Friday, December 14, 2007

Notes on a Note: the CDF Note on Evangelization

After much searching, I haven't been able to find the complete 19 page text of the New Doctrinal Note on Some Aspects of Evangelization. Here is the English summary released by the Vatican

DOCTRINAL NOTE ON SOME ASPECTS OF EVANGELIZATION

SUMMARY POINTS

I. Introduction

1. The Doctrinal Note is devoted principally to an exposition of the Catholic Church’s understanding of the Christian mission of evangelization, which is to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ; the word "Gospel" translates "evangelion" in the Greek New Testament. "Jesus Christ was sent by the Father to proclaim the Gospel, calling all people to conversion and faith. ‘Go out into the whole world and preach the Gospel to every creature’ (Mk 16,15)." [n. 1]

2. The Doctrinal Note cites Pope John Paul II’s Encyclical Letter "The Mission of the Redeemer" in recalling that "‘Every person has the right to hear the Good News [Gospel] of the God who reveals and gives himself in Christ, so that each one can live out in its fullness his or her proper calling.’ This right implies the corresponding duty to evangelize." [n. 2]

3. Today there is "a growing confusion" about the Church’s missionary mandate. Some think "that any attempt to convince others on religious matters is a limitation of their freedom," suggesting that it is enough to invite people "to act according to their consciences", or to "become more human or more faithful to their own religion", or "to build communities which strive for justice, freedom, peace and solidarity", without aiming at their conversion to Christ and to the Catholic faith.

Others have argued that conversion to Christ should not be promoted because it is possible for people to be saved without explicit faith in Christ or formal incorporation in the Church. Because "of these problems, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has judged it necessary to public the present Note." [n. 3]

II. Some Anthropological Implications

4. While some forms of agnosticism and relativism deny the human capacity for truth, in fact human freedom cannot be separated from its reference to truth. Human beings are given intellect and will by God that they might come to know and love what is true and good. The ultimate fulfillment of the vocation of the human person is found in accepting the revelation of God in Christ as proclaimed by the Church.

5. This search for truth cannot be accomplished entirely on one’s own, but inevitably involves help from others and trust in knowledge that one receives from others. Thus, teaching and entering into dialogue to lead someone in freedom to know and to love Christ is not inappropriate encroachment on human freedom, "but rather a legitimate endeavor and a service capable of making human relationships more fruitful." [n. 5]

6. The communication of truths so that they might be accepted by others is also in harmony with the natural human desire to have others share in one’s own goods, which for Catholics includes the gift of faith in Jesus Christ. Members of the Church naturally desire to share with others the faith that has been freely given to them.

7. Through evangelization, cultures are positively affected by the truth of the Gospel. Likewise, through evangelization, members of the Catholic Church open themselves to receiving the gifts of other traditions and cultures, for "Every encounter with another person or culture is capable of revealing potentialities of the Gospel which hitherto may not have been fully explicit and which will enrich the life of Christians and the Church." [n. 6]

8. Any approach to dialogue such as coercion or improper enticement that fails to respect the dignity and religious freedom of the partners in that dialogue has no place in Christian evangelization.

III. Some Ecclesiological Implications

9. "Since the day of Pentecost … the Gospel, in the power of the Holy Spirit, is proclaimed to all people so that they might believe and become disciples of Christ and members of his Church." "Conversion" is a "change in thinking and of acting," expressing our new life in Christ; it is an ongoing dimension of Christian life.

10. For Christian evangelization, "the incorporation of new members into the Church is not the expansion of a power-group, but rather entrance into the network of friendship with Christ which connects heaven and earth, different continents and ages." In this sense, then, "the Church is the bearer of the presence of God and thus the instrument of the true humanization of man and the world." (n. 9)

11. The Doctrinal Note cites the Second Vatican Council’s "Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World" (Gaudium et Spes) to say that respect for religious freedom and its promotion "must not in any way make us indifferent towards truth and goodness. Indeed, love impels the followers of Christ to proclaim to all the truth which saves." [n.10] This mission of love must be accomplished by both proclamation of the word and witness of life. "Above all, the witness of holiness is necessary, if the light of truth is to reach all human beings. If the word is contradicted by behavior, its acceptance will be difficult." On the other hand, citing Pope Paul VI’s Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii nuntiandi, the Note says that "even the finest witness will prove ineffective in the long run, if it is not explained, justified… and made explicit by a clear und unequivocal proclamation of the Lord Jesus." [n. 11]

IV. Some Ecumenical Implications

12. The CDF document points out the important role of ecumenism in the Church’s mission of evangelization. Christian divisions can seriously compromise the credibility of the Church’s evangelizing mission. The more ecumenism brings about greater unity among Christians, the more effective evangelization will be.

13. When Catholic evangelization takes place in a country where other Christians live, Catholics must take care to carry out their mission with "both true respect for the tradition and spiritual riches of such countries as well as a sincere spirit of cooperation." Evangelization proceeds by dialogue, not proselytism. With non-Catholic Christians, Catholics must enter into a respectful dialogue of charity and truth, a dialogue which is not only an exchange of ideals, but also of gifts, in order that the fullness of the means of salvation can be offered to one’s partners in dialogue. In this way, they are led to an ever deeper conversion to Christ.

"In this connection, it needs also to be recalled that if a non-Catholic Christian, for reasons of conscience and having been convinced of Catholic truth, asks to enter into the full communion of the Catholic Church, this is to be respected as the work of the Holy Spirit and as an expression of freedom of conscience and of religion. In such a case, it would not be question of proselytism in the negative sense that has been attributed to this term." [n. 12]

V. Conclusion

14. The Doctrinal Note recalls that the missionary mandate belongs to the very nature of the Church. In this regard it cites Pope Benedict XVI: "The proclamation of and witness to the Gospel are the first service that Christians can render to every person and the entire human race, called as they are to communicate to all God’s love, which was fully manifested in Jesus Christ, the one Redeemer of the world." Its concluding sentence contains a quotation from Pope Benedict’s first Encyclical Letter "Deus caritas est": "The love which comes from God unites us to him and ‘makes us a we which transcends our divisions and makes us one, until in the end God is all in all (1 Cor 15:28)’."


Sherry's comments: Great stuff. Several points that stand out:

1) ‘Every person has the right to hear the Good News [Gospel] of the God who reveals and gives himself in Christ." Freedom of information extends to the knowledge of Christ.

2) The fact that it is possible for people to be saved without explicit knowledge of Christ or formal incorporation into the Church is not a reason to stop proclaiming Christ.

3) I am struck by the phrase "the vocation of the human person" as in "The ultimate fulfillment of the vocation of the human person is found in accepting the revelation of God in Christ as proclaimed by the Church."

4) The search for truth cannot be conducted alone. "Thus, teaching and entering into dialogue to lead someone in freedom to know and to love Christ is not inappropriate encroachment on human freedom, "but rather a legitimate endeavor and a service capable of making human relationships more fruitful.".

Notice: dialogue leading someone to know and love Christ - which is very exciting since that is exactly what we are doing in our new seminar: Making Disciples. How to begin a conversation with post-moderns that stimulates curiosity about and movement toward Christ and his Church.

5) Catholic traditionalist purists will not like this:

"Likewise, through evangelization, members of the Catholic Church open themselves to receiving the gifts of other traditions and cultures, for "Every encounter with another person or culture is capable of revealing potentialities of the Gospel which hitherto may not have been fully explicit and which will enrich the life of Christians and the Church."

Notice: our encounter with non-Catholics enables us to turn back to the fullness of the Apostolic faith and see new "potentialities of the Gospel" which will "enrich the Church." It seems that the CDF thinks we can learn things from non-Catholics - even from evangelicals.

6. I simply love this: "
"entrance into the network of friendship with Christ which connects heaven and earth, different continents and ages." Would that it were more clearly experienced on the ground. As a close friend told me excitedly this week: "Guess what! We met a family of Catholics who are believers!"

7. Even the finest witness of life is not enough without verbal proclamation:

"even the finest witness will prove ineffective in the long run, if it is not explained, justified… and made explicit by a clear und unequivocal proclamation of the Lord Jesus." [n. 11]

8. Ecumenism among Christians is critical to evangelization and evangelization is done differently (not eliminated!) in countries with a local Christian tradition. " With non-Catholic Christians, Catholics must enter into a respectful dialogue of charity and truth, a dialogue which is not only an exchange of ideals, but also of gifts, in order that the fullness of the means of salvation can be offered to one’s partners in dialogue. In this way, they are led to an ever deeper conversion to Christ." Non-Catholic Christians have gifts to give us.

Which reminds me of Cardinal Avery Dulles' First Things "Saving Ecumenism From Itself" in which he writes "I have therefore been urging an ecumenism of mutual enrichment by means of testimony. This proposal corresponds closely, I believe, with John Paul II’s idea of seeking the fullness of truth by means of an “exchange of gifts.”

9. Non-Catholic Christians have the freedom to enter the Catholic Church as a free act of conscience without it being the result of proselytism. (Obviously this is aimed primarily at the Orthodox. It will be interesting to see their response)

None of this is new, of course. Just clear, high level, authoritative reaffirmations of points that are currently debated on several fronts.

"The proclamation of and witness to the Gospel are the first service that Christians can render to every person and the entire human race, called as they are to communicate to all God’s love, which was fully manifested in Jesus Christ, the one Redeemer of the world."


Absolutely. I look forward to reading the entire Note in depth.

5 Comments:

At December 14, 2007 9:19:00 AM MST , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ms. Weddell,

No one, least of all "traditionalist Catholics," disputes anything in this document. The Catholic Church has a long history of evangelization, which is part of our tradition. What many, so-called "traditionalists" do question, however, are the methods which are used by some in this arena. This document put forward some answers to this question, as well.

Your notion that traditionalists will not accept the idea of potentialities of the Gospel being revealed by encounters with non-Catholics is absurd. Read some Church history. Read about the potentialities revealed through the use of Greek philosophy. Read the Fathers of the Church. The whole notion of communio was based on such a revelation of potentialities. So is the whole concept of theology, the revelation of new insights as the ages advance.

As to whether or not the Church can learn from evangelicals, I simply cite Benedict XVI's statement at the opening of CELAM V (May 2007):

"Yet it is true that one can detect a certain weakening of Christian life in society overall and of participation in the life of the Catholic Church, due to secularism, hedonism, indifferentism and proselytism by numerous sects, animist religions and new pseudo-religious phenomena."

The "numerous sects" to which the Holy Father refers are evangelicals and pentecostals. It is arguable that he does not even consider them Christian, given his argument here that they are responsible for a weakening of "Christian life in society overall."

Moreover, you have never replied to the notion that evangelicalism is first and foremost a construction of Modernism and, as such, is inimical to the premodern philosophy and hermeneutics of Catholicism. So the jury's still out on that one.

Janice Kraus

 
At December 14, 2007 9:40:00 AM MST , Blogger Sherry W said...

Janice:

"The "numerous sects" to which the Holy Father refers are evangelicals and pentecostals. It is arguable that he does not even consider them Christian, given his argument here that they are responsible for a weakening of "Christian life in society overall."

Thanks for the memorable quote.

I find it amazing that you so constantly and readily dismiss the sacramental economy when it comes to Christians whose ideas who don't like. If they are validly baptized, they are true Christians as the Catholic Church has constantly recognized over the centuries. That's why the Vatican engages in high level ecumenical (NOT inter-religious dialogue) with evangelicals and Pentecostals and publishes the results.

As we (and Dr. Blosser) have pointed out more times than I can count, your argument is with the Church teaching at the highest level but if you don't accept that, you certainly won't accept anything I say here.

As we know from long and weary experience on this blog and several others, you never respond to argument. You just attack, attack, attack with lashings of ad hominems and invective.

I will retain your comment here although it violates ID's policy of not telling other Christians that they are not true Christians - because you have articulated your rejection of explicit Church teaching in this area for all to see and that should be immortalized.

However, I will not have you dominate the discussion (and scare away thoughtful commenters) here as you have done so here in the past on so many occasions and as you do so on so many other blogs. I have real work to do today. So I will delete any other comments that you make here without apology or warming.

 
At December 14, 2007 2:33:00 PM MST , Anonymous Anonymous said...

I love the idea of an exchange of spiritual gifts. It just seems to radical to work. To have an interfaith meeting where the pentecostals teach us about speaking in tongues and we teach them about the papacy? No way that is going to happen. We have enough trouble just getting together to sing a few songs.

 
At December 14, 2007 4:15:00 PM MST , Blogger Heather said...

The document is indeed wonderful, and heretics have always been considered Christians, however they are not to be considered members of the Mystical Body of Christ according to Pius XII in Mystici Corporis Christi. With regard to non-Catholic Christians the text is clear:

"Therefore, the work of ecumenism does not remove the right or take away the responsibility of proclaiming in fullness the Catholic faith to other Christians, who wish to receive it."

Also the statement is clear that all truth directs the hearer to the Catholic Church:

"Therefore, every free movement of the human heart towards God and towards his kingdom can not but by its very nature lead to Christ and be oriented towards entrance into his Church...."

And the money quote in the footnote on the first page where the document mentions the "pilgrim Church is necessary for salvation."

"This teaching does not contradict the universal salvific will of God, who "desires that all men be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth" therefore, "it is necessary to keep these two truths together, namely, the real possibility of salvation in Christ for all mankind and the necessity of the Church for salvation."

 
At December 15, 2007 2:12:00 AM MST , Blogger Kiwi Nomad 2006 said...

Catholic sensibility carried a link on his blog to the full text on pdf.
http://www.catholic-ew.org.uk/PDF%27s/evangelisation_note_english_141207.pdf

 

Post a Comment

<< Home