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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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VATICAN (CWN) -- Pope John Paul II has called upon Catholics in the United States to avoid the Western tendency to reduce their understanding of the Catholic Church to political or social categories,
and to honor the teachings of the magisterium.
In a meeting today with American bishops who were making their
ad limina visit, the Holy Father emphasized the need to
understanding the teachings of Vatican II-- especially the apostolic
constitutions Lumen Gentium, and Gaudium et Spes, dealing
respectively with the Church and her engagement in the world.
The Pope observed that there is a tendency in the West to "confine
religious convictions to the interior and the private sphere," and that
this tendency constitutes an obstacle to the Church's teaching. The
mission of Christians is to transform the culture, he insisted.
Particularly in the United States, the Pope continued, historical
factors have produced an attitude in which religion is viewed
through a sociological or political lens. That attitude has harmed the
Church, he continued, producing an incomplete and misleading
"horizontal" view of the Church's mission.
The Holy Father urged the bishops to instruct their flocks in the
"very rich" ecclesiology of the Vatican Council. The Church must be
understood, he said, as "the new relation which God established
between himself and humanity through the Cross of Christ." Thus the
Church held together by communion, rather than mere membership.
The Pope added: "One does not join the Church the way one joins a
voluntary association." Rather, belonging to the Church means
"incorporation into the Body of Christ."
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