(Vatican Radio) “We cannot conduct a new evangelisation without new evangelizers”,
said Archbishop Rino Fisichella Thursday as he opened a three day conference on New
Evangelisation in down town Sydney, Australia.
As keynote speaker at Proclaim
2012, the President of the Vatican Council for New Evangelisation spoke of the
decline of the faith in Europe and western societies, which, he said, cannot be stemmed
by a “reform of structures” but only by a personal encounter with the Risen Christ.
He also urged “new relationships of esteem, of trust and of welcome of people’s various
gifts” within the Church.
“To be an evangelizer is a vocation so that
all people may be able to hear the Gospel of Jesus, believe in him and call upon him.
That vocation is born on the very day of our baptism and it is a vocation to every
believer in Christ to make of himself or herself a credible bearer of the good news
encapsulated in his teaching. To be sent, then, is intrinsic to the baptismal vocation;
this implies for all Christians that they assume this responsibility, each one in
their own person, without any possibility of delegating it to others. The proclamation
of the Gospel cannot be delegated to others; rather, it requires the awareness specific
to the believer that he or she is to be a bearer of Christ wherever they go”.
Below
the full text of Archbishop Fisichella’s intervention at Proclaim 2012
What
is the New Evangelization and what does it mean for the Church? Sydney, 9th
August, 2012.
The new evangelization is a challenge. In fact, it is a great
challenge that the Church accepts in order to confirm once more the presence of the
Risen Christ, who guides her through history. We could find many different definitions
of ‘new evangelization’. However, already in 1974, Paul VI stated: ‘No definition
which is only partial and fragmentary can provide an explanation of the rich, complex
and dynamic reality which is evangelization, without running the risk of impoverishing
it and in the end of distorting it. It is impossible to understand it, unless we try
to embrace within our perspective all of its essential elements.’ Even so, he affirmed
very strongly and to avoid any misunderstanding: ‘There is no true evangelization
if the name, the teaching, the life, the promises, the Kingdom, the mystery of Jesus
of Nazareth, Son of God, is not proclaimed’. Paul VI’s concern, though, that evangelization
might be truly new, is to be found in this passage: ‘This problem of “how to evangelize”
remains always a current question because the methods change according to the circumstances
of time, place and culture and hence create a certain challenge to our capacity for
discovery and for adaptation. The responsibility for creating the most suitable and
the most effective methods for communicating the Gospel message to the people of our
time, in a way which is daring but wise, in full fidelity to its contents, lies especially
upon us, who are Pastors of the Church.’ In this apostolic exhortation, we find important
points which remain as fundamental elements of content of the new evangelization today:
the liturgy, the primacy of witness, the need to know how to use the new instruments
of communication, popular piety ... thus, the relevance of Evangelii nuntiandi,
as the first reflection by the Magisterium a few years after the Council, remains
as a constant source of stimulation. From his homily at Nova Huta in June, 1979,
where for the first time he used the expression ‘new evangelization, John Paul II
taught us for 27 years how important it is to understand the significance of a new
‘fervour’, of new ‘methods’ and of new ‘expressions’. Finally, Benedict XVI wished
to accept this challenge in a concrete manner and he has established the Pontifical
Council for the New Evangelization to ‘offer appropriate answers so that the entire
Church, allowing herself to be regenerated by the Holy Spirit, may be able to present
herself to the contemporary world with a new missionary impulse in order to promote
a new evangelization.’ It seems important, however, to state, at the very beginning
of our reflection, that the Church has not set out on the road of the new evangelization
because she finds herself under strong pressure from secularism; but, first of all,
she does this because she wishes to be obedient and faithful to the word of the Lord
Jesus, who commanded her to go into the whole world and to bring his Gospel to every
creature (Mk. 16:15). In this simple thought we can find in summary form a project
for the decades ahead, which must find us able to understand fully the responsibility
which lies upon the Church of Jesus Christ in this particular period of history. The
Church exists in order to bring the Gospel to every person in every age, wherever
they find themselves. Jesus’ command is so crystal clear that it admits neither of
misunderstandings nor of excuses of any kind. Those who believe in his word are sent
out along the roads of the world to proclaim that the salvation which was promised
has become a reality. This proclamation needs to be united to a style of life which
enables the disciples of Christ to be recognised as such wherever they are. As long
as the heart of Christianity is Jesus Christ, encountering him will demand an impact
which will allow people to see in his disciples a life which is coherent with what
they announce. The road of the new evangelization is marked out; we are called upon
to renew the proclamation of Jesus Christ, of the mystery of his death and resurrection,
to call forth once more faith in him through the conversion of life. If our eyes were
still capable of recognising the deep significance of the events which characterise
the life of our contemporaries, it would be easy to demonstrate how greatly this proclamation
still occupies a place of importance. The area upon which we need to stimulate people’s
reflection, in fact, is the meaning of life and of death, of life beyond death; from
those questions which touch human existence as such and which determine our personal
identity, Jesus Christ cannot be excluded. If the proclamation of the new evangelization
is not strong in presenting the element of mystery which surrounds human life and
which relates us to the infinite mystery of the God of Jesus Christ, it will lack
the effective power it needs to elicit the response of faith. It may help us to
enter more fully into our reflection if we take up the words of the apostle Paul:
‘You must lead your whole lives according to the Christ you have received – Jesus
the Lord; you must be rooted in him and built on him and held firm by the faith you
have been taught and full of thanksgiving. Make sure that no-one traps you and deprives
you of your freedom by some second-hand, empty, rational philosophy, based on the
principles of this world instead of on Christ.’ (Col. 2:6-8). The situation of the
Christian community today is not very different from that of the first disciples in
the city of Colossae. Unlike Christians from other communities, the life and the behaviour
of these believers gave Paul no cause for complaint; rather, the news he received
of them was a cause of praise both for the faith they had in the Lord Jesus and for
their witness of charity; both the one and the other pervaded their thoughts and sustained
them in their hope, as can be glimpsed from the opening words of the letter: ‘We have
never failed to remember you in our prayers and to give thanks for you to God, the
Father of our Lord, Jesus Christ, ever since we heard about your faith in Christ Jesus
and the love that you show towards all the saints because of the hope that is stored
up for you in heaven.’ (Col. 1: 3-5). The apostle’s concern, however, is directed
to the cultural context, within which the believers are living. He fears that they
may be easily deceived by new doctrines, by philosophies extraneous to his preaching
and by false ideas, which could lead to a form of syncretism such as to render null
what is new in the Gospel. The invitation he addresses to Christians, therefore, is
that of being able to discern between what is true and what is false, between that
which bears fruit and that which, by contrast, is sterile and ephemeral. It is interesting
to note that Paul reminds the Colossians, as his first point, of their profession
of faith. Christ has been proclaimed to them, they have heard his word, they have
welcomed the Gospel and they have been converted. On this reality, with its various
stages, they have built their life and they have developed a behaviour which was such
as to enable them to be recognised as disciples of the Lord. The community, therefore,
must remain completely firm in the proclamation made by the apostle, without abandoning
it in any way. In short, the transmission of the faith is decisive because, on the
basis of that transmission, are determined both fidelity to the Gospel and the generous
welcome given to it by all who come to faith. The four expressions to which Paul refers
are particularly interesting and remain as imperatives for us too: ‘to be rooted in
the Lord’, ‘to remain firm in faith’, ‘to be full of thanksgiving’, ‘ to take care
no-one deceives you’. The firmness of the rock on which Christian existence is to
be built does not stand in contradiction to the fact that we must travel with constancy
along the path in order to penetrate ever more deeply into the mystery. Planting and
building, moreover, are cause and effect and only in this way is it possible to build
up the community with more and more new disciples. In the same way, that firmness
is reinforced by the teaching which is offered to Christians so that they may not
be tossed about and confused by widely disparate views about the meaning of life.
The call to take care and to remain alert so that no-one may be deceived is a real
worry for the apostles, not only so that his ministry may not be rendered vain, especially
so that Christians may not fall back into the non-sense of life. Thanksgiving, finally,
enables us to appreciate how much the life of the Christian community finds its profound
and irreplaceable locus of meaning in prayer. It is not just a case of giving thanks
to the Lord with the hymns and songs which are proper to prayer, but of giving expression
to the time of the liturgical action with the fulness which is due for the gift of
faith we have received. In a word, once more the apostles places believers before
the fulness of the life of faith, which is rendered explicit in the profession of
the creed, in prayer and in witness. To be sure, we cannot hide away from the
fact that nowadays there are many ‘winds of doctrine’ which have shaken and which
continue to shake us. The great problem of secularism has changed our society, our
culture and hence our way of thinking and our behaviour. There are some expressions
of this which it is well not to forget, in order to understand precisely the cultural
context within which we find ourselves. It may be helpful to consider two such expressions.
The first belongs to the philosopher, M. Heidegger: ‘The time of the night of the
world is the time of poverty because it becomes ever more impoverished. It has already
become so impoverished that it does not even recognise the absence of God as absence.’
The second is a challenge which comes from one of the most prolific thinkers of the
nineteenth century, Dostoevsky: ‘The key point of the question lies in this: whether
a person, imbued with modern civilisation, a European, is still capable of belief,
of belief precisely in the divinity of the Son of God, Jesus Christ. In this, in fact,
lies the whole of faith.’ During his visit to Germany last year, Pope Benedict XVI
gave some points of orientation to respond to questions such as these: ‘The absence
of God from our society weighs upon us more heavily, the history of his revelation,
about which the Sacred Scriptures speak, seems to be located in a past which becomes
ever more distant from us. Should we perhaps give way before the pressure of secularisation,
become modern by diluting the faith? Of course, the faith has to be thought out and
especially lived out today in a way which is new, in order to become something which
belongs to the present. But it is not the dilution of the faith which helps us here,
but only living the faith fully in our world of today ... Tactical changes will not
save us, will not save Christianity, but only a faith which is thought out and lived
out anew, by means of which Christ and with Him the living God may enter into this
world of ours’. Finally, it is asked: ‘The question which time and again lies at the
centre of disputes is: what is a reform of the Church? How does it take place? What
are the ways of bringing this about and what are its objectives? With some anxiety
not only believing members of the faithful, but even those outside of the Church observe
how those people who go to church regularly are becoming older all the time and their
number is in continual decline; how there is a stagnation in priestly vocations, how
scepticism and unbelief are growing. What, then, must we do? There is an infinite
number of discussions as to what to do so that this tendency may be reversed. Certainly,
many things need to be done. But doing on its own does not solve the problem. The
core of the crisis of the Church in Europe is the crisis of faith. If we do not find
a response to that problem, if faith is not re-vitalised to the point where it becomes
a matter of profound conviction and a real source of strength thanks to the encounter
with Jesus Christ, all the other reforms will remain ineffective’.
The
New Evangelizers. We cannot conduct a new evangelisation without new evangelizers.
In St. Paul’s letter to the Romans, we find written: ‘For whoever calls on the name
of the Lord will be saved. But they will not ask his help unless they believe in him
and they will not believe in him unless they have heard of him and they will not hear
of him unless they get an preacher and they will not have a preacher unless one is
sent, but, as Scripture says: “The footsteps of those who bring good news is a welcome
sound” ’ (Rom. 10:13-15). As we may note, the idea which emerges from the apostle,
in the first place, is that of the necessary relationship between invoking the name
of the Lord and having faith in him and of being sent out to proclaim him, so that
all may believe. At the root of this mission is the call; that extends from invocation
to mission, because it recognises that Jesus is Lord of everything and of all people.
Therefore, to be an evangelizer is a vocation so that all people may be able to hear
the Gospel of Jesus, believe in him and call upon him. That vocation is born on the
very day of our baptism and it is a vocation to every believer in Christ to make of
himself or herself a credible bearer of the good news encapsulated in his teaching.
To be sent, then, is intrinsic to the baptismal vocation; this implies for all Christians
that they assume this responsibility, each one in their own person, without any possibility
of delegating it to others. The proclamation of the Gospel cannot be delegated to
others; rather, it requires the awareness specific to the believer that he or she
is to be a bearer of Christ wherever they go. We have evidence of this conviction
already in the oldest writings; Cyril, the bishop of Jerusalem, stated this in his
catecheses: ‘having received in ourselves his body and his blood, we are transformed
into bearers of Christ’. The Christian, then, is of his very nature christophoro
(bearer of Christ) and only in this way can the words of the Lord, so rich in the
meaning they carry, be understood: ‘Shoulder my yoke and learn from me, for I am gentle
and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. Yes, my yoke is easy and
my burden light’ (Mt. 11:29-30). The yoke to which Jesus alludes is none other than
the invitation to become his disciples and to share his very own life; hence, to take
part in his mission of salvation. The first evangelizer, certainly, is the bishop.
As successor of the apostles, upon him is conferred the mandate of being a living
icon in the world of a courageous and strong proclamation of the Gospel. He cannot
stay silent; his experience of the Risen Lord obliges him to give witness. Peter’s
expression just after Easter: ‘We cannot be silent’ (Acts 4:20), notwithstanding the
obligation imposed upon them by the leaders of the people and the threat of violence,
should remain in our lives as a pastoral imperative, from which we may not withdraw
ourselves. Priests participate and share in the mission to evangelize which is proper
to the bishop; together with him, they form the one presbyterate (unum presbyterium),
that is to say the single priestly body placed at the service of the People of God
to proclaim his word and to keep it always alive. Priests are asked to examine the
challenges present in the priestly life. The first challenges they are called upon
to understand stem from directly within our being priests. To the extent that we are
able to accept and to make our own these challenges, we shall be able to see also
as real the challenges which the world places before us. The first challenge, therefore,
is in the order of reflecting upon what it means to be priests in the world of today,
to understand the vocation fully. The priesthood is not a matter of human achievement
nor a right, as many today think, but it is the gift which God makes to those
he has decided to call, to remain with him, in the service of his Church. To forget
this vocational dimension is the equivalent of misunderstanding everything and to
make of the priest an employee and not a man who undertakes a service marked by its
totally gratuitous nature. If we can accept this point, it will enable us to relate
the priest first of all with the reality which brings him into being: the Eucharist.
The real challenge consists exactly in understanding ourselves in relation to the
mystery which is celebrated and which makes of every priest a minister of Christ.
The Eucharist remains as a gift which can never be extinguished, which was made to
the Church and to every priest personally; for this reason respect and devotion are
due, without ever pretending to be able to control the mystery whose servants we are,
as if we were its masters. The whole of the priestly ministry should be characterised
by putting in first place not our own person, with our own opinions,, but Jesus Christ. A
very special role is played by pay people, that is by all the baptised who live the
experience of faith in parishes, in associations, in movements and in that incredible
galaxy given by the action of the Holy Spirit, who constantly works for the mission
of the Church of Christ and who never allows himself to be limited by anything. The
document Christifideles laici (1988) constitutes a genuine theological and
spiritual heritage for our understanding of the irreplaceable role which lay men and
women have to fulfil in this special time in history. The Council’s constitution on
the Church, Lumen gentium, contains an entirely original and decisive interpretative
key for understanding the contribution of the laity to the new evangelization. There
we read: ‘Lay people are called above all to make the Church present and operative
in those places and in those circumstances where she cannot become salt of the earth
unless by means of them’. Precisely the phrase ‘unless by means of them’ should cause
us to reflect on the specific contribution which lay people are called upon to make.
There are settings and contexts which can be reached by no-one other than by lay men
and women, who, through their professional lives, are in a position to give witness
to the Gospel there. Their presence in these contexts is irreplaceable and only they
are capable of bringing about the first form of humanisation, which is often the necessary
prelude to speaking about Jesus Christ. It is necessary that every form of pastoral
support be given to the laity by means of a renewal of the Christian community, which
is not something brought about first of all by the reform of structures, but by new
relationships of esteem, of trust and of welcome of people’s various gifts. It is
obvious that their action in the world will be all the more effective the more they
are able to bring with them the community to which they belong, which encourages them
in their mission, sustains them in the difficulties they meet and remains as the point
of reference where they can recount the wonders the Lord has done through their apostolate. The
Path of the New Evangelization. To enable Christians to recover their identity
and their sense of belonging to the Church can only be brought about to the extent
that they recognise the need to insert themselves into the way of the Church and into
her two thousand years of pastoral activity. A first element concerns formation. This
involves everyone, with no exceptions. Formation makes it possible to recover the
patrimony of faith and culture which we possess and which we are called to transmit
to the generations which will come after us. This implies that we are capable of entering
into that culture, of recognising it, of understanding it, but also of transforming
it in the light of the Gospel. Our presence can never be a passive one in the face
of the development of culture in all of its manifestations. The Christian presence
is ‘seed’ and ‘yeast’; this implies an active presence in cultural settings, without
being afraid of the strong determination of that current of thought which sets itself
up as a form of ‘language control’ in order to prevent us from manifesting our own
positions. Formation affects the important area of catechesis and extends to those
of the preparation of future priests and of priestly preaching. There is a very
special link between the new evangelization and the liturgy, which is the principal
action by which the Church expresses her very own life. From the very beginnings the
Church has been characterised by its liturgical action. What the community preached,
proclaiming the Gospel of salvation, it then made present and alive in liturgical
prayer. Salvation, then, was not just a proclamation made by enthusiastic human beings,
but it was also an action which the Spirit brought about by the presence of Christ
himself in the midst of the believing community. To separate these two aspects would
be the equivalent of not understanding the Church. She lives by liturgical action,
as the vital lymph for her proclamation, and the latter, once it has been accomplished,
returns to the liturgy as to its effective completion. The lex credendi and
the lex orandi form a single whole where, in the end, it becomes difficult
to see the beginning of the one and the end of the other. Hence, the new evangelization
must be capable of making of the liturgy its living heart, so that the proclamation
which is made may have its full effect. It suffices to think not only of the pastoral
opportunity afforded, but also of the value which certain celebrations possess for
indicating meaning. From baptisms to funerals, everybody recognises what potential
they have in themselves for communicating a message that, otherwise, would not be
heard. How many people, ‘indifferent’ to religion take part in such celebrations and
how many people are present at them who often are searching for a genuine spirituality!
The words of the priest on these occasions should be capable of raising the question
of the meaning of life, precisely on the basis of the celebration of the sacrament
and of the signs which give expression to it. In short, what is celebrated is not
a rite which is foreign to daily life, but it is directed precisely to the question
of meaning which all seek. In the celebration of the Eucharist, the preaching and
the signs are full of meanings which go beyond the priest and his person. Here, in
fact, the link with the action of the Spirit enables us to recognise that hearts are
transformed and, by his grace, are formed to render them open to welcome the moment
of salvation. The importance of this connection between the new evangelization and
the liturgy and between the liturgy and the action of the Holy Spirit makes it possible
to foster in every believer a serious reflection on the responsibilities we have and
on the witness which we are called upon to express in our way of life. In particular,
we priests should reflect on a theme of enormous importance, which is that of the
homily. Its value for the proclamation of the Gospel, for understanding the mystery
which we celebrate and daily life is so obvious that it leaves us with no excuse.
To neglect the preparation of the homily, or worse to improvise a homily, is a wrong
done in the first place to the Word of God and, besides that, it humiliates the faithful.
The time dedicated to the preparation of the homily is not time wasted, but it is
the necessary condition for exercising the ministry in a way which is faithful, coherent
and effective. In this way, too, we render a genuine service to the formation of the
laity, planting in those who are listening the desire to know more and more about
the Word of God and the contents of the faith. Finally, a very special place in
the new evangelization certainly belongs to the realm of charity. Entering into this
perspective equates to focusing upon the multiple concrete signs which the Church
continues, untiringly, to present to the world. Obedient to the action of the Holy
Spirit, men and women in the course of these two thousand years have identified different
areas for the purpose of making visible and of putting into action the word of the
Lord: ‘You have the poor with you always’ (Jn. 12:8). The present form of ‘have’ helps
us to understand very well how the history of the Church can never do without giving
very special attention to the witness of charity. Here, in fact, her credibility is
at stake as to that which constitutes the core of her proclamation: love. In his first
encyclical, Benedict XVI has shown clearly the original meaning of Christian love,
its origin, its development. its special character and the risks to be avoided. Love,
however, is to be lived. In the circle which exists between faith and love, it is
possible to verify the genuine nature of the relationship which unites us to the Lord.
In faith, in fact, we understand how God loves; in the exercise of charity it is made
clear the extent to which Christians are faithful to his word. In a period such as
our own, often marked by the closure of individuals within themselves without any
possibility of having relationships with others, and in which delegating others to
act often takes precedence over our own direct participation, this reminder of our
responsibilities commits us to a form of witness which knows how to take upon ourselves
the care of our brothers and sisters in greatest need. But, this after all is our
history. At the Lord’s word, we have learnt to insist upon that which the world rejects,
which it considers useless or largely inefficient. The person who is chronically ill,
the dying, the marginalised, the disabled and many others who, in the eyes of the
world, express the lack of a future and lack of hope, find in the Christian one who
is committed to them. We have many examples which recall in a powerful way the sanctity
of men and women who have made of this programme the concrete proclamation of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ and, with that, the beginning of an authentic cultural revolution.
In the face of this holiness, every possibility of excuse collapses; incredulity gives
way to credibility and the passion for truth and liberty finds a synthesis in the
love which is offered without asking anything in return. From this perspective, too,
the sign of voluntary work finds its place as a truly Christian proclamation on the
part of those who are able to relativise every absolute which does not take the dignity
of the person into serious consideration. In an age where everything seems to be possible
just because it can be bought, we must increase the signs by which it can be shown
that love and solidarity have no other price than commitment and personal sacrifice.
This witness demonstrates that personal life comes to its full realisation only when
it is placed in the perspective of gratuitousness. In Conclusion. Turning
the new evangelization into an empty formula, in which anything and everything finds
a place, must be avoided. That cannot be. The expression needs to be understood and
explained in a way which coherent with its proper meaning, because that is located
in the foundation of the Church’s own activity. Even with all of the uncertainties
and ambiguities which invest it, it appears to be the most suitable expression to
indicate the need the Church feels in this particular stage of history, especially
in the West. The new evangelization, however, is not something alternative or parallel
to what the Church has done in the twenty centuries of her history. New evangelization,
therefore, indicates a new way of fulfilling the same, identical and immutable command
of Jesus to the Church to bring his Gospel to all people. It is the proclamation of
the person of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who in the mystery of his death and resurrection
has redeemed the world, opening up to all who believe in him the gate to eternal life.
For this reason, we need to rediscover the foundations of our belief. |It the time
for a new and mature apologetics of our faith, to offer hope to today’s world. We
are called, therefore, to repeat with conviction the need to ‘have ready the reason’
for our faith (1 Pet. 3:15), recognising that this needs to be done with courtesy,
respect and a clear conscience (1 Pet. 3:16). Reminding ourselves of these three terms
has its value for our programme. The presentation and the explanation made by Christians
of the hope we carry within us cannot turn to arrogance and pride on the basis of
a certain sense of superiority which may be felt in regard to others. Let us not
forget that our contemporaries are characterised strongly by a sense of jealousy for
their own independence and for taking responsibility for their own personal lives.
They have become allergic to any form of authority and they suffer from the illusion
that that alone is true which is produced by science. They change rapidly their way
of thinking and of living, becoming more and more subjects who wish to be involved
in absolutely everything, even if it is greater than they are, especially if it draws
them into that narcissism, no longer even hidden, which deceives them about the essence
of life. We find ourselves in the midst of an explosion of claims to individual liberty,
which affect the spheres of living out our sexuality, inter-personal and family relations,
activities in our free time and at work. The space available for teaching and for
communication has become caught up fatally in all of this and the entire context of
life has been modified. In short, there has come to be created a situation which is
completely new, in which people want to find substitutes for the old values, especially
for those expressed in Christianity. That is why God has become a useless hypothesis
and a competitor to be avoided, if not to be eliminated. The consequence which derives
from this, nevertheless, is that the human being has lost his bearings and has forgotten
what is essential. The great challenge which awaits us in the future lies entirely
in this; whoever wants the liberty to live as if God does not exist can live like
that, but they should know what they will encounter as a result. They should be aware
that this choice is the premise neither for liberty nor for autonomy. Reducing to
silence the desire for God, which has its roots deep within us, will never be able
to achieve autonomy. The enigma of personal existence is not resolved by denying the
mystery, but by choosing to immerse ourselves within the mystery. This is the path
to follow. As may be noted, the crisis is first of all a cultural and an anthropological
crisis. The human being is in crisis. It is not in marginalising Christianity that
we can attain a better society. That would be an impossibility. Such a reading of
events is not only short-sighted, but it is mistaken in its very premises. To be sure,
our history is made up of light and of darkness, but the message we bear is one of
genuine liberation for human beings and one of corresponding progress for peoples.
Therefore, it is necessary that we emerge from a certain form of neutrality into which
many countries have enclosed themselves, even to avoid having to take a position in
favour of their own history. If the West is ashamed of what it has been, of the roots
which sustain it and of the Christian identity which still forms it, then it will
not have a future. The conclusion can only be that of an irreversible decline. We
Catholics will not be found lacking in regard to the responsibility we must assume
and we will not accept being marginalised. Our work of the new evangelization implies
this also. We are convinced that our presence is essential. No-one else could take
our place. Deprived of the significant presence of Catholics, our countries would
be the poorer and would be less attractive. We do not wish this to happen. The hope
that we bear has something extra-ordinarily great about it because it makes it possible
for us to look at the present, even with its difficulties, with a gaze that is full
of confidence and serenity. It is the hope which does not delude because it is strong
in a promise of life; God who loves and who forgives.