The Catholic Church’s New Evangelization effort is not an attempt to
present the Gospel again to people who did not understand it the first
time, but to present the Gospel in a way that makes sense and gives hope
to modern men and women, said the general secretary of the Synod of
Bishops.
At a Vatican news conference March 4, Archbishop Nikola Eterovic, the synod official, presented the lineamenta (outline) for the 2012 general Synod of Bishops.
The 65-page outline is a reflection on various aspects of the New
Evangelization theme and includes dozens of questions about current
needs and practices; bishops’ conferences are supposed to answer the
questions by Nov. 1, so their responses can be used as a basis for the
synod’s working document.
The synod is scheduled to meet at the Vatican Oct. 7-28, 2012; Pope
Benedict XVI chose the theme, which was announced just a few months
after he established the Pontifical Council for Promoting New
Evangelization.
The synod outline defines “New Evangelization” as “the courage to
forge new paths in responding to the changing circumstances and
conditions facing the Church in her call to proclaim and live the Gospel
today.”
Archbishop Eterovic said the most immediate aim of New Evangelization
is to help people who already are baptized, but do not practice the
faith, rediscover the joy of believing and actively living their faith.
It also includes reminding them and all Christians of the obligation of
witnessing the Gospel and proclaiming it to others.
“Christian witness must be both private and public, embracing one’s
thoughts and actions, the way of life inside Christian communities and
their missionary outreach, their educational action, charitable
activities and their presence in contemporary society in order to
communicate the gift of Christian hope,” the archbishop said.
The document said bringing people back to Christ will be impossible
unless there are efforts to evangelize increasingly secular cultures, to
evangelize increasingly diverse societies and to evangelize the media,
the economy, politics, science and the Church itself.
Although it did not specifically mention the sex-abuse crisis, the
document said one fruit of evangelization “is the courage to speak out
against infidelity and scandal which arise in Christian communities as a
sign and consequence of moments of fatigue and weariness in the work of
proclamation.”
A true and lively faith gives individuals and entire Church
communities the ability to recognize their faults and sins, seek
repentance and begin all over again, witnessing to the fact that
conversion and salvation are possible in Christ, it said.
By calling for a New Evangelization, the Church is not criticizing
the way the faith was initially transmitted, the document said, but
rather it is recognizing that it needs to find new ways of proclaiming
the Gospel that respond to the needs of people who are living in modern
societies where anything involving God or faith is considered naive or
too private for polite conversation.
The document also said New Evangelization is essential where the
media tend to preach instant gratification, where population shifts have
meant the disappearance of “Catholic countries,” and where science and
technology have become so advanced and seemingly able to accomplish
anything and everything that science is the god people go to when
they’re hurting or confused.
Catholics, it said, “must know how to speak in ways that are
intelligible to our times and proclaim, inside these areas, the reasons
for our hope, which bolsters our witness.”
The document emphasized the importance of giving the baptized a solid
education in the basics of the faith and in helping nourish their faith
with the Eucharist and the Bible, especially through good preaching at
Masses.
While the synod outline said Christians must always act in a way that
witnesses to the faith and cannot be afraid to tell others about
Christ, it also said dialogue with members of other religions can help
Christians learn more about the shared human yearning for God and for
meaning: The more Christians understand the desires of the human heart
and how they are expressed today, the more easily they can respond.