New Evangelisation part 1: A Pope and his students
What does New Evangelisation actually mean? How does the Church – universally and
locally – envision its concrete application? Is there any ‘master plan’? And what
did they really talk about at the Ratzinger Summer School? These are some of the questions
that Emer McCarthy put to Fr. Vincent Twomey SVD., Professor emeritus of Moral Theology
at Maynooth seminary in Ireland, and one of the founding members of the Ratzinger
Schuelerkreis.
Recently convened for their annual meeting in Castel Gandolfo
(Aug. 25-28), the group of 40 former theology and philosophy students of then Professor
Joseph Ratzinger were given the task of discussing this sometimes ‘nebulous’ term.
Added to their ranks were academics who have chosen to study the thought and writings
of Joseph Ratzinger – a suggestion first put forward by Fr. Twomey himself - creating
a veritable ‘think-tank’, with some surprising results.
In the first part of
this two part interview, Fr. Twomey speaks of how the concept of New Evangelisation
is a thread that runs throughout the teaching and writing of Pope Benedict XVI, then
Professor Ratzinger. He brings us back to their first meeting over 40 years ago, when
as a young Irish missionary priest, he sought out the ‘promising and brilliant theologian’
in his ‘simple’ Bavarian home to ask to study under him. Fr. Twomey takes us on a
journey from the Münster and Tübingen years, through the establishment of Ratzinger’s
first ‘Doctoral colloquium’, to the Regensburg years and finally, Rome. He
speaks about why the New Evangelisation calls for ‘God’s humility’ and why – contrary
to popular belief – secularisation is not wholly negative. Listen: