| Part 1 Interview With Neocatechumenate
Initiator
By Inmaculada Álvarez
PORTO SAN GIORGIO, Italy, 1 JULY 2008 (ZENIT)
Baptism is the answer to secularization, since it is the sacrament
that frees man from slavery to sin, affirmed one of the initiators of
the Neocatechumenal Way.
Kiko Argüello affirmed this when he spoke with ZENIT on the occasion of
the June 13 final approval of the group's statutes. The Way, as Argüello
explains, is a parish-based spiritual renewal movement that is helping
to bring the Second Vatican Council to the lives of ordinary Catholics.
Q: What does this final approval of the statutes mean?
Arguello: Great joy and profound gratitude to the Lord and the Holy
Virgin Mary, who has always helped us, and especially to Peter, in the
person of Benedict XVI, who ratified the statutes.
For us it is a confirmation of 40 years of the Way throughout the world.
From the slums of Palomeras Altas, to Rome in the Latin Borghetto, also
in one of Lisbon's poorest neighborhoods, waiting for the Lord to
manifest his will. To come to this final approval, we have endured
suffering, persecutions, processes, etc., which in the end have borne
fruit.
Q: The decree of approval of the Neocatechumenal Way states that it
responds to the intuitions of Vatican Council II. In what ways?
Arguello: We believe that the Way was inspired by God to actualize the
Council in the life of parishes. In the first meeting we had with the
Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, when they examined for the first
time the celebrations of the Way
—
at the time the Way was accused of "repeating" the sacrament of baptism,
which wasn't true
—
the committee of experts, which was then studying the elaboration of the
"Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum," was very surprised by what we
were doing, because the Holy Spirit was already doing what they were
trying to create.
Father Gottardo Pasqualetti, an expert in liturgy, came to one of our
Masses. Later I received a call from the secretary of the Congregation
to let me know that they were going to proclaim a "laudatio" in Latin
for the whole Church. In it they said that if God does not inspire
charisms that actualize a Council, it's impossible to bring it to
fulfillment.
When the Congregation studied the Way, the first thing it saw was that
it was a gift of God to take Vatican II to the parishes, not a human
project. And this is reflected in the "laudatio's" text: saying that if
after the Council of Trent, God had not inspired charisms to carry out
the conciliar reform, the latter would have been very difficult, and
that the same is true in the case of Vatican II: "'praeclarum exemplar'
... in the Neocatechumenal communities."
Another aspect is love of Scripture, referred to in the constitution Dei
Verbum. This is evident in the Way, which has hermeneutical keys of
interpretation of Scripture that allow for the rediscovery of the Old
Testament in connection with the New, in addition to being able to
contribute to liturgical and pastoral renewal, etc.
Also to be highlighted is the ecumenical spirit which has flourished
through the Way; the Orthodox Church has shown great interest.
Q: Why is baptismal catechesis the key to evangelize modern man?
Arguello: Because baptism opens to us the door of the Church,
participation in divine nature. As St. Paul says, "For the love of
Christ impels us, once we have come to the conviction that one died for
all; therefore, all have died. He indeed died for all, so that those who
live might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake
died and was raised."
The problem of the man of today is that, because of original sin, he
lives everything for himself; he has placed himself at the center of the
universe, substituting God as the center of his person, and does not
realize that he lives enslaved, condemned to live for himself. This
causes profound suffering, because the truth is something else; because
God is total love, total giving to the other that he has shown in
Christ; man suffers because he doesn't love like Christ.
In countries where transcendence has been denied for years, where God
has been denied, as in the former Communist countries, the rate of
suicides is very high, because happiness is to live in the truth, and
truth is love. And this original sin can only be erased through baptism.
That is why it is important to call men back to the faith, through
preaching, the proclamation of the kerygma, the proclamation of Christ
dead and risen. When Peter makes this proclamation on the day of
Pentecost, the people are moved and ask him what they should do. Peter
replies: "Be baptized and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."
The first baptismal fonts were pools
—
the Council talks again of immersion
—
to which the neophyte descended by steps. This first form of baptism
represents perfectly what this sacrament means: death of the old man and
resurrection to new life, to man regenerated by the Holy Spirit, who can
love and give himself. That is why the crucified Christ is the true
image of the free man.
Q: Is this, therefore, the answer to secularization?
Arguello: Of course. How can man be free of the sin that acts in him?
Only Christ can free man, make him able to love others, make him share
in his divine nature. This is something fantastic that changes man's
life; it must be told to the whole universe; the world must be
re-evangelized.
As Pope John Paul II said, this new evangelization requires new ways,
new contents, and this is what God has inspired through the Way. Now
that the statutes have been approved, we can offer this Way to bishops
and to the entire Church, to carry forward the new evangelization.
Q: The Way differs from other existing movements in its juridical
form, given that it isn't an association of faithful. Could you explain
what type of form it has adopted?
Arguello: Precisely one of the novelties of the Way, as Bishop [Juan]
Arrieta explains, who is a member of the Pontifical Council for
Legislative Texts, is that it has been given a public juridical
personality, that is, that we act in the name of the Church.
The form it has adopted is that of a foundation of spiritual goods.
To date foundations were created on the basis of patrimonies of a
material type, as opposed to the Way, which manages a good of the
Church, which is the catechumenate of adults, according to the
guidelines set out by the initiators.
It is based on the bishop, given that it is the diocesan bishop who
has full power in regard to Christian initiation. Consequently, the Way
has no material good; the diocese is the titular of the goods. As the
decree of approval states, the Way is an instrument, an itinerary of
catechesis offered to the bishop for the evangelization of those who
have fallen away.
Part 2
Interview With Neocatechumenate Initiator
By Inmaculada Álvarez
PORTO SAN GIORGIO, Italy, 3 JULY 2008 (ZENIT)What may seem novel in
the charisms of the new ecclesial movements is oftentimes actually a
return to the ancient, says the founder of the Neocatechumenal Way.
Kiko Argüello affirmed this when he spoke with ZENIT on the occasion of
the June 13 final approval of the group's statutes. The Way, as Argüello
explains, is a parish-based spiritual renewal movement that is helping
to bring the Second Vatican Council to the lives of ordinary Catholics.
Q: The liturgical celebrations of the Neocatechumenal Way introduce a
series of novelties that, in some cases, have caused friction, such as
the change in the moment of the exchange of peace, the way of offering
Communion, nocturnal celebrations, and especially the Easter Vigil, in
which the celebration lasts until dawn. Could you explain the reason for
these changes?
Argüello: These changes aren't novelties, but imply a return to
ancient traditions. In the whole of the Eastern Church, the rite of
peace takes place after the Prayer of the Faithful, recalling the Gospel
phrase that says: "Before presenting your offering at the altar, go and
be reconciled with your brother."
Since we are following an ecumenical itinerary open to those who have
fallen away from the Church [and] living in a Christian community in
which our most profound problems and defects are manifested, the rite of
peace, in the presence of the Body of Christ, became conflictive
—
people moved around a lot to show forgiveness of each other and to be
reconciled with a brother. So we asked if it were possible to move the
rite to the present place, as we knew the Ambrosian rite has it, so as
not to break the solemnity of the moment of Communion, and this was
perfectly understood.
In regard to the Easter Vigil, the Council itself has contributed to
its recovery. Many theologians and liturgists have emphasized the
importance of this night in which one doesn't sleep, the Easter night of
our salvation. The celebration of this night has helped many brothers in
Madrid, for example, who would go on vacation after Good Friday
—
in Spain those days are holidays
—
to live Holy Week in a new way.
In this, as in many other things, we have always acted with good
intentions, seeking to help the man of today to rediscover his faith and
to live the Gospel.
Q: One of the accusations leveled against the Way is that the
communities "live" outside the parish.
Argüello: On the contrary! The Way is born in the parish, lives in it
and is at its service. The definitive statutes even indicate that the
Masses celebrated by the Neocatechumenal communities are part of the
parish's pastoral liturgy and are open to anyone who wishes to
participate in them.
Now then, it is very important to live the faith in a small
community, where brothers know one another, help each other even
financially, and pray together. One of the greatest problems of modern
man, which is on the rise, is loneliness. There are many people living
alone in cities. As in the early times of Christianity, the witness of
Christians through mutual love is necessary; it is what amazed the
pagans, who said: "Look how they love one another." As St. Paul says,
the Christian is called to love the other, but especially a brother in
the faith.
One must also keep in mind that many people who enter the Way have
fallen away from the faith; they are "prodigal children" returning to
the house of the Father, and one must be very merciful with them until
their faith matures and they can be fully integrated in the parish. Of
great importance, in this connection, is the work of parish priests, who
must explain this so that suspicions don't arise.
Q: The religious images used in the Way is another element that
attracts attention, more so since you are the painter. They are, in
fact, icons of Eastern Christian origin, which you have reproduced and
contributed to popularize. Why use this type of art and not another?
Argüello: Because a synthesis is necessary, an inculturation of the
faith, an aesthetics that is lacking in the West today. It is very
important that the Church reflect on the kind of aesthetics it hopes to
use to evangelize the world. In the past, the Church had its aesthetics,
in Byzantine, Baroque, Romanesque and Gothic art. Today this doesn't
exist. Parishes are built that, aesthetically, have no meaning. The
Church is participating in the same cultural disconcert that dominates
Western art.
We have understood that it is very important to recover tradition.
Until the advent of the Renaissance, the aesthetics of East and West was
common, up to Cimabue. A separation begins with Giotto, which has lasted
down to our days, and the fundamental reason is that Western art has
lost the canon. Before, an author could not paint sacred art as he
wished, because it did not have a merely aesthetic purpose but also that
of evangelizing. So it had to adjust to a canon, and this has been kept
in the East.
Hence, the recovery of this type of art in the Way responds to two
issues: The first, to recover the canon, and the second, to build
bridges with the Eastern Church. That is why it is very important for us
to know how churches are built, with a defined aesthetics that refers to
Eastern art, in which paintings form part of a "mystery crown" that
reflects the most important moments of the life of Christ, in which the
Eucharist makes heaven present on earth. Little by little, with many
difficulties, we have been recovering this.
Q: Does this closeness to the Eastern Church have an ecumenical
significance that was not present at the beginning of the Way?
Argüello: Indeed, we are surprised by the miracles we are witnessing.
We would never have [thought about] opening seminaries, and we now have
some 70, nor would we have thought of the mission "ad gentes."
The Orthodox Church too, which is present in this region, is
interested, because they have seen that our catechesis is the same, and
they have identified with our aesthetics, perfectly Eastern. They came
to see the mural on the Last Judgment that we painted in the Domus
Galilaeae and they have felt at home, with the same spirit. They were
very surprised and were wondering what is happening in the Catholic
Church. And what is happening is simply what Vatican Council II said,
the spirit the Pope has
—
communion among the Churches.
Q: What is the purpose of the Domus Galilaeae, the house the Way has
opened in Galilee, on the Mount of the Beatitudes?
Argüello: This house, built on a plot of the Custody of the Holy
Land, is the fruit of a desire to welcome brothers of the communities
that were completing the Way
—
the last stage of this "baptismal itinerary" is the solemn renewal of
the baptismal promises on Easter night before the bishop, after which
the entire community goes on pilgrimage for several days to the Holy
Land.
However, our expectations are being surpassed also in this, because
this house is bringing about an unforeseen bridge of union between the
Catholic Church and the Jewish people. This year, around 700 buses full
of Jews have come to visit us; they were surprised to see that the
Torah, and Ten Commandments are there, in relation with the Beatitudes;
that we sing the Shema
— a
hymn that highlights the first commandment of God's law in Hebrew:
"Listen, Israel, thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart,
thy whole soul, thy whole mind and thy whole strength."
Israel's minister of tourism came to the Domus to meet us and asked
why the Way has this love for the Jewish people. I answered that for
Christians, the history of the Jewish people was a sort of "catechumenate"
that led to Christ, which is why the roots of Christianity are Jewish.
John Paul II's words resonate in the Way
—
that the Jews are "our elder brothers in the faith," avoiding judging
them, given that St. Paul himself explains that a sort of "veil" has
been placed over them so that they won't recognize the Messiah until the
Gentiles come.
Q: Another characteristic note of the Way is, as you pointed out
earlier, its missionary character, with the creation of Redemptoris
Mater diocesan missionary seminaries and families on mission. Can you
explain what they are?
Argüello: The Redemptoris Mater seminaries are a bishop's diocesan
seminaries, with the particularity
—
as the former archbishop of Madrid, cardinal Suquia, pointed out
—
that the diocese has to breathe "with two lungs, one diocesan and
another for the world." In Articles 9-10 of Presbyterorum Ordinis,
Vatican Council II states that in the ordination of every priest there
must be "solicitude for all the Churches." The Redemptoris Mater
seminarians know that they might be sent to any part of the world,
wherever bishops request them. However, these seminaries belong to the
bishops. We have no authority whatsoever over the clergy.
In regard to families on mission, the initiative arose as a result of
the Synod of Bishops of Europe in 1985, when, analyzing the situation of
secularization in the West, especially in regard to the destruction of
the family, John Paul II surprised the bishops by saying that the Holy
Spirit was already answering this need, and that it was necessary to put
aside the known models of evangelization and see where the Spirit was
inspiring the answer. Since then, families of the Way have gone where
bishops have requested them.
Then there is the "mission ad gentes," the "mission among the
Gentiles," which has arisen in recent years. The Pope had also spoken
about returning to the first apostolic model, born around homes and
small communities. We find several of these communities in the Acts of
the Apostles, such as the case of Nympha, or Aquilla and Priscilla. In
the Way, we have seen that it is very important to return to this model,
especially in those places where secularization has erased all traces of
Christianity, a new "implantario ecclesiale." As always, it is the
bishop who requests this mission. Several families go, accompanied by a
priest.
However, there is more. We have also seen the need to send
"communities on mission," namely, communities that have completed the
Way, that have maturity in the faith, and are sent at the request of the
parish priests, to help parishes that are experiencing difficulties. For
example, in Rome, 12 communities have been offered to the vicariate to
go to the neediest parishes on the outskirts.
Q: The approval of the statutes implies, hence, a point of arrival,
but also a point of departure. What's next?
Argüello: What is next is to be able to offer ourselves to bishops,
now with the guarantee that this is something of the Church for the new
evangelization. What is next now is to encourage a leap forward in the
new evangelization, because happiness is to give one's life for men, and
this is what we Christians are called to do.
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