2015-02-09 17:34:00

India’s Latin bishops emphasize need for inculturation


The week-long assembly of India’s Latin-rite bishops concluded on Monday with the call to greater inculturation.  One hundred and forty bishops from India’s 131 Latin dioceses who form the Conference of the Catholic Bishops of India (CCBI) held their Plenary Assembly in southern India’s Bangalore city, Feb. 3-9, on the theme ‘Liturgy and Life’.  "We are convinced that inculturation is demanded by faith in accordance with the exigencies of human nature," the bishops said in the final message at the end of their  27th Plenary Assembly.   'Given  the  multi-cultured  nature  of our society  and  keeping  in  mind  that  cultures  are  ever evolving  and transforming, the  sensitivities of the  people  and  of various  groups  are  to  be  addressed  when  efforts  are made  to  promote  inculturation,"  the bishops wrote, stressing that in doing so the dignity and decorum of the celebrations must be maintained. 

The bishop’s final message also viewed the theme of “Liturgy and Life” in the backdrop of the challenging times that the nation is going through currently.  the lamented the increasing marginalization of the poor, the Dalits and the Tribals.  They also noted that rising fundamentalism and communalism was threatening to tear the social fabric ‎and the secular character of the nation.   In view of the Synod on the Family in Oct, 2015, the Latin bishops of India pledged to strengthen the Small Christian Communitlies (SCC) as 'the true way of being the living Church'.

Below is the full text of the CCBI’s final message:

MESSAGE ‎OF THE 27th PLENARY ASSEMBLY OF THE ‎

Conference of the Catholic Bishops of India (CCBI)‎

‎ HELD AT BENGALURU

FROM 3-9 FEBRUARY, 2015‎

 

‎“I have come so that they may have life and have it to the full” (John 10:10)‎

We, the 140 members of the Conference of Catholic Bishops of India ‎gathered for the 27th Plenary Assembly at St. John’s National Academy of ‎Health Sciences, Bengaluru from 3-9 February, 2015, wish to convey our ‎greetings of joy, peace and love of Our Lord Jesus Christ to our Priests, ‎Religious,  Lay Faithful and all People of Good Will.‎

In the light of the theme of the Plenary Assembly, “Liturgy and Life”, we ‎deliberated upon liturgical renewal in the Church in India and reflected on ‎the intrinsic relationship of liturgy to the life of the People of God.  We ‎were encouraged and inspired by the message of the Holy Father, Pope ‎Francis to our Conference in which, quoting Evangelii Gaudium 24, he ‎invites us to reflect that “the Church evangelizes and is herself evangelized ‎through the beauty of the liturgy, which is both a celebration of the task of ‎evangelization and the source of her renewed self-giving”. ‎

Thanks to the Second Vatican Council, liturgical renewal has enabled us to ‎value and experience the beauty, splendor and majesty of the liturgy of ‎the Church. ‎

While considering the relationship between liturgy and life, we could not ‎ignore the fact that our country is going through challenging times. Even as ‎the Country has progressed economically, the benefits have not reached ‎the poor and the marginalized, and at times have even worsened their ‎situation. We are anxious about the increasing marginalization of the poor, ‎the Dalits and the Tribals often in the name of development.  ‎

Rising fundamentalism and communalism threatens to tear the social ‎fabric and the secular character of our beloved Country. We feel sad that ‎the law abiding Christian community appears to be especially targeted. It ‎was in this spirit that we bishops took part in a “Peace and Harmony ‎March” in order to express our solidarity with Christians in different parts ‎of our country who are affected by these atrocities, especially with the ‎Church in Delhi where recently several churches have been vandalized and ‎desecrated.‎

We were conscious of the teaching of the Second Vatican Council that ‎‎“the liturgy is the summit toward which the activity of the Church is ‎directed; at the same time it is the font from which all her power flows” ‎‎(Sacrosanctum Concilium 10). In the light of this Conciliar vision, many ‎suggestions and recommendations were proposed for a liturgy that is ‎celebrated in a proper, effective and relevant manner. Accordingly the ‎National Liturgical Commission has been entrusted with the task of ‎bringing out comprehensive liturgical guidelines. However, at this ‎juncture, we would like to state:‎

‎1.‎  In order to promote a full, conscious and active participation in the ‎liturgical celebrations of the Paschal Mystery, we urge all ministers and ‎faithful to celebrate the liturgy, with due sense of the sacred and of ‎beauty and with joyfulness, leading to a personal and communitarian ‎encounter with God and transformation of life. Care should be taken to ‎follow the prescribed norms in order to maintain the dignity and decorum ‎of the celebrations. The holiness of the priest is the leaven of the liturgical ‎celebration.‎

‎2.‎ At the National, Regional, Diocesan and Parish levels, and in the Formation ‎and Religious Houses, well planned measures have to be undertaken to ‎help the communities to celebrate the liturgy in all its richness. ‎

‎3.‎ An extensive and regular liturgical catechesis will prepare the faithful to ‎participate actively in the liturgy and allow the transforming power of the ‎liturgy to flow into their lives. ‎

‎4.‎ We are convinced that inculturation is demanded by faith in accordance ‎with the exigencies of human nature (Sacrosanctum Concilium 37-40). At ‎the same time, given the multi-cultured nature of our society and keeping ‎in mind that cultures are ever evolving and transforming, the sensitivities ‎of the people and of various groups are to be addressed when efforts are ‎made to promote inculturation.‎

‎5.‎ Heeding the Holy Father’s exhortation that sometimes there is “an ‎ostentatious preoccupation for the liturgy, for doctrine and for the ‎Church’s prestige, but without any concern that the Gospel have a real ‎impact on God’s faithful people and the concrete needs of the present ‎time” (Evangelii Gaudium #77), we shall strive to make the liturgical ‎celebrations also opportunities for catechesis on our missionary and social ‎responsibilities, especially through Homilies and Prayers of the Faithful. ‎

‎6.‎ As the Universal Church prepares herself for the Synod on the Family in ‎October 2015, we recognize the importance of the communion of families ‎in neighborhoods which are the Small Christian Communities (SCC) that ‎always relate liturgy to life and vice versa. It is through the communion of ‎families in the neighborhood, that the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic ‎Church becomes Eucharistic like the early apostolic communities (Acts, ‎chapters 2 and 4). We therefore pledge ourselves to strengthen the SCC as ‎the true way of being the living Church. ‎

May this Year dedicated to Consecrated Life be also a time of liturgical ‎renewal in the Communities of the consecrated persons. ‎

This Plenary Assembly was celebrated in a year full of grace with the ‎recent canonization of three more Indian saints: St. Kuriakose Elias ‎Chavara, St. Euphrasia Eluvathingal and St. Joseph Vaz.  We are grateful to ‎the Church for giving us saints as models for imitation and as our ‎intercessors in heaven.‎

May Mary, the Mother of the Word Incarnate, be our guide and our ‎protector.‎  (Source: CCBI)








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