The New Evangelization needs to reach out to young people using every
means available, new and old, Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles
says.
“It is our mission to ask God for the grace to discover new means to
reach out to young people,” Archbishop Gomez said. “We need to use all
the new means of communication so that they can understand what we are
talking about.”
The New Evangelization must present timeless truths in new ways, he
told CNA on Oct. 18 during a break of the synod on the New
Evangelization.
“Beautiful traditions, like the exposition of the Blessed Sacrament,
and the time of contemplation and meditation, are very popular among
young people,” he noted. “So we have to go back to that, so that they
can feel, too, how important … the Catholic faith is for them.”
Young people are a major focus of the New Evangelization – which is
aimed at reintroducing the faith to formerly Christian countries.
Archbishop Gomez believes the Church can accomplish this by taking action rooted in prayer.
“The first thing we need to do is to pray for them,” he said. “And then
we have to come up with new, better ways to reach out to them.”
In the Los Angeles, for example, “we have specific congresses in every
region of the archdiocese, and some of them try to target young people,
so that they can come and participate and see how beautiful it is to
know Jesus Christ. We pray for them, and entrust their needs (to God)
and see that they get excited about the Catholic faith.”
That excitement is rooted not in feelings but the realization that “the
Catholic faith has all the answers to all the challenges of this
society,” he said. In turn, this recognition should foster “a new
enthusiasm in the way that we know and practice our faith.”
Bishops at the synod say that Church-approved catechists will be
instrumental in bringing people to Christ and making the New
Evangelization a success.
Archbishop Gomez was excited to report that last week he presided at a
Mass welcoming 3,000 new Church-certified catechists. Many of them are
Spanish speakers who can minister to LA-area Latinos who may be devout
and practice popular pieties but need instruction in the faith.
Before hurrying off to a late lunch, Archbishop Gomez referenced a
point he made at his Oct. 9 synod address: “the teachings of the
Catholic Church have not changed, society has changed.”
At that address, he said, “We need to find the ‘language’ that best
presents the traditional means of sanctification – the sacraments,
prayer, works of charity – in a way that is attractive and accessible to
people living in the reality of a globalized, secular, urban society.
“With our rich treasury of Catholic spiritualities … and with our good
news of God's ‘family plan’ for history, we possess powerful resources
for our evangelization of culture in the context of globalization and
the increasing secularization in our societies.”