INTRODUCTION
The Holy Father concluded the Synod of the Americas, begun in November 1997 and capped with his Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in America released at the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City in January this year on the Pope's visit to the Americas. It is the Sovereign Pontiff who has expressed a strong desire to see North, Central and South Americas to be considered "one continent" and he expresses the solidarity, communion and conversion of all nations in the Western Hemisphere in this summation of all that was discussed and decided on between Rome and the Bishops of America at the month-long synod late in 1997. We bring you, over several installments, the entire document since it is pertinent not only to the Bishops and clergy, but to the lay communicants of the Americas. To read the entire document at one time or for footnotes, go to Ecclesia in America. To the right is installment fourteen of ECCLESIA IN AMERICA.
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Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in America
From Pope John Paul II to the Bishops, Priests and Deacons, Men and Women Religious, and all the Lay Faithful on the encounter with the Living Jesus Christ: The Way to Conversion, Communion and Solidarity in America
Installment Fourteen of ECCLESIA IN AMERICA: CHAPTER FOUR: THE PATH TO COMMUNION
Promoting vocations
40. The indispensable role of the priest within the community must lead all
the members of the Church in America to recognize the importance of
promoting vocations. The American continent has many young people,
who represent an immense spiritual resource. Therefore, it is necessary
to foster vocations to the priesthood and religious life where they first
develop, and Christian families must be invited to support their children if
they feel called to follow this path. (131) Vocations “are a gift of God”
and “they are born in communities of faith, above all in the family, the
parish, Catholic schools and other Church organizations. Bishops and
priests are particularly responsible for encouraging vocations by
personally presenting the call, and above all by their witness of a life of
fidelity, joy, enthusiasm and holiness. The entire People of God is
responsible for promoting vocations, and does so chiefly by persistent
and humble prayer for vocations”. (132)
As places which accept and train those called to the priesthood,
seminaries must prepare the future ministers of the Church to live “a solid
spirituality of communion with Christ the Shepherd and of openness to the
workings of the Spirit, that will make them specially able to discern the
needs of God's People and their various charisms, and to work together”.
(133) Therefore, in seminaries “there should be special insistence upon
specifically spiritual formation, so that through constant conversion, the
spirit of prayer, the practice of the Sacraments of the Eucharist and
Penance, the candidates may learn to be close to the Lord and learn to
commit themselves generously to pastoral work”. (134) Those
responsible for formation should carefully supervise and guide the
seminarians towards emotional maturity so that they may be fit to
embrace priestly celibacy and be prepared to live in communion with their
brother priests. They should also foster in seminarians the capacity for
critical observation so that they can discern true and false values, since
this is an essential requirement for establishing a constructive dialogue
with the world of today.
Special attention needs to be given to vocations among indigenous
peoples: they need a formation which takes account of their culture.
While receiving a proper theological and pastoral formation for their future
ministry, these candidates for the priesthood should not be uprooted from
their own culture. (135)
The Synod Fathers wished to thank and bless all those who devote their
lives to the formation of future priests in seminaries. They also invited the
Bishops to assign the most suitable priests to this work, after preparing
them with specific training for this delicate mission. (136)
Renewing parishes
41. The parish is a privileged place where the faithful concretely
experience the Church. (137) Today in America as elsewhere in the
world the parish is facing certain difficulties in fulfilling its mission. The
parish needs to be constantly renewed on the basis of the principle that
“the parish must continue to be above all a Eucharistic community”. (138)
This principle implies that “parishes are called to be welcoming and
fraternal, places of Christian initiation, of education in and celebration of
the faith, open to the full range of charisms, services and ministries,
organized in a communal and responsible way, capable of utilizing
existing movements of the apostolate, attentive to the cultural diversity of
the people, open to pastoral projects which go beyond the individual
parish, and alert to the world in which they live”. (139)
Because of the particular problems they present, special attention needs
to be given to parishes in large urban areas, where the difficulties are
such that normal parish structures are inadequate and the opportunities
for the apostolate are significantly reduced. The institution of the parish,
however, retains its importance and needs to be preserved. For this,
there is a need “to keep looking for ways in which the parish and its
pastoral structures can be more effective in urban areas”. (140) One
way of renewing parishes, especially urgent for parishes in large cities,
might be to consider the parish as a community of communities and
movements. (141) It seems timely therefore to form ecclesial communities
and groups of a size that allows for true human relationships. This will
make it possible to live communion more intensely, ensuring that it is
fostered not only “ad intra”, but also with the parish communities to which
such groups belong, and with the entire diocesan and universal Church.
In such a human context, it will be easier to gather to hear the word of
God, to reflect on the range of human problems in the light of this word,
and gradually to make responsible decisions inspired by the all-embracing
love of Christ. (142) The institution of the parish, thus renewed, “can be
the source of great hope. It can gather people in community, assist family
life, overcome the sense of anonymity, welcome people and help them to
be involved in their neighborhood and in society”. (143) In this way, every
parish, and especially city parishes, can promote nowadays a more
person-centered evangelization and better cooperate with other social,
educational and community work. (144)
Moreover, “this kind of renewed parish needs as its leader a pastor who
has a deep experience of the living Christ, a missionary spirit, a father's
heart, who is capable of fostering spiritual life, preaching the Gospel and
promoting cooperation. A renewed parish needs the collaboration of lay
people and therefore a director of pastoral activity and a pastor who is
able to work with others. Parishes in America should be distinguished by
their missionary spirit, which leads them to reach out to those who are
faraway”. (145)
Permanent deacons
42. For serious pastoral and theological reasons, the Second Vatican
Council decided to restore the diaconate as a permanent element of the
hierarchy of the Latin Church, leaving to the Episcopal Conferences, with
the approval of the Supreme Pontiff, the task of assessing whether and
where to establish permanent deacons. (146) The experience has varied
significantly, not only in the different parts of America but even between
dioceses of the same area. “Some dioceses have trained and ordained a
good number of deacons, and they are fully satisfied with their integration
and their ministry”. (147) Here we see with joy how deacons “sustained
by the grace of the Sacrament, in the ministry (diakonia) of the Liturgy, of
the word and of charity are at the service of the People of God, in
communion with the Bishop and his priests”. (148) Other dioceses have
not followed this path, while elsewhere there have been difficulties in
integrating permanent deacons into the hierarchical structure.
With due respect for the freedom of the particular Churches to restore
the permanent diaconate, with the approval of the Supreme Pontiff, it is
clear that for such a move to be successful there has to be a careful
selection process, solid formation and continuous attention to the
suitability of the candidates, as well as constant concern for them once
they are ordained, and — in the case of married deacons — concern as
well for their families, wives and children. (149)
Consecrated life
43. The history of evangelization in America bears eloquent testimony to
the missionary work accomplished by countless consecrated Religious
who from the beginning proclaimed the Gospel, defended the rights of the
indigenous peoples and, with heroic love for Christ, dedicated themselves
to service of the People of God on the continent. (150) The contribution of
Religious to the proclamation of the Gospel in America is still enormously
important; it is a varied contribution shaped by the charisms of each
group: “Institutes of contemplative life which witness to God as absolute;
apostolic and missionary Institutes which make Christ present in all the
many different areas of human life; Secular Institutes which help to
resolve the tension between real openness to the values of the modern
world and the profound offering of one's heart to God. New Institutes and
new forms of consecrated life are also coming into being, and these
require evangelical discernment”. (151)
Since “the future of the new evangelization . . . is unthinkable without the
renewed contribution of women, especially women Religious”, (152) it is
urgent to promote their participation in the various areas of Church life,
including decision-making processes, especially on issues which
concern them directly. (153)
“Today too the witness of a life consecrated completely to God is an
eloquent proclamation of the fact that God suffices to give fulfillment to
the life of each person”. (154) This consecration to the Lord must become
generous service in the spreading of God's Kingdom. For this reason, on
the threshold of the Third Millennium, it is necessary to ensure “that
consecrated life be more highly esteemed and promoted by Bishops,
priests, and Christian communities, and that, conscious of the joy and
responsibility of their vocation, consecrated religious be fully integrated
into the particular Church to which they belong, fostering communion and
mutual cooperation”. (155)
NEXT MONDAY: Installment fifteen - Chapter Four: Lay faithful and the renewal of the Church
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