the
faith in catechesis (traditio) corresponds to the response of the
subject during the catechetical journey and subsequently in life (redditio).(16)
This process encourages a greater participation in received truth. That
personal response is correct and mature which fully respects the datum of faith
and shows an understanding of the language used to express it (biblical,
liturgical, doctrinal).
The role of the catechist (17)
156. No methodology, no matter how well tested, can dispense with the person
of the catechist in every phase of the catechetical process. The charism given
to him by the Spirit, a solid spirituality and transparent witness of life,
constitutes the soul of every method. Only his own human and Christian qualities
guarantee a good use of texts and other work instruments.
The catechist is essentially a mediator. He facilitates communication
between the people and the mystery of God, between subjects amongst themselves,
as well as with the community. For this reason, his cultural vision, social
condition and lifestyle must not be obstacles to the journey of faith. Rather,
these help to create the most advantageous conditions for seeking out, welcoming
and deepening the Christian message. He does not forget that belief is a fruit
of grace and liberty. Thus, he ensures that his activities always draw support
from faith in the Holy Spirit and from prayer. Finally, the personal
relationship of the catechist with the subject is of crucial importance.
The activity and creativity of the catechized (18)
157. The active participation of all the catechized in their formative
process is completely in harmony, not only with genuine human communication, but
specifically with the economy of Revelation and salvation. Believers, indeed, in
the ordinary state of Christian life, individually or in age groups, are called
to respond to the gift of God through prayer, participation in the sacraments,
the liturgy, ecclesial and social commitment, works of charity and promotion of
human values, such as liberty, justice and peace and the protection of creation.
In catechesis, therefore, subjects take on a commitment in activities of faith,
hope and charity, to acquire the capacity and rectitude of judges, to strengthen
their personal conversion, and to a Christian praxis in their lives. The same
subjects, especially if adults, can contribute to catechesis, by pointing out
the most effective ways of understanding and expressing the message such as: "learning
while doing", by employing research 'and dialogue, by exchanging
challenging points of view.
Community, person and catechesis (19)
158. Catechetical pedagogy will be effective to the extent that the
Christian community becomes a point of concrete reference for the faith journey
of individuals. This happens when the community is proposed as a source, locus
and means of catechesis. Concretely, the community becomes a visible place of
faith-witness. It provides for the formation of its members. It receives them as
the family of God. It constitutes itself as the living and permanent environment
for growth in the faith.(20)
Besides public and collective proclamation of the Gospel, person-to-person
contact, after the example of Jesus and the Apostles, remains indispensable. In
this way, personal conscience is more easily committed. The gift of the Holy
Spirit comes to the subject from one living person to another. Thus, the power
of persuasion becomes more effective.(21)
The importance of the group (22)
159. Groups play an important function in the development processes of
people. The same is true of catechesis, both for children where it fosters a
rounded sociability, and for young people where groups are practically a vital
necessity for personality formation. The same is true of adults where they
promote a sense of dialogue and sharing as well as a sense of Christian
co-responsibility. The catechist who participates in such groups and who
evaluates and notes their dynamics recognizes and plays the primary specific
role of participating in the name of the Church as an active witness to the
Gospel, capable of sharing with others the fruits of his mature faith as well as
stimulating intelligently the common search for faith. Apart from its didactic
aspect, the Christian group is called to be an experience of community and a
form of participation in ecclesial life. It finds its goal and fullest
manifestation in the more extended Eucharistic community. Jesus says: "Where
two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in their midst" (Mt
18:20).
Social communication (23)
160. "The first areopagus of the modern age is the world of
communication, which is unifying humanity... The means of social communication
have become so important as to be for many the chief means of information and
education, of guidance and inspiration in their behaviour as individuals,
families and within society at large".(24) For this reason, in addition to
the numerous traditional means in use, the media has become essential for
evangelization and catechesis.(25) In fact, "the Church would feel herself
guilty before God if she did not avail of those powerful instruments which human
skill is constantly developing and perfecting... In them she finds in a new and
more effective forum a platform or pulpit from which she can address the
multitudes".(26)
In this respect, the following can be considered: television, radio, press,
discs, tape recordings, video and audio cassettes, Compact Discs, as well as the
entire range of audio-visual aids.(27)All of these media offer a particular
service and everybody will have his own specific use for them. It is therefore
necessary to appreciate their importance and to respect their demands.(28) In
every well planned catechesis, such aids cannot be absent. Reciprocal assistance
between the Churches, so as to defray the rather high costs of acquiring and
running such aids, is a true service to the Gospel.
161. Good use of the media requires of catechists a serious commitment to
knowledge, competence, training and up to date use of them. But, above all,
because of the strong influence of the mass media and culture, it must be
remembered that "it is not enough to use the media simply to spread the
Christian message and the Church's authentic teaching. It is also necessary to
integrate that message into the "new culture" created by modern
communications... with new languages, new techniques and a new psychology".(29)
Only by this, with the grace of God, can the Gospel message have the capacity to
penetrate the consciousness of all and obtain a personal acceptance as well as a
complete personal commitment.(30)
162. Those who work in the mass media, as well as those who make use of them
should be able to receive the grace of the Gospel. This should cause catechists
to consider particular groups of people: media professionals to whom the Gospel
can be pointed out as a great horizon of truth, of responsibility and of
inspiration; families—who are so much exposed to the influence of the media—for
their defence, but more so in view of a growing critical and educational
capacity; (31) the younger generations, who are the users and creative subjects
of mass media communications. All are reminded that "the use of these
instruments by professionals in communication and their reception by the public
demand both a work of education in a critical sense, animated by a passion for
the truth, and a work of defence of liberty, respect for the dignity of
individuals, and the elevation of the authentic culture of peoples".(32)
PART FOUR
THOSE TO BE CATECHIZED
Those to be catechized
"I will give you as a light to the nations, that my salvation may
reach to the ends of the earth" (Is 49:6). "And he
came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up; and he went to the synagogue, as
his custom was, on the sabbath day. And he stood up to read; and there was given
to him the book of the prophet Isaiah. He opened the book and found the place
where it was written, 'The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has
anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release
to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those
who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord'. And he closed
the book, and gave it back to the attendant, and sat down; and the eyes of all
in the synagogue were fixed on him. And he began to say to them: 'Today this
scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing'" (Lk 4:16-21).
"The Kingdom is for all" (33)
163. At the beginning of his ministry, Jesus proclaimed that he had been
sent to announce a joyful message (34) to the poor, making it plain and
confirming by his life that the Kingdom of God is for all men, beginning with
those who are most disadvantaged. Indeed he made himself a catechist of
the Kingdom of God for all categories of persons, great and small, rich and
poor, healthy and sick, near and far, Jews and pagans, men and women, righteous
and sinners, rulers and subjects, individuals and groups. He is available to
all. He is interested in the needs of every person, body and soul. He heals and
forgives, corrects and encourages, with words and deeds.
Jesus concluded his earthly life by sending his disciples to do the same, to
preach the Gospel to every creature on earth,(35) to "all nations" (Mt
28,19; Lk 24,47) "to the end of the earth", (Acts 1,8)
for all time, "to the close of the age" (Mt 28,20).
164. Throughout her two-thousand-year history, the Church, continually
prompted by the Holy Spirit, has accomplished the task of paying her obligation
of evagelizing "both to Greeks, and to Barbarians, both to the wise and the
foolish" (Rm 1,14) with an immense variety of experience in
proclamation or catechesis. In this way the characteristics of a pedagogy of the
faith have been articulated in which the universal openness of catechesis and
its visible incarnation in the world of those to whom it is addressed, are
clearly linked.
The meaning and purpose of Part Four
165. Attention to the diverse life situations of people (36) moves
catechesis to employ many different approaches to meet them and to adapt the
Christian message and the pedagogy of the faith to different needs.(37) The
catechesis of initial faith is for catechumens and neophytes. Attention to the
development in faith of the baptized gives rise to catechesis designed to deepen
faith or indeed to recover faith, for those who need to discover that essential
orientation again. When considering the physical and psychological development
of those to be catechized, catechesis is developed according to age. In
socio-cultural contexts, again, catechesis is developed within these categories.
166. Because it impossible to deal with every type of catechesis, this Part
will restrict itself to a consideration of those aspects of catechesis which are
of importance in any situation:
– general aspects of catechetical adaptation (chapter 1);
– catechesis based on age (chapter 2);
– catechesis for those who live in special circumstances (chapter
3);
– catechesis in various contexts (chapters 4 and 5).
The question of inculturation will also be approached in general terms,
especially with reference to the content of the faith to persons and to cultural
contexts. It is for particular Churches, in their national and regional
catechetical directories, to give more specific directions with regard to
concrete conditions and local needs.
CHAPTER I
Adaptation to those to be catechized: General
aspects
The need and right of every believer to receive a valid catechesis
(38)
. All the baptized, because they are called by God to maturity of faith,
need and have therefore a right to adequate catechesis. It is thus a primary
responsibility of the Church to respond to this in a fitting and satisfactory
manner. Hence it must be recalled that those to be evangelized are "concrete
and historical persons",(39) rooted in a given situation and always
influenced by pedagogical, social, cultural, and religious conditioning. They
may or may not be aware of this.(40) In the catechetical process, the recipient
must be an active subject, conscious and co-responsible, and not merely a silent
and passive recipient.(41)
A community need and a community right (42)
168. In giving attention to the individual, it should not be overlooked that
the recipient of catechesis is the whole Christian community and every person in
it. If indeed it is from the whole life of the Church that catechesis draws its
legitimacy and energy, it is also true that "her inner growth and
correspondence with God's plan depend essentially on catechesis".(43)
The adaptation of the Gospel both concerns and involves the community as
a community.
Adaptation requires that the content of catechesis be a healthy and
adequate food (44)
169. The "adaptation of the preaching of the revealed word must always
remain a law for all evangelization".(45) There is an intrinsic theological
motivation for this in the Incarnation. It corresponds to the elementary,
pedagogical demands of healthy human communications and reflects the practice of
the Church throughout the centuries. Such adaptation must be understood as a
maternal action of the Church, who recognizes people as "the field of God"
(1 Cor 3,9) not to be condemned but to be cultivated in hope. She sets
out to meet each person, taking into serious account diversity of circumstances
and cultures and maintains the unity of so many in the one saving Word. Thus the
Gospel is transmitted as genuine, satisfying, healthy and adequate food. All
particular initiatives must therefore be inspired by this criterion and the
creativity and talent of the catechist must bow to it.
Adaptation takes account of diverse circumstances
170. Adaptation is realized in accordance with the diverse circumstances in
which the word of God is transmitted.(46) These are determined by "differences
of culture, age, spiritual maturity and social and ecclesial conditions amongst
all of those to whom it is addressed".(47) Much careful attention shall be
given to them. It shall be remembered that, in the plurality of situations,
adaptation must always keep in mind the totality of the person and his essential
unity, in accordance with the vision of the Church. For this reason catechesis
does not stop with a consideration of the merely exterior elements of a given
situation, but is always mindful of the interior world of the person, the truth
of being human, "the first fundamental way of the Church".(48) In this
manner a process of adaptation is determined which becomes the more suitable,
the more the questions, aspirations and interior needs of the person are
considered.
CHAPTER II
Catechesis according to age
General observations
Catechesis based on different age groups is an essential task of the
Christian community. On the one hand, faith contributes to the development of
the person; on the other, every phase of life is open to the challenge of
dechristianization and must above all be reinforced by ever new responses of
Christian vocation.
Catechesis, therefore, is given by right on the basis of diverse and
complementary age groups, on account of the needs and capacity of its
recipients.(49)
For this reason it is necessary to pay attention to all the factors
involved, whether anthropological-evolutionary or theological-pastoral,
including also up to date scientific data and pedagogical methods prepared for
different age groups. The various stages in the journey of faith must be
prudently integrated, with care that successive phases of catechesis
harmoniously complete catechesis received in childhood. Hence it is
pedagogically useful to make reference to adult catechesis and, in that light,
orientate catechesis for other times of life.
This chapter seeks to set out purely general elements, by way of example,
and leaves further details to be worked out by the Catechetical Directories of
particular Churches and of the Episcopal Conferences.
The catechesis of adults (50)
Adults to whom catechesis is directed (51)
172. The discourse of faith with adults must take serious account of their
experience, of their conditioning and of the challenges which they have
encountered in life. Their questions of faith as well as their needs are many
and varied.(52) Consequently, the following categories may be distinguished:
– adult Christians who consistently live their faith option and
sincerely desire to deepen it;
– adults who have been baptized but who have not been sufficiently
catechized, or have not brought to fulfilment the journey begun at Christian
initiation, or who have fallen away from the faith, to such a degree that they
may be called 'quasi catechumens'; (53)
– non-baptized adults, to whom the catechumenate truly and properly
corresponds.(54)
Mention must also be made of those adults who come from Christian
confessions which are not in full communion with the Catholic Church.
Elements and criteria proper to adult catechesis (55)
173. Adult catechesis concerns persons who have a right and a duty to bring
to maturity the seed of faith sown in them by God.(56) It is addressed to
individuals who are charged to fulfill social responsibilities of various types
and to those who are also prey to all kinds of changes and crises, sometimes
profound. The faith of adults, therefore, must be continually enlightened,
developed and protected, so that it may acquire that Christian wisdom which
gives sense, unity, and hope to the many experiences of personal, social, and
spiritual life. Adult catechesis requires the accurate identification of the
typical characteristics of Christian adults. It must translate them into
objectives and content, and determine certain constants of presentation. It must
establish the most effective methodological approaches and choose formats and
models. The role and identity of the catechists who work with adults and their
formation—the people who are responsible for the catechesis of adults in
the community—are vitally important.(57)
174. Among the criteria which assure an authentic and effective adult
catechesis, mention must be made of the following: (58)
– attention to those to whom it is addressed, to their condition as
adult men and women, requires taking account of their problems and experiences,
their spiritual and cultural resources, with full respect for their differences;
– attention to the lay condition of adults, on whom Baptism confers the
task of "seeking the Kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and
directing them according to God's Will",(59) and whom it calls to holiness;
(60)
– attention to the involvement of the community so that it may be a
welcoming and supportive environment;
– attention to ensure systematic pastoral care of adults, with which
liturgical formation and the service of charity have been integrated.
General and particular tasks of adult catechesis (61)
175. So as to respond to the more profound needs of our time, adult
catechesis must systematically propose the Christian faith in its entirety and
in its authenticity, in accordance with the Church's understanding. It must give
priority to the proclamation of salvation, drawing attention to the many
difficulties, doubts, misunderstandings, prejudices and objections of today. It
must introduce adults to a faith-filled reading of Sacred Scripture and the
practice of prayer. A fundamental service to adult catechesis is given by the
Catechism of the Catholic Church and by those adult catechisms based on
it by the particular Churches. In particular, the tasks of adult catechesis are:
– to promote formation and development of life in the Risen Christ
by adequate means: pedagogy of the sacrements, retreats, spiritual direction...
– to educate toward a correct evaluation of the socio-cultural
changes of our societies in the light of faith: thus the Christian community
is assisted in discerning true values in our civilization, as well as its
dangers, and in adopting appropriate attitudes;
– to clarify current religious and moral questions, that is,
those questions which are encountered by the men and women of our time: for
example, public and private morality with regard to social questions and the
education of future generations;
– to clarify the relationship between temporal actions and
ecclesial action, by demonstrating mutual distinctions and implications and
thus due interaction; to this end, the social doctrine of the Church is an
integral part of adult catechesis;
– to develop the rational foundations of the faith: that the
right understanding of the faith and of the truths to be believed are in
conformity with the demands of reason and the Gospel is always relevant; it is
therefore necessary to promote effectively the pastoral aim of Christian thought
and culture: this helps to overcome certain forms of fundamentalism as well as
subjective and arbitrary interpretations;
– to encourage adults to assume responsibility for the Church's
mission and to be able to give Christian witness in society:
The adult is assisted to discover, evaluate and activate what he has
received by nature and grace, both in the Christian community and by living in
human society; in this way, he will be able to overcome the dangers of
standardization and of anonymity which are particularly dominant in some
societies of today and which lead to loss of identity and lack of appreciation
for the resources and qualities of the individual.
Particular forms of adult catechesis (62)
176. Certain situations and circumstances require special forms of
catechesis:
– catechesis for the Christian initiation or catechumenate of adults:
this has its own express form in the RCIA;
– traditional forms of catechesis of the people of God, duly adapted to
the liturgical year or in the extraordinary form of missions;
– the on-going catechesis of those who have a task of formation in the
community: catechists and those involved in the lay apostolate;
– catechesis for use in particularly significant events in life, such
as Marriage, the Baptism of children and the other sacraments of initiation, at
critical times during youth, in sickness etc.: in such circumstances, people are
disposed more than ever to seek out the true meaning of life;
– is for special events and experiences, such as beginning work,
military service, emigration etc.: these are changes which can give rise to
interior enrichment or bewilderment and in which the need of God's saving word
should be emphasized;
– catechesis for the Christian use of leisure time, especially during
holidays and travel;
– catechesis for special events in the life of the Church and society.
These and many other forms of special catechesis, complement, but do not
replace, the ongoing, systematic, catechetical courses which every ecclesial
community must provide for all adults.
The catechesis of infants and young children (63)
The important context of infancy and childhood (64)
177. This age group, traditionally divided into early infancy or pre-school
age and childhood, possesses, in the light of faith and reason, the grace of the
beginnings of life, from which "valuablepossibilities exist, both for the
building up of the Church and for the making of a more humane society".(65)
As a child of God, in virtue of the gift of Baptism, the child is proclaimed by
Christ to be a privileged member of the Kingdom of God.(66) For various reasons
today, rather more than in the past, the child demands full respect and help in
its spiritual and human growth. This is also true in catechesis which must
always be made available to Christian children. Those who have given life to
children and have enriched them with the gift of Baptism have the duty
continually to nourish it.
Characteristics of catechesis for infants and children (67)
178. The catechesis of children is necessarily linked with their life
situation and conditions. It is the work of various but complementary
educational agents. Some factors of universal relevance may be mentioned:
– Infancy and childhood, each understood according to its own
peculiarities, are a time of primary socialization as well as of human and
Christian education in the family, the school and the Church. These must then be
understood as a decisive moment for subsequent stages of faith.
– In accordance with accepted tradition, this is normally the time in
which Christian initiation, inaugurated with Baptism, is completed. With the
reception of the sacraments, the first organic formation of the child in the
faith and his introduction into the life of the Church is possible.(68)
– The catechetical process in infancy is eminently educational. It
seeks to develop those human resources which provide an anthropological basis
for the life of faith, a sense of trust, of freedom, of self-giving, of
invocation and of joyful participation. Central aspects of the formation of
children are training in prayer and introduction to Sacred Scripture.(69)
– Finally attention must be devoted to the importance of two vital
educational loci: the family and the school. In a certain sense nothing
replaces family catechesis, especially for its positive and receptive
environment, for the example of adults, and for its first explicit experience
and practice of the faith.
179. Beginning school means, for the child, entering a society wider than
the family, with the possibility of greater development of intellectual,
affective and behavioural capacities. Often specific religious instruction will
be given in school. All this requires that catechesis and catechists constantly
co-operate with parents and school teachers as suitable opportunities arise.(70)
Pastors should remember that, in helping parents and educators to fulfil their
mission well, it is the Church who is being built up. Moreover this is an
excellent occasion for adult catechesis.(71)
Infants and children without religious support in the family or who do
not attend school (72)
180. There are indeed many gravely disadvantaged children who lack adequate
religious support in the family, either because they have no true family, or
because they do not attend school, or because they are victims of dysfunctional
social conditions or other environmental factors. Many are not even baptized;
others do not bring to completion the journey of initiation. It is the
responsibility of the Christian community to address this situation by providing
generous, competent and realistic aid, by seeking dialogue with the families, by
proposing appropriate forms of education and by providing catechesis which is
proportionate to the concrete possibilities and needs of these children.
Catechesis of young people (73)
Pre-adolescence, adolescence and young adulthood (74)
181. In general it is observed that the first victims of the spiritual and
cultural crisis gripping the world (75) are the young. It is also true that any
commitment to the betterment of society finds its hopes in them. This should
stimulate the Church all the more to proclaim the Gospel to the world of youth
with courage and creativity. In this respect experience suggests that it is
useful in catechesis to distinguish between pre-adolescence, adolescence and
young adulthood, attending to the results of scientific research in various
countries. In developed regions the question of preadolescence is particularly
significant: sufficient account is not taken of the difficulties, of the needs
and of the human and spiritual resources of pre-adolescents, to the extent of
defining them a negated age-group. Very often at this time the
pre-adolescent, in receiving the sacrament of Confirmation, formally concludes
the process of Christian initiation but from that moment virtually abandons
completely the practice of the faith. This is a matter of serious concern which
requires specific pastoral care, based on the formative resources of the journey
of initiation itself. With regard to the other two categories, it is helpful to
distinguish between adolescence and young adulthood even though it is difficult
to define them strictly. They are understood together as the period of life
which precedes the taking up of responsibilities proper to adults. Youth
catechesis must be profoundly revised and revitalized.
The importance of youth for society and the Church(76)
182. The Church, while regarding young people as "hope", also sees
them as "a great challenge for the future of the Church" (77) herself.
The rapid and tumultuous socio-cultural change, increase in numbers,
self-affirmation for a consistent period before taking up adult
responsibilities, unemployment, in certain countries conditions of permanent
under-development, the pressures of consumer society—all contribute to make
of youth a world in waiting, not infrequently a world of disenchantment, of
boredom, of angst and of marginalization. Alienation from the Church, or a least
diffidence in her regard, lurks in many as a fundamental attitude. Often this
reflects lack of spiritual and moral support in the family and weaknesses in the
catechesis which they have received. On the other hand, many of them are driven
by a strong impetus to find meaning, solidarity, social commitment and even
religious experience.
183. Some consequences for catechesis arise from this. The service of the
faith notes above all the contrasts in the condition of youth as found
concretely in various regions and environments. The heart of catechesis is the
explicit proposal of Christ to the young man in the Gospel; (78) it is a direct
proposal to all young people in terms appropriate to young people, and with
considered understanding of their problems. In the Gospel young people in fact
speak directly to Christ, who reveals to them their "singular richness"
and calls them to an enterprise of personal and community growth, of decisive
value for the fate of society and of the Church.(79) Therefore young people
cannot be considered only objects of catechesis, but also active subjects and
protagonists of evangelization and artisans of social renewal.(80)
Characteristics of catechesis for young people (81)
184. Given the extent of this task, the Catechetical Directories of
particular Churches and national and regional Episcopal Conferences must, taking
into account different contexts, determine more specifically suitable measures
for these areas. Some general directions, however, may be indicated.
– The diversity of the religious situation should be kept in mind:
there are young people who are not even baptized, others have not completed
Christian initiation, others are in grave crises of faith, others are moving
towards making a decision with regard to faith, others have already made such a
decision and call for assistance.
– It should also be remembered that the most successful catechesis is
that which is given in the context of the wider pastoral care of young people,
especially when it addresses the problems affecting their lives. Hence,
catechesis should be integrated with certain procedures, such as analysis of
situations, attention to human sciences and education, the co-operation of the
laity and of young people themselves.
– Well organized group action, membership of valid youth associations
(82) and personal accompaniment of young people, which should also include
spiritual direction as an important element, are useful approaches for effective
catechesis.
185. Among the diverse forms of youth catechesis, provision should be made,
in so far as circumstances permit, for the youth catechumenate during school
years, catechesis for Christian initiation, catechesis on specific themes, as
well as other kinds of occasional and informal meetings.
Generally youth catechesis should be proposed in new ways which are open to
the sensibilities and problems of this age group. They should be of a
theological, ethical, historical and social nature. In particular, due emphasis
should be given to education in truth and liberty as understood by the Gospel,
to the formation of conscience and to education for love. Emphasis should also
be placed on vocational discernment, Christian involvement in society and on
missionary responsibility in the world.(83) It must be emphasized, however, that
frequently contemporary evangelization of young people must adopt a missionary
dimension rather than a strictly catechumenal dimension. Indeed, the
situation often demands that the apostolate amongst young people be an animation
of a missionary or humanitarian nature, as a necessary first step to
bringing to maturity those dispositions favourable to the strictly catechetical
moment. Very often, in reality, it is useful to intensify pre-catechumenal
activity within the general educational process. One of the difficulties to
be addressed and resolved is the question of "language" (mentality,
sensibility, tastes, style, vocabulary) between young people and the Church
(catechesis, catechists). A necessary "adaptation of catechesis to
young people" is urged, in order to translate into their terms "the
message of Jesus with patience and wisdom and without betrayal".(84)
Catechesis for the aged (85)
Old age, gift of God to the Church
186. In many countries, the growing number of old people represents a new
and specific pastoral challenge for the Church. Not infrequently the old are
seen as passive objects and possibly even as an encumbrance. In the light of
faith, however, they must be understood as a gift of God to the Church and to
society, and must also be given adequate catechetical care. In catechesis, they
have the same rights and duties as all Christians.
Attention must always be paid to the diversity of personal, family and
social conditions. In particular, account must be taken of factors such as
isolation and the risk of marginalization. The family has a primary function,
since it is here that the proclamation of the faith can take place in an
environment of acceptance and of love which best confirm the validity of the
word. In any event, catechesis addressed to the aged will associate with the
content of faith the caring presence of the catechist and of the community of
believers. For this reason, it is most desirable that the aged participate fully
in the catechetical journey of the community.
Catechesis of fulfilment and hope
187. Catechesis for the aged pays particular attention to certain aspects of
their condition of faith. An aged person may have a rich and solid faith, in
which case catechesis, in a certain sense, brings to fulfilment a journey of
faith in an attitude of thanksgiving and hopeful expectation. Others live a
faith weakened by poor Christian practice. In this case, catechesis becomes a
moment of new light and religious experience. Sometimes people reach old age
profoundly wounded in body and soul. In these circumstances, catechesis can help
them to live their condition in an attitude of prayer, forgiveness and inner
peace.
At any rate, the condition of the old calls for a catechesis of hope, which
derives from the certainty of finally meeting God. It is always a personal
benefit and an enrichment of the Christian community, when the old bear witness
to a faith which grows even more resplendent as they gradually approach the
great moment of meeting the Lord.
Wisdom and dialogue (86)
188. The Bible presents us with the figure of the old man as the symbol of a
person rich in wisdom and fear of God, and as a repository of an intense
experience of life, which, in a certain sense, makes him a natural "catechist"
in the community. He is a witness to a tradition of faith, a teacher of life,
and a worker of charity. Catechesis values this grace. It helps the aged to
discover the riches within themselves and to assume the role of catechists among
children—for whom they are often valued grandparents—and for young
people and adults. Thus a fundamental dialogue between the generations can be
promoted both within the family and within the community.
CHAPTER III
Catechesis for special situations, mentalities
and environments
Catechesis for the disabled and the handicapped (87)
. Every Christian community considers those who suffer handicaps, physical
or mental, as well as other forms of disability—especially children—as
persons particularly beloved of the Lord. A growth in social and ecclesial
consciousness, together with undeniable progress in specialized pedagogy, makes
it possible for the family and other formative centres to provide adequate
catechesis for these people, who, as baptized, have this right and, if
non-baptized, because they are called to salvation. The love of the Father for
the weakest of his children and the continuous presence of Jesus and His Spirit
give assurance that every person, however limited, is capable of growth in
holiness.
Education in the faith, which involves the family above all else, calls for
personalized and adequate programmes. It should take into account the findings
of pedagogical research. It is most effectively carried out in the context of
the integral education of the person. On the other hand, the risk must be
avoided of separating this specialized catechesis from the general pastoral care
of the community. It is therefore necessary that the community be made aware of
such catechesis and be involved in it. The particular demands of this
catechesis require a special competence from catechists and render their service
all the more deserving.
The catechesis of the marginalized
190. The catechesis of the marginalized must be considered within the same
perspective. It addresses itself to immigrants, refugees, nomads, travelling
people, the chronically ill, drug addicts, prisoners. The solemn word of Jesus,
which acknowledged, as done to him any good work done to "the least of the
brethren" (Mt 25,40;45) guarantees the grace needed to work well in
difficult environments. Permanent signs of the strength of catechesis are its
capacity to identify different situations, to meet the needs and questions of
everyone, to stress the value of generous and patient personal contact, to
proceed with trust and realism, sometimes turning to indirect and occasional
forms of catechesis. The Christian community fraternally supports those
catechists who dedicate themselves to this service.
Catechesis for different groups
191. Catechesis, today, is confronted by subjects who, because of
professional training or more broadly cultural formation, require special
programmes. These include catechesis for workers, for professionals, for
artists, for scientists and for university students. This is warmly recommended
within the common journey of the Christian community. Clearly, all these sectors
demand a competent approach and language adapted to those being catechized,
while always maintaining fidelity to the message which catechesis transmits.(88)
Environmental catechesis
192. The service of the faith today takes careful note of the environment
and human habitats. It is in these that the person lives his concrete existence.
It is here that he is influenced and that he influences. Here too he exercises
his responsibilities. Very broadly, two major environments must be mentioned:
rural and urban. Both call for different forms of catechesis. The catechesis of
country people will necessarily reflect needs experienced in the country. Such
needs are often linked with poverty, sometimes with fear and superstition, but
also rich in simplicity, trust in life, a sense of solidarity, faith in God and
fidelity to religious traditions. Urban catechesis must take account of a
variety of social conditions, sometimes so extreme as to extend from exclusive
areas of prosperity to pockets of poverty and marginalization. Stress can
dominate the rhythm of life. Mobility is easy. There are many temptations to
escapism and irresponsibility. Oppressive anonymity and loneliness are
widespread.
For both of these environments the service of the faith requires adequate
planning, trained catechists, useful aids and familiarity with the resources of
the mass-media.
CHAPTER IV
Catechesis in the socio-religious context
Catechesis in complex and pluralistic situations (89)
. Many communities and individuals are called to live in a pluralistic and
secularized world,(90) in which forms of unbelief and religious indifference may
be encountered together with vibrant expressions of religious and cultural
pluralism. In many individuals the search for certainty and for values appears
strong. Spurious forms of religion, however, are also evident as well as dubious
adherence to the faith. In the face of such diversity, some Christians are
confused or lost. They become incapable of knowing how to confront situations or
to judge the messages which they receive. They may abandon regular practice of
the faith and end by living as though there were no God—often resorting to
surrogate or pseudo-religions. Their faith is exposed to trials. When threatened
it risks being extinguished altogether, unless it is constantly nourished and
sustained.
194. In these circumstances, a catechesis of evangelization becomes
indispensable: a catechesis "which must be impregnated with the spirit of
the Gospel and imparted in language adapted to the times and to the hearers".(91)
Such catechesis seeks to educate Christians in a sense of their identity as
baptized, as believers, as members of the Church, who are open to dialogue with
the world. It reminds them of the fundamental elements of the faith. It
stimulates a real process of conversion. For them, it deepens the truth and the
value of the Christian message in the face of theoretical and practical
objections. It helps them to discern the Gospel and to live it out in every-day
life. It enables them to give the reasons for the hope that is theirs.(92) It
encourages them to exercise their missionary vocation by witness, dialogue and
proclamation.
Catechesis and popular devotion (93)
195. As a vital dimension in Catholic life, there exists in Christian
communities, particular expressions of the search for God and the religious life
which are full of fervour and purity of intention, which can be called "popular
piety". "For it does indicate a certain thirst for God such as only
those who are simple and poor in spirit can experience. It can arouse in them a
capacity for self dedication and for the exercise of heroism when there is a
question of professing the faith. It gives men a keen sensitivity by virtue of
which they can appreciate the ineffable attributes of God: his fatherly
compassion, his providence, his benevolence and loving presence. It can develop
in the inmost depths of man habits of virtue rarely to be found otherwise in the
same degree, such as patience, acceptance of the Cross in daily life,
detachment, openness to other men and a spirit of ready service".(94) This
is a rich yet vulnerable reality in which the faith at its base may be in need
of purification and consolidation. A catechesis, therefore, is required which is
of such religious richness as to be quick to appreciate its inherent nature and
its desirable qualities and zealous to direct it so that the dangers arising out
of its errors or fanaticism, superstition, syncretism, or religious ignorance
may be avoided. "When it is wisely directed popular piety of this kind can
make a constantly increasing contribution towards bringing the masses of our
people into contact with God in Jesus Christ".(95)
196. Multiple forms of devotion to the Mother of God have developed in
different circumstances of time and place, in response to popular sensibilities
and cultural differences. Certain forms of Marian devotion however, because of
long usage, require a renewed catechesis to restore to them elements that have
become lost or obscured. By such catechesis the perennial value of Marian
devotion can be emphasised, doctrinal elements gleaned from theological
reflection and the Church's Magisterium assimilated. Catechesis on the Blessed
Virgin Mary should always express clearly the intrinsic Trinitarian,
Christological and ecclesiological aspects of mariology. In revising or drawing
up materials for use in Marina peity account should be taken of biblical,
liturgical, ecumenial and anthroplogical orientation.(96)
Catechesis in the context of ecumenism (97)
197. Every Christian community, by the mere fact of being what it is, is
moved by the Spirit to recognize its ecumenical vocation in the circumstances in
which it finds itself, by participating in ecumenical dialogue and initiatives
to foster the unity of Christians. Catechesis, therefore, is always called to
assume an "ecumenical dimension" (98) everywhere. This is done,
firstly, by an exposition of all of Revelation, of which the Catholic Church
conserves the deposit, while respecting the hierarchy of truths.(99) In the
second place, catechesis brings to the fore that unity of faith which exists
between Christians and explains the divisions existing between them and the
steps being taken to overcome them. (100) Catechesis also arouses and nourishes
a true desire for unity, particularly with the love of Sacred Scripture.
Finally, it prepares children, young people and adults to live in contact with
brothers and sisters of other confessions, by having them cultivate both their
own Catholic identity and respect for the faith of others.
198. In the context of different Christian confessions, the Bishops may deem
opportune or necessary specific ecumenical co-operation in the area of religious
instruction. It is important, however, that Catholics are guaranteed, at the
same time, a genuinely Catholic catechesis, by specific provisions and with all
the more care. (101)
The teaching of religion in schools attended by Christians of diverse
confessions can also have an ecumenical value when Christian doctrine is
genuinely presented. This affords the opportunity for dialogue through which
prejudice and ignorance can be overcome and a greater openness to better
reciprocal understanding achieved.
Catechesis in relation to Judaism
199. Special attention needs to be given to catechesis in relation to the
Jewish religion. (102) Indeed "when she delves into her own mystery, the
Church, the People of God in the New Covenant, discovers her links with the
Jewish People, the first to hear the word of God". (103)
"Religious instruction, catechesis, and preaching should not form only
towards objectivity, justice and tolerance but also in understanding and
dialogue. Both of our traditions are too closely related to be able to ignore
each other. It is necessary to encourage a reciprocal consciousness at all
levels". (104) In particular, an objective of catechesis should be to
overcome every form of anti-semitism. (105)
Catechesis in the context of other religions (106)
200. For the most part, Christians today live in multi-religious contexts;
many, indeed, in a minority position. In this context, especially with relation
to Islam, catechesis takes on a particular importance and is called to assume a
delicate responsibility which is expressed in several duties. Above all, it
deepens and strengthens, by means of appropriate adaptation or inculturation,
the identity of believers—particularly where they constitute a minority—who
find themselves in an obligatory encounter between the Gospel of Jesus Christ
and the message of other religions. For this exchange, solid, fervent, Christian
communities and well prepared, native catechists are indispensable. In the
second place, catechesis assists in creating awareness of the presence of other
religions. It necessarily facilitates Christians in discerning the elements in
those religions which are contrary to the Christian message, but also educates
them to accept the seeds of the Gospel (semina Verbi) which are found in
them and which can sometimes constitute an authentic preparation for the
Gospel.
In the third instance, catechesis promotes a lively missionary sense among
believers. This is shown by clear witness to the faith, by an attitude of
respect and mutual understanding, by dialogue and cooperation in defence of the
rights of the person and of the poor and, where possible, with explicit
proclamation of the Gospel.
Catechesis in relation to "new religious movements" (107)
201. In a climate of cultural and religious relativism, and sometime because
of the inappropriate conduct of Christians, a proliferation of "new
religious movements" has occurred. These are sometimes called sects or
cults but, because of the abundance of names and tendencies, are difficult to
categorize in a comprehensive and precise framework. From available data,
movements of Christian origin can be identified, while others derive from
oriental religions, and others again appear to be connected with esoteric
traditions. Their doctrines and their practices are of concern because they are
alien to the content of the Christian faith. It is therefore necessary to
promote among Christians exposed to such risks "a commitment to
evangelization and integral systematic catechesis which must be accompanied by a
witness which translates these into life". (108) Thus it is necessary to
overcome the danger of ignorance and prejudice, to assist the faithful in
engaging correctly with the Scriptures, to awaken in them a lively experience of
prayer, to defend them from error, to educate them in responsibility for the
faith which they have received, confronting dangerous situations of loneliness,
poverty and suffering with the love of the Gospel. Because of the religious
yearning which these movements can express, they should be considered "a
market place to be evangelized", in which some of the most pressing
questions can find answers. "The Church has an immense spiritual patrimony
to offer mankind, a heritage in Christ, who called himself ?the way, and the
truth, and the life' (Jn 14:6)". (109)
CHAPTER V
Catechesis in the socio-cultural context
(110)
Catechesis and contemporary culture (111)
. "We can say of catechesis, as well as of evangelization in general,
that it is called to bring the power of the Gospel into the very heart of
culture and cultures". (112) The principles governing the adaptation and
inculturation of catechesis have already been discussed. (113) It suffices to
reaffirm that the catechetical discourse has as its necessary and eminent guide
"the rule of faith", illuminated by the Magisterium of the Church and
further investigated by theology. It must always be remembered that the history
of catechesis, particularly in the patristic period, from several perspectives,
is the history of the inculturation of the faith, and as such it merits careful
study and meditation. It is, at the same time, an open-ended history which will
continue to require long periods of ongoing assimilation of the Gospel. In this
chapter, some methodological directions will be expounded concerning this task,
as demanding as it is necessary, ever easy and open to the risks of syncretism
and other misunderstandings. It can indeed be said on this subject, which is
particularly important today, that there exists a need for greater systematic
and universal reflection on catechetical experience.
Duties of catechesis for inculturation of the faith (114)
203. These duties form an organic whole and are briefly expressed as
follows:
– to know in depth the culture of persons and the extent of its
penetration into their lives;
– to recognize a cultural dimension in the Gospel itself, while
affirming, on the one hand, that this does not spring from some human cultural
humus, and recognizing, on the other, that the Gospel cannot be isolated
from the cultures in which it was initially inserted and in which it has found
expression through the centuries;
– to proclaim the profound change, the conversion, which the Gospel, as
a "transforming and regenerating" (115) force works in culture;
– to witness to the transcendence and the non-exhaustion of the Gospel
with regard to culture, while at the same time discerning those seeds of the
Gospel which may be present in culture;
– to promote a new expression of the Gospel in accordance with
evangelized culture, looking to a language of the faith which is the common
patrimony of the faithful and thus a fundamental element of communion;
– To maintain integrally the content of the faith and esure that the
doctrinal formulations of tradition are explained and illustrated, while taking
into account the cultural and historical circumstaces of those being instructed,
and to avoid defacing or falsifying the contents.
Methodological processes
204. Catechesis, while avoiding all manipulation of culture, is not limited
to a mere juxtaposition of the Gospel with culture in some "decorative
manner". Rather it proposes the Gospel "in a vital way, profoundly, by
going to the very roots of culture and the cultures of mankind". (116) This
defines a dynamic process consisting of various interactive elements: a
listening in the culture of the people, to discern an echo (omen, invocation,
sign) of the word of God; a discernment of what has an authentic Gospel value or
is at least open to the Gospel; a purification of what bears the mark of sin
(passions, structures of evil) or of human frailty; an impact on people through
stimulating an attitude of radical conversion to God, of dialogue, and of
patient interior maturation.
The need for and criteria of evaluation
205. In the evaluation phase, particularly in cases of initial attempts or
experimentation, careful attention must always be given to ensuring that the
catechetical process is not infiltrated by syncretistic elements. In instances
where this happens, attempts at inculturation will prove dangerous and erroneous
and must be corrected. In positive terms, a catechesis which inspires not only
intellectual assimilation of the faith, but also touches the heart and
transforms conduct is correct. Catechesis, thus, generates a dynamic life which
is unified by the faith. It bridges the gap between belief and life, between the
Christian message and the cultural context, and brings forth the fruits of true
holiness.
Those with responsibility for the processes of inculturation
206. "Inculturation must involve the whole People of God, and not just
a few experts, since the people reflect the authentic 'sensus fidei'
which must never be lost sight of. Inculturation needs to be guided and
encouraged, but not forced, lest it give rise to negative reactions among
Christians. It must be an expression of the community's life, one which must
mature within the community itself and not be exclusively the result of erudite
research". (117) The thrust to incarnate the Gospel which is the specific
task of inculturation requires the co-operation in catechesis of all who live in
the same cultural condition—clergy, pastoral workers (catechists) and
laity.
Privileged forms and means
207. Among the forms most apt to inculturate the faith, it is helpful to
bear in mind catechesis of the young and adult catechesis on account of the
possibilities which they offer of better correlating faith and life. Neither can
inculturation be neglected in the Christian initiation of children precisely
because of the important cultural implications of this process: acquiring new
motivations in life, education of conscience, learning a biblical and
sacramental language, knowledge of the historical density of Christianity.
A privileged means of this is liturgical catechesis with its richness of
signs in expressing the Gospel message and its accessibility to so great a part
of the people of God. The Sunday homily, the content of the Lectionary and the
structure of the liturgical year should be valued afresh, along with other
occasions of particularly significant catechesis (marriages, funerals,
visits to the sick, feasts of patron saints etc.). The care of the family
always remains central, since it is the primary agent of an incarnate
transmission of the faith.
Catechesis also places special emphasis on multi-ethnic and multi-cultural
situations in that it leads to a greater discovery and appreciation of the
resources of diverse groups to receive and express the faith.
Language (118)
208. Inculturation of the faith, under certain aspects, is a linguistic
task. This implies that catechesis respect and value the language proper to the
message, especially biblical language, as well as the historical-traditional
language of the Church (creed, liturgy) and doctrinal language (dogmatic
formulations). It is also necessary for catechesis to enter into dialogue
with forms and terms proper to the culture of those to whom it is addressed.
Finally, catechesis must stimulate new expressions of the Gospel in the culture
in which it has been planted. In the process of eculturating the Gospel,
catechesis should not be afraid to use traditional formulae and the technical
language of the faith, but it must express its meaning and demonstrate its
existential importance. Similarly, it is also the duty of catechesis "to
speak a language suited to today's children and young people in general and to
other categories of people—the language of students, intellectuals and
scientists; the language of the illiterate or of people of simple culture; the
language of the handicapped, and so on". (119)
The media of communication
209. Intrinsically connected with the question of language is that of the
means of communication. One of the most effective and pervasive means is the
mass media. "The very evangelization of modern culture depends to a
great extent on the influence of the media". (120)
While not repeating what has already been said of the mass media elsewhere,
(121) some indications are proposed as useful in inculturation: a greater
appreciation of the media for their specific communication quality, while
realizing the importance of balancing the language of image and that of word;
the safeguarding of the genuine religious meaning of selected forms of
expression; the promotion of critical maturity among audiences, stimulating them
to a deep, personal discernment of what has been received from the media; the
production of catechetical aids congruent with this aim and the effective
co-operation of all those engaged in pastoral initiatives. (122)
210. The catechism and, above all, the Catechism of the Catholic Church
is central to the process of inculturation, and it must be used so as to evince
a "vast range of services... which aim at inculturation, which, to be
effective, must never cease to be true". (123)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church expressly calls for the
preparation of appropriate local catechisms, incorporating those adaptations
required by difference of culture, age, spirituality and in the social and
ecclesial situations of those to whom catechesis is addressed. (124)
Anthropological environments and cultural tendencies
211. The Gospel seeks a catechesis which is open, generous and courageous in
reaching people where they live, especially in encountering those nuclei
in which the most elementary and fundamental cultural exchanges take place, such
as the family, the school, the work environment and free time.
It is important for catechesis to discern and penetrate these environments,
as it is there that the major cultural tendencies have greater impact in
creating and popularizing such models of life as urban life, migratory or
tourist influxes, the world of youth and other socially relevant phenomena.
Indeed "there are so many sectors to enlighten with the light of the Gospel",
(125) especially those cultural areas denominated 'modern areopagi' like
communications; civil campaigns for peace, development and liberation of
peoples; the protection of creation; the defence of human rights, especially of
minorities, women and children; scientific research and international relations.
Intervention in concrete situations
212. The process of inculturation operated by catechesis is continually
called to confront many, different concrete situations. Here some of the more
frequent and relevant are mentioned. In the first place, it is necessary to
distinguish inculturation in countries of recent Christian origin, where the
primary proclamation of the Gospel must yet be consolidated, from inculturation
in countries of long Christian tradition which have need of new evangelization.
Account must also be taken of situations which are open to conflict and
tension deriving from factors such as ethnic pluralism, religious pluralism,
differences of development which sometimes are strident; urban and extra-urban
life-styles, dominant thought-systems, which in some countries are strongly
influenced by massive secularization and by strong religiosity in others.
Finally, inculturation seeks to respect the significant cultural tendencies of a
particular country, represented in the various social and professional strata,
such as men and women of science and culture, the world of workers, the youth,
the marginalized, foreigners and the disabled. In more general terms, "the
formation of Christians will take the greatest account of local human culture,
which contributes to formation itself, and will help to discern the value,
whether implanted in tradition or proposed in modern affairs. Attention should
be paid to diverse cultures which can exist in one and the same people or nation
at the same time". (126)
Tasks of the local Churches (127)
213. Inculturation is a task for the particular churches and is referred to
by all areas of the Christian life. Precisely because of the nature of
inculturation which takes place in concrete and specific circumstances, "a
legitimate attention to the particular Churches cannot but enrich the Church. It
is indeed pressing and indispensable". (128) To this end, and most
opportunely, Episcopal Conferences, almost everywhere, are proposing
Catechetical Directories (and analogous instruments), catechisms and aids,
work-shops and centres of formation. In the light of what has been expressed in
the present Directory, an updating and revision of local directories becomes
necessary. This should stimulate competition between centres of research, whilst
availing of the experience of catechists and encouraging the participation of
the people of God.
Guided initiatives
214. The importance of the matter, as well as, the indispensable phase of
research and experimentation requires initiatives guided by legitimate Pastors.
These include:
– promotion of widespread catechesis which serves to overcome ignorance
and misinformation, the great obstacle of every attempt at inculturation: this
permits that dialogue and direct involvement of persons who can best indicate
effective ways of proclaiming the Gospel;
– carrying out pilot-schemes of inculturation of the faith within a
programme established by the Church: the Catechumenate of adults according to
the RCIA assumes a particularly influential role in this respect;
– if, in the same ecclesial area there are several linguistic or ethnic
groups, it is always useful to provide for the translation of guides and
directories into the various languages, promoting, by means of catechetical
centres, an homogenous catechetical service for each group;
– setting up a dialogue of reciprocal learning and of communion between
the Churches, and between these and the Holy See: this allows for the
certification of experiences, criteria, programmes, tools and for a more valid
and up to date inculturation.
PART FIVE
CATECHESIS IN THE PARTICULAR CHURCH
Catechesis in the particular Church
"And he went up into the hills, and called to him those whom he
desired; and they came to him. And he appointed twelve, to be with him, and to
be sent out to preach and have authority to cast out demons" (Mk
3:13-15). "Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood
has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you,
you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church" (Mt
16:17-18). The Church of Jerusalem moved by the Holy Spirit gave birth
to the Churches: "The Church of God which is at Corinth" (1 Cor
1:2); "The Churches of Asia" (1 Cor 16:19); "The Churches
of Christ in Judaea" (Gal 1:22); "The seven Churches: Ephesus,
Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, Laodicea" (cf. Apoc
2,1-3,22).
The meaning and purpose of Part Five
215. From what has been said in the preceding parts concerning the nature of
catechesis, its content, pedagogy, and those to whom it is addressed, there
arises the nature of catechetical pastoral work, which is done in the particular
Church. Part Five of this Directory presents its more important elements.
216. The first chapter reflects upon the catechetical ministry and its
agents. Catechesis is a shared but differentiated responsibility. Bishops,
priests, deacons, religious and the lay faithful play their part, each according
to their respective responsibilities and charisms.
The second chapter analyses catechists' formation, a decisive element in
catechetical activity. If it is important that catechesis be provided with valid
catechetical material, yet more important is the preparation of suitable
catechists. The third chapter studies the loci where catechesis is
realized.
The fourth chapter studies the more organizational aspects of catechesis:
the structures of responsibility, the co-ordination of catechesis and some tasks
specific to catechetical service. The directives and suggestions offered in this
section cannot find immediate and contemporary application in all parts of the
Church. For those nations or regions in which catechetical activity has not yet
had the means of reaching a sufficient level of development, these orientations
and suggestions offer but a series of goals to be achieved gradually.
CHAPTER I
The ministry of catechesis in the porticular
Churches and its agents
The particular Church (129)
217. The proclamation, transmission and lived experience of the Gospel are
realized in the particular Church (130) or Diocese. (131) The particular Church
is constituted by the community of Christ's disciples, (132) who live incarnated
in a definite socio-cultural space. Every particular Church "makes present
the universal Church together with all of its essential elements". (133) In
reality the universal Church, made fruitful by the Holy Spirit on the first
Pentecost, "brings forth the particular Churches as children and is
expressed in them". (134) The universal Church, as the Body of Christ, is
thus made manifest as "a Body of Churches". (135)
218. The proclamation of the Gospel and the Eucharist are the two pillars on
which is built and around which gathers the particular Church. Like the
universal Church she also "exists for evangelization". (136)
Catechesis is a basic evangelizing activity of every particular Church. By means
of it the Diocese gives to all its members, and to all who come with a desire to
give themselves to Jesus Christ, a formative process which permits knowledge,
celebration, living and proclamation within a particular cultural horizon. In
this way the confession of faith—the goal of catechesis—can be
proclaimed by the disciples of Christ "in their own tongues". (137) As
at Pentecost, so also today, the Church of Christ, "present and operative"
(138) in the particular Churches, "speaks all languages", (139) since
like a growing tree she extends her roots into all cultures.
The ministry of catechesis in the particular Church
219. In all the ministries and services which the particular Church performs
to carry out its mission of evangelization, catechesis occupies a position of
importance. (140) In this the following traits are underlined:
a) In the Diocese catechesis is a unique service (141) performed
jointly by priests, deacons, religious and laity, in communion with the Bishop.
The entire Christian community should feel responsible for this service. Even if
priests, deacons, religious and laity exercise catechesis in common, they do so
in different ways, each according to his particular condition in the Church (sacred
ministers, consecrated persons and the Christian faithful). (142) Through
them all and their differing functions, the catechetical ministry hands on the
word in a complete way and witnesses to the reality of the Church. Were one of
these forms absent catechesis would lose something of its richness as well as
part of its proper meaning;
b) On the other hand it is a fundamental ecclesial service,
indispensable for the growth of the Church. It is not an action which can be
realized in the community on a private basis or by purely personal initiative.
The ministry of catechesis acts in the name of the Church by its participating
in mission.
c) The catechetical ministry—among all ministries and ecclesial
services—has a proper character which derives from the specific role of
catechetical activity within the process of evangelization. The task of the
catechist, as an educator in the faith, differs from that of other pastoral
agents (liturgical, charitable and social) even if he or she always acts
in coordination with them.
d) In order that the catechetical ministry in the Diocese be
fruitful, it needs to involve other agents, not specifically catechists, who
support and sustain catechetical activity by performing indispensable tasks such
as: the formation of catechists, the production of catechetical material,
reflection, organization and planning. These agents, together with catechists,
are at the service of a single diocesan catechetical ministry even if all do not
play the same roles or act on the same basis.
The Christian community and responsibility for catechesis
220. Catechesis is a responsibility of the entire Christian community.
Christian initiation, indeed, "should not be the work of catechists and
priests alone, but of the whole community of the faithful". (143)
Continuing education in the faith is a question which concerns the whole
community; catechesis, therefore, is an educational activity which arises from
the particular responsibility of every member of the community, in a rich
context of relationships, so that catechumens and those being catechized are
actively incorporated into the life of the community. The Christian community
follows the development of catechetical processes, for children, young people
and adults, as a duty that involves and binds it directly. (144) Again, at the
end of the catechetical process, it is the Christian community that welcomes the
catechized in a fraternal environment, "in which they will be able to live
in the fullest way what they have learned". (145)
221. The Christian community not only gives much to those who are being
catechized but also receives much from them. New converts, especially
adolescents and adults, in adhering to Jesus Christ, bring to the community
which receives them new religious and human wealth. Thus the community grows and
develops. Catechesis not only brings to maturity the faith of those being
catechized but also brings the community itself to maturity.
Yet, while the entire Christian community is responsible for Christian
catechesis and all of it members bear witness to the faith, only some receive
the ecclesial mandate to be catechists. Together with the primordial mission
which parents have in relation to their children, the Church confers the
delicate task of organically transmitting the faith within the community on
particular, specifically called members of the people of God. (146)
The Bishop has primary responsibility for catechesis in the particular
Church
222. The Second Vatican Council gave much importance to the proclamation and
transmission of the Gospel in the episcopal ministry. "Among the principal
duties of Bishops, that of preaching the Gospel excels". (147) In carrying
out this task, Bishops are, above all, "heralds of the faith", (148)
seeking new disciples for Jesus Christ, and "authentic teachers",
(149) transmitting the faith to be professed and lived to those entrusted to
their care. Missionary proclamation and catechesis are two closely united
aspects of the prophetic ministry of Bishops. To perform this duty Bishops
receive "the charism of truth". (150) The Bishops are "beyond
all others the ones primarily responsible for catechesis and catechists par
excellence". (151) In the Church's history the preponderant role of great
and saintly Bishops is evident. Their writings and initiatives mark the richest
period of the catechumenate. They regarded catechesis as one of the most
fundamental tasks of their ministry. (152)
223. This concern for catechetical activity will lead the Bishop to assume "the
overall direction of catechesis" (153) in the particular Church, which
implies among other things:
– that he ensure effective priority for an active and fruitful
catechesis in his Church "putting into operation the necessary personnel,
means and equipment, and also financial resources"; (154)
– that he exercise solicitude for catechesis by direct intervention in
the transmission of the Gospel to the faithful, and that he be vigilant with
regard to the authencity of the faith as well as with regard to the quality of
texts and instruments being used in catechesis; (155)
– "that he bring about and maintain... a real passion for
catechesis, a passion embodied in a pertinent and effective organization",
(156) out of a profound conviction of the importance of catechesis for the
Christian life of the diocese;
– that he ensure "that catechists are adequately prepared for
their task, being well instructed in the doctrine of the Church and
possessing both a practical and theoretical knowledge of the laws of psychology
and educational method"; (157)
– that he establish an articulated, coherent and global programme
in the Diocese in order to respond to the true needs of the faithful: it
should be integrated into the diocesan pastoral plan and co-ordinated with the
programmes of the Episcopal Conference.
Priests, pastors and educators of the Christian community
224. The function proper to the presbyterate in the catechetical task arises
from the sacrament of Holy Orders which they have received. "Through that
sacrament priests, by the anointing of the Holy Spirit, are signed with a
special character and so are configured to Christ the priest, in such a way that
they are able to act in the person of Christ the head". (158) In virtue of
this ontological configuration to Christ, the ministry of the priest is a
service which forms the Christian community and co-ordinates and strengthens
other charisms and services. In catechesis the sacrament of Holy Orders
constitutes priests as "educators of the faith". (159) They work,
therefore, to see that the faithful are properly formed and reach true Christian
maturity. (160) Conscious, on the other hand, that their "ministerial
Priesthood" (161) is at the service of "the common Priesthood of the
faithful", (162) priests foster the vocation and work of catechists and
assist them in carrying out a function which springs from Baptism and is
exercised in virtue of a mission entrusted to them by the Church. Thus priests
put into effect the request which the Second Vatican Council made of them: "to
recognize and promote the dignity of the laity and their specific role in the
Church's mission". (163)
225. The catechetical tasks proper to the presbyterate and particularly to
parish priests are: (164)
– to foster a sense of common responsibility for catechesis in
the Christian community, a task which involves all, and a recognition and
appreciation for catechists and their mission;
– to care for the basic orientation of catechesis and its
planning by giving emphasis to active participation of catechists and by
insisting that catechesis be "well structured and oriented"; (165)
– to promote and to discern vocations to the service of
catechesis and, as catechist of catechists, attend to their formation by giving
the greatest attention to this duty;
– to integrate catechetical activity into his programme of community
evangelization; and foster the link between catechesis sacramets and the
liturgy;
– to secure the bonds between the catechesis of his community and the
diocesan pastoral programme by helping catechists become active
co-operators in a common diocesan programme.
Experience bears out that the quality of catechesis in a community depends
very largely on the presence and activity of the priest.
Parents, primary educators of their children (166)
226. The witness of Christian life given by parents in the family comes to
children with tenderness and parental respect. Children thus perceive and
joyously live the closeness of God and of Jesus made manifest by their parents
in such a way that this first Christian experience frequently leaves decisive
traces which last throughout life. This childhood religious awakening which
takes place in the family is irreplaceable. (167) It is consolidated when, on
the occasion of certain family events and festivities, "care is taken to
explain in the home the Christian or religious content of these events".
(168) It is deepened all the more when parents comment on the more methodical
catechesis which their children later receive in the Christian community and
help them to appropriate it. Indeed, "family catechesis
precedes...accompanies and enriches all forms of catechesis". (169)
227. Parents receive in the sacrament of Matrimony "the grace and the
ministry of the Christian education of their children", (170) to whom they
transmit and bear witness to human and religious values. This educational
activity which is both human and religious is "a true ministry", (171)
through which the Gospel is transmitted and radiated so that family life is
transformed into a journey of faith and the school of Christian life. As the
children grow, exchange of faith becomes mutual and "in a catechetical
dialogue of this sort, each individual both receives and gives". (172) It
is for this reason that the Christian community must give very special attention
to parents. By means of personal contact, meetings, courses and also adult
catechesis directed toward parents, the Christian community must help them
assume their responsibility—which is particularly delicate today—of
educating their children in the faith. This is especially pressing in those
areas where civil legislation does not permit or makes difficult freedom of
education in the faith. (173) In this case "the domestic Church"
(174) is virtually the only environment in which children and young people can
receive authentic catechesis.
The role of religious in catechesis
228. In a special way the Church calls those in consecrated life to
catechetical activity and wishes that "religious communities dedicate as
much as possible of what ability and means that they have to the specific work
of catechesis". (175) The particular contribution to catechesis of
religious and of members of societies of apostolic life derives from their
specific condition. The profession of the evangelical counsels, which
characterizes the religious life, constitutes a gift to the whole Christian
community. In diocesan catechetical activity their original and particular
contribution can never be substituted for by priests or by laity. This original
contribution is born of public witness to their consecration, which makes them a
living sign of the reality of the Kingdom: "it is the profession of these
counsels, within a permanent state of life recognized by the Church, that
characterizes the life consecrated to God". (176) Although evangelical
values must be lived by every Christian, those in consecrated life "incarnate
the Church in her desire to abandon herself to the radicalism of the beatitudes".
(177) The witness of religious united to the witness of the laity shows forth
the one face of the Church which is a sign of the Kingdom of God. (178)
229. "Many religious institutes for men and women came into being for
the purpose of giving Christian education to children and young people,
especially the most abandoned". (179) That same charism of the founders is
such that many religious collaborate today in diocesan adult catechesis.
Throughout history many men and women religious "have been committed to the
Church's catechetical activity". (180) The founding charisms (181) are not
a marginal consideration when religious assume catechetical tasks. While
maintaining intact the proper character of catechesis, the charisms of the
various religious communities express this common task but with their own proper
emphases, often of great religious, social and pedagogical depth. The history of
catechesis demonstrates the vitality which these charisms have brought to the
Church's educational activity.
Lay catechists
230. The catechetical activity of the laity also has a proper character
which is due to their condition in the Church: "their secular character is
proper and peculiar to the laity". (182) The laity engage in catechesis on
the basis of their insertion in the world, sharing all the demands of humanity
and bringing to the transmission of the Gospel specific sensitivity and nuances:
"this evangelization, that is, the proclamation of Christ by word and the
testimony of life, acquires a specific property and peculiar efficacy because it
is accomplished in the ordinary circumstances of the world". (183) Indeed
by sharing the same form of life as those whom they catechize, lay catechists
have a special sensitivity for incarnating the Gospel in the concrete life of
men and women. Catechumens and those receiving catechesis can find in them a
Christian model for their future as believers.
231. The vocation of the laity to catechesis springs from the sacrament of
Baptism. It is strengthened by the sacrament of Confirmation. Through the
sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation they participate in the "priestly,
prophetic and kingly ministry of Christ". (184) In addition to the common
vocation of the apostolate, some lay people feel called interiorly by God to
assume the service of catechist. The Church awakens and discerns this divine
vocation and confers the mission to catechize. The Lord Jesus invites men and
women, in a special way, to follow him, teacher and formator of disciples. This
personal call of Jesus Christ and its relationship to him are the true moving
forces of catechetical activity. "From this loving knowledge of Christ
springs the desire to proclaim him, to 'evangelize,' and to lead others to the
'Yes' of faith in Jesus Christ". (185) To feel called to be a catechist and
to receive this mission from the Church acquires different levels of dedication
inaccordance with the particular characteristics of individuals. At times the
catechist can collaborate in the service of catechesis over a limited period or
purely on an occasional basis, but it is always a valuable service and a worthy
collaboration. The importance of the ministry of catechesis, however, would
suggest that there should be in a Diocese a certain number of religious and
laity publicly recognized and permanently dedicated to catechesis who, in
communion with the priests and the Bishop, give to this diocesan service that
ecclesial form which is proper to it. (186)
Various types of catechists particularly necessary today
232. The figure of the catechist in the Church, has different modes, just
as, the needs of catechesis are varied.
– "The catechists in missionary countries", (187) to
whom this title is applied in a special way: "Churches that are flourishing
today would not have been built up without them". (188) There are those who
have the "specific responsibility for catechesis"; (189) and there
are those who collaborate in various forms of apostolate. (190)
– In some Churches of ancient Christian tradition but where there is a
shortage of clergy, there is need for catechists in some way analogous to those
of missionary countries. This requires confronting urgent needs: the community
animation of small rural populations deprived of the constant presence
of a priest, the helpfulness of a missionary presence "in areas of large
cities". (191)
– In countries of Christian tradition which require a "new
evangelization" (192) the catechist for young people and the catechist
for adults become indispensable, in promoting the process of initiatory
catechesis. The catechists must provide for continuing catechesis. In such tasks
the role of the priest is equally fundamental.
– The catechist for children and adolescents continues to be
indispensable. This catechist has the delicate mission of giving "the first
notions of catechism and preparation for the sacrament of Penance, for First
Communion and Confirmation". (193) This responsibility is all the more
pressing today if children and adolescents "do not receive adequate
religious formation within the family". (194)
– A catechist who must also be formed is the catechist for
pre-sacramental encounter, (195) for adults on occasions such as the Baptism
or the First Holy Communion of their children or the celebration of the
sacrament of Matrimony. It is a specific and original task comprising the
welcome of the faithful, of primary proclamation to them and of accompanying
them on the journey of faith.
– Other catechists urgently needed in delicate human situations include
catechists for the old (196) who need a presentation of the Gospel adapted to
their condition; for handicapped or disabled people who require a special
pedagogy, (197) in addition to their total integration into the community; for
migrants and those marginalized by the evolution of modern
society. (198)
– Other types of catechists may also be advisable. Every local Church,
by analysing her own cultural and religious situation, will discover her own
needs and will realistically foster those kinds of catechists which she needs.
The organization and orientation of the formation of catechists is a fundamental
responsibility.
CHAPTER II
Formation for the service of catechesis
Pastoral care of catechists in a Particular Church
233. To ensure the working of the catechetical ministry in a local Church,
it is fundamental to have adequate pastoral care of catechists. Several elements
must be kept in mind in this respect. Indeed efforts must be made:
– to encourage in parishes and Christian communities vocations for
catechesis. Today, because the needs of catechesis are so varied, it is
necessary to promote different kinds of catechists. "There is therefore a
need for specialised catechists". (199) In this respect selection criteria
must be established;
– to try to provide a certain number of full time catechists so
that these can devote their time intensely and in a more stable way to
catechesis, (200) in addition to fostering part-time catechists who are
likely to be more numerous in the ordinary course of events;
– to organize a more balanced distribution of catechists, among
the various groups who require catechesis. Awareness of the needs of adult
catechesis and catechesis for young people, for example, can help to establish a
greater balance in relation to the number of catechists who work with children
and adolescents.
– to foster animators of catechetical activity with
responsibility at diocesan level, in regions and in parishes. (201)
– to organize adequately the formation of catechists, both in
relation to basic training and continuing formation.
– to attend to the personal and spiritual needs of catechists as
well as to the group of catechists as such. This activity is principally and
fundamentally the responsibility of the priests of the respective Christian
communities.
– to co-ordinate catechists with other pastoral workers in
Christian communities, so that the entire work of evangelization will be
consistent and to ensure that catechists will not be isolated from or unrelated
to the life of the community.
Importance of the formation of Catechists
234. All of these tasks are born of the conviction that the quality of any
form of pastoral activity is placed at risk if it does not rely on truly
competent and trained personnel. The instruments provided for catechesis cannot
be truly effective unless well used by trained catechists. Thus the adequate
formation of catechists cannot be overlooked by concerns such as the
updating of texts and the re-organization of catechesis. (202)
Consequently, diocesan pastoral programmes must give absolute priority to
the formation of lay catechists. Together with this, a fundamentally
decisive element must be the catechetical formation of priests both at
the level of seminary formation as well as at the level of continuing formation.
Bishops are called upon to ensure that they are scrupulously attentive to such
formation.
Nature and purpose of the formation of catechists
235. Formation seeks to enable catechists to transmit the Gospel to those
who desire to entrust themselves to Jesus Christ. The purpose of formation,
therefore, is to make the catechist capable of communicating: "The summit
and centre of catechetical formation lies in an aptitude and ability to
communicate the Gospel message". (203)
The christocentric purpose of catechesis, which emphasizes the communion of
the convert with Jesus Christ, permeates all aspects of the formation of
catechists. (204) This aim is nothing other than to lead the catechist to know
how to animate a catechetical journey of which, the necessary stages are: the
proclamation of Jesus Christ; making known his life by setting it in the context
of salvation history; explanation of the mystery of the Son of God, made man for
us; and finally to help the catechumen, or those being catechized, to identify
with Jesus Christ through the sacraments of initiation. (205) With continuing
catechesis, the catechist merely tries to deepen these basic elements. This
christological perspective touches directly upon the identity of the catechist
and his preparation. "The unity and harmony of the catechist must be
read in this christocentric light and built around a profound familiarity with
Christ and the Father, in the Spirit". (206)
236. By virtue of the fact that formation seeks to make the catechist
capable of transmitting the Gospel in the name of the Church, all formation has
an ecclesial nature. The formation of catechists is nothing other than an
assistance for them in identifying with the living and actual awareness that the
Church has of the Gospel, in order to make them capable of transmitting it in
his name.
In concrete terms, the catechist—in his formation—enters into
communion with that aspiration of the Church which, like a spouse, "keeps
pure and intact the faith of the Spouse" (207) and which, as "mother
and teacher" desires to transmit the Gospel by adapting it to all cultures,
ages, and situations. This truly ecclesial quality of the transmission of the
Gospel permeates the entire formation of catechists and gives to that formation
its true nature.
The inspiring criteria of the formation of catechists
237. An adequate conception of the formation of catechists must always
take prior note of some of the criteria which inspire and configure with varying
emphases relevant to the formation of catechists:
– Firstly, it is a question of forming catechists for the need to
evangelize in the present historical context, with its values, challenges and
disappointments. To accomplish this task, it is necessary for catechists to have
a deep faith, (208) a clear Christian and ecclesial identity; (209) as well as
a great social sensitivity. (210) All formation programmes must accommodate
these points.
– In formation, account must also be taken of the concept of
catechesis, proposed by the Church today. It is a question of forming
catechists so as to be able to transmit not only a teaching but also an integral
Christian formation, by developing "tasks of initiation, of education, and
of teaching". (211) Catechists must be able to be, at one and the same
time, teachers, educators and witnesses of the faith.
– The present catechetical moment being lived by the Church
requires catechists who can "integrate", who are capable of overcoming
"unilateral divergent tendencies" (212) and who are able to provide a
full and complete catechesis. They must know how to link the dimension of truth
and meaning of the faith, orthodoxy and orthopraxis, ecclesial and social
meaning. Formation must contribute to the enrichment of these factors lest
tensions arise between them.
– The formation of lay catechists cannot ignore the specific
character of the laity in the Church, and cannot be regarded as merely a
synthesis of the mission received by priests and religious. Rather, "their
apostolic training acquires a special character precisely from the secular
nature of the lay state and from its particular type of spirituality".
– Finally, the pedagogy used in this formation is of
fundamental importance. As a general criterion, it is necessary to underline the
need for a coherence between the general pedagogy of formation of catechists
and the pedagogy proper to the catechetical process. It would be very difficult
for the catechist in his activity to improvise a style and a sensibility to
which he had not been introduced during his own formation.
The dimensions of formation: being, knowing, and savoir-faire
238. The formation of catechists is made up of different dimensions. The
deepest dimension refers to the very being of the catechist, to his human and
Christian dimension. Formation, above all else, must help him to mature as a
person, a believer and as an apostle. This is what the catechist must know so as
to be able to fulfil his responsibilities well. This dimension is permeated by
the double commitment he has to the message and to man. It requires the
catechist to have a sufficient knowledge of the message that he transmits and of
those to whom he transmits the message and of the social context in which they
live. This then is the dimension of savoir-faire, of knowing how to
transmit the message, so that it is an act of communication. The formation of
the catechist tends to make of him an "educator of man and of the life of
man". (213)
The human, Christian and apostolic maturity of catechists.
239. On the basis of this initial human maturity, (214) the exercise of
catechesis, by constant consideration and evaluation, allows the catechist to
grow in a balanced and in a critical outlook, in integrity, in his ability to
relate, to promote dialogue, to have a constructive spirit, and to engage in
group work. (215) It will cause him to grow in respect and in love for
catechumens and those being catechized: "What is this love? It is the love,
not so much of a teacher as of a father, or rather of a mother. It is the Lord's
wish that every preacher of the Gospel, every builder up of the Church should
have this love". (216) Formation also assumes that the faith of the
catechist is fostered and nourished by the exercize of catechesis, making him
thus to grow as a believer. The formation, above all, nourishes the spirituality
of the catechist, (217) so that his activity springs in truth from his own
witness of life. Every theme covered by formation should feed, in the first
place, the faith of the catechist. It is true that catechists catechize others
by firstly catechizing themselves.
Formation also constantly nourishes the apostolic consciousness of the
catechist, that is, his sense of being an evangelizer. For this reason he
should be aware of and live out the concrete evangelization efforts being made
in his own diocese, as well as those of his own parish so as to be in harmony
with the awareness that the particular Church has of its own mission. The best
way to feed this apostolic awareness is by identifying with the figure of Jesus
Christ, teacher and formator of disciples by seeking to acquire the zeal which
Jesus had for the Kingdom. Beginning with the exercise of catechesis, the
apostolic vocation of the catechist—constantly fostered by continuing
formation—will progressively mature.
The biblico-theological formation of the catechist
240. Besides being a witness, the catechist must also be a teacher who
teaches the faith. A biblico-theological formation should afford the catechist
an organic awareness of the Christian message, structured around the central
mystery of the faith, Jesus Christ.
The context of this doctrinal formation should be drawn from the various
areas that constitute every catechetical programme;
– the three great eras in the history of Salvation: the Old Testament,
the life of Christ and the history of the Church.
– the great nuclei of the Christian message: the Creed, the Liturgy,
the moral life and prayer.
In its own level of theological instruction, the doctrinal content of the
formation of a catechist is that which the catechist must transmit. For its
part, "Sacred Scripture should be the very soul of this formation".
(218) The Catechism of the Catholic Church remains the fundamental
doctrinal reference point together with the catechism proper to the particular
Church.
241. This biblico-theological formation must contain certain qualities:
a) In the first place, it should be of a summary nature and
correspond to the message to be transmitted. The various elements of the
Christian faith should be presented in a well structured way and in harmony with
each other by means of an organic vision that respects the "hierarchy of
truths".
b) This synthesis of faith should be such as to help the catechist
to mature in his own faith and enable him to offer an explanation for the
present hope in this time of mission: "The situation today points to an
ever-increasing urgency for doctrinal formation of the lay faithful, not simply
for a better understanding which is natural to faith's dynamism, but also in
enabling them to ?give a reason for their hope' in view of the world and its
grave and complex problems". (219)
c) It must be a theological formation that is close to human
experience and capable of correlating the various aspects of the Christian
message with the concrete life of man "both to inspire it and to judge it
in the light of the Gospel". (220) While remaining theological it must in
some fashion adopt a catechetical style.
d) It must be such that the catechist "will be able not only to
communicate the Gospel accurately, but also able to make those being taught
capable of receiving it actively and of discerning what in their spiritual
journey agrees with the faith". (221)
The human sciences and the formation of catechists
242. The catechist also acquires a knowledge of man and the reality in which
he lives through the human sciences which have greatly developed in our own
time. "In pastoral care sufficient use should be made, not only of
theological principles, but also of secular findings, especially in the fields
of psychology and sociology: in this way the faithful will be brought to a more
mature living of the faith". (222)
It is necessary for the catechist to have some contact, with at least some
of the fundamental elements of psychology: the psychological dynamics motivating
man; personality structure; the deepest needs and aspirations of the human
heart; progressive psychology and the phases of the human life-cycle; the
psychology of religion and the experiences which open man to the mystery of the
sacred.
The social sciences provide an awareness of the socio-cultural context in
which man lives and by which he is strongly influenced. It is therefore
necessary that in the formation of catechists that there take place "an
analysis of the religious situation as well as of the sociological, cultural and
economic conditions to the extent that these facts of collective life can
greatly influence the success of evangelization". (223) In addition to
these sciences, explicitly recommended by the Second Vatican Council, other
human sciences should be used in one way or another in the formation of
catechists, particularly the sciences of education and communication.
Various criteria which can inspire the use of human sciences in the
formation of catechists
243. These are:
a) Respect for the autonomy of the sciences: "the Church...
affirms the legitimate autonomy of culture and especially of the sciences".
(224)
b) Evangelical discernment of the different tendencies or schools in
psychology, sociology, and pedagogy: their values and their limitations.
c) The study of the human sciences—in the formation of
catechists—is not an end in itself. Acquiring awareness of the existential,
psychological, cultural and social situation of man is accomplished in the light
of the faith in which man must be educated. (225)
d) In forming catechists, theology and the human sciences should
mutually enrich each other. Consequetly it is necessary to avoid a situation in
which these materials are converted into the only norm for the pedagogy of the
faith apart from the theological criteria deriving from the divine pedagogy.
While these are fundamental and necessary disciplines, they are always at
theservice of evangelization which is more than a human activity. (226)
Pedagogical formation
244. Together with those dimensions which refer to being and knowledge, the
formation of catechists must also cultivate technique. The catechist is
an educator who facilitates maturation of the faith which catechumens and those
being catechized obtain with the help of the Holy Spirit. (227) The first
reality of which account must be taken in this decisive area of formation is
that concerning the original pedagogy of faith. The catechist is prepared or
formed so as to facilitate a growth in the experience of faith, which he himself
has not implanted for it is God who has sown it in the heart of man. The
responsibility of the catechist is merely to cultivate this gift by nourishing
it and by helping it to grow. (228) Formation seeks to mature an educational
capacity in the catechist which implies: an ability to be attentive to people,
an ability to interpret or respond to educational tasks or initiatives in
organizing learning activities and the ability of leading a human group toward
maturity. As with any other art the most important factor is that the catechist
should acquire his own style of imparting catechesis by adapting the general
principles of catechetical pedagogy to his own personality. (229)
245. More concretely: it must enable the catechist and particularly the
full-time catechist to know how to organize in the group of catechists,
educational activity by carefully considering the circumstances, by elaborating
a realistic catechetical plan and—having drawn it up—to know how to
evaluate it critically. (230) It must be capable of animating a group by
applying with discernment the techniques of group dynamics offered by
psychology. This educational capacity and this "know-how" along with
the knowledge, attitudes and techniques which it involves "can be better
acquired if they are taught simultaneously while the apostolic works are being
performed (for example, during sessions when lessons of catechesis are being
prepared and tested)". (231) The goal or ideal is that catechists should be
the protagonists of their own learning by being creative in formation and not by
just applying external rules. This formation must be closely related to praxis:
one must start with praxis to be able to arrive at praxis. (232)
The formation of catechists within the Christian community
246. Among the ways of forming catechists, those of their own Christian
community are all important. It is in this community that catechists test their
own vocation and continually nourish their own apostolic awareness. The figure
of the priest is fundamental in the task of assuring their progressive
maturation as believers and witnesses. (233)
247. A Christian community can develop various types of formative activities
for their own catechists:
a) One of these is the constant fostering of the ecclesial vocation
of catechists by keeping alive in them an awareness of being sent by the Church;
b) It is also important to ensure catechists have a mature faith,
through the usual means by which the Christian community educates in the faith
its own pastoral workers and its more committed lay members. (234) When the
faith of catechists is not yet mature it is advisable that they should
participate in a catechumenal programme designed for young people and adults.
This can be organized by the community itself, or one specifically created for
them.
c) Immediate preparation for catechesis, done with a group of
catechists, is an excellent means of formation especially when accompanied with
an evaluation of all that has been experienced in the sessions of catechesis.
d) Within the community other formative activities can also be
realized: courses in awareness of catechesis, for example, at the beginning of
the pastoral year; retreats and living in community at the important liturgical
times of the year; (235) dissertations on more pressing and necessary themes;
systematic doctrinal formation, for example, studying the Catechism of the
Catholic Church. These are activities of continuing formation, which
together with the personal work of the catechist, would appear very useful.
(236)
Schools for catechists and centres for higher learning for experts in
catechesis
248. Attendance at a school for catechists (237) is a particularly
important moment in the formation of a catechist. In many places such schools
are organized on two levels: one for catechists who are "ordinary";
(238) the other for those who have "responsibility for catechesis".
Schools for ordinary catechists
249. The purpose of such schools is to give an comprehensive and
systematic catechetical formation of a basic nature over a period of time during
which the specifically catechetical dimensions of formation are promoted: the
Christian message; knowledge of man and his socio-cultural situation; the
pedagogy of the faith. Such a systematic formation has notable advantages
amongst which the following can be numbered:
– its systematic nature which is not so absorbed in the immediate
concerns of catechetical activity;
– its quality which is assured by trained specialists;
– integration with catechists from other communities, which promotes
ecclesial communion.
Institutes for those with responsibility for catechesis
250. So as to prepare those who have responsibility for catechesis, in
parishes and vicariates as well as full time catechists (239) it is useful to
provide catechetical institutes either at diocesan or inter-diocesan level.
Clearly, standards in these institutes will be more demanding. In addition to
the courses of basic catechetical formation they will promote those
specializations regarded as necessary for the particular circumstances in which
they are located. It may prove opportune, even for reasons of rationalizing
resources, that the orientation of such institutes be directed towards those
with responsibility for various pastoral activities. In this event they can be
transformed into centres of formation for pastoral workers. Commencing with a
general basic formation (doctrinal and anthropological) those areas in which
specialization is required should be determined in relation to the particular
demands made on the various pastoral and apostolic works of the diocese in which
its pastoral workers are involved.
Higher institutes for experts in catechesis
251. A higher level of catechetical formation to which priests, religious
and laity might have access is of vital importance for catechesis. In this
regard it is hoped that "higher institutes for training in pastoral
catechetics should be promoted or founded, so that catechists capable of
directing catechesis at the diocesan level, or within the area of activities to
which religious congregations are dedicated, may be prepared. These higher
institutes can be national or even international. They ought to function as a
university so far as curriculum, length of course and requisites for admission
are concerned". (240) In addition to the formation of those who must assume
responsibility for catechesis, these institutes will also form those who teach
catechesis in seminaries, houses of formation and in the catechetical schools.
These institutes should devote themselves to a congruent level of research in
catechesis.
252. At this level of formation there is much opportunity for fruitful
co-operation between the Churches: "Here also the material aid provided by
the richer Churches to their poorer sisters can show the greatest effectiveness,
for what better assistance can one Church give to another than to help it to
grow as a Church with its own strength?" (241) Obviously such
collaboration has due respect for the particular circumstances of poorer
Churches and their responsibilities. At diocesan and inter-diocesan levels it is
most useful when there is an awareness of the need to form people at a higher
level, just as there is a similar need for such in other ecclesiastical
activities as well as in the teaching of other disciplines.
CHAPTER III
Loci and means of catechesis
The Christian community is a home for catechesis (242)
The Christian community is the historical realization of the gift of "communion"
(koinonia), (243) which is a fruit of the Holy Spirit. "Communion"
expresses the profound nucleus between the universal Church and the particular
Churches which make up the Christian community. It is realized and made visible
in the rich variety of immediate Christian communities in which Christians are
born into the faith, educated in it and live it: the family; parish; Catholic
schools; Christian associations and movements; basic ecclesial communities.
These are the loci of catechesis, the community places where initiatory
catechesis and continuing education in the faith are realized. (244)
254. The Christian community is the origin, locus and goal of catechesis.
Proclamation of the Gospel always begins with the Christian community and
invites man to conversion and the following of Christ. It is the same community
that welcomes those who wish to know the Lord better and permeate themselves
with a new life. The Christian community accompanies catechumens and those being
catechized, and with maternal solicitude makes them participate in her own
experience of the faith and incorporates them into herself. (245)
Catechesis is always the same. However the loci (246) of catechesis
distinguish it, each in its own way. Hence it is important to know the role of
each of these.
The family as an environment or means of growth in faith
255. Parents are the primary educators in the faith. Together with them,
especially in certain cultures, all members of the family play an active part in
the education of the younger members. It is thus necessary to determine more
concretely the sense in which the Christian family community is a locus
of catechesis. The family is defined as a "domestic Church", (247)
that is, in every Christian family the different aspects and functions of the
life of the entire Church may be reflected: mission; catechesis; witness; prayer
etc. Indeed in the same way as the Church, the family "is a place in which
the Gospel is transmitted and from which it extends". (248) The family as a
locus of catechesis has an unique privilege: transmitting the Gospel by
rooting it in the context of profound human values. (249) On this human base,
Christian initiation is more profound: the awakening of the sense of God; the
first steps in prayer; education of the moral conscience; formation in the
Christian sense of human love, understood as a reflection of the love of God the
Father, the Creator. It is, indeed, a Christian education more witnessed to than
taught, more occasional than systematic, more on-going and daily than structured
into periods. In this family catechesis, the role of grandparetns is of growing
importace. Their wisdom and sense of the religious is often times decisive in
creating a true Christian climate.
The baptismal catechumenate of adults (250)
256. The baptismal catechumenate is a typical locus of catechesis,
instituted by the Church to prepare adults, who desire to become Christians and
to receive the Sacraments of Christian initiation. (251) In the catechumenate,
it is realized "that specific formation by means of which the adult,
converted to the faith, is brought to a confession of baptismal faith during the
Easter Vigil". (252) The catechesis given in the catechumenate is closely
linked with the Christian community. (253) From the moment of their entry into
the catechumenate, the Church surrounds catechumens "with her affection,
her care, as though they are already her children and joined to her: indeed,
they belong to the family of Christ". (254) Thus the Christian community
assists "candidates and catechumens during their initiation process, from
the precatechumenate to the catechumenate, to the period of mystagogy".
(255) This continual presence of the Christian community is expressed in
different ways and appropriately described in the Rite of Christian
Initiation of Adults. (256)
The parish as an environment for catechesis
257. The parish is, without doubt, the most important locus in which the
Christian community is formed and expressed. This is called to be a fraternal
and welcoming family where Christians become aware of being the people of God.
(257) In the parish, all human differences melt away and are absorbed into the
universality of the Church. (258) The parish is also the usual place in which
the faith is born and in which it grows. It constitutes, therefore, a very
adequate community space for the realization of the ministry of the word at once
as teaching, education and life experience.
Today, the parish is undergoing profound transformation in many countries.
Social changes are having repercussions on the parish especially in big cities "shaken
by the phenomenon of urbanization". (259) Despite this, "the parish
is still a major point of reference for the Christian people, even for the
non-practising". (260) It must however, continue " to be the prime
mover and pre-eminent place for catechesis", (261) while recognising that
in certain occasions, it cannot be the centre of gravity for all of the
ecclesial functions of catechesis and must integrate itself into other
institutions.
258. In order that the parish may succeed in activating effectively the
mission of evangelization, some conditions must be fulfilled:
a) Adult catechesis (262) must be given priority. This involves "a
post-baptismal catechesis, in the form of a catechumenate, ...presenting again
some elements from the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults with the
purpose of allowing a person to grasp and live the immense, extraordinary
richness and responsibility received at Baptism". (263)
b) With renewed courage, the proclamation of the Gospel to those
alienated or who live in religious indifference (264) must be planned. In this
task, pre-sacramental meetings (preparation for Marriage, Baptism and First
Holy Communion of children) can be fundamental. (265)
c) As a solid reference point for parochial catechesis it is necessary
to have a nucleus of mature Christians, initiated into the faith, for whom the
pastor should have an adequate and differentiated pastoral care. This objective
can be more easily achieved by the formation of small ecclesial communities. (266)
d) While the preceding points refer mainly to adults, at the same
time catechesis for children, adolescents, and young people—which is always
indispensable—will also benefit greatly.
Catholic schools
259. The Catholic school (267) is a most important locus for human
and Christian formation. The declaration of the Second Vatican Council, Gravissimum
Educationis "makes a decisive change in the history of Catholic
schools: the move from school as institution to school as community". (268)
Catholic schools "are no less zealous than other schools in the promotion
of culture and in the human formation of young people. It is however, the
special function of the Catholic school to:
– develop in the school community an atmosphere animated by a spirit of
liberty and charity;
– enable young people, while developing their own personality, to grow
at the same time in that new life which has been given them in baptism;
– orientate the whole of human culture to the message of salvation";
(269)
The educational task of Catholic schools is bound to be developed along the
basis of this concept proposed by the Second Vatican Council. It is accomplished
in the school community, to which belong all of those who are directly involved
in it: "teachers, management, administrative and auxiliary staff, parents—central
in that they are the natural and irreplaceable educators of their own children—and
pupils, who are participants and active subjects too of the educational process".
(270)
260. When most students attending a Catholic school belong to families who
associate themselves with the school because of its Catholic character, the
ministry of the word can be exercised in it in multiple forms: primary
proclamation, scholastic religious instruction, catechesis, homily. Two of these
forms, however, have a particular importance in the Catholic school: religious
instruction in the school and catechesis whose respective characteristics have
already been discussed. (271) When students and their families become associated
with Catholic schools because of the quality of education offered in the school,
or for other possible reasons, catechetical activity is necessarily limited and
even religious education—when possible—accentuates its cultural
character. The contribution of such schools is always "a service of great
value to men", (272) as well as an internal element of evangelization of
the Church. Given the plurality of socio-cultural and religious contexts in
which the work of Catholic schools is carried on in different nations, it is
opportune that the Bishops and the Episcopal Conferences specify the kind of
catechetical activity to be implemented in Catholic schools.
Associations, movements and groups of the faithful
261. The purpose of the various "associations, movements and groups of
the faithful" (273) which develop in a particular Church is to help the
disciples of Jesus Christ to fulfil their lay mission in the world and in the
Church. In such associations Christians devote themselves to "the practice
of piety, the direct apostolate, charity and relief work, or a Christian
presence in temporal matters". (274) In all of these associations and
movements it is always necessary to provide formation of some kind, in order to
cultivate the fundamental aspects of the Christian life: "In fact they have
the possibility, each with its own method, of offering a formation through a
deeply shared experience in the apostolic life as well as having the opportunity
to integrate, to make concrete and specific the formation that their members
receive from other persons and communities". (275) Catechesis is always a
basic dimension in the formation of the laity. Usually, these organizations have
"special times for catechesis". (276) Such catechesis is not an
alternative for Christian formation. Rather it is one of its fundamental
aspects.
262. When catechesis is given in the context of these associations and
movements, some important aspects of it must be regarded as fundamental:
a) The "proper nature" (277) of catechesis must be
respected by developing the richness of its content through the threefold
dimension of word, memory and witness (doctrine, celebration and commitment in
life). (278) Catechesis, whatever the "way" in which it is given, is
always a basic organic formation in the faith. It must, however, include "a
serious study of Christian doctrine", (279) and it must constitute a
serious religious formation "open to all the... factors of the Christian
life". (280)
b) This is not an impediment to accomplishing the objectives proper
to the various associations and movements—with their own charisms. With
different emphases, catechesis must always remain faithful to its own nature.
Education in the spirituality proper to a particular movement or association
enriches the Church and is a natural continuation of the basic formation
received by all Christians. Firstly, it is necessary to educate in what is
common to all the members of the Church, before educating in what is particular
and diverse.
c) It is necessary to affirm that movements and associations, as far
as catechesis is concerned, are not alternatives to the parish since this is the
educational community to which reference must be made by catechesis. (281)
Basic ecclesial communities
263. Basic ecclesial communities have experienced a great diffusion in
recent decades. (282) These are groups of Christians which "arise because
men want to live the life of the Church with greater fervour or because they
desire and seek a more human way of life which large ecclesial communities
cannot easily provide". (283)
Basic ecclesial communities are a sign of the "Church's vitality".
(284) The disciples of Christ gather together in them so as to hear the word of
God, to develop fraternal bonds, to celebrate the Christian mysteries in their
lives and to assume responsibility for transforming society. In addition to
these specifically Christian concerns other important human values emerge:
friendship, personal recognition, a spirit of co-responsibility, creativity,
vocational response, concern for the problems of the world and of the Church.
From them, an enriched community experience can result, "a true expression
of communion and a means for the construction of a more profound communion".
(285) To be authentic, "every community must live in union with the
particular and the universal Church, in heartfelt communion with the Church's
Pastors and the Magisterium, with a commitment to missionary outreach and
without yielding to isolationism or ideological exploitation". (286)
264. In basic ecclesial communities an extremely enriching catechesis can be
developed:
– The fraternal climate, in which it lives, is an environment suitable
for integral catechetical activity, providing that the proper nature and
character of catechesis is respected;
– On the other hand, catechesis must strive to deepen community life so
as to ensure a basis for the Christian life of the faithful, without which basic
Christian communities lack stability;
– The small Community is always a suitable place to receive those who
have concluded a catechetical journey.
CHAPTER IV
The organization of catechetical pastoral care
in the particular Churches
Organization and exercise of responsibilities
The diocesan service of catechesis
The organization of catechetical pastoral care has as its reference point
the Bishop and the Diocese. The diocesan catechetical office (Officium
Catechisticum) is "the means which the Bishop as head of the community
and teacher of doctrine utilizes to direct and moderate all the catechetical
activities of the diocese". (287)
266. The principal competencies of the diocesan office are the following:
a) to analyse the state of the diocese (288) with regard to
education in the faith: such analysis must identify, amongst other things, the
real needs of the diocese as far as catechetical praxis is concerned;
b) to develop a plan of action (289) which sets out clear
objectives, proposes definite suggestions and shows concrete results;
c) to promote the formation of catechist: in this respect suitable
centres shall be set up; (290)
d) to elaborate, or at least to indicate to parishes and to
catechists, the necessary instruments for catechesis: catechisms, directories,
programmes for different ages, guides for catechists, material for those being
catechized, audio-visual aids etc.; (291)
e) to foster diocesan institutions of a specifically catechetical
character (catechumenate, parochial catechesis, groups responsible for
catechesis): these are the "basic cells" (292) of catechetical
activity;
f) to improve personnel and material resources at diocesan level as
well as at the level of the parish and the vicariates forane; (293)
g) to collaborate with the Liturgical Office given the relevance of
Liturgy for catechesis, especially for catechumenal and initiatory catechesis.
267. To accomplish these responsibilities, the diocesan catechetical office
should "have a staff of persons who have special competence. The extent and
the diversity of the problems which must be handled demand that the
responsibilities be divided among a number of truly skilled people". (294)
Ordinarily, this diocesan service should be performed by priests, religious and
laity. Catechesis is so basic to the life of every particular Church, that "no
diocese can be without its own catechetical office". (295)
Services of inter-diocesan co-operation
268. This co-operation is extremely fruitful in our time. Shared
catechetical endeavour is advisable not only for reasons of geographic proximity
but also for reasons of cultural homogeneity. Indeed "it is useful for a
number of Dioceses to combine their actions, bringing together for common
benefit their experiences and undertakings, their offices and equipment; for the
Dioceses that are better provided to give help to the others; and for a common
action programme to be prepared for the region as a whole". (296)
The service of the Episcopal Conference
269. "The Episcopal Conference may establish a catechetical office,
whose principal purpose is to assist individual dioceses in catechetical matters".
(297) This possibility, which has been established by the Code of Canon Law,
is in fact a reality in many of the Episcopal Conferences. The catechetical
office or national catechetical centre of the Episcopal Conference has a double
function: (298)
– to be at the service of the catechetical needs of all Dioceses of a
given territory: it oversees publications of national relevance, national
congresses, relations with the mass media and, in general, those tasks and
responsibilities which are beyond the means of Dioceses or regions;
– to be at the service of the Dioceses and regions by distributing
information and catechetical projects, in order to co-ordinate activities and to
lend assistance to Dioceses less well provided with catechetical materials.
If an Episcopate so determines, it is also within the competence of the
catechetical office or the national catechetical centre to co-ordinate its
activities with other catechetical institutions or to co-operate with
catechetical activities at international level. All this, however, is always
done as a means of assistance to the Bishops of an Episcopal Conference.
The service of the Holy See
270. "The command of Christ to preach the Gospel to every creature
applies primarily and immediately to them (the Bishops)—with Peter, and
subject to Peter". (299) The ministry of the Successor of Peter—in
this collegial mandate of Jesus regarding the proclamation and transmission of
the Gospel—assumes a basic responsibility. This ministry must be considered
"not only as a global service reaching every Church from the outside,
but
from inside as something already belonging to the essence of every
particular Church". (300)
The ministry of Peter in catechesis is exercised in an eminent way through
its teachings. The Pope, in what regards catechesis, acts in an immediate and
particular way through the Congregation for Clergy, which assists "the
Roman Pontiff in the exercise of his supreme pastoral office". (301)
271. The Congregation for the Clergy thus:
– "has the function of promoting the religious education of the
Christian faithful of all ages and conditions;
– issues timely norms so that catechetical lessons be conducted
according to a proper programme;
– maintains a watchful attention to the suitable delivery of
catechetical instruction;
– grants, with the assent of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the
Faith, the prescribed approbation of the Holy See for catechisms and other
writings pertaining to catechetical instruction; (302)
– is available to catechetical offices and international initiatives on
religious education, coordinates their activities and, where necessary, it lends
assistance". (303)
The co-ordination of catechesis
The importance of an effective co-ordination of catechesis
272. The co-ordination of catechesis is an important internal
responsibility of the local Church. It can be considered:
– from within catechesis itself, through its diverse forms, intended
for different ages and social contexts;
– in reference to the link between catechesis and other forms of
education in the faith and other evangelizing activities.
The co-ordination of catechesis is not merely a strategic factor, aimed at
more effective evangelization, but has a profound theological meaning.
Evangelizing activity must be well co-ordinated because it touches on the unity
of faith, which sustains all the Church's actions.
273. The purpose of this section is to consider:
– the internal co-ordination of catechesis, so that the particular
Church can offer a coherent and unified catechetical service;
– the link between missionary activity and catechumenal activity—which
are mutually dependent—in the context of the mission ad gentes
(304) or of "new evangelization"; (305)
– the need for well co-ordinated pastoral care in the area of
education, taking account of the multiplicity of educators who address
themselves to the same recipients, especially children and adolescents.
The Second Vatican Council recommended the co-ordination of all pastoral
activity, so that the unity of the particular Church may shine forth all the
more. (306)
Coherent diocesan catechetical programmes
274. The diocesan catechetical programme is the global catechetical project
of a particular Church, which integrates, in a structured and coherent way, the
diverse catechetical programmes addressed by the Diocese to different age
groups. (307) In this sense, every particular Church, especially in relation to
Christian initiation, should offer at least two services:
a) a single, coherent, process of Christian initiation for children,
adolescents and young people, intimately connected with the sacraments of
initiation already received or about to be received and linked with educational
pastoral care;
b) a catechetical programme for adults, addressed to those
Christians who need to deepen their faith in order to complete the Christian
initiation begun at Baptism.
In many countries, there is also a growing need for programmes of catechesis
for the old, for those Christians who, in the last stage of their
earthly lives, desire, perhaps for the first time, to lay a solid foundation for
their faith.
275. These different programmes of catechesis, each with it own
socio-cultural variations, should not be organized separately as though they
were "separate compartments without any communication between them".
(308) It is necessary that the catechesis offered by a particular Church be well
co-ordinated. Among the diverse forms of catechesis "their perfect
complementarity must be fostered". (309) As has been already mentioned, the
organizing principle, which gives coherence to the various catechetical
programmes offered by a particular Church, is attention to adult catechesis.
This is the axis around which revolves the catechesis of childhood and
adolescence as well as that of old age.(310)
The fact that a Diocese offers within a single diocesan programme different
programmes of catechesis does not imply that those to whom it is addressed need
follow them one after the other. A young person who has arrived at adulthood
with a well rounded faith does not need a catechumenal type of catechesis for
adults, but other more solid nourishment, to assist him in permanently maturing
in the faith. The same is true of those who arrive at old age with well rooted
faith. Along with the provision of initiatory programmes, which are absolutely
indispensable, the local Church must also provide diversified programmes of
permanent catechesis for Christians adults.
Catechetical activity in the context of new evangelization
276. If catechesis is defined as a moment in the total process of
evangelization, the problem inevitably arises of co-ordinating catechetical
activity with the missionary activity which necessarily precedes it, as well as
with the pastoral activity which follows it. There are in fact "elements
which prepare for catechesis as well as those deriving from it". (311) In
this respect, the link between missionary proclamation which seeks to stir up
the faith, and initiatory catechesis, which seeks to deepen its roots, is
decisive for evangelization. This link is, in a certain sense, more evident in
the mission ad gentes. (312) Adults converted by the primary
proclamation enter the catechumenate where they are catechized. In situations
requiring "new evangelization", (313) co-ordination becomes
more complex because ordinary catechesis is, at times, offered to young people
and adults who need a period of prior proclamation and awakening in their
adherence to Christ.
Similar difficulties arise with regard to the catechesis of children and the
formation of their parents. (314) At other times forms of ongoing catechesis are
applied to adults who, in fact, reguire a true intiatory catechesis.
277. The current situation of evangelization requires that both activities,
missionary proclamation and initiatory catechesis, be conceived in a
co-ordinated manner and be given, in the particular Church, through a single
programme of evangelization which is both missionary and catechumenal. Today,
catechesis must be seen above all as the consequence of an effective missionary
proclamation. The directives of the decree Ad Gentes—which sets the
catechumenate in the context of the Church's missionary activity—remain a
particularly valid reference point for catechesis. (315)
Catechesis in educational pastoral work
278. Pastoral care offered by a particular Church in the area of education
should establish a necessary co-ordination between the different loci in
which education in the faith takes place. It is extremely important that all
catechetical means "should converge on the same confession of faith, on the
same membership of the Church, and on commitments in society lived in the same
Gospel spirit". (316) Educational co-ordination primarily concerns
children, adolescents, and young adults. It is more than useful for the
particular Church to integrate various educational sectors and environments in a
single project at the service of the Christian education of youth. All of these
loci complement each other, but no one of them, taken separately, can
ensure a complete Christian education. Since it is always the same and unique
person of the child or young person who undergoes these different educational
actions, it is important that the different influences always have the same
fundamental inspiration. Any contradiction between these actions is harmful, in
so far as each one of them has its own specificity and importance. Thus it is
most important for the particular Church to provide a programme of Christian
initiation which takes into account and integrates the various
educational tasks as well as the demands of new evagelization.
Some responsibilities proper to the catechetical ministry
Analysis of the situation and its needs
279. The particular Church, in organizing its catechetical activity, must
have as its point of departure an analysis of the situation. "The
object of this investigation is multiple: included are examination of pastoral
action and analysis of the religious situation as well as of the sociological,
cultural, and economic conditions, to the extent that these facts of collective
life can greatly influence the success of evangelization". (317) This is
nothing other than becoming aware of reality from the point of view of
catechesis and its needs.
More concretely:
– there must be a clear awareness, in "examining pastoral
action", of the state of catechesis: how, in fact, it is situated in
the process of evangelization; a distinct balance between the various
catechetical sectors (children, adolescents, young people, adults); the
co-ordination of catechesis with Christian education in the family, in schools
and elsewhere; its internal quality; the contents imparted and the methodology
used; the characteristics of catechists and their formation;
– an "analysis of the religious situation" of the
Diocese includes three closely related levels: the sense of the sacred,
that is those human experiences, which, because of their depth, tend to open to
mystery; the religious sense, the concrete ways in which a particular
people conceives of and communicates with God; and the situation of the
faith, in the light of the various types of believer; in connection with
these levels, it also investigates the moral situation as lived,
inquiring into its emerging values and evident ambiguities or counter values.
– "socio-cultural analysis", about which much has
already been said in relation to the human sciences in the formation of
catechists, (318) is also necessary because catechumens and those being
catechized must be prepared to constitute a Christian presence in society.
280. The analysis of the situation, from these various perspectives, "should
also convince those who work in the ministry of the word that, so far as
pastoral action is concerned, human situations are ambivalent. Therefore,
workers in the service of the Gospel should learn to note the many possibilities
that are opening up for their action in new and diverse circumstances... For
always possible is a process of change which can make clear the way to the Faith".
(319)
This analysis is a primary working instrument, of an informational nature,
offered by the catechetical service to pastors and catechists.
Programme of catechetical actions and orientation
281. Following close study of the situation, it becomes necessary to proceed
to the formulation of a programme of action. This will determine the
objectives, the means of pastoral catechesis and the norms governing it with
reference to local needs and be in complete harmony with the objectives and
norms of the universal Church. The programme or plan of action should be
effective since its purpose is to orientate diocesan or inter-diocesan
catechesis. Because of its nature, it is usually drawn up for a specific period,
at the end of which it is revised, taking into account new emphases, objectives
and means. Experience confirms the usefulness of such a programme of action for
catechesis. By defining certain common objectives it encourages various
interests to work together with a common purpose. Thus realism should be the
first characteristic of a programme of action, then simplicity, conciseness and
clarity.
282. Together with the programme of action—focused above all on
workable options—many Episcopates prepare, at national level, catechetical
materials of a orientational or reflective nature which provide criteria for an
adequate and appropriate catechesis. These instruments are called by various
names: Catechetical Directory, Catechetical Guidelines, Basic Document,
Reference Text, etc. These are mainly addressed to those responsible for
catechesis and to catechists. They clarify the concept of catechesis: its
nature, object, tasks, contents, method and those to whom it is addressed. These
directories or general guidelines prepared by Episcopal Conferences or published
with their authority are obliged to follow the same process of elaboration and
approval as catechisms. That is, such documents, before their publication, must
be submitted to the Apostolic See for its approbation. (320) These catechetical
guidelines are a source of great inspiration for catechesis in the local
Churches and their elaboration is useful and recommended, because, amongst other
things, they are an important point of reference for the formation of
catechists. This kind of aid is closely and directly related to episcopal
responsibility.
Elaboration of instruments and didactic aids for catechetical activity
283. Along with those instruments dedicated to the orientation and general
planning of catechetical activity (analysis of the situation, plan of
action, Catechetical Directory), there are other instruments of more
immediate use in catechetical activity. In the first place, mention must be made
of textbooks, (321) which are placed directly in the hands of
catechumens and those being catechized. Also helpful are the various
catechetical Guides for both catechists and, in the case of the
catechesis of children, for parents. (322) Audio-visual aids too are
important in catechesis and appropriate discernment should be exercised in their
use. (323) The basic criterion for these work aids should be that of twofold
fidelity to God and to man, a fundamental principle for the whole Church. This
implies an ability to marry perfect doctrinal fidelity with a profound
adaptation to man's needs, taking into consideration the psychology of age and
the socio-cultural context in which he lives.
In short, catechetical aids must:
– be "linked with the real life of the generation to which they
are addressed, showing close acquaintance with its anxieties and questionings,
struggles and hopes"; (324)
– try "to speak meaingfully to this generation"; (325)
– "really aim to give to those who use them a better knowledge of
the mysteries of Christ, aimed at true conversion and a life more in conformity
with God's will". (326)
Preparation of local catechisms: a direct responsibility of the
episcopal ministry
284. Among the aids available to catechesis, catechisms excel all others.
(327) Their importance derives from the fact that the message transmitted by
them is recognized as authentic by the Pastors of the Church. If the Bishop
presides over the general catechetical activity of a particular Church, it is
also true that the publication of catechisms is a direct responsibility of the
episcopal ministry. National, regional, or diocesan catechisms, drawn up in
co-operation with catechetical workers, are ultimately the responsibility of the
Bishops, who are catechists par excellence in the particular Churches.
In drawing up catechisms, the following two criteria must be carefully
adhered to.
a) perfect harmony with the Catechism of the Catholic Church:
"a sure and authentic reference... particularly for preparing local
catechisms"; (328)
b) due consideration for the norms and criteria for the presentation
of the Gospel message contained in the General Directory for Catechesis,
which is also a "standard of reference" (329) for catechesis.
285. The "prior approbation of the Apostolic See" (330)
which is required for catechisms emanating from Episcopal Conferences—signifies
that these are documents whereby the universal Church, in the differing
socio-cultural contexts to which she is sent, proclaims and transmits the Gospel
and "generates the particular Churches by manifesting herself in them".
(331) The approbation of a catechism is a recognition of the fact that it is a
text of the universal Church for a specific culture and situation.
CONCLUSION
286. In formulating the present guidelines and directives every possible
effort has been made to ensure that they are based on the teachings of the
Second Vatican Council and on the subsequent interventions of the Church's
Magisterium. Particular attention has, moreover, been given to the experience of
ecclesial life among different peoples in the interim. In the light of fidelity
to the spirit of God the requisite discernment has been exercised, always,
however, with a view to the renewal of the Church and the service of
evangelization.
287. This new Directory is offered to all the Pastors of the Church, to
their fellow workers and to catechists in the hope that it may serve as an
encouragement in the service which the Church and the Holy Spirit entrusts to
them, namely, fostering the growth of faith in those who believe. The
guidelines, contained herein, are intended not only to clarify the nature of
catechesis and the norms and criteria which govern this evangelizing ministry of
the Church but to nurture, with the power of the word and the interior action of
the Holy Spirit, the hope of those who labour in this privileged area of
ecclesial activity.
288. The effectiveness of catechesis is and always will be a gift of God,
through the operation of the Spirit of the Father and the Son. St Paul, in his
letter to the Corinthians, confirms this total dependence on the intervention of
God when he writes: "I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the
growth. So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who
gives the growth" (1 Cor 3:6-7).
Neither catechesis nor evangelization is possible without the action of God
working through his Spirit. (332) In catechetical praxis neither the most
advanced pedagogical techniques nor the most talented catechist can ever replace
the silent and unseen action of the Holy Spirit. (333) "It is he who is in
truth the protagonist of all the Church's mission"; (334) it is he who is
the principal catechist; it is he who is "the interior teacher" of
those who grow in the Lord. (335) He is, in fact, "the principle inspiring
all catechetical work and all who do this work". (336)
289. May patience and trust abide in the spirituality of the catechist,
since it is God himself who sows, gives growth, and brings to fruition the seed
of his word, planted in good soil and tended with love. St Mark, the Evangelist,
is alone in recounting the parable by which Jesus makes us to understand the
stages, one after the other, whereby the scattered seed gradually and constantly
develops: "The Kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seed upon
the ground, and should sleep and rise night and day, and, the seed should sprout
and grow, he knows not know. The earth produces of itself, first the blade, then
the ear, then the full grain in the ear. But when the grain is ripe, at once he
puts in the sickle, because the harvest has come" (Mk 4:26-29).
290. The Church, which has the responsibility of catechizing those who
believe, invokes the Spirit of the Father and of the Son, begging him to give
fruitfulness and interior strength to the toil which is everywhere undertaken
for the growth of the faith and the fellowship of Our Saviour Jesus Christ.
291. Today as ever, all labourers of catechesis, trusting in her
intercession, turn to the Blessed Virgin Mary, who saw her Son grow "in
wisdom, age and grace" (Lk 2,52). They find in her the spiritual
model for carrying out and strengthening the renewal of contemporary catechesis,
in faith, hope and love. Through the intercession of the "Virgin of
Pentecost", (337) there is born in the Church a new power, generating sons
and daughters in the faith and educating them toward the fullness of Christ.
His Holiness Pope John Paul II, on 11 August 1997, approved this present
General Directory for Catechesis and authorized its publication.
+Darío Castrillón Hoyos Archbishop Emeritus of
Bucaramanga Pro-Prefect
+ Crescenzio Sepe Titular Archbishop of Grado
Secretary
INDEX
Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction
Preaching the Gospel in the contemporary world
Listen! A sower going out to sow
Looking at the world from the standpoint of faith
The field that is the world
Human rights
Culture and cultures
Religious and moral factors
The Church in the world
The faith of Christians
The internal life of the ecclesial community
The situation of catechesis; its vitality
The sowing of the Gospel
How to read the signs of the times
Some challenges for catechesis
Part One
CATECHESIS IN THE CHURCH'S MISSION OF EVANGELIZATION
The missionary mandate of Jesus
The meaning and purpose of Part One
Chapter One
Revelation and its transmission through evangelization
The revelation of God's providential plan
Revelation: deeds and words
Jesus Christ: mediator and fullness of Revelation
The transmission of Revelation by the Church, the work of the Holy Spirit
Evangelization
The process of evangelization
The ministry of the word in evangelization
Functions and forms of the ministry of the word
Conversion and faith
The process of continuing conversion
Socio-religious situations and evangelization
The mutual connection between the activities of evangelizaiton which
correspond to these socio-religious situations
Chapter Two
Catechesis in the process of evangelization
Primary or first proclamation and catechesis
Catechesis at the service of christian initiation
Catechesis, an essential "moment" in the process of evangelization
Catechesis, a service of Christian initiation
Fundamental characteristics of catechesis of initiation
Catechesis at the service of ongoing formation in the faith
Continuing education in faith within the Christian community
Various forms of continuing catechesis
Catechesis and religious instruction in schools
The proper character of religious instruction in schools
The school context and those to whom religious instruction in schools is
directed
Education in the Christian family, catechesis and religious instruction at
the service of education in the faith
Chapter Three
The nature, object and the duties of catechesis
Catechesis: activity of an ecclesial nature
The object of catechesis: communion with Jesus Christ
The object of catechesis is expressed in profession of faith in the one God:
Father, Son and Holy Spirit
The tasks of catechesis accomplish its objective
Fundamental tasks of catechesis: helping to know, to celebrate and to
contemplate the mystery of Christ
Other fundamental tasks of catechesis: initiation and education in community
life and to mission
Observations on the totality of these tasks
The baptismal catechumenate: structure and progression
The baptismal catechumenate: inspiration for catechesis in the Church
Part Two
THE GOSPEL MESSAGE
The meaning and purpose of part two
Chapter One
Norms and criteria for presenting the Gospel message in catechesis
The word of God: source of catechesis
The source and the "sources" of the message of catechesis
Criteria for the presentation of the message
The christocentricity of the Gospel message
The trinitarian christocentricity of the Gospel message
A message proclaiming salvation
A message of liberation
The ecclesial nature of the Gospel message
The historical character of the mystery of salvation
Inculturation of the Gospel message
The integrity of the Gospel message
A comprehensive and hierarchical message
A meaningful message for the human person
Methodological principle for the presentation of the message
Chapter Two
"This is our faith, this is the faith of the Church"
The Catechism of the Catholic Church and the General Directory
for Catechesis
The catechism of the catholic Church
Nature and purpose of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
Structure of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
The inspiration of the Catechism of the Catholic Church: trinitarian
christocentricity and the nobility of the Christian vocation
The literary genre of the Catechism of the Catholic Church
The Deposit of Faith and the Catechism of the Catholic Church
Sacred Scripture and the Catechism of the Catholic Church
The catechetical tradition of the Fathers and the Catechism of the
Catholic Church
Catechisms in the local Churches
Local catechisms: their necessity
The literary genre of the local catechism
Aspects of adaptation in a local catechism
The creativity of local Churches in the elaboration of catechesis
The Catechism of the Catholic Church and local catechisms: the
symphony of faith
Part Three
THE PEDAGOGY OF THE FAITH
"You have one Master, the Christ" (Mt 23:10)
The meaning and purpose of Part Three
Chapter One
The pedagogy of God, source and model of the pedagogy of the faith
The pedagogy of God
The pedagogy of Christ
The pedagogy of the Church
Divine pedagogy, action of the Holy Spirit in every Christian
Divine pedagogy and catechesis
The original pedagogy of faith
Fidelity to God and to the person
The "condescension" of God, a school for the person
Evangelize by educating and educate by evangelizing
Chapter Two
Elements of methodology
Diversity of methods in catechesis
The content-method relationship in catechesis
Inductive and deductive method
Human experience in catechesis
Memorization and catechesis
The role of the catechist
The activity and creativity of the catechized
Community, person and catechesis
The importance of the group
Social communication
Part four
THOSE TO BE CATECHIZED
"The Kingdom is for all" (Rm 15)
The meaning and purpose of Part Four
Chapter One
Adaptation to those to be catechized: general aspects
The need and right of every believer to receive a valid
catechesis
A community need and a community right
Adaptation requires that catechesis be a healthy and adequate food
Adaptation takes account of diverse circumstances
Chapter Two
Catechesis according to age
General observations
The catechesis of adults
Adults to whom catechesis is directed
Elements and criteria proper to adult catechesis
General and particular tasks of adult catechesis
Particular forms of adult catechesis
The catechesis of infants and young children
The important context of infancy and childhood
Characteristics of catechesis for infants and children
Infants and children without religious support in the family or who do not
attend school
Catechesis of young people
Pre-adolescence, adolescence and young adulthood
The importance of youth for society and the Church
Characteristics of catechesis for young people
Catechesis for the aged
Old age, gift of God to the Church
Catechesis of fulfilment and hope
Wisdom and dialogue
Chapter Two
Catechesis for special situations, mentalities and environments
Catechesis for the disabled and the handicapped
The catechesis of the marginalized
Catechesis for different groups
Environmental catechesis
Catechesis in the socio-religious context
Catechesis in complex and pluralistic situations
Catechesis and popular devotion
Catechesis in the context of ecumenism
Catechesis in relation to Judaism
Catechesis in the context of other religions
Catechesis in relation to "new religious movements"
Chapter Five
Catechesis in the socio-cultural context
Catechesis and contemporary culture
Duties of catechesis for inculuration of the faith
Methodological processes
The need for and criteria of evaluation
Those with responsibility for the processes of inculturation
Privileged forms and means
Language
The media of communication
Anthropological environments and cultural tendencies
Intervention in concrete situations
Tasks of the local Churches
Guided initiatives
Part Five
CATECHESIS IN THE PARTICULAR CHURCH
The meaning and purpose of Part Five
Chapter One
The ministry of catechesis in the particular Churches and its agents
The particular Church
The ministry of catechesis in the particular Church
The Christian community and responsibility for catechesis
The Bishop has primary responsibility for catechesis in the particular
Church
Priests, pastors and educators of the Christian community
Parents, primary educators of their children
The role of religious in catechesis
Lay catechists
Various types of catechists particulary necessary today
Chapter Two
Formation for the service of catechesis
Pastoral care of catechists in a particular Church
Importance of the formation of Catechists
Nature and purpose of the formation of catechists
The inspiring criteria of the formation of catechists
The dimensions of formation: being, knowing, savoir-faire
The human, Christian and apostolic maturity of catechists
The biblico-theological formation of the catechist
The human sciences and the formation of catechists
Various criteria which can inspire the use of human sciences in the
formation of catechists
Pedagogical formation
The formation of catechists within the Christian community
Schools for catechists and centres for higher learning for experts in
catechesis
Schools for ordinary catechists
Institutes for those with responsibility for catechesis
Higher institute for experts in catechesis
Chapter Two
Loci and means of catechesis
The Christian community is a home for catechesis
The family as an environment or means of growth in faith
The baptismal catechumenate of adults
The parish as an environment for catechesis
Catholic schools
Associations, movements and groups of the faithful
Basis ecclesial communities
Chapter Four
The organization of catechetical pastoral care in the particular
Churches
Organization and exercise of responsibilities
The diocesan service of catechesis
Services of inter-diocesan co-operation
The service of the Episcopal Conference
The service of the Holy See
The co-ordination of catechesis
The importance of an effective co-ordination of catechesis
Coherent diocesan catechetical programmes
Catechetical activity in the context of new evangelization
Catechesis in educational pastoral work
Some responsibilities
proper to the catechetical ministry
Analysis of the situation and its needs
Programmes of catechetical action and orientation
Elaboration of instruments and didactic aids for catechetical activity
Preparation of local catechisms: a direct responsibility of the episcopal
ministry
Conclusion
Thematic Index
(1) CD 44.
(2) CT 2.
(3) CT 3.
(4) Corresponds to Part II of the DCG.
(5) It has the same objectives of Part III to the DCG.
(6) Corresponds to Part IV of the DCG.
(7) Corresponds to Part V of the DCG of 1971. While several significant
reasons would suggest that this section should preceed that on pedagogy,
however, given the new form of Part Three it is preferred to maintain the same
order as that in the 1971 text. This underlines that attention to those to whom
catechesis is directed is a partipation in and a consequence of this same divine
pedagogy, this Acondescenion of God in the history of Salvation (DV 13) of his
self adaptation in revelation to the human condition.
(8) Assumes all the elements of Paul VI of the DCG.
(9) Cf. DCG (1971), Introduction.
(10) Cf. ibidem.
(11) Cf. ibidem.
(12) GS 1.
(13) GS 2.
(14) GS 2.
(15) SRS 35.
(16) SRS 13b; cf. EN 30.
(17) Cf. CT 29.
(18) SRS 41, cf. 1971 Documents of The Synod of Bishops, II: "Justice
in the world" (30 Nov. 1971), III, "The struggle for justice":
AAS 43 (1971), pp. 935-937; and LC 77.
(19) SRS 41. Cf. ChL 42; TMA 51; CCC 2444-2448.
(20) Cf. John XXIII. Pacem in Terris ,Encyclical Letter (11 April
1963), 9-27: AAS 55 (1963). pp. 261-270. Here are pointed out for the Church
those more fundamental human rights. In numbers 28-34 (AAS 55 (1963), pp.
270-273) are indicated the principal "human rights". Catechesis
should pay attention to both of these perspectives.
(21) Cf. SRS 15a.
(22) Cf. PP 14; CA 29.
(23) ChL 5; cf. SRS 26b; VS 31c.
(24) Cf. ChL 5a. The Extraordinary Synod of 1985, II, D, 1.
(25) Cf. SRS 15e; CCC 2444; CA 57b.
(26) ChL 37. Cf. CA 47.
(27) AG 22a.
(28) GS 5.
(29) GS 54.
(30) GS 56c.
(31) Cf. EN 20; CT 53.
(32) GS 19.
(33) Ibid.
(34) EN 55; cf. LC 41 and GS 19.
(35) Synod, II, A 1.
(36) ChL 4.
(37) Cf. RM 38.
(38) CA 29 and 46c.
(39) Cf. GS 36. John Paul II, in the encyclical letter Dominum et
vivificantem (18 may 1986), n. 38: AAS 78 (1986), pp. 851-852, also
establishes this connection: "The ideology of the 'death of God' easily
demonstrates in its effects that on the 'theoretical and practical' levels it is
the ideology of the 'death of man'".
(40) VS 101; cf. EV 19, 20.
(41) CT 3; cf. MPD 4.
(42) TMA 36b; GS 19c.
(43) EN 52. Cf. CT 19 and 42.
(44) EN 56.
(45) EN 52.
(46) EN 48; cr. CT 54; ChL 34b; 1985 Synod, II, A, 4; DCG (1971), 6.
(47) EN 52.
(48) Cf. EN 52; CT 44.
(49) ChL, 34b; 33d.
(50) LG 10.
(51) Synod, 1985, I, 3.
(52) Ibid.
(53) Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter Communionis
notio (28 May 1992), n. 1, AAS 85 (1993), p. 838; cf. TMA 36e.
(54) Cf. CT 19b.
(55) Cf. CT 43.
(56) Cf. CT 27b.
(57) DV 10c.
(58) Cf. CT 29b.
(59) Cf. CT 30.
(60) CT 23.
(61) Cf. CT 58.
(62) EN 63.
(63) FC 4b; cf. ChL 3e.
(64) GS 11; cf. GS 4.
(65) Cf. GS 62; FC 5.
(66) Cf. Mk 1:15 and parallels. RM 12-20; CCC 541-560.
(67) Cf. Mt 5:3-12.
(68) Cf. Mt 5,1-7,29.
(69) Cf. Mt 13:11.
(70) Cf. Mt 18:1-35.
(71) Cf. Mt 24:1-25,46.
(72) DV 3.
(73) Cf. 2 Pet 1:4; CCC 51-52.
(74) 2 DV 2.
(75) 2 Eph 1:9.
(76) 2 DV 2.
(77) 2 EN 11.
(78) Cf. GS 22a.
(79) Cf. Eph 2:8; EN 27.
(80) Cf. EN 9.
(81) Cf. Gen 11:52; AG 2b and 3a.
(82) Cf. St Irenaeus of Lyons, "Adversus haereses" III,
20, 2. SCh 211, 389-393. DV 15; CT 58; ChL 61; CCC 53 and 122; and also Part
III, chap. 1.
(83) CCC 54-64.
(84) DV 2.
(85) Cf. DCG (1971) 11b.
(86) Cf. Heb 1:1-2.
(87) DV 4.
(88) Cf. Lk 24:27.
(89) CCC 65; St John of the Cross puts it as follows: "He has told us
everything at once in this one Word" ("The Ascent of Mount Carmel"
2,22; cf. The Liturgy of Hours, I, Office of Readings for Monday of the Second
week of Advent).
(90) Cf. CT 5; CCC 520 and 2053.
(91) CCC 125, which refers to DV 18.
(92) CT 5. The Theme of Christocentrism, is explained in "The object of
catechesis: communion with Jesus Christ" (Part I Chapter 3) and in "The
Christocentricity of the Gospel Message (Part II, Chapter 1).
(93) Cf.DV 7.
(94) Cf. DV 7a.
(95) Cf. DV 8 and CCC 75-79.
(96) DV 10b; cf CCC 85-87.
(97) LG 448; AG 1; GS 45; cf. CCC 774-776.
(98) Cf. Col 1,26.
(99) Dei Verbum and the Catechism of the Catholic Church (nn. 150-175) speak
of faith as a response to Revelation. In this context, for catechetical pastoral
motivation, it is preferred to associate faith more with Evangelization than
with Revelation in so far as the latter, in fact, reaches man normally by way of
the evangelical mission of the Church.
(100) EN 14.
(101) EN 18.
(102) Cf. Mt 28,19-20.
(103) Acts 1,8.
(104) Mt 28,19.
(105) EN 17.
(106) EN 28.
(107) Cf. EN 22a.
(108) Cf. EN 47b.
(109) Cf. EN 18.
(110) EN 24d.
(111) Cf. EN 14.
(112) AG 6b.
(113) In the dynamism of evangelization a distinction must be made between "initial
situations" (initia), "gradual developments" (gradus)
and situations of maturity: "appropriate acts must correspond to condition
and state" (AG 6).
(114) EN 18-20 and RM 52-54; cf. AG 11-12 and 22.
(115) EN 21 and 41; RM 42-43; AG 11.
(116) EN 51,52,53. cf. CT 18, 19, 21, 25; RM 44.
(117) AG 13; EN 10 and 23; CT 19; RM 46.
(118) EN 22 and 24; CT 18; cf. AG 14 and RM 47.
(119) AG 14; CCC 1212; cf. CCC 1229-1233.
(120) EN 23; CT 24; RM 48-49; cf. AG 15.
(121) ChL 18.
(122) ChL 32, which demonstrates the close connection between "communion"
and "mission".
(123) Cf. EN 24.
(124) Cf. CT 18.
(125) Cf. AG 6f; RM 33 and 48.
(126) Cf. Acts 6:4. The Ministry of the Word of God is fostered in
the Church by: – the ordained ministers (cf. CIC 756-757); –
members of institutes of consecrated life in light of their consecration to God
(cf. CIC 758); – the lay faithful in light of their baptism and
confirmation (cf. CIC 759). In regard to the term ministry (servitium),
it is necessary that all reference be made to the uniqueness and to the source
of all ministry which is the ministry of Christ. To a certain extent
this applies also without ambiguity to the non-ordained faithful. In the
original meaning, it expresses the work with which the members of the Church
carry on the mission of Christ, both within the Church and throughout the world.
However, when the term is distinguished from and compared with the various munera
and officia, then it should be clearly noted that only in virtue of sacred
ordination does the word obtain that full, univocal meaning that tradition has
attributed to it (cf. John Paul II, Allocution at the Simposium on "The
Participation of the Lay Faithul in the Priestly Ministry" n. 4, L'Osservatore
Romano, English Edition, 11 May 1994.
(127) EN 22; cf. EN 51-53.
(128) Cf. EN 42-45, 54, 57.
(129) DV 8c.
(130) PO 4b; cf. CD 13c.
(131) Many diverse forms of this single ministry appear in the New
Testament: "Proclamation, teaching, exhortation, prophecy, witness... this
richness of expression is notable.
(132) The forms through which the ministry of the word is filtered are not
in reality intrinsic to the Christian message as though to imply that diversity
of form connotes different messages. These are, rather, accentuations or tones
more or less explicitated and adapted to the situation of faith of each person
or group of persons in their concrete situations.
(133) EN 51-53.
(134) AG 14.
(135) There are different reasons which for using such expressions as "continuing
education in the faith" or "continuing catechesis". They may not
however, relativise the prior, basic, structural and specific character of
catechesis understood as basic initiation. The expression "continuing
education in the faith" has been widely used in catechetical praxis since
the Second Vatican Council. It denotes a second grade of catechesis which is
subject to initiatory catechesis. It does not denote the totality of
catechetical activity. The distinction between basic formation and permanent
formation is used in reference to priestly formation in the Apostolic
Exhortation, Pastores dabo vobis of John Paul II, chapters five and six,
especially in n. 71: AAS 84 (1992), pp. 729 ff; 778 ff; 782-783.
(136) DCG (1971) 19d.
(137) Cf. SC 35; CCC 1154.
(138) Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, "Instruction
on the ecclesial vocation of the theologian", Donum veritatis (24 May
1990), n. 6: AAS 82 (1990), p. 1552.
(139) DCG (1971) 17; cf. GS 62g.
(140) Cf. Rm 10:17; LG 16 and AG 7; cf. CCC 846-848.
(141) Cf. AG 13a.
(142) Cf. CT 5b.
(143) Cf. CT 20b.
(144) Cf. CCC 166-167.
(145) Cf. CCC 150 and 176.
(146) DV 5.
(147) CCC 177.
(148) Cf. EN 10; AG 13b; CCC 1430-1431.
(149) EN 23.
(150) Cf. AG 13.
(151) Cf. RM 45c.
(152) Cf. RM 46d.
(153) DV 5; cf. CCC 153.
(154) Ibidem.
(155) CCC 149.
(156) CT 20a: "It is in fact a matter of giving growth, at the level of
knowledge and in life, to the seed of faith sown by the Holy Spirit with the
initial proclamation".
(157) Cf. RM 46b.
(158) Cf. 1 Pet 2:2; Heb 5:13.
(159) Eph 4:13.
(160) RCIA 12.
(161) Cf. Eusebius of Caesrea, "Praeparatio evangelica", I,
1; SCh 206, 6; LG 16; AG 3a.
(162) ChL 4c.
(163) RCIA 12 and 111.
(164) Cf. RCIA 6 and 7.
(165) AG 13b..
(166) Cf. AG 13; EN 10; RM 46; VS 66; RCIA 10.
(167) AG 13b.
(168) Cf. MPD 8b; CCC 187-189.
(169) Mt 5:48; cf. LG 11, 40b, 42e.
(170) Cf. DV 24; EN 45.
(171) Cf. RM 33.
(172) RM 33b.
(173) RM 33b. It is important to be cognisant of the parameters (fines)
that RM assigns to the "mission ad gentes". This is not restricted
solely to territorial parameters (RM 37) but also to new social environments and
phenomena (RM 37) such as large cities, youth, migration and to cultural areas
and modern fora (RM 37) such as modern communications, science and ecology. In
virtue of this a particular Church already rooted in a particular territory
carries on a missio ad gentes not only ad extra but also ad
intra.
(174) RM 33c.
(175) RM 33d.
(176) Ibidem.
(177) RM 34b.
(178) RM 34c. The text also speaks of the mutual enrichment between the
mission ad intra and the mission ad extra. In RM 59c, in the
same way, it is shown how the mission ad gentes encourages people
towards development, while "new evangelization" in the more developed
nations brings about a clear sense of solidarity towards others.
(179) Cf. RM 31,34.
(180) 1977 Synod, MPD 8.
(181) DCG (1971) 20; CT 43; cf. Part Four, chap. 2.
(182) CT 19.
(183) Mk 16:15 and Mt 28:19.
(184) Mk 16:16.
(185) Cf. CT 19; DCG (1971) 18.
(186) RCIA 9-13. cf. CIC 788.
(187) In the present directory it is supposed that those to whom kerygmatic
catechesis or pre-catechesis is addressed will be interested in the
Gospel. In situations where they have no such interest then primary proclamation
is called for.
(188) Cf. RCIA 9,10,50; CT 19.
(189) CT 18; cf CT 20c.
(190) CT 18.
(191) Ibidem.
(192) AG 14.
(193) CT 18.
(194) St Cyril of Jerusalem, Catecheses illuminandorum, I, 11; PG.
33, 351-352.
(195) Cf. Mt 7:24-27.
(196) CT 13; cf. CT 15.
(197) CCC 1122.
(198) AG 14. Cf. CCC 1212, 1229.
(199) CCC 1253. In the baptismal catechumenate of adults in the mission ad
gentes catechesis precedes Baptism. In the catechesis of the baptized,
formation is subsequent to Baptism. However, also in this case a function of
catechesis is to help to discover and bring to life the immense richness of
Baptism already received. CCC 1231 uses the expression post-baptismal
catechumenate. ChL 61 calls it post-baptismal catechesis.
(200) Cf. CCC 1229; CD 14.
(201) CT 22. Cf. CT 21b, 18d.
(202) Cf. CT 21.
(203) Two things need to be underlined in this synodal contribution taken
from Catechesi Tradendae: the preoccupation to take into account a
pastoral problem ("I insist on the necessity of an organic and systematic
Christian education because for diverse reasons there has been a tendency to
minimize its importance"), and the fact of considering the organic nature
of catechesis as the principal characteristic connoting it.
(204) CT 21.
(205) Cf. CT 20; St Augustine, De catechizandis rudibus, I, chap. 4,
n. 8; CCL 46, 128-129.
(206) Cf. CT 21b.
(207) Cf. CT 21c.
(208) Cf. CT 33 and CCC 1231; AG 14.
(209) Cf. DCG (1971) 31.
(210) CT 24.
(211) DV 21.
(212) Jn 17:21.
(213) Cf. CT 48; cf. SC 52; DV 24; DCG (1971) 17; Missale Romanum, Ordo
Lectionum Missae, n. 24 Editio Typica Altera, Libreria Editrice Vaticana
1981.
(214) Cf. DV 21-25; Pontifical Biblical Commission, The interpretation
of the Bible in the Church (21 September 1993), especially in IV, see 2 and
3, Città del Vaticano 1993.
(215) SRS 41; cf. CA 5, 53-62. Congregation for Catholic Education, Guidelines
for the study and teaching of the Social Doctrine of the Church in the formation
of priests (30 December, 1988), Rome 1988.
(216) CT 23. Cf. SC 35 ad 3; CIC 777, 1 and 2.
(217) Cf. CT 21c and 47; DCG (1971) 96 c, d, e, f.
(218) Cf. 1 Pt 3,15 Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,
Instruction Dominum veritatis, n. 6b l.c. 1552. Confer also what
is indicated in CT 61, about the correlation between catechesis and theology.
(219) CT 45c.
(220) Congregation for Catholic Education, "The religious dimension of
education in the catholic school" (7 April 1988), n. 68; Tipografia
Poliglotta Vaticana, Roma 1988 cf. John Paul II, Allocution to the
priests of the diocese of Rome (5 March 1981). Insegnamenti di Giovanni
Paolo II, IV 1 pp. 629-630, CD 13c CIC 761.
(221) Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education, Document, The Catholic
school (19 March 1977) n. 26, Typographie Polyglotte Vaticane 1977.
(222) CT 69. Note also as per CT 69 the originality of religious instruction
in schools does not consist solely in rendering possible dialogue with culture
in general since this pertains to all the forms of ministry of the word.
Religious instruction in schools seeks in a more immediate way to promote this
dialogue in a personal process of systematic and critical initiation and by
encounter with the cultural patrimony promoted by the school.
(223) Cf. Congregation for Catholic Education, "The religious
dimension of education in the Catholic school", l.c. 70.
(224) Cf. John Paul II, Allocution on the Symposium of the Council
of the Episcopal Conference on the the Teaching of the Catholic Religion in the
public school (15 April 1991): Teachings of John Paul II, XIV1, pp.
780s.
(225) Ibid.
(226) Cf. CT 69, Congregation for Catholic Education, The religious
dimension of education in the Catholic school, n. 66: l.c.
(227) Cf. CT 33.
(228) Cf. CT 34.
(229) As has been stated in chapter I of this part in "The
transmission of Revelation by the Church, the work of the Holy Spirit" and
in part II, chapter I in "The ecclesial nature of the Gospel message".
Cf. EN 60 which speaks of the ecclesial nature of any evangelizing activity.
(230) Cf. LG 64; DV 10a.
(231) Cf. DCG (1971) 13.
(232) Cf. AG 22a.
(233) Cf. CT 28, RCIA 25 and 183-187. The traditio-redditio symboli
(the handing over and giving back of the Creed) is an important element of
the baptismal catechumenate. The bipolarity of this gesture expresses the double
dimension of the faith: the received gift (traditio) and the personal
and enculturated response (redditio). Cf. CT 28 for Aan adequate use in
catechesis of this most expressive rite.
(234) Cf. LG 64.
(235) CCC 169. The relation between the maternity of the Church and
her educative function is expressed very well by St Gregory the Great:
"Having been made fruitful by conceiving her children thanks to the
ministry of preaching, causes them to grow in her womb by her teaching. Moralia
XIX, c. 12, 9; PL 76, 108).
(236) CT 5; cf. CCC 426; AG 14a. In relation to this christological end of
catechesis see Part I, chap. I and Part II, chap. I. "Jesus Christ
mediator and fullness of Revelation" and that which is said in II part,
chapter 1 "Christiaity of the evagelical mission".
(237) AG 13b.
(238) CT 20c.
(239) LG 7b.
(240) MPD 8; CCC 185-197.
(241) Cf. CCC 189.
(242) Cf. CCC 180-190 and 197.
(243) Cf. CCC 2113.
(244) Cf. CCC 166-67; CCC 196.
(245) Cf. RM 45.
(246) The DCG (1971) 21-29 also distinguishes between the end (finis)
and the means (munera) of catechesis. These are the specific
objectives in which the end is concretized.
(247) Cf. Mk 4:10-12.
(248) Cf. Mt 6: 5-6.
(249) Cf. Mt 10,5-15.
(250) CT 21b.
(251) GE 4; cf. RICA 19, CIC 788,2.
(252) Cf. DCG (1971) 36a.
(253) Cf. DCG (1971) 24.
(254) DV 25a.
(255) SC 7.
(256) Cf. SC 14.
(257) DCG (1971) 25b.
(258) AG 13.
(259) Cf. LG 62; CCC 1965-1986. The CCC 1697 specifies in particular the
characteristics which catechesis must assume in moral formation.
(260) VS 107.
(261) Cf. CT 29f.
(262) RCIA 25 and 188-191.
(263) Cf. CCC 2761.
(264) PO 6d.
(265) AG 14d.
(266) DCG (1971) 27.
(267) UR 3b.
(268) CT 32; cf. CCC 821; CT 34.
(269) Cf. CT 24b and DCG (1971) 28.
(270) Cf. LG 31b and ChL 15; CCC 898-900.
(271) Cf. Mt 10:5-42 and Lk 10:1-20.
(272) Cf. EN 53 and RM 55-57.
(273) Cf. RM 55b; Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples and the
Pontifical Council for inter-religious dialogue, "Dialogue and
Proclamation" (19 may 1991), nn. 14-54; AAS 84 (1992), pp. 419-432. CCC
839-845; Part IV, chap. 4 of this Directory refers to those to whom
catechesis is addressed and returns to the topic Catechesis in the
context of other religions.
(274) RM 55a.
(275) Cf. CIC 773 and 778 § 2.
(276) Cf. DCG (1971) 22 and 23.
(277) Cf. DCG (1971) 26.
(278) DCG (1971) 31b.
(279) Cf. RCIA 19.
(280) RCIA 9-13.
(281) RCIA 14-20; 68-72; 98-105.
(282) RCIA 93; cf. MPD 8c.
(283) RCIA 21-26; 133-142; 152-159.
(284) RCIA 25 and 183-187.
(285) RCIA 25 and 188-192.
(286) RCIA 37-40; 35-239.
(287) This gradual nature is also apparent in the names which the Church
uses to designate those who are in the various stages of the baptismal
catechumenate: sympathizers (RCIA 12), those who are disposed to the
faith but do not yet fully believe; catechumens (RCIA 17-18), those who
have firmly decided to follow Jesus; elect (RCIA 24), those called to
receive Baptism; neophytes (RCIA 31-36) those just born into the light
by the grace of Baptism; the Christian faithful (RCIA 39), those who are
mature in the faith and active members of the Christian community.
(288) Cf. MPD 8; EN 44; ChL 61.
(289) In this DCG the expressions 'catechumens' and 'those being catechized'
are used to make this distinction. For its part the CIC, canons 204-206, notes
the different ways by which catechumens and the Christian faithful have union
with the Church.
(290) RCIA 295. The same Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults,
chap. 4, ponders the question of those baptized adults who need initiatory
catechesis. CT 44 specifies the diverse circumstances in which this catechesis
may be deemed necessary.
(291) AG 14d.
(292) Methodius of Olympus, for example, speaks of this maternal action
of the Christian community when he says: With regard to those who are still
imperfect (in the Christian life), it is for the more mature to form them and to
bring them to birth as a mother. (Symposium, III, 8; GCS 27, 88). See
also St Gregory the Great Homilia in Evangelia, I, III, 2; PL 76,1086
D).
(293) RCIA 8.
(294) Cf. CT 53.
(295) DCG (1971) 130. This article begins with the affirmation: "The
catechumenate for adults, which at one and the same time includes catechesis,
liturgical participation and community living, is an excellent example of an
institute that springs from the cooperation of diverse pastoral functions".
(296) Cf. DCG (1971) 36a.
(297) CT 27.
(298) Cf. DV 10 a e b; cf. 1 Tim 6:20 and 2 Tim 1:14.
(299) Cf. Mt 13:52.
(300) DV 13.
(301) Ibid.
(302) DV 10.
(303) As can be seen both expressions, the source and the sourcees,
are used. The term 'the source of catechesis' is used to underline the
oneness of the word of God and recalls the concept of Revelation in Dei
Verbum. CT 27 also speaks of 'the source' of catechesis. Nonetheless
following general catechetical usage the expression 'the sources' is used to
denote those concrete loci from which catechesis draws its message; cf. DCG
(1971) 45.
(304) Cf. DCG (1971) 45b.
(305) DV 9.
(306) Ibid.
(307) DV 10b.
(308) DV 10c.
(309) Cf. MPD 9.
(310) Cf. CCC 426-429; CT 5-6; DCG (1971) 40.
(311) CT 5.
(312) DCG (1971) 41a; cf. DCG (1971) 39, 40, 44.
(313) GS 10.
(314) CT 6.
(315) Cf. 1 Cor 15:1-4; EN 15e, f.
(316) CT 11b.
(317) CCC 139.
(318) Cf. Jn 14:6.
(319) The term 'one of the Trinity' was used by the Fifth Ecumenical Council
(Constantinople 533): cf. Constantinopolitanum II, Session VIII, can. 4, Dz
424. It is also used in CCC 468.
(320) CCC 234; cf. CCC 2157.
(321) DCG (1971) 41; cfr. Eph 2:18.
(322) Cf. DCG (1971) 41.
(323) Cf. CCC 258, 236 and 259.
(324) Cf. CCC 236.
(325) CCC 450.
(326) Cf. CCC 1878; CCC 1702. SRS uses the term model of unity when
referring to this question. CCC 2845 calls the communion of the Blessed Trinity
"the source and criterion of truth in every relationship".
(327) The term comes from St Cyprian "De orat. dom.", 23;
PL, 4:553; LG 4b.
(328) Cf. EN 11-14; RM 12-20; cf. CCC 541-556.
(329) In the liturgy of the Church it is expressed in the Easter Vigil: "Almighty
and eternal God you created all things in wonderful beauty and order. Help us
now to perceive how still more wonderful is the new creation by which in the
fullness of time you redeemed your people through the sacrifice of our Passover,
Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns forever and ever" (Missale Romanum,
Easter Vigil, prayer after the first reading).
(330) EN 9.
(331) CT 25.
(332) EN 26.
(333) This gift of Salvation confers on us, "justification"
by means of the grace of faith and of the Church's Sacraments, This grace frees
us from sin and introduces us to communion with God" (LC 52).
(334) EN 27.
(335) Cf. LG 3 and 5.
(336) Cf. RM 16.
(337) GS 39.
(338) LG 5.
(339) RM 20.
(340) EN 28.
(341) Cf. EN 30-35.
(342) EN 30.
(343) CA 57; cf. CCC 2444.
(344) EN 30.
(345) EN 32; cf. SRS 41 and RM 58.
(346) EN 32.
(347) EN 33. Cf. LC. This Instruction is an obligatory point of reference
for catechesis.
(348) LC 71.
(349) SRS 42; CA 57; LC 68. Cf. CCC 2443-2449.
(350) LC 68.
(351) SRS 41; cf. LC 77. For its part the 1971 Synod devoted attention to a
theme of fundamental importance to catechesis: Education in Justice (III, 2).
Cf. Documents of the Synod of Bishops, II De Iustitia in mundo III, 835-937.
(352) RCIA 75; cf. CCC 1253.
(353) Cf. CCC 172-175 where, inspired by St Irenaeus of Lyon there is an
analysis of all the riches contained in the reality of one faith.
(354) CCC 815: "...the unity of the pilgrim Church is also assured by
visible bonds of communion: profession of one faith received from the apostles;
common celebration of divine worship, especially of the sacraments; apostolic
succession through the sacrament of Holy Orders, maintaining the fraternal
concord of God's family".
(355) EN 61, which takes up St Gregory the Great and the Didaché.
(356) CCC 1076.
(357) DCG (1971) 44.
(358) The Fathers basing the content of catechesis on the narration of the
events of salvation, wish to root Christianity in time by showing that it was a
salvation history and not a mere religious philosophy. They also wished to
emphasize that Christ was the centre of this history.
(359) CCC 54-64. At this point the catechism deals with the most important
phases of revelation and in them the idea of Covenant is a key concept. These
texts are a fundamental reference for biblical catechesis. Cf. CCC 1081 and
1093.
(360) Cf. DV 4.
(361) DCG (1971) 11.
(362) CCC 1095. Cf. CCC 1075; CCC 1116; cf. CCC 129-130 and 1093-1094.
(363) CCC 1095. CCC 1075 indicates the inductive nature of this "mystagogical
catechesis" since it proceeds "from the visible to the invisible, from
the sign to the thing signified, from the 'sacraments' to the 'mysteries'".
(364) DV 2.
(365) DCG (1971) 72; cf. CCC 39-43.
(366) Cf. Part IV, chp 5.
(367) AG 10; cf. AG 22a.
(368) CT 53; cf. EN 20.
(369) The term "inculturation" is taken from diverse documents of
the Magisterium. See CT 53; RM 52-54. The concept of culture, either in a
general or an ethnological or sociological sense is clarified in GS 53. Cf. also
ChL 44a.
(370) AG 22a; cf. LG 13 and 17; GS 53-62; DCG (1971) 37.
(371) Cf. RM 52b which speaks of the "long time" required for
inculturation.
(372) EN 20; cf. EN 63; RM 52.
(373) LG 13 uses the expression "to foster and to take (fovet et
assumit)".
(374) LG 13 expresses it in this way: "she purifies, strengthens
and elevates them (sanare, elevare et consummare)".
(375) EN 19 affirms: "to acquire and almost to overturn".
(376) RM 54a.
(377) RM 54b.
(378) Cf. Guide for catechists, 12.
(379) Cf. CCC 24.
(380) CT 30.
(381) Ibid.
(382) DCG (1971) 38a.
(383) DCG (1971) 38b.
(384) Cf. Mt 11:30.
(385) EN 63 uses the expressions "transferre" and "traslatio";
cf. RM 53b.
(386) EN 63c; cf. CT 53c and CT 31.
(387) Synod 1985, II, D, 3; cf. EN 65.
(388) CT 31 which expounds the integrity and organization of the message;
cf. DCG (1971) 39 and 43.
(389) CCC 234.
(390) UR 11.
(391) DCG (1971) 43.
(392) DCG (1971) 41.
(393) St Cyril of Jerusalem affirms with regard to the Creed: "This
synthesis of faith was not made to accord with human opinions but rather what
was of the greatest importance was gathered from all the Scriptures, to present
the one teaching of the faith in its entirety. And just as a mustard seed
contains a great number of branches in a tiny grain, so too the summary of faith
encompassed in a few words the whole knowledge of the true religion contained in
the Old and New Testaments".
(394) CCC 1211.
(395) Ibid.
(396) St Augustine presents the Sermon on the Mount as "the perfect
charter of the Christian life and contains all the appropriate precepts
necessary to guide it" (De Sermone Domini in Monte I, 1; PL 34,
1229-1231); cf. EN 8.
(397) The Our Father is, in truth, the summing up of the entire Gospel
(Tertullian, De oratione, 1, 6). "Go through all the prayers in
the Scriptures and I do not believe that it is possible to find anyone,
anywhere, that is not included in the Lord's Prayer. (St Augustine, Epistolas,
130, 12; PL, 33, 502); cf. CCC 2761.
(398) GS 22a.
(399) Cf. Ibid.
(400) CT 22c; cf. EN 29.
(401) GS 22b.
(402) CCC 521; cf. CCC 519-521.
(403) Cf. CT 20b.
(404) Cf. Rm 6:4.
(405) DCG (1971) 74; cf. CT 29.
(406) Cf. AG 8a.
(407) Cf. Phil 1:27.
(408) Cf. CCC 1697.
(409) Cf. CCC 1145-1152 concerning the importance of signs and symbols in
liturgical action.
(410) Cf. part III, chapter 2.
(411) DCG (1971) 46.
(412) CT 31.
(413) Cf. CIC 775, §§ 1-3.
(414) Cf. FD 2d.
(415) FD 4a.
(416) DCG (1971) Introduction.
(417) DCG (1971) Part III, chap. 2.
(418) CCC 11.
(419) FD 4a; cf. FD 4b.
(420) CCC 815.
(421) FD 4a; cf. FD 4c.
(422) FD 1f; cf. FD 4c.
(423) FD 4d.
(424) Ibid.
(425) FD 3d.
(426) FD 2e.
(427) Cf.CCC 13.
(428) Cf. Part One, chap. 3.
(429) H.E. Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Il Catechismo della Chiesa
Cattolica e l'otttsimo dei redenti in J. Ratzinger-C. Schönborn,Brief
introduction to the Catechism of the Catholic Church (original title
Kleine Hinfürung zum Catechismus der Katolischen Kirche, München
1993) Roma 1994, pp. 26-27.
(430) Cf. CCC 189-190; 1077-1109; 1693-1695; 2564; etc.
(431) Cf. CCC 27-49; 355-379; 456-478; 1699-1756; etc.
(432) GS 22a.
(433) Cf. DCG (1971) 119.
(434) CCC 24.
(435) DV 21.
(436) MPD 9c. Cf. Pontifical Biblical Commission, The interpretation of
the Bible in the Church, IV, c, 3 l.c.
(437) CT 27; cf. Synod 1985, II B, a, 1.
(438) DV 9.
(439) Cf. MPD 9.
(440) DV 8c.
(441) When the Second Vatican Council called for the restoration of the
adult catechumenate it underlined its necessary gradual nature: "The Adult
Catechumenate arranged in various stages will be re-established" (SC 64).
(442) The witness of Origen is significant: "When you abandon the
darkness of idolatry and when you wish to arrive at a knowledge of the Divine
Law then you begin your exodus from Egypt. When you are counted among the
multitude of the catechumens, when you have started to obey the commandments of
the Church, then you have crossed the Red Sea. During the sojourn in the desert,
everyday, when you apply yourself to listen to the Law of God and to contemplate
the face of Moses who uncovers for you the glory of the Lord. But when you
arrive at the baptismal font, having crossed the Jordan, then you will enter
into the Promised Land" (Homiliae in Iesu Nave, IV, 1: SCh 71,
149).
(443) CCC 13.
(444) This section refers exclusively to official catechisms, that is those
catechisms which are proper to the diocesan bishop or Episcopal Conference (CIC
775). Non official catechisms (CIC 827) and other catechetical aids (DCG (1971)
116) will be considered in Part V, chap. 4.
(445) FD 4c.
(446) FD 4d.
(447) Cf. CIC 775.
(448) CT 53a; cf. CCC 24.
(449) CT 50.
(450) DV 15.
(451) Cf. DV 13.
(452) DV 13.
(453) DV 13. "Ineffable kindness", "providence and care",
"condescension" are terms which define the divine pedagogy in
Revelation. They show God's desire to " adapt Himself " (synkatabasis)
to human beings. This same spirit should guide the redaction of local
catechisms.
(454) DCG (1971) 119.
(455) In catechesis apart from catechetical aids there are other decisive
factors: the person of the catechist, his method of transmission, the rapport
between catechist and those being catechized, respect for the receptive capacity
of those being catechized, an atmosphere of love and faith in communication,
active involvement of the Christian community, etc.
(456) Cf. part IV, chapter 1.
(457) CCC 24.
(458) GS 44.
(459) CT 53a.
(460) Cf. CT 55c; MPD 7; DCG (1971) 34.
(461) Cf. CT 36-45.
(462) Local catechisms must give attention to the question and orientation
of popular devotions (cf. EN 48; CT 54 and CCC 1674-1676). Equally they should
be concerned with ecumenical dialogue (cf. CT 32-34; CCC 817-822) and with
inter-religious dialogue (cf. EN 53; RM 55-57 and CCC 839-845).
(463) LC 72 distinguishes between "principles of reflection", "criteria
of judgement" and "directives for action" which the Church offers
in her social doctrine. A catechism should also distinguish these various
levels.
(464) It refers fundamentally to "the different socio-religious
situations" faced by evangelization. These are examined in Part I, chap. I.
(465) On the distinction between local catechisms and syntheses of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church see "Orientamenti sulle sintesi del
Catechismo della Chiesa Cattolica", of the Congregation for the Clergy
and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Among other things it notes:
"syntheses of the Catechism of the Catholic Church can be
erroneously understood to be substitutes for local catechisms even to the extent
of discouraging these latter. However, they lack those adaptations to local
situations particular to those who are catechized which is required of
catechesis" (4).
(466) Cf. CIC 775 §§ 1-2.
(467) The question of language both in local catechisms and in catechetical
activity is of supreme importance. Cf. CT 59.
(468) EN 63. In the delicate task of assimilation and translation mentioned
in this text it is most important to bear in mind the observation of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and of the Congregation for the
Clergy "Orientamenti sulle sintesi del Catechismo della Chiesa
Cattolica", 3: "The preparation of local catechisms, which have
the Catechism of the Catholic Church as an authoritative and secure
reference text (FD 4), remains an important objective for the various
Episcopates. However, the foreseeable difficulties which can arise in such an
undertaking can only be overcome by an adequate assimilation of the Catechism
of the Catholic Church. Such assimilation even when it is accomplished over
a long period of time prepares the theological, catechetical and linguistic
ground for a work that really inculturates the contents of the Catechism".
(469) GS 62b.
(470) FD 4b.
(471) RM 54b.
(472) CCC 815.
(473) LG 23a.
(474) Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Letter Communionis
notio, n. 19 l. c. 843.
(475) Cf. CT 63b.
(476) Cf. Jn 15:15; Mk 9:33-37; 10:41-45.
(477) Cf. CT 9.
(478) Cf. Mk 8:14-21; 8:27.
(479) Cf. Mk 4:34; Lk 12:41.
(480) Cf. Lk 11:1-2.
(481) Cf. Lk 10:1-20.
(482) Cf. Jn 16:13.
(483) Cf. Mt 10:20; Jn 15:26; Acts 4:31.
(484) CT 9.
(485) CT 58.
(486) DV 15; DCG (1971) 33; CT 58; ChL 61; CCC 53, 122, 684, 708, 1145,
1609, 1950, 1964.
(487) Cf. Dt 8:5; Hos 11:3-4; Prov 3:11-12.
(488) Cf. Dt 4:36-40; 11:2-7.
(489) Cf. Ex 12:25-27; Dt 6:4-8; 6:20-25; 3:12-13; Jos
4:20.
(490) Cf. Amos 4:6; Hos 7:10; Jer 2:30; Prov
3:11-12; Heb 12:4-11; Apoc 3:19.
(491) Cf. Mk 8:34-38; Mt 8:18-22.
(492) LG 1.
(493) CCC 196; cf. GE 3c.
(494) Cf. GE 4.
(495) Cf. Paul VI, Ecyclical Letter, Ecclesiam Suam (6 August 1964),
III: AAS 56 (1964), 637-659.
(496) Cf. DV 2.
(497) Cf. RM 15; CCC 24b-25; DCG (1971) 10.
(498) Cf. MPG 11; CT 58.
(499) Cf. CT 52.
(500) Cf. Paul VI, Lett. enc. Ecclesiam Suam, l.c. 609-659.
(501) Cf. MPD 7-11; CCC 3; 13; DCG (1971) 36.
(502) DV 5.
(503) Cf. MPD 7; CT 55; DCD (1971) 4.
(504) CT 55.
(505) Cf. DCG (1971) 10 and 22.
(506) DV 13; CCC 684.
(507) Cf. DV 2.
(508) Cf. DV 13.
(509) Cf. EN 63; CT 59.
(510) Cf. CT 31.
(511) Cf. GE 1-4; CT 58.
(1) CT 51.
(2) Cf. CT 51.
(3) Cf. CT 31, 52, 59.
(4) Cf. CT 52.
(5) Cf. Pontifical Biblical Commission, The Interpretation of the Bible
in the Church, l.c..
(6) MPD 9.
(7) DCG (1971), 72.
(8) Cf. DCG (1971), 72.
(9) Cf. DCG (1971), 74; CT 22.
(10) By this we mean those experiences linked with the "great questions"
of life, reality and especially about the person: the existence of God, the
destiny of the human person, the origin and end of history, the truth about good
and evil, the meaning of suffering, of love and of the future...; cf. EN 53; CT
22 and 39.
(11) Cf. Part I, chap. III; DCG (1971) 73; CT 55.
(12) Cf. MPD 9.
(13) Cf. CT 55.
(14) Cf. CCC 22.
(15) CT 55.
(16) Cf. Part I, chap. 3. The baptismal Catechumenate: structure and
progression.
(17) DCG (1971), 71; cf. Part V, Chaps. 1 and 2.
(18) DCG (1971) 75.
(19) Cf. Part V Chap. 1.
(20) Cf. AG 14; DCG (1971), 35; CT 24.
(21) EN 46.
(22) DCG (1971), 76.
(23) Cf. DCG (1971) 122-123; EN 45; CT 46; FC 76; ChL 44; RM 37; Pontifical
Council for Social Communications, Instruction Aetatis Novae (22 Feb.
1992): AAS 84 (1992) pp. 447-468; EA 71; 122-124.
(24) RM 37.
(25) Cf. Aetatis novae, l.c., n. 11.
(26) Cf. EN 45.
(27) Cf. CT 46.
(28) Cf. DCG (1971), 122.
(29) RM 37.
(30) Cf. EN 45.
(31) Cf. FC 76.
(32) ChL 44.
(33) Cf. RM 15; EN 49-50; CT 35s; RM 14; 23.
(34) Cf. Lk 4:18.
(35) Cf. Mk 16:15.
(36) Cf. the General Introduction.
(37) Cf. DCG (1971), 77.
(38) EN 49-50; CT 14; 35s.
(39) RH 13; cf. EN 31.
(40) Cf. RH 13-14; CCC 24.
(41) Cf. DCG (1971), 75.
(42) Cf. DCG (1971), 21.
(43) CT 13.
(44) Cf. GS 44; EN 63; CT 31; CCC 24-25.
(45) GS 44. In this Part the terms adaptation and inculturation
are used because they are employed in the Magisterium and for practical
purposes. The first term mainly applies to attention given to persons while the
second term is applied to cultural contexts.
(46) Cf. RM 33.
(47) CCC 24.
(48) RH 14.
(49) Cf. CT 45.
(50) Cf. Part I, chap. II, nn. 142-144; DCG (1971), 20; 92-97; CT 43-44;
COINCAT, The catechesis of adults in the Christian community, 1990.
(51) Cf. DCG (1971), 20; CT 19; 44; COINCAT, 10-18.
(52) Cf. COINCAT 10-18.
(53) CT 44.
(54) Cf. CT 19.
(55) Cf. DCG (1971), 92-94; COINCAT, 20-25; 26-30; 33-84.
(56) Cf. 1 Cor 13:11; Eph 4:13.
(57) Cf. COINCAT, 33-84.
(58) Cf. COINCAT, 26-30.
(59) LG 31; cf. EN 70; ChL 23.
(60) Cf. ChL 57-59.
(61) Cf. DCG (1971), 97.
(62) Cf. Part I, chap. 2; DCG (1971), 96.
(63) Cf. DCG (1971) 78-81; CT 36-37.
(64) DCG (1971) 78-79; ChL 47.
(65) Cf. ChL 47.
(66) Mk 10:14.
(67) Cf. DCG (1971) 78-79; CT 37.
(68) Cf. CT 37.
(69) Cf. Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, Directory for Masses
with children; AAS 66 (1974) pp. 30-46.
(70) Cf. DCG (1971) 79.
(71) Cf. DCG (1971) 78, 79.
(72) Cf. DCG (1971) 80-81; CT 42.
(73) Cf. DCG (1971) 82-91; EN 72; CT 38-42.
(74) Cf. DCG (1971) 83.
(75) Cf. General Introduction, 23-24.
(76) Cf. DCG (1971) 82; EN 72; MDP 3; CT 38-39; ChL 46; TMA 58.
(77) GE 2; ChL 46.
(78) Cf. Mt 19:16-22; cf. John Paul II, Apostolic Letter to Youth
Parati Semper (31 March 1985): AAS 77 (1985), pp. 579-628.
(79) Cf. John Paul II, "Parati semper", n. 3.
(80) ChL 46; DCG (1971) 89.
(81) DCG (1971) 84-89; CT 38-40.
(82) DCG (1971) 87.
(83) Other important themes include: the relationship between faith and
reason; the existence and meaning of God; the problem of evil; the Church; the
objective moral order in relation to personal subjectivity; the encounter
between man and woman; the social doctrine of the Church.
(84) CT 40.
(85) Cf. DCG (1971) 95; ChL 48.
(86) Cf. ChL 48.
(87) Cf. DCG (1971) 91; CT 41.
(88) Cf. CT 59.
(89) Cf. EN 51-56; MPD 15.
(90) Cf. General Introduction.
(91) Cf. EN 54.
(92) Cf. 1 Pet 3:15.
(93) Cf. DCG (1971) 6; EN 48; CT 54.
(94) EN 48.
(95) EN 48.
(96) Cf. Paul VI, Apostolic Exhortation Marialis cultus (2 February
1974), nn. 24, 25, 29, AAS 66 (1979), pp. 134-136, 141.
(97) Cf. DCG (1971) 27; MPG 15; EN 54; CT 32-34; Pontifical Council for the
Promotion of Christian Unity, Directory for the application of principles
and norms concerning Ecumenism, 61 AAS 85 (1993) pp. 1063-1064; TMA 34; (cf.
Ut Unum sint (25 May, 1995) n. 18 AAS 87 (1995), p. 932.
(98) CT 32.
(99) Cf. UR 11.
(100) Cf. Directory for the application of principles and norms
concerning Ecumenism, n. 190; l.c., p. 1107.
(101) Cf. CT 33.
(102) Nostra Aetate, Segretariat for Christian Unity, Commission for
religious relations with Judaism, Jews and Judaism in Catholic preaching and
catechesis 24 june 1985.
(103) CCC 839.
(104) Jesus and Judaism in Catholic preaching and Catechesis, n.
VII.
(105) Cf. Nostra Aetate, 4.
(106) Cf. EN 53; MPD 15; ChL 35; RM 55-57; CCC 839-845; TMA 53; Sacred
Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples - Pontifical Council for
inter-religious dialogue, Dialogue and Proclamation (19 May 1991): AAS
84 (1992), pp. 414-446; 1263.
(107) Report of the Secretariat for Christian Unity, the Secretariat for
non-Christians and the Secretariat for non-believers and the Pontifical Council
for Culture The Phenomenon of Sects or new religious movements: pastoral
challenge, L'Osservatore Romano, 7 May 1986.
(108) The Phenomenon of Sects or new religious movements: pastoral
challenge, cit., n. 5. 4.
(109) RM 38.
(110) Cf. Part II, chap. 1; DCG (1971) 8; EN 20; CT 53; RM 52-54; John Paul
II, Discourse to members of the International Council for catechesis, L'Osservatore
Romano, of September 27, 1992; cf. Congregation for Divine Norship and the
discipline of the Sacraments, The Roman liturgy and Inculturation, 1994;
International Theological Commission, Document on the faith and
inculturation: (25 Janury, 1985); AAS 87 (1995), pp. 288-319 Commissio
Theologica on the Faith and Inculturation (3-8 October, 1988). Apostolic
Exhortation Ecclesia in Africa (1995); cf. Discourses of John Paul II to
the various Churches in his pastoral visits.
(111) Cf. EN 20; 63; CT 53; RM 52-54; CCC 172-175.
(112) CT 53.
(113) Cf. Part II, chap. 1.
(114) CT 53.
(115) Cf. CT 53.
(116) EN 20.
(117) RM 54.
(118) Cf. CT 59.
(119) CT 59.
(120) RM 37.
(121) Cf. Part III, chap. 2.
(122) Cf. DCG (1971), 123.
(123) John Paul II, to the members of COINCAT l.c.
(124) CCC 24; John Paul II, Fidei Depositum 4.
(125) Cf. RM 37.
(126) ChL 63.
(127) Cf. Part V, chap. 4.
(128) EN 63.
(129) In Part Five as in the rest of the document the term particular
Church refers to dioceses and there equiparates (CIC Canon 368). The term
local Church refers to a group of particular Churches delineated in terms of
Region or Nation or group of Nations united by special links. Cf. Part I, chap.
III and Part II, chap. I. "The ecclesial nature of the Gospel message".
(130) As mentioned in LG 26a the term Churches in the NT is used to
denote lawful groups of the faithful; see the biblical texts with which this
part opens.
(131) Cf. CD 11.
(132) The particular Church is described before all else as Populi Dei
portio or "a portion of the people of God".
(133) Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Lettera Communionis
Noito, 7 (AAS 85 -1993), 842.
(134) Communionis Notio, 9b.
(135) LG 23b refers to St Hilary of Poitiers In Ps 14:3 (PL 9, 206)
and St Gregory the Great Moralia: IV, 7, 12 (PL 75, 643 C).
(136) EN 14.
(137) Cf. Acts 2:11.
(138) Communionis Notio 7.
(139) Ibid. 9b: l.c., p. 843; cf. AG 4.
(140) The expression ministry of catechesis is used in CT 13.
(141) It is important to underline the nature of the one service which
catechesis has in the particular Church. The subject of evangelizing activity is
the particular Church. She proclaims and transmits the Gospel, which
celebrates... The agents of catechesis "serve" this ministry and work "in
the name of the Church." The theological, spiritual and pastoral
implications of the ecclesial nature of catechesis are considerable.
(142) CT 16: "Shared but differentiated responsibility". Cf. also
note 54, as well as note 50 for a clarification of the term "ministry of
the Word".
(143) AG 14. In this sense CT 16 says: "Catechesis always has been, and
always will be a work for which the whole Church must feel responsible and must
wish to be responsible." Cf. also 1977 Synod; MPG 12; RCIA 12; CIC 774 §
1.
(144) Catechesis must be supported by the witness of the ecclesial
community, DCG (1971) 35; cf. part IV, chapter 2.
(145) CT 24.
(146) "Besides this apostolate, which belongs to absolutely every
Christian, the laity can be called in different ways to more immediate
co-operation in the apostolate of the hierarchy, like those men and women who
helped the apostle Paul in the Gospel, labouring much in the Lord" (LG 33).
This conciliar doctrine is adopted by CIC 228 and 759.
(147) LG 25; cf. CD 12a; EN 68c.
(148) LG 25.
(149) Ibid.
(150) DV 8.
(151) CT 63b.
(152) Cf. CT 12a.
(153) CT 63c.
(154) CT 63c; CIC 775 § 1.
(155) Cf. CT 63c; CIC 823 § 1.
(156) CT 63c.
(157) CD 14b; CIC 780.
(158) Cf. PO 8; 6; 12a; John Paul II, Post synodal exhortation Pastores
dabo vobis (25 March 1992), n. 12 l.c. 675-677.
(159) PO 6b.
(160) Cf. CIC 773.
(161) LG 10.
(162) LG 10. Concerning the "two ways of participating in the single
priesthood of Jesus Christ", cf. CCC 1546-1547.
(163) PO 9b.
(164) Cf. CIC 776-777.
(165) CT 64. With respect to this basic orientation which priests must
collaborate in giving to catechesis, the Second Vatican Council indicates two
basic requirements: "their role is to teach not their own wisdom but the
word of God", (PO 4) and "to expound the word of God not merely in a
general and abstract way but by an application of the eternal truth of the
Gospel to the concrete circumstances of life" (ibid.).
(166) Cf. chap. 3 of this Part, The family as an environment or means of
growth in the faith, where the characteristics of family catechesis are
analysed; here, more consideration is given to parents as agents of catechesis.
Cf. CIC 226 § 2; 774 § 2.
(167) CT 68.
(168) Ibid.
(169) Ibid.
(170) Cf. ChL 62; cf. FC 38.
(171) FC 38.
(172) CT 68; cf. EN 71b.
(173) Cf. CT 68.
(174) LG 11; FC 36b.
(175) CT 65; cf. CIC 778.
(176) CCC 915; cf. LG 44.
(177) EN 69; cf. VC 33.
(178) Cf. VC 31 concerning "the relationship between the diverse
states of life of the Christian"; cf. CCC 932.
(179) CT 65; cf. RM 69.
(180) CT 65.
(181) Cf. 1 Cor 12:4; cf. LG 12b.
(182) LG 31. ChL 15 contains a detailed analysis of the ?secular
character' of the lay faithful.
(183) LG 35.
(184) AA 2b. cf. Rituale Romanum, Ordo Baptisimi Parvulorum, n. 62,
Editio Typica, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis 1969; RCIA 224.
(185) CCC 429.
(186) The Code of Canon Law establishes that ecclesiastical
authority may officially entrust an office or an ecclesial service to the laity,
prescinding from the fact that this service is or is not a formally instituted
non-ordained ministry: "lay people, who are found to be
suitable, are capable of being admitted by the sacred pastors to those
ecclesiastical offices and functions which, in accordance with the provisions of
law, they can discharge" (CIC 228 § 1); cf. EN 73; ChL 23.
(187) CT 66b; cf. GCM.
(188) CT 66b.
(189) GCM 4.
(190) Ibid.
(191) CT 45; cf. RM 37, ab, par. 2.
(192) RM 33.
(193) CT 66a.
(194) Ibid.; cf. CT 42.
(195) Cf. DCG (1971) 96.
(196) Cf. CT 45; cf. DCG (1971) 95.
(197) Cf. DCG (1971) 91; cf. CT 41.
(198) CT 45a.
(199) GMC, 5.
(200) In missionary territories (CT 66) the Second Vatican Council
distinguishes two types of catechist: full time catechists and auxiliary
catechists (cf. AG 17). This distinction is taken up in the Guide for
Catechists 4, which refers to them as full-time catechists and part-time
catechists.
(201) Cf. GMC, 5.
(202) DCG (1971) 108a.
(203) Cf. DCG (1971) 111.
(204) Cf. CT 5c. This text defines the christocentric end of catechesis.
This fact determines the Christocentric content of catechesis. It also
determines the christocentricity of the response of those to whom catechesis is
addressed (the 'Yes' to Jesus Christ) and the christocentricity of the
spirituality of the catechist and of his formation.
(205) The four stages of the baptismal catechumenate are cultivated in a
christocentric prospective.
(206) Guide for Catechists, 20.
(207) LG 64.
(208) DCG (1971) 114.
(209) Cf. Guide for Catechists, 7.
(210) Cf. Guide for Catechists, 13.
(211) DCG (1971) 31.
(212) CT 52; cf. CT 22.
(213) CT 22d.
(214) Cf. GCM, 21.
(215) The following human qualities are suggested by the Guide for
Catechists: facility in human relationships and dialogue facilitating
communication, a disposition to collaboration, a willingness to act as a guide,
serenity of judgement, understanding and realism, a capacity to give consolation
and hope (cf. 21).
(216) EN 79.
(217) Cf. ChL 60.
(218) Cf. DCG (1971) 112. Guide for Catechists, 23, underlines the
primary importance of Sacred Scripture in the formation of catechists: "May
Sacred Scripture continue to be the principal subject of teaching and may it
become the soul of all theological study. Where necessary may this be actualized".
(219) ChL 60c.
(220) CT 22.
(221) DCG (1971) 112.
(222) GS 62b.
(223) DCG (1971) 100.
(224) GS 59.
(225) "In the teaching of human sciences, given their very great number
and diversity there are difficult problems in regard to choosing from among them
and in regard to the method of teaching them. Since the question here is one of
training catechists, not experts in psychology, the norm to be followed is this:
determine and choose that which can directly help them to acquire facility in
communication." DCG (1971) 112.
(226) A fundamental text for use of the human sciences in the formation of
catechists continues to be that recommended by the Second Vatican Council in GS
62: "The faithful ought to work in close conjunction with their
contemporaries and try to get to know that their ways of thinking and feeling,
as they find them expressed in current culture. Let the faithful incorporate the
findings of new sciences and teachings and the understanding of the most recent
discoveries with Christian morality and thought so that their practice of
religion and their moral behaviour may keep abreast of their acquaintance with
science and of the relentless progress of technology: in this way they will
succeed in evaluating and interpreting everything with an authentically
Christian sense of values".
(227) The importance of pedagogy is underlined by CT 58: "Among the
many prestigious sciences of man that are nowadays making immense advances,
pedagogy is certainly one of the most important... the science of education and
the art of teaching are continually being subjected to review, with a view to
making them better adapted or more effective, with varying degrees of success".
(228) Cf. CT 58.
(229) Cf. DCG (1971) 113.
(230) Ibid.
(231) DCG (1971) 112.
(232) Cf. GCM, 28.
(233) "Priests and religious ought to assist the lay faithful in their
formation. In this regard the Synod Fathers have invited priests and candidates
for Orders ?to be prepared carefully so they are ready to foster the vocation
and mission of the lay faithful'". ChL 61.
(234) Cf. ChL 61.
(235) "Also to be recommended are those parochial initiatives that
promote the interior formation of catechists, such as prayer groups, the
fraternal life, spiritual sharing and spiritual retreats. These initiatives do
not isolate catechists but they help them to grow in their own spirituality and
in communion with one another" (GCM, 22).
(236) Cf. DCG (1971) 110.
(237) Cf. concerning schools for catechists in the missions: AG 17c; RM 73;
CIC 785 and GCM, 30. For the Church in general see: DCG (1971) 109.
(238) The expression 'ordinary catechist' is used in DCG (1971) 112c.
(239) Cf. DCG (1971) 109b.
(240) DCG (1971) 109a.
(241) CT 71a.
(242) See Part Five, chap. 1 where mention is made of the community
responsibility for catechesis. This is regarded as a locus of catechizing.
(243) Cf. Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, "Communionis
notio", n. 1: l.c. 838.
(244) Cf. MPD 13.
(245) Cf. CT 24.
(246) CT 67a. This is a classic expression in catechesis. The
Apostolic Exhortation speaks of the places of catechesis (de locis
catecheseos).
(247) Cf LG 11; cf AA 11; FC 49.
(248) EN 71.
(249) Cf. GS 52; FC 37a.
(250) See Part I, chap. III. Here the question of the baptismal
catechumenate as a locus of catechesis is addressed in relation to the
continuing presence of the community in it.
(251) Cf. DCG (1971), 130 which describes the end of the baptismal
catechumenate. Cf. RCIA 4 indicates the connection between the baptismal
catechumenate and the Christian community.
(252) 1977 Synod, MPG 8c.
(253) Cf. RCIA 4, 41.
(254) RCIA 18.
(255) RCIA 41.
(256) Cf. RCIA 41.
(257) Cf. CT 67c.
(258) Cf. AA 10.
(259) CT 67b.
(260) Ibid.
(261) Ibid.
(262) The importance of adult catechesis is underlined in CT 43 and DCG
(1971) 20.
(263) ChL 61.
(264) Cf. EN 52.
(265) Cf. DCG (1971) 96c.
(266) It is important to state as Pope John Paul II does in ChL 61 the
usefulness of small ecclesial groups in the context of parishes. They should not
however be a parallel movement which absorbs the best members of parishes: "internal
to the parish, especially if vast and territorially extensive, small Church
communities, where present, can be a notable help in the formation of Christians
by providing a consciousness and an experience of ecclesial communion and
mission which are more extensive and incisive".
(267) Cf. Congregation for Catholic Education, The Catholic School, Rome
1977.
(268) Congregation for Catholic Education, The religious dimension of
education in the Catholic School. Outlines for Reflection, Rome 1988, n.
31.
(269) GE 28.
(270) Congregation for Catholic Education, The Religions dimension of
education in the Catholic School, n. 32: l.c.
(271) "The special character of the Catholic school, the underlying
reason for it, the reason why Catholic parents should prefer it, is precisely
the quality of the religious instruction integrated into the education of the
pupils" (CT 69); cf Part I, Chap. 2, nn. 73-76.
(272) AG 12c.
(273) Cf. CT 70.
(274) CT 70 mentions those associations, movements and groups of faithful in
which the catechetical aspects of their formation are attended to but which do
not give rise, properly speaking, to environments of chatechizing.
(275) ChL 62.
(276) CT 67.
(277) CT 47b.
(278) CT 47b.
(279) CT 47. In this text Pope John Paul II speaks of diverse groups of
young people: groups of Catholic action, prayer groups, groups for Christian
reflection... he asks that in these there should also be a serious study of
Christian doctrine. Catechesis should always be considered an essential part in
the apostolic life of the laity.
(280) Cf. CT 21.
(281) Cf. CT 67b-c.
(282) EN 58 indicates how basic ecclesial communities flourish nearly
everywhere in the Church. RM 51 refers to them as a phenomenon in rapid growth.
(283) EN 58c.
(284) RM 51a; cf. EN 58f; LC 69.
(285) RM 51c.
(286) Ibid., RM 51; cf. EN 58; LC 69.
(287) DCG (1971) 126. The diocesan office (officium catechisticum)
was instituted in every diocese by the decree Provido Sane (1935): cf.
AAS 27 (1935), p. 151; see also CIC 775 § 1.
(288) Cf. DCG (1971) 100. the general lines are suggested in the Introduction
and also in this chapter under the heading: Analysis of the situation and of
needs.
(289) Cf. DCG (1971) 103. See also in this chapter: "Programmes of
catechetical actions and orientation".
(290) Cf. DCG (1971) 108-109. See also Part V, chapter II.
(291) Cf. DCG (1971) 116-124.
(292) DCG (1971) 126.
(293) Cf. CT 63. Pope John Paul II recommends that catechesis be given
"pertinent and effective organization, putting in to operation the
necessary personnel, means and equipment, and also financial resources".
(294) DCG (1971) 126.
(295) Ibidem.
(296) DCG (1971) 127.
(297) CIC 775 § 3.
(298) Cf. DCG (1971) 129.
(299) AG 38a; cf. CIC 756 §§ 1-2.
(300) John Paul II, Allocution to the Bishops of the United States
of America, during the meeting in the seminary of Our Lady of Los Ageles
16-IX-1987: Insegnamenti di Giovanni Paolo II, X, 3 (1987), 556. The
expression is taken from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Communionis
Notio, Rome 1992, n. 13, l.c. 846.
(301) Apostolic Constitution Pastor Bonus, art. 1. This
constitution, of 28 June 1988, deals with the reform of the Roman Curia which
had been requested by the Council: cf. CD 9. The first reform was promulgated by
the Apostolic Constitution Regimmini Ecclesiae of Paul VI, 18 August
1967: AAS 59 (1967) pp. 885-928.
(302) See nn. 282 and 284 of this chapter.
(303) PB, 94.
(304) RM 33.
(305) Ibid.
(306) CD 17a: "...the various forms of the apostolate should be
encouraged. Close collaboration and the co-ordination of all the apostolic works
under the direction of the Bishop should be promoted in the diocese as a whole
or in parts of it. Thus all the undertakings and organizations, whether their
object be catechetical, missionary, charitable, social, family, educational, or
any other pastoral end, will act together in harmony, and the unity of the
diocese will be more closely demonstrated".
(307) Cf. Part IV, chap. 2: "Catechesis according to age".
(308) CT 45c.
(309) Ibid.
(310) Cf. DCG (1971) 20, where it is shown how the other forms of catechesis
are ordered (ordinantur) to adult catechesis.
(311) CT 18d.
(312) RM 33.
(313) Ibidem.
(314) Cf. CT 19 and 42.
(315) Cf. AG 11-15. The concept of evangelization as a process structured in
stages was analysed in Part I, chap. I. The process of evagelization.
(316) CT 67b.
(317) DCG (1971) 100.
(318) Cf. Part Five, chap. 5.
(319) DCG (1971) 102; cf. Introductory explanation, 16.
(320) Cf. DCG (1971) 117 and 134; PB 94.
(321) With regard to this ensemble of catechetical books Catechesi
Tradendae notes: "one of the major features of the renewal of
catechetics today is the rewriting and multiplication of catechetical books
taking place in many parts of the Church. Numerous very successful works have
been produced and are a real treasure in this service of catechetical
instruction" (CT 49). DCG (1971) 120 defines textbooks in the
following way: "textbooks are aids offered to the Christian community that
is engaged in catechesis. No text can take the place of a live communication of
the Christian message; nevertheless, the texts do have great value in that they
make it possible to present a fuller exposition of the witnesses of Christian
tradition and of principles that foster catechetical activity".
(322) With regard to catechetical manuals DCG (1971) 121 indicates what they
should contain: "an explanation of the message of Salvation (constant
reference must be made to the sources and a clear distinction must be kept
between those things which pertain to the faith and to the doctrine that must be
held, and those things which are mere opinions of theologians); psychological
and pedagogical advice; suggestions about methods".
(323) Cf. Part Three, chap. 2, Social communication; cf. DCG (1971)
122.
(324) CT 49b.
(325) Ibid.
(326) Ibid.
(327) The question of local catechisms has been dealt with in Part two,
chap. II. Here we intend to present only some criteria for their elaboration. By
the term "local catechisms" the present document refers to those
catechisms which are proposed by particular Churches or by Episcopal
Conferences.
(328) FD 3c.
(329) CT 50.
(330) DCG (1971) 119, 134; CIC 775 § 2; PB 94.
(331) Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, "Communionis
Notio" 9; l.c. 843.
(332) Cf. EN 75a.
(333) Cf. EN 75d.
(334) RM 21.
(335) Cf. CT 72.
(336) CT 72.
(337) CT 73.
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