Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York told the synod of bishops
gathered at the Vatican that “the primary sacrament of the New
Evangelization is the sacrament of penance.”
“Yes the sacraments of initiation – baptism, confirmation and the
Eucharist – change, challenge and equip the agents of evangelization,
but the sacrament of reconciliation evangelizes the evangelizers, as it
brings us sacramentally into contact with Jesus who calls us to
conversion of heart and inspires (us) to answer his invitation to
repentance,” Cardinal Dolan said on Oct. 9, the third day of the synod.
Cardinal Dolan is one of seven U.S. bishops present at the synod, which
runs October 7-28 and was convened by Pope Benedict to discuss the
theme of “The New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian
Faith.”
Speaking in the presence of the Pope, Cardinal Dolan proposed that for a
new evangelization to happen “the very agents of evangelization must
first be evangelized themselves,” and that begins with sacramental
confession.
With only 48 hours to go before the 50th anniversary of the Second
Vatican Council’s opening, he lamented the fact that while the council
“called for a renewal of the sacrament of penance,” what emerged “sadly,
in many places, was the disappearance of the sacrament.”
Instead, he recalled, the conclusion of Vatican II in 1965 saw a series
of demands for the “reform of structures, systems, institutions and
people other than ourselves.”
But the answer to the question “what is wrong with the world?” proved
was not external factors like “politics, the economy, secularism,
pollution or global warming,” he noted.
“No, as G.K. Chesterton wrote, the answer to the question what is wrong with the world is two words: ‘I am.’”
Cardinal Dolan stated in his remarks to his 250 fellow bishops that
paving the way for a personal “conversion of heart and repentance,”
which is the “core of the Gospel invitation,” requires a recognition of
personal sin.
“This happens in the sacrament of penance. This is the sacrament of the
New Evangelization,” he said to warm applause from the assembled Synod
Fathers, experts and observers.