Sunday, December 16, 2012

Church in America: Beginning with the family

Latin America and the Caribbean, the United States and Canada are home to half the world’s global Catholic population. Pope Benedict XVI’s described the Church in America as an irreplaceable source of “zealous generosity” and “missionary spirit”.

But according to the 250 participants at the International Conference underway here at the Vatican, marking 15 years since Blessed John Paul II’s post-Synodal exhortation Ecclesia in America, a lot more can and must be done. 

The ‘New Continent’ aims to be at the forefront of New Evangelisation: by harnessing the untapped potential of Catholic laity north and south of the border; by strengthening collaboration and coordination between the local churches, to build the civilisation of love, evoked by Ecclesia in America; by seeing in the current anthropological crisis an opportunity to spread the message that speaks strongest of Christ…love, beginning with the family.

According to Dr. Guzmán Carriquiry Secretary General of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, relations between the Churches on the continent have at times been fragmentary. In fact he credits the 1997 Synod as having had a ground breaking exploratory character in drawing American Church leaders together.

Today 15 years on, “many common realities and problems require greater cooperation from the Churches on an inter-American level”, noted Commission President Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet. 

The Cardinal who is also Prefect of the Congregation for bishops spoke of the important presence of the "Hispanic" in Canada and the United States, the unresolved and often dramatic issue of immigration, the spiral of violence usually fuelled by drug trafficking networks and increased drug use. 

But above all, the Cardinal signalled out attacks on the culture of life and the institution of marriage and the family, which he described as a continent wide issue, and the need to safeguard religious liberty: “We all know that in the Western world in a very special way we are going through a very deep anthropological crisis”. “It is a sign of the times”, he added “that the New Evangelisation really has to go through the testimony of the laity, through sacramental marriage and the sense of the family as the heart of the New Evangelisation”.

“In a cultural context where the Church is seen a preaching from outside the culture, the witness of the laity, and of all Christians, inside the culture is critical” said Carl A. Anderson, leader of the Knights of Columbus, who are co-sponsoring the event with the Pope’s Commission for Latin America.

According to Anderson, this begins with recovering “a sacramental understanding of Christian marriage…we cannot in carrying forward the mission of the New Evangelisation, proclaim the truth about man and his dignity unless we proclaim with courage and conviction the truth about marriage and the family…”. “Today Catholics are called to evangelization which of itself constitutes a kind of reform of how Catholics live”.

“What is needed is not simply new pastoral initiative towards those who no longer embrace Christianity – though such outreach is of course imperative today – the New Evangelisation must be broader and also more positive in scope” he continued.

“While it may be prompted by, it cannot be determined by the crisis of our age…the message that speaks strongest of Christ is love… beginning with the family and extending to the more general. But nevertheless, urgent concern for the poor and those who suffer. The Western hemisphere is fertile ground for the seed of this Christian charity. Only by building a civilization of love can Catholics help build the authentic solidarity and communion described in Ecclesia in America”.

“In the message of Our Lady of Guadalupe and in the life of St Juan Diego it is manifest that this call for a new assimilation and proclamation of the Gospel embraces the Church as a whole, in every people and nation in which she is present”.