All Christians are called to bear witness
According to the Evangelist Luke, Jesus gave his instructions to
the Apostles saying: "So it is written that the Christ would
suffer and on the third day rise from the dead, and that, in his
name, repentance for the forgiveness of sins would be preached to
all nations, beginning from Jerusalem. You are witnesses to
this" (24:46-48). The Gospel adds immediately that Jesus was to
send upon the Apostles what the Father had promised, namely, the
Holy Spirit (24:49). It is, therefore, fitting for us Christians to
dwell on the theme of "being witnesses" on the occasion of
the feast of Pentecost this Jubilee Year. It is a day for Christians
to reflect on their duties towards others, i.e., to proclaim Christ,
to be his witnesses and to engage in dialogue with all.
Throughout the entire period of remote and immediate preparation
for the celebration of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, the
Church has been incessantly reminding her faithful about the urgency
and the permanence of mission. The totality of Christian mission
embraces the following elements:
a) mission is already constituted by the simple presence and
living witness of the Christian life;
b) it entails the concrete commitment to the service of mankind
and all forms of activity for social development and for the
struggle against poverty and the structures which produce it;
c) it includes liturgical life, and also prayer and
contemplation, eloquent testimonies to a living and liberating
relationship with the active and true God who calls all to his
kingdom and to his glory;
d) it comprises the dialogue in which Christians meet the
followers of other religious traditions in order to walk together
towards truth and to work together in projects of common concern;
e) it incorporates announcement and catechesis in which the good
news of the Gospel of Jesus Christ is proclaimed and its
consequences for life and culture are analyzed (Pontifical Council
for Interreligious Dialogue, Dialogue and Mission, 1984, n.
13).
Martyr means one who bears witness
In our pluralistic world, the simple witness of an authentically
Christian life becomes the first means of evangelization. In his
Apostolic Exhortation, Pope Paul VI says: "Modern man listens
more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen
to teachers, it is because they are witnesses" (Evangelii
nuntiandi, n. 41; cf. also Redemptoris missio, n. 42).
Moreover there are contexts where the explicit proclamation of Jesus
Christ as Lord and Saviour is not possible. In such circumstances
the witness of a reverent and chaste life, the witness of detachment
from riches, of freedom in the face of the powers of this world, in
a word, the witness of sanctity—even
if it is given silently—is
already a fulfilment of the duty of mission.
Lest it be wrongly presumed that to bear witness, as the first
element of evangelization, would mean an attitude of anonymity,
ambiguity, mediocrity or passivity, we need to reflect on this theme
in the context of the apostolic times. Deriving from the Greek word martys,
which means "one who bears witness", this term came to be
applied at the end of the second and at the beginning of the third
century to the baptized persons who bore testimony to Christ and his
teaching by offering their lives. The Apostles are those who bear
witness to Christ, to his passion, death and resurrection, by
sacrificing their own life: "... you will be handed over to the
Sanhedrin, you will be beaten in synagogues, and you will be brought
before governors and kings for my sake, as evidence to them"
(Mk 13:9; cf. Acts 22:17-21).
Far from implying an attitude of passivity and weakness, to bear
witness, therefore, means to participate actively and fully in the
life and mission of Christ, taking him as the model. It takes firm
faith in Jesus and unshakeable courage to be true witnesses of
Christ. Martyrs are those who not only profess their faith in words
but confess it, above all, by imitating Jesus, the Lord and Master,
in the willing offering of their lives.
Recent history has witnessed many martyrs, as the Holy Father
reminded us recently at the ecumenical commemorative ceremony which
was held at the Colosseum in Rome to recall various testimonies to
Christ in the 20th century. However, it is also true that in normal
circumstances, the world in which we live today is not overtly
hostile to the right of each individual to freedom of religious
belief and practice. This means that for the majority of us it is
difficult to imagine being arrested, brought to trial and condemned
to death, like a heroic victim, for our religious belief and
practice. Are we to conclude then that martyrdom is only an
exception in our contemporary world? The truth could be far from
this, because the Church needs "witnesses" also in today's
world in which evil has become endemic and institutionalized. The
world today is dominated by atheism, hedonism, materialism,
relativism, indifferentism, etc. All Christians are invited to
respond to these and many other challenges, first of all, by being
witnesses. In concrete this means to live in simple fidelity to God
in the midst of today's materialistic society in which God and his
precepts are often ridiculed and marginalized. Alluding to the
supreme testimony of love for all in imitation of Christ, Lumen
gentium exhorts the disciples of Jesus "'God is love, and
he who abides in love abides in God, and God in him' (1 Jn 4:16).
God pours out his love into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who
has been given to us (cf. Rom 5:5). Thus the first and most
necessary gift is that charity by which we love God above all things
and our neighbour because of God" (n. 42). Witness thus becomes
connatural to Christian faith.
Christians must have right attitude towards the world
In our increasingly secularized society, in a world which is a
complex but diversified reality, accent on "witness" is
necessary. Without detracting from the profound theological meaning
of martyrdom, a Christian is invited to bear witness today by being
a person of charity, mercy, pardon, reconciliation and peace. In his
Letter to the Galatians Paul reminds us "... the fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
trustfulness, gentleness and self-control" (5:22). A disciple
of Jesus should never divide any community, should not provoke
polemics nor encourage controversies. There should be no antipathy
towards anyone; rather a joyful openness. Triumphalism is to be
avoided and a humble spirit shown. There should be no intolerance
but rather an attitude of compassion and understanding towards all.
The Christian is not to be socially alienated but rather is called
to share "the joys and the hopes, the griefs and the anxieties
of the men of this age, especially those who are poor or in any way
afflicted ..." (Gaudium et spes, n. 1). A disciple of
Christ lives the tension of "already" and "not
yet" of the kingdom of God.
Jesus himself began preaching the kingdom of God by proclaiming
the Beatitudes (Mt 5:1-12). In imitation of Jesus his disciple is
called to have a right attitude towards the world, neither
accommodating nor unnecessarily provocative. Without being of the
world, a disciple of Jesus is, nonetheless, committed to making the
world a better place to live in. "A commitment to peace,
justice, human rights and human promotion is also a witness to the
Gospel when it is a sign of concern for persons and is directed
towards integral human development" (Redemptoris missio,
n. 42).
A Christian who wishes to bear witness to Christ is not alone in
his earthly journey. Our dialogue with people of other religions has
taught us that as Christians we can live our faith with more
integrity and can be better witnesses to Christ through
collaboration with other believers. Ad gentes, the Decree on
the Church's Missionary Activity, exhorts Christians: "Let
their lives be such that 'observing their good works [other men] can
glorify the Father' (Mt 5:16); let them be joined to those men by
esteem and love and acknowledge themselves to be members of the
group of men among whom they live; let them share cultural and
social life by the various exchanges and enterprises of human
living; let them be familiar with their national and religious
traditions, gladly and reverently laying bare the seeds of the Word
which lie hidden in them" (n.11; cf. also n. 15). A
confrontational and conflictual attitude is not expected of
Christians today but rather a spirit of collaboration. In the final
message of the Interreligious Assembly, held in October 1999
in the Vatican, the participants, belonging to different religious
traditions, declared: "People may be urged to commend their
faith to others above all by the way they live, by the quality of
their actions and their care for others".
Different ways of bearing witness to Christ
The Holy Spirit inspires, enables and guides every Christian to
bear witness as "salt of the earth and light of the world"
(Mt 5:13-14). In a certain sense the taste of salt is alluring and
the function of light is indispensable in human life; and yet the
usefulness of salt and the necessity of light in daily life are
taken for granted. Salt is appreciated in food and light is pleasing
to the eyes only if both are present in human life in a just measure
and a discreet manner. The simple but firm witness of Francis of
Assisi, or in our time, that of Mother Teresa, explains to us what
Jesus means when he invites his disciples to be the "salt of
the earth and the light of the world". St Francis of Assisi is
revered today not only by Christians but also by many followers of
other religious traditions. Mother Teresa was able to touch the
hearts of millions of people in our world through the divine power
of the message she proclaimed by the witness of her life. Muslims,
Hindus, Buddhists, Jains and Parsis referred to her as "a
messenger of God". The desire spontaneously expressed by
leaders of these religions to pray at her funeral is a proof of the
extraordinary witness Mother Teresa bore to the paschal mystery.
There are different ways of bearing witness to Christ. One
finds a wide spectrum in the list of witnesses from St Peter the
Apostle, St Stephen, the first martyr, to Charles de Foucauld,
Maximilian Kolbe, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Mother Teresa and Graham
Staines. The latter was burnt alive with his two young sons in their
jeep in India on 23 January 1999. Dr Graham Staines had come to
India with his wife and three children to bear witness to Christ by
offering his humble service to lepers. Upon hearing the news of the
cruel death her husband suffered at the hands of some religious
fundamentalists, Mrs Staines said: "I feel extremely sad, but I
forgive the killers. God gave Graham and our two sons their allotted
span of life. I have no complaints...". She has promised to
stay in India with her daughter and carry on the work of her husband
among leprosy patients.
The feast of Pentecost is an occasion for Christians who are
engaged in the evangelizing mission of the Church through bearing
simple witness to renew their promise of fidelity to Christ and be
encouraged to journey on to meet the Lord who has promised:
"Lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age" (Mt
28:20).
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