Thursday, July 26, 2007

Pope urges each young Christian to bring a contemporary to Christ

Each young person must have “the courage to promise the Holy Spirit that they will bring another young person to Christ”.

Benedict XVI’s message in preparation for the XXIII World Youth Day is fundamentally a missionary mandate.

The gathering will take place in Sydney Australia, and has as its theme: “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you will be my witnesses (Acts 1:8)”.

While the final exhortation is: “Be prepared to put your life on the line in order to enlighten the world with the truth of Christ; to respond with love to hatred and disregard for life; to proclaim the hope of the risen Christ in every corner of the earth (n. 7)”, the papal message highlights the necessary steps to be taken in order to realise this mission.

“I gladly offer you an outline for meditation”, writes Benedict XVI, centring his discourse on the unbreakable bond between the Spirit and mission. Pentecost, in fact, is “the starting point of the Churches mission”. The Holy Spirit renewed the Apostles from within, filling them with a power that would give them courage to go out and boldly proclaim that “Christ has died and is risen!”

Freed from all fear, they began to speak openly with self-confidence (cf. Acts 2:29; 4:13; 4:29,31). These frightened fishermen had become courageous heralds of the Gospel.

Even their enemies could not understand how “uneducated and ordinary men” (cf. Acts 4:13) could show such courage and endure difficulties, suffering and persecution with joy.

Nothing could stop them. To those who tried to silence them they replied: “We cannot keep from speaking about what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20). This is how the Church was born, and from the day of Pentecost she has not ceased to spread the Good News “to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8) (n. 3).

“If we are to understand the mission of the Church, we must go back to the Upper Room where the disciples remained together (cf. Lk 24:49), praying with Mary, the “Mother”, awaiting the Spirit that had been promised. This icon of the nascent Church should be a constant source of inspiration for every Christian community.

Apostolic and missionary fruitfulness is not principally due to programmes and pastoral methods that are cleverly drawn up and “efficient”, but is the result of the community’s constant prayer (cf. Evangelii Nuntiandi, 75). Moreover, for the mission to be effective, communities must be united, that is, they must be “of one heart and soul” (cf. Acts 4:32), and they must be ready to witness to the love and joy that the Holy Spirit instils in the hearts of the faithful (cf. Acts 2:42)” (n. 4).

The Pope reminds young people that “the Holy Spirit continues today to act with power in the Church, and the fruits of the Spirit are abundant in the measure in which we are ready to open up to this power that makes all things new. For this reason it is important that each one of us know the Spirit, establish a relationship with Him and allow ourselves to be guided by Him.”. This is why it is important to observe the sacraments, “particularly those of Christian initiation: Baptism, Confirmation and the Eucharist, which are complementary and inseparable” (n. 5).

“The need and urgency of mission” thus becomes the answer to the many questions which arise in young people regarding their future. “They anxiously ask: How can we fit into a world marked by so many grave injustices and so much suffering? How should we react to the selfishness and violence that sometimes seem to prevail? How can we give full meaning to life?

How can we help to bring it about that the fruits of the Spirit mentioned above, “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control” can fill this scarred and fragile world, the world of young people most of all?” (n. 7).

“to proclaim the Gospel and bear witness to the faith is more necessary than ever today (cf. Redemptoris Missio, 1). There are those who think that to present the precious treasure of faith to people who do not share it means being intolerant towards them, but this is not the case, because to present Christ is not to impose Him (cf. Evangelii Nuntiandi, 80).

Moreover, two thousand years ago twelve Apostles gave their lives to make Christ known and loved. Throughout the centuries since then, the Gospel has continued to spread by means of men and women inspired by that same missionary fervour.

Today too there is a need for disciples of Christ who give unstintingly of their time and energy to serve the Gospel”. (n. 7)

If this is the mission of all Christians, the Pope’s proposal to young people is to “bring their contemporaries to Jesus Christ”.

“The difficulty that adults undoubtedly find in approaching the sphere of youth in a comprehensible and convincing way could be a sign with which the Spirit is urging you young people to take this task upon yourselves. You know the ideals, the language, and also the wounds, the expectations, and at the same time the desire for goodness felt by your contemporaries. This opens up the vast world of young people’s emotions, work, education, expectations, and suffering ... Each one of you must have the courage to promise the Holy Spirit that you will bring one young person to Jesus Christ in the way you consider best, knowing how to “give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope, but [to] do it with gentleness and reverence” (cf. 1 Pet 3:15). (n. 7).

“In order to achieve this goal, my dear friends, you must be holy and you must be missionaries since we can never separate holiness from mission (cf. Redemptoris Missio, 90).”..In order to “Invoke a ‘new Pentecost’ on the world”.

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