Below is the full text of the introduction on the New Evangelization given on Friday
by Cardinal-designate Timothy Dolan (Archbishop of New York) during the Day of Prayer
and Reflection of the College of Cardinals the day before the Consitory creating 22
new Cardinals.
The Announcement of the Gospel Today, Between missio
ad gentes and the New Evangelization
Holy Father, Cardinal Sodano, my brothers
in Christ: Sia lodato Gesu Cristo!
It is as old as the final mandate of
Jesus, “Go, teach all nations!,” yet as fresh as God’s Holy Word proclaimed at our
own Mass this morning.
I speak of the sacred duty of evangelization. It is
“ever ancient, ever new.” The how of it, the when of it, the where of it, may change,
but the charge remains constant, as does the message and inspiration, “Jesus Christ,
the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow.”
We gather in the caput mundi, evangelized
by Peter and Paul themselves, in the city from where the successors of St. Peter “sent
out” evangelizers to present the saving Person, message, and invitation that is at
the heart of evangelization: throughout Europe, to the “new world” in the “era of
discovery,” to Africa and Asia in recent centuries.
We gather near the basilica
where the evangelical fervor of the Church was expanded during the Second Vatican
Council, and near the tomb of the Blessed Pontiff who made the New Evangelization
a household word.
We gather grateful for the fraternal company of a pastor
who has made the challenge of the new evangelization almost a daily message.
Yes,
we gather as missionaries, as evangelizers.
We hail the teaching of the Second
Vatican Council, especially found in Lumen Gentium, Gaudium et Spes, and Ad Gentes,
that refines the Church’s understanding of her evangelical duty, defining the entire
Church as missionary, that all Christians, by reason of baptism, confirmation, and
Eucharist, are evangelizers.
Yes, the Council reaffirmed, especially in
Ad Gentes, there are explicit missionaries, sent to lands and peoples who have never
heard the very Name by which all are saved, but also that no Christian is exempt from
the duty of witnessing to Jesus and offering His invitation to others in his own day-to-day
life.
Thus, mission became central to the life of every local church, to every
believer. The context of mission shifted not only in a geographical sense, but in
a theological sense, as mission applied not only to unbelievers but to believers,
and some thoughtful people began to wonder if such a providential expansion of the
concept of evangelization unintentionally diluted the emphasis of mission ad gentes.
Blessed
John Paul II developed this fresh understanding, speaking of evangelizing cultures,
since the engagement between faith and culture supplanted the relationship between
church and state dominant prior to the Council, and included in this task the re-evangelizing
of cultures that had once been the very engine of gospel values. The New Evangelization
became the dare to apply the invitation of Jesus to conversion of heart not only ad
extra but ad intra, to believers and cultures where the salt of the gospel had lost
its tang. Thus, the missio is not only to New Guinea but to New York.
In
Redemptoris Missio, #33, he elaborated upon this, noting primary evangelization --
the preaching of Jesus to lands and people unaware of His saving message -- the New
Evangelization -- the rekindling of faith in persons and cultures where it has grown
lackluster -- and the pastoral care of those daily living as believers.
We
of course acknowledge that there can be no opposition between the missio ad gentes
and the New Evangelization. It is not an “either-or” but a “both-and” proposition.
The New Evangelization generates enthusiastic missionaries; those in the apostolate
of the missio ad gentes require themselves to be constantly evangelized anew.
Even
in the New Testament, to the very generation who had the missio ad gentes given by
the Master at His ascension still ringing in their ears, Paul had to remind them to
“stir into flame” the gift of faith given them, certainly an early instance of the
New Evangelization.
And, just recently, in the inspirational Synod in Africa,
we heard our brothers from the very lands radiant with the fruits of the missio ad
gentes report that those now in the second and third generation after the initial
missionary zeal already stand in need of the New Evangelization.
The acclaimed
American missionary and TV evangelist, Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, commented, “Our
Lord’s first word to His disciples was ‘come!’ His last word was ‘go!’ You can’t
‘go’ unless you’ve first ‘come’ to Him.”
A towering challenge to both the
missio ad gentes and the New Evangalization today is what we call secularism. Listen
to how our Pope describes it:
Secularization, which presents itself in cultures
by imposing a world and humanity without reference to Transcendence, is invading
every aspect of daily life and developing a mentality in which God is effectively
absent, wholly or partially, from human life and awareness. This secularization is
not only an external threat to believers, but has been manifest for some time in the
heart of the Church herself. It profoundly distorts the Christian faith from within,
and consequently, the lifestyle and daily behavior of believers. They live in the
world and are often marked, if not conditioned, by the cultural imagery that impresses
contradictory and impelling models regarding the practical denial of God: there is
no longer any need for God, to think of him or to return to him. Furthermore, the
prevalent hedonistic and consumeristic mindset fosters in the faithful and in Pastors
a tendency to superficiality and selfishness that is harmful to ecclesial life. (Benedict
XVI, Address to Pontifical Council for Culture, 8.III.2008)
This secularization
calls for a creative strategy of evangelization, and I want to detail seven planks
of this strategy.
1. Actually, in graciously inviting me to speak on this topic,
“The Announcement of the Gospel Today, between missio ad gentes and the new evangelization,”
my new-brother-cardinal, His Eminence, the Secretary of State, asked me to put in
into the context of secularism, hinting that my home archdiocese of New York might
be the “capital of a secular culture.”
As I trust my friend and new-brother-cardinal,
Edwin O’Brien -- who grew up in New York -- will agree, New York -- without denying
its dramatic evidence of graphic secularism -- is also a very religious city.
There
one finds, even among groups usually identified as materialistic -- the media, entertainment,
business, politics, artists, writers -- an undeniable openness to the divine!
The
cardinals who serve Jesus and His Church universal on the Roman Curia may recall the
address Pope Benedict gave them at Christmas two years ago when he celebrated this
innate openness to the divine obvious even in those who boast of their secularism:
We
as believers, must have at heart even those people who consider themselves agnostics
or atheists. When we speak of a new evangelization these people are perhaps taken
aback. They do not want to see themselves as an object of mission or to give up their
freedom of thought and will. Yet the question of God remains present even for them.
As the first step of evangelization we must seek to keep this quest alive; we must
be concerned that human beings do not set aside the question of God, but rather see
it as an essential question for their lives. We must make sure that they are open
to this question and to the yearning concealed within. I think that today too the
Church should open a sort of “Court of the Gentiles” in which people might in some
way latch on to God, without knowing him and before gaining access to his mystery,
at whose service the inner life of the Church stands.
This is my first point:
we believe with the philosophers and poets of old, who never had the benefit of revelation,
that even a person who brags about being secular and is dismissive of religion, has
within an undeniable spark of interest in the beyond, and recognizes that humanity
and creation is a dismal riddle without the concept of some kind of creator.
A
movie popular at home now is The Way, starring a popular actor, Martin Sheen. Perhaps
you have seen it. He plays a grieving father whose estranged son dies while walking
the Camino di Santiago di Campostella in Spain. The father decides, in his grief,
to complete the pilgrimage in place of his dead son. He is an icon of a secular man:
self-satisfied, dismissive of God and religion, calling himself a “former Catholic,”
cynical about faith . . . but yet unable to deny within him an irrepressible interest
in the transcendent, a thirst for something -- no, Someone -- more, which grows on
the way.
Yes, to borrow the report of the apostles to Jesus from last Sunday’s
gospel, “All the people are looking for you!”
They still are . . .
2. .
. . and, my second point, this fact gives us immense confidence and courage in the
sacred task of mission and New Evangelization.
“Be not afraid,” we’re told,
is the most repeated exhortation in the Bible.
After the Council, the good
news was that triumphalism in the Church was dead.
The bad news was that,
so was confidence!
We are convinced, confident, and courageous in the New
Evangelization because of the power of the Person sending us on mission -- who happens
to be the second Person of the Most Blessed Trinity – because of the truth of the
message, and the deep down openness in even the most secularized of people to the
divine.
Confident, yes!
Triumphant, never!
What keeps us from
the swagger and arrogance of triumphalism is a recognition of what Pope Paul VI taught
in Evangelii Nuntiandi: the Church herself needs evangelization!
This gives
us humility as we confess that Nemo dat quod not habet, that the Church has a deep
need for the interior conversion that is at the marrow of the call to evangelization.
3. A
third necessary ingredient in the recipe of effective mission is that God does not
satisfy the thirst of the human heart with a proposition, but with a Person, whose
name is Jesus.
The invitation implicit in the Missio ad gentes and the New
Evangelization is not to a doctrine but to know, love, and serve -- not a something,
but a Someone.
When you began your ministry as successor of St. Peter, Holy
Father, you invited us to friendship with Jesus, which is the way you defined sanctity.
There
it is . . . love of a Person, a relationship at the root of out faith.
As
St. Augustine writes, “Ex una sane doctrina impressam fidem credentium cordibus singulorum
qui hoc idem credunt verissime dicimus, sed aliud sunt ea quae creduntur, aliud fides
qua creduntur” (De Trinitate, XIII, 2.5)
4. Yes, and here’s my fourth point,
but this Person, Jesus, tells us He is the truth.
So, our mission has a substance,
a content, and this twentieth anniversary of the Catechism, the approaching fiftieth
anniversary of the Council, and the upcoming Year of Faith charge us to combat catechetical
illiteracy.
True enough, the New Evangalization is urgent because secularism
has often choked the seed of faith; but that choking was sadly made easy because so
many believers really had no adequate knowledge or grasp of the wisdom, beauty, and
coherence of the Truth.
Cardinal George Pell has observed that “it’s not so
much that our people have lost their faith, but that they barely had it to begin with;
and, if they did, it was so vapid that it was easily taken away.”
So did Cardinal
Avery Dulles call for neo-apologetics, rooted not in dull polemics but in the Truth
that has a name, Jesus.
So did Blessed John Newman, upon reception of his
own biglietto nominating him a cardinal warn again of what he constantly called a
dangerous liberalism in religion: “. . . the belief that there is no objective truth
in religion, that one creed is as good as another . . . Revealed religion is not a
truth, but a sentiment, a taste . . . ”
And, just as Jesus tells us “I am
the Truth,” He also describes Himself as “the Way, and the Life.”
The Way
of Jesus is in and through His Church, a holy mother who imparts to us His Life.
“For
what would I ever know of Him without her?” asks De Lubac, referring to the intimate
identification of Jesus and His Church.
Thus, our mission, the New Evangelization,
has essential catechetical and ecclesial dimensions.
This impels us to think
about Church in a fresh way: to think of the Church as a mission. As John Paul II
taught in Redemptoris Missio, the Church does not “have a mission,” as if “mission”
were one of many things the Church does. No, the Church is a mission, and each of
us who names Jesus as Lord and Savior should measure ourselves by our mission-effectiveness.
Over
the fifty years since the convocation of the Council, we have seen the Church pass
through the last stages of the Counter-Reformation and rediscover itself as a missionary
enterprise. In some venues, this has meant a new discovery of the Gospel. In once-catechized
lands, it has meant a re-evangelization that sets out from the shallow waters of institutional
maintenance, and as John Paul II instructed us in Novo Millennio Ineunte, puts out
“into the deep” for a catch.
In many of the countries represented in this
college, the ambient public culture once transmitted the Gospel, but does so no more.
In those circumstances, the proclamation of the Gospel -- the deliberate invitation
to enter into friendship with the Lord Jesus -- must be at the very center of the
Catholic life of all of our people. But in all circumstances, the Second Vatican
Council and the two great popes who have given it an authoritative interpretation
are urging us to call our people to think of themselves as missionaries and evangelists.
5. When
I was a new seminarian at the North American College here in Rome, all the first-year
men from all the Roman theological universities were invited to a Mass at St. Peter’s
with the Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, Cardinal John Wright, as celebrant
and homilist.
We thought he would give us a cerebral homily. But he began
by asking, “Seminarians: do me and the Church a big favor. When you walk the streets
of Rome, smile!”
So, point five: the missionary, the evangelist, must be
a person of joy.
“Joy is the infallible sign of God’s presence,” claims Leon
Bloy.
When I became Archbishop of New York, a priest old me, “You better stop
smiling when you walk the streets of Manhattan, or you’ll be arrested!”
A
man dying of AIDS at the Gift of Peace Hospice, administered by the Missionaries of
Charity in Cardinal Donald Wuerl’s Archdiocese of Washington, asked for baptism.
When the priest asked for an expression of faith, the dying man whispered, “All I
know is that I’m unhappy, and these sisters are very happy, even when I curse them
and spit on them. Yesterday I finally asked them why they were so happy. They replied
‘Jesus.’ I want this Jesus so I can finally be happy.
A genuine act of
faith, right?
The New Evangelization is accomplished with a smile, not a frown.
The
missio ad gentes is all about a yes to everything decent, good, true, beautiful and
noble in the human person.
The Church is about a yes!, not a no!
6. And,
next-to-last point, the New Evangelization is about love.
Recently, our brother
John Thomas Kattrukudiyil, the Bishop of Itanagar, in the northeast corner of India,
was asked to explain the tremendous growth of the Church in his diocese, registering
over 10,000 adult converts a year.
“Because we present God as a loving
father, and because people see the Church loving them.” he replied.
Not a
nebulous love, he went on, but a love incarnate in wonderful schools for all children,
clinics for the sick, homes for the elderly, centers for orphans, food for the hungry.
In
New York, the heart of the most hardened secularist softens when visiting one of our
inner-city Catholic schools. When one of our benefactors, who described himself as
an agnostic, asked Sister Michelle why, at her age, with painful arthritic knees,
she continued to serve at one of these struggling but excellent poor schools, she
answered, “Because God loves me, and I love Him, and I want these children to discover
this love.”
7. Joy, love . . . and, last point . . . sorry to bring it up,
. . . but blood.
Tomorrow, twenty-two of us will hear what most of you have
heard before:
“To the praise of God, and the honor of the Apostolic See receive
the red biretta, the sign of the cardinal’s dignity; and know that you must be
willing to conduct yourselves with fortitude even to the shedding of your blood: for
the growth of the Christian faith, the peace and tranquility of the People of God, and
the freedom and spread of the Holy Roman Church.”
Holy Father,can you omit
“to the shedding of your blood” when you present me with the biretta?
Of course
not! We are but “scarlet audio-visual aids” for all of our brothers and sisters also
called to be ready to suffer and die for Jesus.
It was Pope Paul VI who noted
wisely that people today learn more from “witness than from words,” and the supreme
witness is martyrdom.
Sadly, today we have martyrs in abundance.
Thank
you, Holy Father, for so often reminding us of those today suffering persecution for
their faith throughout the world.
Thank you, Cardinal Koch, for calling the
Church to an annual “day of solidarity” with those persecuted for the sake of the
gospel, and for inviting our ecumenical and inter-religious partners to an “ecumenism
of martyrdom.”
While we cry for today’s martyrs; while we love them, pray
with and for them; while we vigorously advocate on their behalf; we are also very
proud of them, brag about them, and trumpet their supreme witness to the world.
They
spark the missio ad gentes and New Evangelization.
A young man in New York
tells me he returned to the Catholic faith of his childhood, which he had jettisoned
as a teenager, because he read The Monks of Tibhirine, about Trappists martyred in
Algeria fifteen years ago, and after viewing the drama about them, the French film,
Of Gods and Men.
Tertullian would not be surprised.
Thank you, Holy
Father and brethren, for your patience with my primitive Italian. When Cardinal Bertone
asked me to give this address in Italian, I worried, because I speak Italian like
a child.
But, then I recalled, that, as a newly-ordained parish priest, my
first pastor said to me as I went over to school to teach the six-year old children
their catechism, “Now we’ll see if all your theology sunk in, and if you can speak
of the faith like a child.”
And maybe that’s a fitting place to conclude:
we need to speak again as a child the eternal truth, beauty, and simplicity of Jesus
and His Church.