INTRODUCTION
The Marvel of God's Plan in Asia
1. The Church in Asia sings the praises of the
"God of salvation" (Ps 68:20) for choosing to initiate
his saving plan on Asian soil, through men and women of that continent.
It was in fact in Asia that God revealed and fulfilled his saving
purpose from the beginning. He guided the patriarchs (cf. Gen 12)
and called Moses to lead his people to freedom (cf. Ex 3:10). He
spoke to his chosen people through many prophets, judges, kings and
valiant women of faith. In "the fullness of time" (Gal 4:4),
he sent his only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ the Saviour, who took flesh
as an Asian! Exulting in the goodness of the continent's peoples,
cultures, and religious vitality, and conscious at the same time of the
unique gift of faith which she has received for the good of all, the
Church in Asia cannot cease to proclaim: "Give thanks to the Lord
for he is good, for his love endures for ever" (Ps 118:1).
Because Jesus was born, lived, died and rose from the
dead in the Holy Land, that small portion of Western Asia became a land
of promise and hope for all mankind. Jesus knew and loved this land. He
made his own the history, the sufferings and the hopes of its people. He
loved its people and embraced their Jewish traditions and heritage. God
in fact had long before chosen this people and revealed himself to them
in preparation for the Saviour's coming. And from this land, through the
preaching of the Gospel in the power of the Holy Spirit, the Church went
forth to make "disciples of all nations" (Mt 28:19).
With the Church throughout the world, the Church in Asia will cross the
threshold of the Third Christian Millennium marvelling at all that God
has worked from those beginnings until now, and strong in the knowledge
that "just as in the first millennium the Cross was planted on the
soil of Europe, and in the second on that of the Americas and Africa, we
can pray that in the Third Christian Millennium a great harvest of
faith will be reaped in this vast and vital continent".1
Background to the Special Assembly
2. In my Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio
Adveniente, I set out a programme for the Church to welcome the
Third Millennium of Christianity, a programme centred on the challenges
of the new evangelization. An important feature of that plan was the
holding of continental Synods so that Bishops could address the
question of evangelization according to the particular situation and
needs of each continent. This series of Synods, linked by the common
theme of the new evangelization, has proved an important part of the
Church's preparation for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000.
In that same letter, referring to the Special
Assembly for Asia of the Synod of Bishops, I noted that in that part of
the world "the issue of the encounter of Christianity with ancient
local cultures and religions is a pressing one. This is a great
challenge for evangelization, since religious systems such as Buddhism
or Hinduism have a clearly soteriological character".2
It is indeed a mystery why the Saviour of the world, born in Asia, has
until now remained largely unknown to the people of the continent. The
Synod would be a providential opportunity for the Church in Asia to
reflect further on this mystery and to make a renewed commitment to the
mission of making Jesus Christ better known to all. Two months after the
publication of Tertio Millennio Adveniente, speaking to the Sixth
Plenary Assembly of the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences, in
Manila, the Philippines, during the memorable Tenth World Youth Day
celebrations, I reminded the Bishops: "If the Church in Asia is to
fulfil its providential destiny, evangelization as the joyful, patient
and progressive preaching of the saving Death and Resurrection of Jesus
Christ must be your absolute priority".3
The positive response of the Bishops and of the
particular Churches to the prospect of a Special Assembly for Asia of
the Synod of Bishops was evident throughout the preparatory phase. The
Bishops communicated their desires and opinions at every stage with
frankness and a penetrating knowledge of the continent. They did so in
full awareness of the bond of communion which they share with the
universal Church. In line with the original idea of Tertio Millennio
Adveniente and following the proposals of the Pre-Synodal Council
which evaluated the views of the Bishops and the particular Churches on
the Asian continent, I chose as the Synod's theme: Jesus Christ the
Saviour and his Mission of Love and Service in Asia:"That they may
have Life and have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10). Through
this particular formulation of the theme, I hoped that the Synod might
"illustrate and explain more fully the truth that Christ is the one
Mediator between God and man and the sole Redeemer of the world, to be
clearly distinguished from the founders of other great religions".4
As we approach the Great Jubilee, the Church in Asia needs to be able to
proclaim with renewed vigour: Ecce natus est nobis Salvator mundi,
"Behold the Saviour of the World is born to us", born in Asia!
The Celebration of the Special Assembly
3. By the grace of God, the Special Assembly for Asia
of the Synod of Bishops took place from 18 April to 14 May 1998 in the
Vatican. It came after the Special Assemblies for Africa (1994) and
America (1997), and was followed at the year's end by the Special
Assembly for Oceania (1998). For almost a month, the Synod Fathers and
other participants, gathered around the Successor of Peter and sharing
in the gift of hierarchical communion, gave concrete voice and
expression to the Church in Asia. It was indeed a moment of special
grace! 5 Earlier meetings of Asian Bishops had contributed to
preparing the Synod and making possible an atmosphere of intense
ecclesial and fraternal communion. Of particular relevance in this
respect were the past Plenary Assemblies and Seminars sponsored by the
Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences and its offices, which
periodically brought together great numbers of Asian Bishops and
fostered personal as well as ministerial bonds between them. I had the
privilege of being able to make a visit to some of these meetings, at
times presiding at the opening or closing Solemn Eucharistic
Celebrations. On those occasions I was able to observe directly the encounter
in dialogue of the particular Churches, including the Eastern
Churches, in the person of their Pastors. These and other regional
assemblies of Asia's Bishops served providentially as remote preparation
for the Synod Assembly.
The actual celebration of the Synod itself confirmed
the importance of dialogue as a characteristic mode of the Church's
life in Asia. A sincere and honest sharing of experiences, ideas and
proposals proved to be the way to a genuine meeting of spirits, a
communion of minds and hearts which, in love, respects and transcends
differences. Particularly moving was the encounter of the new Churches
with the ancient Churches which trace their origins to the Apostles. We
experienced the incomparable joy of seeing the Bishops of the particular
Churches in Myanmar, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Mongolia, Siberia and the
new republics of Central Asia sitting beside their Brothers who had long
desired to encounter them and to dialogue with them. Yet there was also
a sense of sadness at the fact that Bishops from Mainland China could
not be present. Their absence was a constant reminder of the heroic
sacrifices and suffering which the Church continues to endure in many
parts of Asia.
The encounter in dialogue of the Bishops and the
Successor of Peter, entrusted with the task of strengthening his
brothers (cf. Lk 22:32), was truly a confirmation in faith and
mission. Day after day the Synod Hall and meeting rooms were filled with
accounts of deep faith, self-sacrificing love, unwavering hope,
long-suffering commitment, enduring courage and merciful forgiveness,
all of which eloquently disclosed the truth of Jesus' words: "I am
with you always" (Mt 28:20). The Synod was a moment of grace
because it was an encounter with the Saviour who continues to be present
in his Church through the power of the Holy Spirit, experienced in a
fraternal dialogue of life, communion and mission.
Sharing the Fruits of the Special Assembly
4. Through this Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation, I
wish to share with the Church in Asia and throughout the world the
fruits of the Special Assembly. This document seeks to convey the wealth
of that great spiritual event of communion and episcopal collegiality.
The Synod was a celebratory remembering of the Asian roots of
Christianity. The Synod Fathers remembered the first Christian
community, the early Church, Jesus' little flock on this immense
continent (cf. Lk 12:32). They remembered what the Church has
received and heard from the beginning (cf. Rev 3:3), and, having
remembered, they celebrated God's "abundant goodness" (Ps 145:7)
which never fails. The Synod was also an occasion to recognize the
ancient religious traditions and civilizations, the profound
philosophies and the wisdom which have made Asia what it is today. Above
all, the peoples of Asia themselves were remembered as the continent's
true wealth and hope for the future. Throughout the Synod those of us
present were witnesses of an extraordinarily fruitful meeting between
the old and new cultures and civilizations of Asia, marvellous to behold
in their diversity and convergence, especially when symbols, songs,
dances and colours came together in harmonious accord around the one
Table of the Lord in the opening and closing Eucharistic Liturgies.
This was not a celebration motivated by pride in
human achievements, but one conscious of what the Almighty has done for
the Church in Asia (cf. Lk 1:49). In recalling the Catholic
community's humble condition, as well as the weaknesses of its members,
the Synod was also a call to conversion, so that the Church in
Asia might become ever more worthy of the graces continually being
offered by God.
As well as a remembrance and a celebration, the Synod
was an ardent affirmation of faith in Jesus Christ the Saviour.
Grateful for the gift of faith, the Synod Fathers found no better way to
celebrate the faith than to affirm it in its integrity, and to reflect
on it in relation to the context in which it has to be proclaimed and
professed in Asia today. They emphasized frequently that the faith is
already being proclaimed with trust and courage on the continent, even
amid great difficulties. In the name of so many millions of men and
women in Asia who put their trust in no one other than the Lord, the
Synod Fathers confessed: "We have believed and come to know that
you are the Holy One of God" (Jn 6:69). In the face of the
many painful questions posed by the suffering, violence, discrimination
and poverty to which the majority of Asian peoples are subjected, they
prayed: "I believe, help my unbelief" (Mk 9:24).
In 1995, I invited the Bishops of Asia gathered in
Manila to "open wide to Christ the doors of Asia".6
Taking strength from the mystery of communion with the countless and
often unheralded martyrs of the faith in Asia, and confirmed in hope by
the abiding presence of the Holy Spirit, the Synod Fathers courageously
called all Christ's disciples in Asia to a new commitment to mission.
During the Synod Assembly, the Bishops and participants bore witness to
the character, spiritual fire and zeal which will assuredly make Asia
the land of a bountiful harvest in the coming millennium.
CHAPTER I
THE ASIAN CONTEXT
Asia, the Birthplace of Jesus and of the Church
5. The Incarnation of the Son of God, which the whole
Church will solemnly commemorate in the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000,
took place in a definite historical and geographical context. That
context exercised an important influence on the life and mission of the
Redeemer as man. "In Jesus of Nazareth, God has assumed the
features typical of human nature, including a person's belonging to a
particular people and a particular land... The physical particularity of
the land and its geographical determination are inseparable from the
truth of the human flesh assumed by the Word".7
Consequently, knowledge of the world in which the Saviour "dwelt
among us" (Jn 1:14) is an important key to a more precise
understanding of the Eternal Father's design and of the immensity of his
love for every creature: "For God so loved the world that he gave
his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have
eternal life" (Jn 3:16).
Likewise, the Church lives and fulfils her mission in
the actual circumstances of time and place. A critical awareness of the
diverse and complex realities of Asia is essential if the People of God
on the continent are to respond to God's will for them in the new
evangelization. The Synod Fathers insisted that the Church's mission of
love and service in Asia is conditioned by two factors: on the one hand,
her self-understanding as a community of disciples of Jesus Christ
gathered around her Pastors, and on the other hand, the social,
political, religious, cultural and economic realities of Asia.8
The situation of Asia was examined in detail during the Synod by those
who have daily contact with the extremely diversified realities of such
an immense continent. The following is, in synthesis, the result of the
Synod Fathers' reflections.
Religious and Cultural Realities
6. Asia is the earth's largest continent and is home
to nearly two-thirds of the world's population, with China and India
accounting for almost half the total population of the globe. The most
striking feature of the continent is the variety of its peoples who are
"heirs to ancient cultures, religions and traditions".9
We cannot but be amazed at the sheer size of Asia's population and at
the intricate mosaic of its many cultures, languages, beliefs and
traditions, which comprise such a substantial part of the history and
patrimony of the human family.
Asia is also the cradle of the world's major
religions—Judaism, Christianity, Islam and Hinduism. It is the
birthplace of many other spiritual traditions such as Buddhism, Taoism,
Confucianism, Zoroastrianism, Jainism, Sikhism and Shintoism. Millions
also espouse traditional or tribal religions, with varying degrees of
structured ritual and formal religious teaching. The Church has the
deepest respect for these traditions and seeks to engage in sincere
dialogue with their followers. The religious values they teach await
their fulfilment in Jesus Christ.
The people of Asia take pride in their religious and
cultural values, such as love of silence and contemplation, simplicity,
harmony, detachment, non-violence, the spirit of hard work, discipline,
frugal living, the thirst for learning and philosophical enquiry.10
They hold dear the values of respect for life, compassion for all
beings, closeness to nature, filial piety towards parents, elders and
ancestors, and a highly developed sense of community.11 In
particular, they hold the family to be a vital source of strength, a
closely knit community with a powerful sense of solidarity.12
Asian peoples are known for their spirit of religious tolerance and
peaceful co-existence. Without denying the existence of bitter tensions
and violent conflicts, it can still be said that Asia has often
demonstrated a remarkable capacity for accommodation and a natural
openness to the mutual enrichment of peoples in the midst of a plurality
of religions and cultures. Moreover, despite the influence of
modernization and secularization, Asian religions are showing signs of
great vitality and a capacity for renewal, as seen in reform movements
within the various religious groups. Many people, especially the young,
experience a deep thirst for spiritual values, as the rise of new
religious movements clearly demonstrates.
All of this indicates an innate spiritual insight and
moral wisdom in the Asian soul, and it is the core around which a
growing sense of "being Asian" is built. This "being
Asian" is best discovered and affirmed not in confrontation and
opposition, but in the spirit of complementarity and harmony. In this
framework of complementarity and harmony, the Church can communicate the
Gospel in a way which is faithful both to her own Tradition and to the
Asian soul.
Economic and Social Realities
7. On the subject of economic development, situations
on the Asian continent are very diverse, defying any simple
classification. Some countries are highly developed, others are
developing through effective economic policies, and others still find
themselves in abject poverty, indeed among the poorest nations on earth.
In the process of development, materialism and secularism are also
gaining ground, especially in urban areas. These ideologies, which
undermine traditional, social and religious values, threaten Asia's
cultures with incalculable damage.
The Synod Fathers spoke of the rapid changes taking
place within Asian societies and of the positive and negative aspects of
these changes. Among them are the phenomenon of urbanization and the
emergence of huge urban conglomerations, often with large depressed
areas where organized crime, terrorism, prostitution, and the
exploitation of the weaker sectors of society thrive. Migration too is a
major social phenomenon, exposing millions of people to situations which
are difficult economically, culturally and morally. People migrate
within Asia and from Asia to other continents for many reasons, among
them poverty, war and ethnic conflicts, the denial of their human rights
and fundamental freedoms. The establishment of giant industrial
complexes is another cause of internal and external migration, with
accompanying destructive effects on family life and values. Mention was
also made of the construction of nuclear power plants with an eye to
cost and efficiency but with little regard for the safety of people and
the integrity of the environment.
Tourism also warrants special attention. Though a
legitimate industry with its own cultural and educational values,
tourism has in some cases a devastating influence upon the moral and
physical landscape of many Asian countries, manifested in the
degradation of young women and even children through prostitution.13
The pastoral care of migrants, as well as that of tourists, is difficult
and complex, especially in Asia where basic structures for this may not
exist. Pastoral planning at all levels needs to take these realities
into account. In this context we should not forget the migrants from
Catholic Eastern Churches who need pastoral care according to their own
ecclesiastical traditions.14
Several Asian countries face difficulties related to
population growth, which is "not merely a demographic or economic
problem but especially a moral one".15 Clearly, the
question of population is closely linked to that of human promotion, but
false solutions that threaten the dignity and inviolability of life
abound and present a special challenge to the Church in Asia. It is
perhaps appropriate at this point to recall the Church's contribution to
the defence and promotion of life through health care, social
development and education to benefit peoples, especially the poor. It is
fitting that the Special Assembly for Asia paid tribute to the late
Mother Teresa of Calcutta, "who was known all over the world for
her loving and selfless care of the poorest of the poor".16
She remains an icon of the service to life which the Church is offering
in Asia, in courageous contrast to the many dark forces at work in
society.
A number of Synod Fathers underlined the external
influences being brought to bear on Asian cultures. New forms of
behaviour are emerging as a result of over-exposure to the mass media
and the kinds of literature, music and films that are proliferating on
the continent. Without denying that the means of social communication
can be a great force for good,17 we cannot disregard the
negative impact which they often have. Their beneficial effects can at
times be outweighed by the way in which they are controlled and used by
those with questionable political, economic and ideological interests.
As a result, the negative aspects of the media and entertainment
industries are threatening traditional values, and in particular the
sacredness of marriage and the stability of the family. The effect of
images of violence, hedonism, unbridled individualism and materialism
"is striking at the heart of Asian cultures, at the religious
character of the people, families and whole societies".18
This is a situation which poses a great challenge to the Church and to
the proclamation of her message.
The persistent reality of poverty and the
exploitation of people are matters of the most urgent concern. In Asia
there are millions of oppressed people who for centuries have been kept
economically, culturally and politically on the margins of society.19
Reflecting upon the situation of women in Asian societies, the Synod
Fathers noted that "though the awakening of women's consciousness
to their dignity and rights is one of the most significant signs of the
times, the poverty and exploitation of women remains a serious problem
throughout Asia".20 Female illiteracy is much higher
than that of males; and female children are more likely to be aborted or
even killed after birth. There are also millions of indigenous or tribal
people throughout Asia living in social, cultural and political
isolation from the dominant population.21 It was reassuring
to hear the Bishops at the Synod mention that in some cases these
matters are receiving greater attention at the national, regional and
international levels, and that the Church is actively seeking to address
this serious situation.
The Synod Fathers pointed out that this necessarily
brief reflection upon the economic and social realities of Asia would be
incomplete if recognition were not also given to the extensive economic
growth of many Asian societies in recent decades: a new generation of
skilled workers, scientists and technicians is growing daily and their
great number augurs well for Asia's development. Still, not all is
stable and solid in this progress, as has been made evident by the most
recent and far-reaching financial crisis suffered by a number of Asian
countries. The future of Asia lies in cooperation, within Asia and with
the nations of other continents, but building always on what Asian
peoples themselves do with a view to their own development.
Political Realities
8. The Church always needs to have an exact
understanding of the political situation in the different countries
where she seeks to fulfil her mission. In Asia today the political
panorama is highly complex, displaying an array of ideologies ranging
from democratic forms of government to theocratic ones. Military
dictatorships and atheistic ideologies are very much present. Some
countries recognize an official state religion that allows little or no
religious freedom to minorities and the followers of other religions.
Other States, though not explicitly theocratic, reduce minorities to
second-class citizens with little safeguard for their fundamental human
rights. In some places Christians are not allowed to practise their
faith freely and proclaim Jesus Christ to others.22 They are
persecuted and denied their rightful place in society. The Synod Fathers
remembered in a special way the people of China and expressed the
fervent hope that all their Chinese Catholic brothers and sisters would
one day be able to exercise their religion in freedom and visibly
profess their full communion with the See of Peter.23
While appreciating the progress which many Asian
countries are making under their different forms of government, the
Synod Fathers also drew attention to the widespread corruption existing
at various levels of both government and society.24 Too
often, people seem helpless to defend themselves against corrupt
politicians, judiciary officials, administrators and bureaucrats.
However, there is a growing awareness throughout Asia of people's
capacity to change unjust structures. There are new demands for greater
social justice, for more participation in government and economic life,
for equal opportunities in education and for a just share in the
resources of the nation. People are becoming increasingly conscious of
their human dignity and rights and more determined to safeguard them.
Long dormant ethnic, social and cultural minority groups are seeking
ways to become agents of their own social advancement. The Spirit of God
helps and sustains people's efforts to transform society so that the
human yearning for a more abundant life may be satisfied as God wills
(cf. Jn 10:10).
The Church in Asia: Past and Present
9. The history of the Church in Asia is as old as the
Church herself, for it was in Asia that Jesus breathed the Holy Spirit
upon his disciples and sent them to the ends of the earth to proclaim
the Good News and gather communities of believers. "As the Father
has sent me, even so I send you" (Jn 20:21; see also Mt 28:18-20;
Mk 16:15-18; Lk 24:47; Acts 1:8). Following the
Lord's command, the Apostles preached the word and founded Churches. It
may help to recall some elements of this fascinating and complex
history.
From Jerusalem, the Church spread to Antioch, to Rome
and beyond. It reached Ethiopia in the South, Scythia in the North and
India in the East, where tradition has it that Saint Thomas the Apostle
went in the year 52 A.D. and founded Churches in South India. The
missionary spirit of the East Syrian community in the third and fourth
centuries, with its centre at Edessa, was remarkable. The ascetic
communities of Syria were a major force of evangelization in Asia from
the third century onwards. They provided spiritual energy for the
Church, especially during times of persecution. At the end of the third
century, Armenia was the first nation as a whole to embrace
Christianity, and is now preparing to celebrate the 1700th anniversary
of its baptism. By the end of the fifth century, the Christian message
had reached the Arab kingdoms, but for many reasons, including the
divisions among Christians, the message failed to take root among these
peoples.
Persian merchants took the Good News to China in the
fifth century. The first Christian Church was built there at the
beginning of the seventh century. During the T'ang dynasty (618-907
A.D.), the Church flourished for nearly two centuries. The decline of
this vibrant Church in China by the end of the First Millennium is one
of the sadder chapters in the history of God's People on the continent.
In the thirteenth century the Good News was announced
to the Mongols and the Turks and to the Chinese once more. But
Christianity almost vanished in these regions for a number of reasons,
among them the rise of Islam, geographical isolation, the absence of an
appropriate adaptation to local cultures, and perhaps above all a lack
of preparedness to encounter the great religions of Asia. The end of the
fourteenth century saw the drastic diminution of the Church in Asia,
except for the isolated community in South India. The Church in Asia had
to await a new era of missionary endeavour.
The apostolic labours of Saint Francis Xavier, the
founding of the Congregation of Propaganda Fide by Pope Gregory
XV, and the directives for missionaries to respect and appreciate local
cultures all contributed to achieving more positive results in the
course of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Again in the
nineteenth century there was a revival of missionary activity. Various
religious congregations dedicated themselves wholeheartedly to this
task. Propaganda Fide was reorganized. Greater emphasis was
placed upon building up the local Churches. Educational and charitable
works went hand in hand with the preaching of the Gospel. Consequently,
the Good News continued to reach more people, especially among the poor
and the underprivileged, but also here and there among the social and
intellectual elite. New attempts were made to inculturate the Good News,
although they proved in no way sufficient. Despite her centuries-long
presence and her many apostolic endeavours, the Church in many places
was still considered as foreign to Asia, and indeed was often associated
in people's minds with the colonial powers.
This was the situation on the eve of the Second
Vatican Council; but thanks to the impetus provided by the Council, a
new understanding of mission dawned and with it a great hope. The
universality of God's plan of salvation, the missionary nature of the
Church and the responsibility of everyone in the Church for this task,
so strongly reaffirmed in the Council's Decree on the Church's
Missionary Activity Ad Gentes, became the framework of a new
commitment. During the Special Assembly, the Synod Fathers testified to
the recent growth of the ecclesial community among many different
peoples in various parts of the continent, and they appealed for further
missionary efforts in the years to come, especially as new possibilities
for the proclamation of the Gospel emerge in the Siberian region and the
Central Asian countries which have recently gained their independence,
such as Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.25
A survey of the Catholic communities in Asia shows a
splendid variety by reason of their origin and historical development,
and the diverse spiritual and liturgical traditions of the various
Rites. Yet all are united in proclaiming the Good News of Jesus Christ,
through Christian witness, works of charity and human solidarity. While
some particular Churches carry out their mission in peace and freedom,
others find themselves in situations of violence and conflict, or feel
threatened by other groups, for religious or other reasons. In the
vastly diversified cultural world of Asia, the Church faces multiple
philosophical, theological and pastoral challenges. Her task is made
more difficult by the fact of her being a minority, with the only
exception the Philippines, where Catholics are in the majority.
Whatever the circumstances, the Church in Asia finds
herself among peoples who display an intense yearning for God. The
Church knows that this yearning can only be fully satisfied by Jesus
Christ, the Good News of God for all the nations. The Synod Fathers were
very keen that this Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation should focus
attention on this yearning and encourage the Church in Asia to proclaim
with vigour in word and deed that Jesus Christ is the Saviour.
The Spirit of God, always at work in the history of
the Church in Asia, continues to guide her. The many positive elements
found in the local Churches, frequently highlighted in the Synod,
strengthen our expectation of a "new springtime of Christian
life".26 One solid cause of hope is the increasing
number of better trained, enthusiastic and Spirit-filled lay people, who
are more and more aware of their specific vocation within the ecclesial
community. Among them the lay catechists deserve special recognition and
praise.27 The apostolic and charismatic movements too are a
gift of the Spirit, bringing new life and vigour to the formation of lay
men and women, families and the young.28 Associations and
ecclesial movements devoted to the promotion of human dignity and
justice make accessible and tangible the universality of the evangelical
message of our adoption as children of God (cf. Rom 8:15-16).
At the same time, there are Churches in very
difficult circumstances, "experiencing intense trials in the
practice of their faith".29 The Synod Fathers were moved
by reports of the heroic witness, unshaken perseverance and steady
growth of the Catholic Church in China, by the efforts of the Church in
South Korea to offer assistance to the people of North Korea, the humble
steadfastness of the Catholic community in Vietnam, the isolation of
Christians in such places as Laos and Myanmar, the difficult
co-existence with the majority in some predominantly Islamic states.30
The Synod paid special attention to the situation of the Church in the
Holy Land and in the Holy City of Jerusalem, "the heart of
Christianity",31 a city dear to all the children of
Abraham. The Synod Fathers expressed the belief that the peace of the
region, and even the world, depends in large measure on the peace and
reconciliation which have eluded Jerusalem for so long.32
I cannot bring to an end this brief survey of the
situation of the Church in Asia, though far from complete, without
mentioning the Saints and Martyrs of Asia, both those who have been
recognized and those known only to God, whose example is a source of
"spiritual richness and a great means of evangelization".33
They speak silently but most powerfully of the importance of holiness of
life and readiness to offer one's life for the Gospel. They are the
teachers and the protectors, the glory of the Church in Asia in her work
of evangelization. With the whole Church I pray to the Lord to send many
more committed labourers to reap the harvest of souls which I see as
ready and plentiful (cf. Mt 9:37-38). At this moment, I call to
mind what I wrote in Redemptoris Missio: "God is opening
before the Church the horizons of a humanity more fully prepared for the
sowing of the Gospel".34 This vision of a new and
promising horizon I see being fulfilled in Asia, where Jesus was born
and where Christianity began.
CHAPTER II
JESUS THE SAVIOUR:
A GIFT TO ASIA
The Gift of Faith
10. As the Synod discussion of the complex realities
of Asia unfolded, it became increasingly obvious to all that the
Church's unique contribution to the peoples of the continent is the
proclamation of Jesus Christ, true God and true man, the one and only
Saviour for all peoples.35 What distinguishes the Church from
other religious communities is her faith in Jesus Christ; and she cannot
keep this precious light of faith under a bushel (cf. Mt 5:15),
for her mission is to share that light with everyone. "[The Church]
wants to offer the new life she has found in Jesus Christ to all the
peoples of Asia as they search for the fullness of life, so that they
can have the same fellowship with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ in
the power of the Spirit".36 This faith in Jesus Christ
is what inspires the Church's evangelizing work in Asia, often carried
out in difficult and even dangerous circumstances. The Synod Fathers
noted that proclaiming Jesus as the only Saviour can present particular
difficulties in their cultures, given that many Asian religions teach
divine self-manifestations as mediating salvation. Far from discouraging
the Synod Fathers, the challenges facing their evangelizing efforts were
an even greater incentive in striving to transmit "the faith that
the Church in Asia has inherited from the Apostles and holds with the
Church of all generations and places".37 Indeed they
expressed the conviction that "the heart of the Church in Asia will
be restless until the whole of Asia finds its rest in the peace of
Christ, the Risen Lord".38
The Church's faith in Jesus is a gift received and a
gift to be shared; it is the greatest gift which the Church can offer to
Asia. Sharing the truth of Jesus Christ with others is the solemn duty
of all who have received the gift of faith. In my Encyclical Letter Redemptoris
Missio, I wrote that "the Church, and every individual
Christian within her, may not keep hidden or monopolize this newness and
richness which has been received from God's bounty in order to be
communicated to all mankind".39 In the same Letter I
wrote: "Those who are incorporated in the Catholic Church ought to
sense their privilege and for that very reason their greater obligation
of bearing witness to the faith and to the Christian life as a
service to their brothers and sisters and as a fitting response to
God".40
Deeply convinced of this, the Synod Fathers were
equally conscious of their personal responsibility to grasp through
study, prayer and reflection the timeless truth of Jesus in order to
bring its power and vitality to bear on the present and future
challenges of evangelization in Asia.
Jesus Christ, the God-Man Who Saves
11. The Scriptures attest that Jesus lived an
authentically human life. The Jesus whom we proclaim as the only Saviour
walked the earth as the God-Man in full possession of a human nature. He
was like us in all things except sin. Born of a Virgin Mother in humble
surroundings at Bethlehem, he was as helpless as any other infant, and
even suffered the fate of a refugee fleeing the wrath of a ruthless
leader (cf. Mt 2:13-15). He was subject to human parents who did
not always understand his ways, but in whom he trusted and whom he
lovingly obeyed (cf. Lk 2:41-52). Constantly at prayer, he was in
intimate relationship with God whom he addressed as Abba,
"Father", to the dismay of his listeners (cf. Jn 8:34-59).
He was close to the poor, the forgotten and the
lowly, declaring that they were truly blessed, for God was with them. He
ate with sinners, assuring them that at the Father's table there was a
place for them when they turned from their sinful ways and came back to
him. Touching the unclean and allowing them to touch him, he let them
know the nearness of God. He wept for a dead friend, he restored a dead
son to his widowed mother, he welcomed children, and he washed the feet
of his disciples. Divine compassion had never been so immediately
accessible.
The sick, the lame, the blind, the deaf and the dumb
all experienced healing and forgiveness at his touch. As his closest
companions and co-workers he chose an unusual group in which fishermen
mixed with tax collectors, Zealots with people untrained in the Law, and
women also. A new family was being created under the Father's
all-embracing and surprising love. Jesus preached simply, using examples
from everyday life to speak of God's love and his Kingdom; and the
people recognized that he spoke with authority.
Yet he was accused of being a blasphemer, a violator
of the sacred Law, a public nuisance to be eliminated. After a trial
based on false testimony (cf. Mk 14:56), he was sentenced to die
as a criminal on the Cross and, forsaken and humiliated, he seemed a
failure. He was hastily buried in a borrowed tomb. But on the third day
after this death, and despite the vigilance of the guards, the tomb was
found empty! Jesus, risen from the dead, then appeared to his disciples
before returning to the Father from whom he had come.
With all Christians, we believe that this particular
life, in one sense so ordinary and simple, in another sense so utterly
wondrous and shrouded in mystery, ushered into human history the Kingdom
of God and "brought its power to bear upon every facet of human
life and society beset by sin and death".41 Through his
words and actions, especially in his suffering, death and resurrection,
Jesus fulfilled the will of his Father to reconcile all humanity to
himself, after original sin had created a rupture in the relationship
between the Creator and his creation. On the Cross, he took upon himself
the sins of the world—past, present and future. Saint Paul reminds us
that we were dead as a result of our sins and his death has brought us
to life again: "God made [us] alive together with him, having
forgiven us all our trespasses, having cancelled the bond which stood
against us with its legal demands; this he set aside, nailing it to the
cross" (Col 2:13-14). In this way, salvation was sealed once
and for all. Jesus is our Saviour in the fullest sense of the word
because his words and works, especially his resurrection from the dead,
have revealed him to be the Son of God, the pre-existent Word, who
reigns for ever as Lord and Messiah.
The Person and Mission of the Son of God
12. The "scandal" of Christianity is the
belief that the all-holy, all-powerful and all-knowing God took upon
himself our human nature and endured suffering and death to win
salvation for all people (cf. 1 Cor 1:23). The faith we have
received declares that Jesus Christ revealed and accomplished the
Father's plan of saving the world and the whole of humanity because of
"who he is" and "what he does because of who he
is". "Who he is" and "what he does"
acquire their full meaning only when set within the mystery of the
Triune God. It has been a constant concern of my Pontificate to remind
the faithful of the communion of life of the Blessed Trinity and the
unity of the three Persons in the plan of creation and redemption. My
Encyclical Letters Redemptor Hominis, Dives in Misericordia and
Dominum et Vivificantem are reflections on the Son, the Father
and the Holy Spirit respectively and on their roles in the divine plan
of salvation. We cannot however isolate or separate one Person from the
others, since each is revealed only within the communion of life and
action of the Trinity. The saving action of Jesus has its origin in the
communion of the Godhead, and opens the way for all who believe in him
to enter into intimate communion with the Trinity and with one another
in the Trinity.
"He who has seen me has seen the Father",
Jesus claims (Jn 14:9). In Jesus Christ alone dwells the fullness
of God in bodily form (cf. Col 2:9), establishing him as the
unique and absolute saving Word of God (cf. Heb 1:1-4). As the
Father's definitive Word, Jesus makes God and his saving will known in
the fullest way possible. "No one comes to the Father but by
me", Jesus says (Jn 14:6). He is "the Way, and the
Truth, and the Life" (Jn 14:6), because, as he himself says,
"the Father who dwells in me does his works" (Jn 14:10).
Only in the person of Jesus does God's word of salvation appear in all
its fullness, ushering in the final age (cf. Heb 1:1-2). Thus, in
the first days of the Church, Peter could proclaim: "There is
salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given
among men by which we must be saved" (Acts 4:12).
The mission of the Saviour reached its culmination in
the Paschal Mystery. On the Cross, when "he stretched out his arms
between heaven and earth in the everlasting sign of [the Father's]
covenant",42 Jesus uttered his final appeal to the
Father to forgive the sins of humanity: "Father, forgive them; for
they know not what they do" (Lk 23:34). Jesus destroyed sin
by the power of his love for his Father and for all mankind. He took
upon himself the wounds inflicted on humanity by sin, and he offered
release through conversion. The first fruits of this are evident in the
repentant thief hanging beside him on another cross (cf. Lk 23:43).
His last utterance was the cry of the faithful Son: "Father, into
your hands I commit my spirit" (Lk 23:46). In this supreme
expression of love he entrusted his whole life and mission into the
hands of the Father who had sent him. Thus he handed over to the Father
the whole of creation and all humanity, to be accepted finally by him in
compassionate love.
Everything that the Son is and has accomplished is
accepted by the Father, who then offers this gift to the world in the
act of raising Jesus from the dead and setting him at his right hand,
where sin and death have power no more. Through Jesus' Paschal Sacrifice
the Father irrevocably offers reconciliation and fullness of life to
the world. This extraordinary gift could only come through the
beloved Son, who alone was capable of fully responding to the Father's
love, rejected by sin. In Jesus Christ, through the power of the Holy
Spirit, we come to know that God is not distant, above and apart from
man, but is very near, indeed united to every person and all humanity in
all of life's situations. This is the message which Christianity offers
to the world, and it is a source of incomparable comfort and hope for
all believers.
Jesus Christ: the Truth of Humanity
13. How does the humanity of Jesus and the ineffable
mystery of the Incarnation of the Son of the Father shed light on the
human condition? The Incarnate Son of God not only revealed completely
the Father and his plan of salvation; he also "fully reveals man to
himself".43 His words and actions, and above all his
Death and Resurrection, reveal the depths of what it means to be human.
Through Jesus, man can finally know the truth of himself. Jesus'
perfectly human life, devoted wholly to the love and service of the
Father and of man, reveals that the vocation of every human being is to
receive love and give love in return. In Jesus we marvel at the
inexhaustible capacity of the human heart to love God and man, even when
this entails great suffering. Above all, it is on the Cross that Jesus
breaks the power of the self-destructive resistance to love which sin
inflicts upon us. On his part, the Father responds by raising Jesus as
the first-born of all those predestined to be conformed to the image of
his Son (cf. Rom 8:29). At that moment, Jesus became once and for
all both the revelation and the accomplishment of a humanity re-created
and renewed according to the plan of God. In Jesus then, we discover the
greatness and dignity of each person in the heart of God who created man
in his own image (cf. Gen 1:26), and we find the origin of the
new creation which we have become through his grace.
The Second Vatican Council taught that "by his
Incarnation, he, the Son of God, in a certain way united himself with
each individual".44 In this profound insight the Synod
Fathers saw the ultimate source of hope and strength for the people of
Asia in their struggles and uncertainties. When men and women respond
with a living faith to God's offer of love, his presence brings love and
peace, transforming the human heart from within. In Redemptor Hominis
I wrote that "the redemption of the world—this tremendous
mystery of love in which creation is renewed—is, at its deepest root,
the fullness of justice in a human Heart—the Heart of the First-born
Son—in order that it may become justice in the hearts of many human
beings, predestined from eternity in the First-born Son to be children
of God and called to grace, called to love".45
Thus, the mission of Jesus not only restored
communion between God and humanity; it also established a new communion
between human beings alienated from one another because of sin. Beyond
all divisions, Jesus makes it possible for people to live as brothers
and sisters, recognizing a single Father who is in heaven (cf. Mt 23:9).
In him, a new harmony has emerged, in which "there is neither Jew
nor Greek, ... neither slave nor free, ... neither male nor female, for
you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal 3:28). Jesus is our
peace, "who has made us both one, and has broken down the dividing
wall of hostility" (Eph 2:14). In all that he said and did,
Jesus was the Father's voice, hands and arms, gathering all God's
children into one family of love. He prayed that his disciples might
live in communion just as he is in communion with the Father (cf. Jn 17:11).
Among his last words we hear him say: "As the Father has loved me,
so have I loved you; abide in my love... This is my commandment, that
you love one another as I have loved you" (Jn 15:9, 12).
Sent by the God of communion and being truly God and truly man, Jesus
established communion between heaven and earth in his very person. It is
our faith that "in him all the fullness of God was pleased to
dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on
earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his Cross" (Col
1:19-20). Salvation can be found in the person of the Son of God
made man and the mission entrusted to him alone as the Son, a mission of
service and love for the life of all. Together with the Church
throughout the world, the Church in Asia proclaims the truth of faith:
"There is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men,
the man Christ Jesus who gave himself as a ransom for all" (1
Tim 2:5-6).
The Uniqueness and Universality of Salvation
in Jesus
14. The Synod Fathers recalled that the pre-existent
Word, the eternally begotten Son of God, "was already present in
creation, in history and in every human yearning for good".46
Through the Word, present to the cosmos even before the Incarnation, the
world came to be (cf. Jn 1:1-4, 10; Col 1:15-20). But as
the incarnate Word who lived, died and rose from the dead, Jesus Christ
is now proclaimed as the fulfilment of all creation, of all history, and
of all human yearning for fullness of life.47 Risen from the
dead, Jesus Christ "is present to all and to the whole of creation
in a new and mysterious way".48 In him, "authentic
values of all religious and cultural traditions, such as mercy and
submission to the will of God, compassion and rectitude, non-violence
and righteousness, filial piety and harmony with creation find their
fullness and realization".49 From the first moment of
time to its end, Jesus is the one universal Mediator. Even for those who
do not explicitly profess faith in him as the Saviour, salvation comes
as a grace from Jesus Christ through the communication of the Holy
Spirit.
We believe that Jesus Christ, true God and true man,
is the one Saviour because he alone—the Son—accomplished the
Father's universal plan of salvation. As the definitive manifestation of
the mystery of the Father's love for all, Jesus is indeed unique, and
"it is precisely this uniqueness of Christ which gives him an
absolute and universal significance, whereby, while belonging to
history, he remains history's centre and goal".50
No individual, no nation, no culture is impervious to
the appeal of Jesus who speaks from the very heart of the human
condition. "It is his life that speaks, his humanity, his fidelity
to the truth, his all-embracing love. Furthermore, his death on the
Cross speaks—that is to say the inscrutable depth of his suffering and
abandonment".51 Contemplating Jesus in his human nature,
the peoples of Asia find their deepest questions answered, their hopes
fulfilled, their dignity uplifted and their despair conquered. Jesus is
the Good News for the men and women of every time and place in their
search for the meaning of existence and for the truth of their own
humanity.
CHAPTER III
THE HOLY SPIRIT:
LORD AND GIVER OF LIFE
The Spirit of God in Creation and History
15. If it is true that the saving significance of
Jesus can be understood only in the context of his revelation of the
Trinity's plan of salvation, then it follows that the Holy Spirit is an
absolutely vital part of the mystery of Jesus and of the salvation which
he brings. The Synod Fathers made frequent references to the role of the
Holy Spirit in the history of salvation, noting that a false separation
between the Redeemer and the Holy Spirit would jeopardize the truth of
Jesus as the one Saviour of all.
In Christian Tradition, the Holy Spirit has always
been associated with life and the giving of life. The
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed calls the Holy Spirit "the Lord,
the Giver of Life". It is not surprising, therefore, that many
interpretations of the creation account in Genesis have seen the Holy
Spirit in the mighty wind that swept over the waters (cf. Gen 1:2).
The Holy Spirit is present from the first moment of creation, the first
manifestation of the love of the Triune God, and is always present in
the world as its life-giving force.52 Since creation is the
beginning of history, the Spirit is in a certain sense a hidden power at
work in history, guiding it in the ways of truth and goodness.
The revelation of the person of the Holy Spirit, the
mutual love of the Father and the Son, is proper to the New Testament.
In Christian thought he is seen as the wellspring of life for all
creatures. Creation is God's free communication of love, a communication
which, out of nothing, brings everything into being. There is nothing
created that is not filled with the ceaseless exchange of love that
marks the innermost life of the Trinity, filled that is with the Holy
Spirit: "the Spirit of the Lord has filled the world" (Wis 1:7).
The presence of the Spirit in creation generates order, harmony and
interdependence in all that exists.
Created in the image of God, human beings become the
dwelling-place of the Spirit in a new way when they are raised to the
dignity of divine adoption (cf. Gal 4:5). Reborn in Baptism, they
experience the presence and power of the Spirit, not just as the Author
of Life but as the One who purifies and saves, producing fruits of
"love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness, self-control" (Gal 5:22-23). These fruits of the
Spirit are the sign that "God's love has been poured into our
hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us" (Rom 5:5).
When accepted in freedom, this love makes men and women visible
instruments of the unseen Spirit's ceaseless activity. It is above all
this new capacity to give and receive love which testifies to the
interior presence and power of the Holy Spirit. As a consequence of the
transformation and re-creation which he produces in people's hearts and
minds, the Spirit influences human societies and cultures.53
"Indeed, the Spirit is at the origin of the noble ideals and
undertakings which benefit humanity on its journey through history.
‘The Spirit of God with marvellous foresight directs the course of the
ages and renews the face of the earth'".54
Following the lead of the Second Vatican Council, the
Synod Fathers drew attention to the multiple and diversified action of
the Holy Spirit who continually sows the seeds of truth among all
peoples, their religions, cultures and philosophies.55 This
means that these religions, cultures and philosophies are capable of
helping people, individually and collectively, to work against evil and
to serve life and everything that is good. The forces of death isolate
people, societies and religious communities from one another, and
generate the suspicion and rivalry that lead to conflict. The Holy
Spirit, by contrast, sustains people in their search for mutual
understanding and acceptance. The Synod was therefore right to see the
Spirit of God as the prime agent of the Church's dialogue with all
peoples, cultures and religions.
The Holy Spirit and the
Incarnation of the Word
16. Under the Spirit's guidance, the history of
salvation unfolds on the stage of the world, indeed of the cosmos,
according to the Father's eternal plan. That plan, initiated by the
Spirit at the very beginning of creation, is revealed in the Old
Testament, is brought to fulfilment through the grace of Jesus Christ,
and is carried on in the new creation by the same Spirit until the Lord
comes again in glory at the end of time.56 The Incarnation of
the Son of God is the supreme work of the Holy Spirit: "The
conception and birth of Jesus Christ are in fact the greatest work
accomplished by the Holy Spirit in the history of creation and
salvation: the supreme grace—‘the grace of union', source of every
other grace".57 The Incarnation is the event in which
God gathers into a new and definitive union with himself not only man
but the whole of creation and all of history.58
Having been conceived in the womb of the Virgin Mary
by the Spirit's power (cf. Lk 1:35; Mt 1:20), Jesus of
Nazareth, the Messiah and only Saviour, was filled with the Holy Spirit.
The Spirit descended upon him at his baptism (cf. Mk 1:10) and
led him into the wilderness to be strengthened before his public
ministry (cf. Mk 1:12; Lk 4:1; Mt 4:1). In the
synagogue at Nazareth he began his prophetic ministry by applying to
himself Isaiah's vision of the Spirit's anointing which leads to the
preaching of good news to the poor, freedom to captives and a time
acceptable to the Lord (cf. Lk 4:18-19). By the power of the
Spirit, Jesus healed the sick and cast out demons as a sign that the
Kingdom of God had come (cf. Mt 12:28). After rising from the
dead, he imparted to the disciples the Holy Spirit whom he had promised
to pour out on the Church when he returned to the Father (cf. Jn 20:22-23).
All of this shows how Jesus' saving mission bears the
unmistakable mark of the Spirit's presence: life, new life.
Between the sending of the Son from the Father and the sending
of the Spirit from the Father and the Son, there is a close and
vital link.59 The action of the Spirit in creation and human
history acquires an altogether new significance in his action in the
life and mission of Jesus. The "seeds of the Word" sown by the
Spirit prepare the whole of creation, history and man for full maturity
in Christ.60
The Synod Fathers expressed concern about the
tendency to separate the activity of the Holy Spirit from that of Jesus
the Saviour. Responding to their concern, I repeat here what I wrote in Redemptoris
Missio: "[The Spirit] is ... not an alternative to Christ, nor
does he fill a sort of void which is sometimes suggested as existing
between Christ and the Logos. Whatever the Spirit brings about in human
hearts and in the history of peoples, in cultures and religions serves
as a preparation for the Gospel and can only be understood in reference
to Christ, the Word who took flesh by the power of the Spirit ‘so that
as perfectly human he would save all human beings and sum up all
things'".61
The universal presence of the Holy Spirit therefore
cannot serve as an excuse for a failure to proclaim Jesus Christ
explicitly as the one and only Saviour. On the contrary, the universal
presence of the Holy Spirit is inseparable from universal salvation in
Jesus. The presence of the Spirit in creation and history points to
Jesus Christ in whom creation and history are redeemed and fulfilled.
The presence and action of the Spirit both before the Incarnation and in
the climactic moment of Pentecost point always to Jesus and to the
salvation he brings. So too the Holy Spirit's universal presence can
never be separated from his activity within the Body of Christ, the
Church.62
The Holy Spirit and the Body of Christ
17. The Holy Spirit preserves unfailingly the bond of
communion between Jesus and his Church. Dwelling in her as in a temple
(cf. 1 Cor 3:16), the Spirit guides the Church, first of all, to
the fullness of truth about Jesus. Then, it is the Spirit who empowers
the Church to continue Jesus' mission, in the first place by witnessing
to Jesus himself, thus fulfilling what he had promised before his death
and resurrection, that he would send the Spirit to his disciples so
that they might bear witness to him (cf. Jn 15:26-27). The
work of the Spirit in the Church is also to testify that believers are
the adopted children of God destined to inherit salvation, the promised
fullness of communion with the Father (cf. Rom 8:15-17). Endowing
the Church with different charisms and gifts, the Spirit makes the
Church grow in communion as one body made up of many different parts
(cf. 1 Cor 12:4; Eph 4:11-16). The Spirit gathers into
unity all kinds of people, with their different customs, resources and
talents, making the Church a sign of the communion of all humanity under
the headship of Christ.63 The Spirit shapes the Church as a
community of witnesses who, through his power, bear testimony to Jesus
the Saviour (cf. Acts 1:8). In this sense, the Holy Spirit is the
prime agent of evangelization. From this the Synod Fathers could
conclude that, just as the earthly ministry of Jesus was accomplished in
the power of the Holy Spirit, "the same Spirit has been given to
the Church by the Father and the Son at Pentecost to bring to completion
Jesus' mission of love and service in Asia".64
The Father's plan for the salvation of man does not
end with the death and resurrection of Jesus. By the gift of Christ's
Spirit, the fruits of his saving mission are offered through the Church
to all peoples of all times through the proclamation of the Gospel and
loving service of the human family. As the Second Vatican Council
observed, "the Church is driven by the Holy Spirit to do her part
for the full realization of the plan of God, who has constituted Christ
as the source of salvation for the whole world".65
Empowered by the Spirit to accomplish Christ's salvation on earth, the
Church is the seed of the Kingdom of God and she looks eagerly for its
final coming. Her identity and mission are inseparable from the Kingdom
of God which Jesus announced and inaugurated in all that he said and
did, above all in his death and resurrection. The Spirit reminds the
Church that she is not an end unto herself: in all that she is and all
that she does, she exists to serve Christ and the salvation of the
world. In the present economy of salvation the workings of the Holy
Spirit in creation, in history and in the Church are all part of the one
eternal design of the Trinity over all that is.
The Holy Spirit and the Church's
Mission in Asia
18. The Spirit who moved upon Asia in the time of the
patriarchs and prophets, and still more powerfully in the time of Jesus
Christ and the early Church, moves now among Asian Christians,
strengthening the witness of their faith among the peoples, cultures and
religions of the continent. Just as the great dialogue of love between
God and man was prepared for by the Spirit and accomplished on Asian
soil in the mystery of Christ, so the dialogue between the Saviour and
the peoples of the continent continues today by the power of the same
Holy Spirit at work in the Church. In this process, Bishops, priests,
religious and lay men and women all have an essential role to play,
remembering the words of Jesus, which are both a promise and a mandate:
"You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you;
and you shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria
and to the end of the earth" (Acts 1:8).
The Church is convinced that deep within the people,
cultures and religions of Asia there is a thirst for "living
water" (cf. Jn 4:10-15), a thirst which the Spirit himself
has created and which Jesus the Saviour alone can fully satisfy. The
Church looks to the Holy Spirit to continue to prepare the peoples of
Asia for the saving dialogue with the Saviour of all. Led by the Spirit
in her mission of service and love, the Church can offer an encounter
between Jesus Christ and the peoples of Asia as they search for the
fullness of life. In that encounter alone is to be found the living
water which springs up to eternal life, namely, the knowledge of the one
true God and Jesus Christ whom he has sent (cf. Jn 17:3).
The Church well knows that she can accomplish her
mission only in obedience to the promptings of the Holy Spirit.
Committed to being a genuine sign and instrument of the Spirit's action
in the complex realities of Asia, she must discern, in all the diverse
circumstances of the continent, the Spirit's call to witness to Jesus
the Saviour in new and effective ways. The full truth of Jesus and the
salvation he has won is always a gift, never the result of human effort.
"It is the Spirit himself bearing witness with our spirit that we
are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and
fellow heirs with Christ" (Rom 8:16-17). Therefore the
Church ceaselessly cries out, "Come, Holy Spirit! Fill the hearts
of your faithful and enkindle in them the fire of your love!" This
is the fire which Jesus casts upon the earth. The Church in Asia shares
his zeal that this fire be re-kindled now (cf. Lk 12:49). With
this ardent desire, the Synod Fathers sought to discern the principal
areas of mission for the Church in Asia as she crosses the threshold of
the new millennium.
CHAPTER IV
JESUS THE SAVIOUR:
PROCLAIMING THE GIFT
The Primacy of Proclamation
19. On the eve of the Third Millennium, the voice of
the Risen Christ echoes anew in the heart of every Christian: "All
authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go, therefore,
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe
all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the
close of the age" (Mt 28:18-20). Certain of the unfailing
help of Jesus himself and the presence and power of his Spirit, the
Apostles set out immediately after Pentecost to fulfil this command:
"they went forth and preached everywhere, while the Lord worked
with them" (Mk 16:20). What they announced can be summed up
in the words of Saint Paul: "For what we preach is not ourselves,
but Jesus Christ as Lord, with ourselves as your servants for Jesus'
sake" (2 Cor 4:5). Blessed with the gift of faith, the
Church, after two thousand years, continues to go out to meet the
peoples of the world in order to share with them the Good News of Jesus
Christ. She is a community aflame with missionary zeal to make Jesus
known, loved and followed.
There can be no true evangelization without the
explicit proclamation of Jesus as Lord. The Second Vatican Council and
the Magisterium since then, responding to a certain confusion about the
true nature of the Church's mission, have repeatedly stressed the
primacy of the proclamation of Jesus Christ in all evangelizing work.
Thus Pope Paul VI explicitly wrote that "there is no true
evangelization if the name, the teaching, the life, the promises, the
Kingdom and the mystery of Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God, are not
proclaimed".66 This is what generations of Christians
have done down the centuries. With understandable pride the Synod
Fathers recalled that "many Christian communities in Asia have
preserved their faith down the centuries against great odds and have
clung to this spiritual heritage with heroic perseverance. For them to
share this immense treasure is a matter of great joy and urgency".67
At the same time the participants in the Special
Assembly testified over and over again to the need for a renewed
commitment to the proclamation of Jesus Christ precisely on the
continent which saw the beginning of that proclamation two thousand
years ago. The words of the Apostle Paul become still more pointed,
given the many people on that continent who have never encountered the
person of Jesus in any clear and conscious way: "Everyone who calls
upon the name of the Lord will be saved. But how are they to call upon
him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him
of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without a
preacher?" (Rom 10:13-14). The great question now facing the
Church in Asia is how to share with our Asian brothers and
sisters what we treasure as the gift containing all gifts, namely, the
Good News of Jesus Christ.
Proclaiming Jesus Christ in Asia
20. The Church in Asia is all the more eager for the
task of proclamation knowing that "through the working of the
Spirit, there already exists in individuals and peoples an expectation,
even if an unconscious one, of knowing the truth about God, about man,
and about how we are to be set free from sin and death".68
This insistence on proclamation is prompted not by sectarian impulse nor
the spirit of proselytism nor any sense of superiority. The Church
evangelizes in obedience to Christ's command, in the knowledge that
every person has the right to hear the Good News of the God who reveals
and gives himself in Christ.69 To bear witness to Jesus
Christ is the supreme service which the Church can offer to the peoples
of Asia, for it responds to their profound longing for the Absolute, and
it unveils the truths and values which will ensure their integral human
development.
Deeply aware of the complexity of so many different
situations in Asia, and "speaking the truth in love" (Eph 4:15),
the Church proclaims the Good News with loving respect and esteem for
her listeners. Proclamation which respects the rights of consciences
does not violate freedom, since faith always demands a free response on
the part of the individual.70 Respect, however, does not
eliminate the need for the explicit proclamation of the Gospel in its
fullness. Especially in the context of the rich array of cultures and
religions in Asia it must be pointed out that "neither respect and
esteem for these religions nor the complexity of the questions raised
are an invitation to the Church to withhold from these non-Christians
the proclamation of Jesus Christ".71 While visiting
India in 1986, I stated clearly that "the Church's approach to
other religions is one of genuine respect... This respect is twofold:
respect for man in his quest for answers to the deepest questions of his
life, and respect for the action of the Spirit in man".72
Indeed, the Synod Fathers readily recognized the Spirit's action in
Asian societies, cultures and religions, through which the Father
prepares the hearts of Asian peoples for the fullness of life in Christ.73
Yet even during the consultations before the Synod
many Asian Bishops referred to difficulties in proclaiming Jesus as
the only Saviour. During the Assembly, the situation was described
in this way: "Some of the followers of the great religions of Asia
have no problem in accepting Jesus as a manifestation of the Divine or
the Absolute, or as an ‘enlightened one'. But it is difficult for them
to see Him as the only manifestation of the Divine".74
In fact, the effort to share the gift of faith in Jesus as the only
Saviour is fraught with philosophical, cultural and theological
difficulties, especially in light of the beliefs of Asia's great
religions, deeply intertwined with cultural values and specific world
views.
In the opinion of the Synod Fathers, the difficulty
is compounded by the fact that Jesus is often perceived as foreign to
Asia. It is paradoxical that most Asians tend to regard Jesus—born on
Asian soil—as a Western rather than an Asian figure. It was inevitable
that the proclamation of the Gospel by Western missionaries would be
influenced by the cultures from which they came. The Synod Fathers
recognized this as an unavoidable fact in the history of evangelization.
At the same time they took advantage of the occasion "to express in
a very special way their gratitude to all the missionaries, men and
women, religious and lay, foreign and local, who brought the message of
Jesus Christ and the gift of faith. A special word of gratitude again
must be expressed to all the particular Churches which have sent and
still send missionaries to Asia".75
Evangelizers can take heart from the experience of
Saint Paul who engaged in dialogue with the philosophical, cultural and
religious values of his listeners (cf. Acts 14:13-17; 17:22-31).
Even the Ecumenical Councils of the Church which formulated doctrines
binding on the Church had to use the linguistic, philosophical and
cultural resources available to them. Thus these resources become a
shared possession of the whole Church, capable of expressing her
Christological doctrine in an appropriate and universal way. They are
part of the heritage of faith which must be appropriated and shared
again and again in the encounter with the various cultures.76
Thus the task of proclaiming Jesus in a way which enables the peoples of
Asia to identify with him, while remaining faithful both to the Church's
theological doctrine and to their own Asian origins is a paramount
challenge.
The presentation of Jesus Christ as the only Saviour
needs to follow a pedagogy which will introduce people step by
step to the full appropriation of the mystery. Clearly, the initial
evangelization of non-Christians and the continuing proclamation of
Jesus to believers will have to be different in their approach. In
initial proclamation, for example, "the presentation of Jesus
Christ could come as the fulfilment of the yearnings expressed in the
mythologies and folklore of the Asian peoples".77 In
general, narrative methods akin to Asian cultural forms are to be
preferred. In fact, the proclamation of Jesus Christ can most
effectively be made by narrating his story, as the Gospels do. The
ontological notions involved, which must always be presupposed and
expressed in presenting Jesus, can be complemented by more relational,
historical and even cosmic perspectives. The Church, the Synod Fathers
noted, must be open to the new and surprising ways in which the face of
Jesus might be presented in Asia.78
The Synod recommended that subsequent catechesis
should follow "an evocative pedagogy, using stories, parables and
symbols so characteristic of Asian methodology in teaching".79
The ministry of Jesus himself shows clearly the value of personal
contact, which requires the evangelizer to take the situation of the
listener to heart, so as to offer a proclamation adapted to the
listener's level of maturity, and in an appropriate form and language.
In this perspective, the Synod Fathers stressed many times the need to
evangelize in a way that appeals to the sensibilities of Asian peoples,
and they suggested images of Jesus which would be intelligible to Asian
minds and cultures and, at the same time, faithful to Sacred Scripture
and Tradition. Among them were "Jesus Christ as the Teacher of
Wisdom, the Healer, the Liberator, the Spiritual Guide, the Enlightened
One, the Compassionate Friend of the Poor, the Good Samaritan, the Good
Shepherd, the Obedient One".80 Jesus could be presented
as the Incarnate Wisdom of God whose grace brings to fruition the
"seeds" of divine Wisdom already present in the lives,
religions and peoples of Asia.81 In the midst of so much
suffering among Asian peoples, he might best be proclaimed as the
Saviour "who can provide meaning to those undergoing unexplainable
pain and suffering".82
The faith which the Church offers as a gift to her
Asian sons and daughters cannot be confined within the limits of
understanding and expression of any single human culture, for it
transcends these limits and indeed challenges all cultures to rise to
new heights of understanding and expression. Yet at the same time the
Synod Fathers were well aware of the pressing need of the local Churches
in Asia to present the mystery of Christ to their peoples according to
their cultural patterns and ways of thinking. They pointed out that such
an inculturation of the faith on their continent involves rediscovering
the Asian countenance of Jesus and identifying ways in which the
cultures of Asia can grasp the universal saving significance of the
mystery of Jesus and his Church.83 The penetrating insight
into peoples and their cultures, exemplified in such men as Giovanni da
Montecorvino, Matteo Ricci and Roberto de Nobili, to mention only a few,
needs to be emulated at the present time.
The Challenge of Inculturation
21. Culture is the vital space within which the human
person comes face to face with the Gospel. Just as a culture is the
result of the life and activity of a human group, so the persons
belonging to that group are shaped to a large extent by the culture in
which they live. As persons and societies change, so too does the
culture change with them. As a culture is transformed, so too are
persons and societies transformed by it. From this perspective, it
becomes clearer why evangelization and inculturation are naturally and
intimately related to each other. The Gospel and evangelization are
certainly not identical with culture; they are independent of it. Yet
the Kingdom of God comes to people who are profoundly linked to a
culture, and the building of the Kingdom cannot avoid borrowing elements
from human cultures. Thus Paul VI called the split between the Gospel
and culture the drama of our time, with a profound impact upon both
evangelization and culture.84
In the process of encountering the world's different
cultures, the Church not only transmits her truths and values and renews
cultures from within, but she also takes from the various cultures the
positive elements already found in them. This is the obligatory path for
evangelizers in presenting the Christian faith and making it part of a
people's cultural heritage. Conversely, the various cultures, when
refined and renewed in the light of the Gospel, can become true
expressions of the one Christian faith. "Through inculturation the
Church, for her part, becomes a more intelligible sign of what she is,
and a more effective instrument of mission".85 This
engagement with cultures has always been part of the Church's pilgrimage
through history. But it has a special urgency today in the multi-ethnic,
multi-religious and multi-cultural situation of Asia, where Christianity
is still too often seen as foreign.
It is good to remember at this point what was said
repeatedly during the Synod: that the Holy Spirit is the prime agent of
the inculturation of the Christian faith in Asia.86 The same
Holy Spirit who leads us into the whole truth makes possible a fruitful
dialogue with the cultural and religious values of different peoples,
among whom he is present in some measure, giving men and women with a
sincere heart the strength to overcome evil and the deceit of the Evil
One, and indeed offering everyone the possibility of sharing in the
Paschal Mystery in a manner known to God.87 The Spirit's
presence ensures that the dialogue unfolds in truth, honesty, humility
and respect.88 "In offering to others the Good News of
the Redemption, the Church strives to understand their culture. She
seeks to know the minds and hearts of her hearers, their values and
customs, their problems and difficulties, their hopes and dreams. Once
she knows and understands these various aspects of culture, then she can
begin the dialogue of salvation; she can offer, respectfully but with
clarity and conviction, the Good News of the Redemption to all who
freely wish to listen and to respond".89 Therefore the
people of Asia who, as Asians, wish to make the Christian faith their
own, can rest assured that their hopes, expectations, anxieties and
sufferings are not only embraced by Jesus, but become the very point at
which the gift of faith and the power of the Spirit enter the innermost
core of their lives.
It is the task of the Pastors, in virtue of their
charism, to guide this dialogue with discernment. Likewise, experts in
sacred and secular disciplines have important roles to play in the
process of inculturation. But the process must involve the entire
People of God, since the life of the Church as a whole must show
forth the faith which is being proclaimed and appropriated. To ensure
that this is done soundly, the Synod Fathers identified certain areas
for particular attention—theological reflection, liturgy, the
formation of priests and religious, catechesis and spirituality.90
Key Areas of Inculturation
22. The Synod expressed encouragement to theologians
in their delicate work of developing an inculturated theology,
especially in the area of Christology.91 They noted that
"this theologizing is to be carried out with courage, in
faithfulness to the Scriptures and to the Church's Tradition, in sincere
adherence to the Magisterium and with an awareness of pastoral
realities".92 I too urge theologians to work in a spirit
of union with the Pastors and the people, who—in union with one
another and never separated from one another—"reflect the
authentic sensus fidei which must never be lost sight of".93
Theological work must always be guided by respect for the sensibilities
of Christians, so that by a gradual growth into inculturated forms of
expressing the faith people are neither confused nor scandalized. In
every case inculturation must be guided by compatibility with the Gospel
and communion with the faith of the universal Church, in full compliance
with the Church's Tradition and with a view to strengthening people's
faith.94 The test of true inculturation is whether people
become more committed to their Christian faith because they perceive it
more clearly with the eyes of their own culture.
The Liturgy is the source and summit of all
Christian life and mission.95 It is a decisive means of
evangelization, especially in Asia, where the followers of different
religions are so drawn to worship, religious festivals and popular
devotions.96 The liturgy of the Oriental Churches has for the
most part been successfully inculturated through centuries of
interaction with the surrounding culture, but the more recently
established Churches need to ensure that the liturgy becomes an ever
greater source of nourishment for their peoples through a wise and
effective use of elements drawn from the local cultures. Yet liturgical
inculturation requires more than a focus upon traditional cultural
values, symbols and rituals. There is also a need to take account of the
shifts in consciousness and attitudes caused by the emerging secularist
and consumer cultures which are affecting the Asian sense of worship and
prayer. Nor can the specific needs of the poor, migrants, refugees,
youth and women be overlooked in any genuine liturgical inculturation in
Asia.
The national and regional Bishops' Conferences need
to work more closely with the Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments in the search for effective ways of
fostering appropriate forms of worship in the Asian context.97
Such cooperation is essential because the Sacred Liturgy expresses and
celebrates the one faith professed by all and, being the heritage of the
whole Church, cannot be determined by local Churches in isolation from
the universal Church.
The Synod Fathers stressed particularly the
importance of the biblical word in passing on the message of salvation
to the peoples of Asia, where the transmitted word is so important in
preserving and communicating religious experience.98 It
follows that an effective biblical apostolate needs to be developed in
order to ensure that the sacred text may be more widely diffused and
more intensively and prayerfully used among the members of the Church in
Asia. The Synod Fathers urged that it be made the basis for all
missionary proclamation, catechesis, preaching and styles of
spirituality.99 Efforts to translate the Bible into local
languages need to be encouraged and supported. Biblical formation should
be considered an important means of educating people in the faith and
equipping them for the task of proclamation. Pastorally oriented courses
on the Bible, with due emphasis on applying its teachings to the complex
realities of Asian life, ought to be incorporated into formation
programmes for the clergy, for consecrated persons and for the laity.
100 The Sacred Scriptures should also be made known among the
followers of other religions; the word of God has an inherent power to
touch the hearts of people, for through the Scriptures the Holy Spirit
reveals God's plan of salvation for the world. Moreover, the narrative
styles found in many books of the Bible has an affinity with the
religious texts typical of Asia. 101
Another key aspect of inculturation upon which the
future of the process in large part depends is the formation of
evangelizers. In the past, formation often followed the style,
methods and programmes imported from the West, and while appreciating
the service rendered by that mode of formation, the Synod Fathers
recognized as a positive development the efforts made in recent times to
adapt the formation of evangelizers to the cultural contexts of Asia. As
well as a solid grounding in biblical and patristic studies, seminarians
should acquire a detailed and firm grasp of the Church's theological and
philosophical patrimony, as I urged in my Encyclical Letter Fides et
Ratio. 102 On the basis of this preparation, they will
then benefit from contact with Asian philosophical and religious
traditions. 103 The Synod Fathers also encouraged seminary
professors and staff to seek a profound understanding of the elements of
spirituality and prayer akin to the Asian soul, and to involve
themselves more deeply in the Asian peoples' search for a fuller life.
104 To this end, emphasis was placed on the need to ensure the
proper formation of seminary staff. 105 The Synod also
expressed concern for the formation of men and women in the consecrated
life, making it clear that the spirituality and lifestyle of consecrated
persons needs to be sensitive to the religious and cultural heritage of
the people among whom they live and whom they serve, always presupposing
the necessary discernment of what conforms to the Gospel and what does
not. 106 Moreover, since the inculturation of the Gospel
involves the entire People of God, the role of the laity is of paramount
importance. It is they above all who are called to transform society, in
collaboration with the Bishops, clergy and religious, by infusing the
"mind of Christ" into the mentality, customs, laws and
structures of the secular world in which they live. 107 A
wider inculturation of the Gospel at every level of society in Asia will
depend greatly on the appropriate formation which the local Churches
succeed in giving to the laity
Christian Life as Proclamation
23. The more the Christian community is rooted in the
experience of God which flows from a living faith, the more credibly it
will be able to proclaim to others the fulfilment of God's Kingdom in
Jesus Christ. This will result from faithfully listening to the word of
God, from prayer and contemplation, from celebrating the mystery of
Jesus in the sacraments, above all in the Eucharist, and from giving
example of true communion of life and integrity of love. The heart of
the particular Church must be set on the contemplation of Jesus Christ,
God-made-Man, and strive constantly for a more intimate union with him
whose mission she continues. Mission is contemplative action and
active contemplation. Therefore, a missionary who has no deep
experience of God in prayer and contemplation will have little spiritual
influence or missionary success. This is an insight drawn from my own
priestly ministry and, as I have written elsewhere, my contact with
representatives of the non-Christian spiritual traditions, particularly
those of Asia, has confirmed me in the view that the future of mission
depends to a great extent on contemplation. 108 In Asia, home
to great religions where individuals and entire peoples are thirsting
for the divine, the Church is called to be a praying Church, deeply
spiritual even as she engages in immediate human and social concerns.
All Christians need a true missionary spirituality of prayer and
contemplation.
A genuinely religious person readily wins respect and
a following in Asia. Prayer, fasting and various forms of asceticism are
held in high regard. Renunciation, detachment, humility, simplicity and
silence are considered great values by the followers of all religions.
Lest prayer be divorced from human promotion, the Synod Fathers insisted
that "the work of justice, charity and compassion is interrelated
with a genuine life of prayer and contemplation, and indeed it is this
same spirituality that will be the wellspring of all our evangelizing
work". 109 Fully convinced of the importance of
authentic witnesses in the evangelization of Asia, the Synod Fathers
stated: "The Good News of Jesus Christ can only be proclaimed by
those who are taken up and inspired by the love of the Father for his
children, manifested in the person of Jesus Christ. This proclamation is
a mission needing holy men and women who will make the Saviour known and
loved through their lives. A fire can only be lit by something that is
itself on fire. So, too, successful proclamation in Asia of the Good
News of salvation can only take place if Bishops, clergy, those in the
consecrated life and the laity are themselves on fire with the love of
Christ and burning with zeal to make him known more widely, loved more
deeply and followed more closely". 110 Christians who
speak of Christ must embody in their lives the message that they
proclaim.
In this regard, however, a particular circumstance in
the Asian context demands attention. The Church realizes that the
silent witness of life still remains the only way of proclaiming
God's Kingdom in many places in Asia where explicit proclamation is
forbidden and religious freedom is denied or systematically restricted.
The Church consciously lives this type of witness, seeing it as the
"taking up of her cross" (cf. Lk 9:23), all the while
calling upon and urging governments to recognize religious freedom as a
fundamental human right. The words of the Second Vatican Council are
worth repeating here: "the human person has a right to religious
freedom. Such freedom consists in this, that all should have such
immunity from coercion by individuals, or by social groups, or by any
human power, that no one should be forced to act against his conscience
in religious matters, nor prevented from acting according to his
conscience, whether in private or in public, whether alone or in
association with others, within due limits". 111 In some
Asian countries, this statement still has to be acknowledged and put
into effect.
Clearly, then, the proclamation of Jesus Christ in
Asia presents many complex aspects, both in content and in method. The
Synod Fathers were keenly aware of the legitimate variety of approaches
to the proclamation of Jesus, provided that the faith itself is
respected in all its integrity in the process of appropriating and
sharing it. The Synod noted that "evangelization today is a reality
that is both rich and dynamic. It has various aspects and elements:
witness, dialogue, proclamation, catechesis, conversion, baptism,
insertion into the ecclesial community, the implantation of the Church,
inculturation and integral human promotion. Some of these elements
proceed together, while some others are successive steps or phases of
the entire process of evangelization". 112 In all
evangelizing work, however, it is the complete truth of Jesus Christ
which must be proclaimed. Emphasizing certain aspects of the
inexhaustible mystery of Jesus is both legitimate and necessary in
gradually introducing Christ to a person, but this cannot be allowed to
compromise the integrity of the faith. In the end, a person's acceptance
of the faith must be grounded on a sure understanding of the person of
Jesus Christ, as presented by the Church in every time and place, the
Lord of all who is "the same yesterday, today and for ever" (Heb
13:8).
CHAPTER V
COMMUNION AND DIALOGUE
FOR MISSION
Communion and Mission Go Hand in Hand
24. In accordance with the Father's eternal design,
the Church, foreshadowed from the world's beginning, prepared for in the
old Covenant, instituted by Christ Jesus and made present to the world
by the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost, "progresses on her
pilgrimage amid this world's persecutions and God's consolations",
113 as she strives towards her perfection in the glory of heaven.
Since God desires "that the whole human race may become one People
of God, form one Body of Christ, and be built up into one temple of the
Holy Spirit", 114 the Church is in the world "the
visible plan of God's love for humanity, the sacrament of
salvation". 115 The Church cannot therefore be
understood merely as a social organization or agency of human welfare.
Despite having sinful men and women in her midst, the Church must be
seen as the privileged place of encounter between God and man, in which
God chooses to reveal the mystery of his inner life and carry out his
plan of salvation for the world.
The mystery of God's loving design is made present
and active in the community of the men and women who have been buried
with Christ by baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the
dead by the glory of the Father, they might walk in newness of life (cf.
Rom 6:4). At the heart of the mystery of the Church is the bond
of communion which unites Christ the Bridegroom to all the baptized.
Through this living and life-giving communion, "Christians no
longer belong to themselves but are the Lord's very own". 116
United to the Son in the Spirit's bond of love, Christians are united to
the Father, and from this communion flows the communion which Christians
share with one another through Christ in the Holy Spirit. 117
The Church's first purpose then is to be the sacrament of the inner
union of the human person with God, and, because people's communion
with one another is rooted in that union with God, the Church is also
the sacrament of the unity of the human race. 118 In
her this unity is already begun; and at the same time she is the
"sign and instrument" of the full realization of the unity yet
to come. 119
It is an essential demand of life in Christ that
whoever enters into communion with the Lord is expected to bear fruit:
"He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much
fruit" (Jn 15:5). So true is this that the person who does
not bear fruit does not remain in communion: "Each branch of mine
that bears no fruit [my Father] takes away" (Jn 15:2).
Communion with Jesus, which gives rise to the communion of Christians
among themselves, is the indispensable condition for bearing fruit; and
communion with others, which is the gift of Christ and his Spirit, is
the most magnificent fruit that the branches can give. In this sense,
communion and mission are inseparably connected. They interpenetrate and
mutually imply each other, so that "communion represents both the
source and fruit of mission: communion gives rise to mission and mission
is accomplished in communion". 120
Using the theology of communion, the Second Vatican
Council could describe the Church as the pilgrim People of God to whom
all peoples are in some way related. 121 On this basis the
Synod Fathers stressed the mysterious link between the Church and the
followers of other Asian religions, noting that they are "related
to [the Church] in varying degrees and ways". 122 In the
midst of so many different peoples, cultures and religions "the
life of the Church as communion assumes greater importance".
123 In effect, the Church's service of unity has a specific
relevance in Asia where there are so many tensions, divisions and
conflicts, caused by ethnic, social, cultural, linguistic, economic and
religious differences. It is in this context that the local Churches in
Asia, in communion with the Successor of Peter, need to foster greater
communion of mind and heart through close cooperation among themselves.
Vital also to their evangelizing mission are their relations with other
Christian Churches and ecclesial communities, and with the followers of
other religions. 124 The Synod therefore renewed the
commitment of the Church in Asia to the task of improving both
ecumenical relations and interreligious dialogue, recognizing that
building unity, working for reconciliation, forging bonds of solidarity,
promoting dialogue among religions and cultures, eradicating prejudices
and engendering trust among peoples are all essential to the Church's
evangelizing mission on the continent. All this demands of the Catholic
community a sincere examination of conscience, the courage to seek
reconciliation and a renewed commitment to dialogue. At the threshold of
the Third Millennium it is clear that the Church's ability to evangelize
requires that she strive earnestly to serve the cause of unity in all
its dimensions. Communion and mission go hand in hand.
Communion within the Church
25. Gathered around the Successor of Peter, praying
and working together, the Bishops of the Special Assembly for Asia
personified as it were the communion of the Church in all the rich
diversity of the particular Churches over which they preside in charity.
My own presence at the Synod's General Sessions was both a welcome
opportunity to share the joys and hopes, the difficulties and anxieties
of the Bishops, and an intense and deeply-felt exercise of my own
ministry. It is in fact within the perspective of ecclesial communion
that the universal authority of the Successor of Peter shines forth more
clearly, not primarily as juridical power over the local Churches, but
above all as a pastoral primacy at the service of the unity of faith and
life of the whole People of God. Fully aware that "the Petrine
office has a unique ministry in guaranteeing and promoting the unity of
the Church", 125 the Synod Fathers acknowledged the
service which the Dicasteries of the Roman Curia and the Holy See's
Diplomatic Service render to the local Churches, in the spirit of
communion and collegiality. 126 An essential feature of this
service is the respect and sensitivity which these close co-workers of
the Successor of Peter show towards the legitimate diversity of the
local Churches and the variety of cultures and peoples with which they
are in contact.
Each particular Church must be grounded in the
witness of ecclesial communion which constitutes its very nature as
Church. The Synod Fathers chose to describe the Diocese as a
communion of communities gathered around the Shepherd, where clergy,
consecrated persons and the laity are engaged in a "dialogue of
life and heart" sustained by the grace of the Holy Spirit. 127
It is primarily in the Diocese that the vision of a communion of
communities can be actualized in the midst of the complex social,
political, religious, cultural and economic realities of Asia. Ecclesial
communion implies that each local Church should become what the Synod
Fathers called a "participatory Church", a Church, that is, in
which all live their proper vocation and perform their proper role. In
order to build up the "communion for mission" and the
"mission of communion", every member's unique charism needs to
be acknowledged, developed and effectively utilized. 128 In
particular there is a need to foster greater involvement of the laity
and consecrated men and women in pastoral planning and decision-making,
through such participatory structures as Pastoral Councils and Parish
Assemblies. 129
In every Diocese, the parish remains the
ordinary place where the faithful gather to grow in faith, to live the
mystery of ecclesial communion and to take part in the Church's mission.
Therefore, the Synod Fathers urged Pastors to devise new and effective
ways of shepherding the faithful, so that everyone, especially the poor,
will feel truly a part of the parish and of God's People as a whole.
Pastoral planning with the lay faithful should be a normal feature of
all parishes. 130 The Synod singled out young people in
particular as those for whom "the parish should provide greater
opportunity for fellowship and communion... by means of organized youth
apostolates and youth clubs". 131 No one should be
excluded a priori from sharing fully in the life and mission of
the parish because of their social, economic, political, cultural or
educational background. Just as each follower of Christ has a gift to
offer the community, so the community should show a willingness to
receive and benefit from the gift of each one.
In this context, and drawing on their pastoral
experience, the Synod Fathers underlined the value of basic ecclesial
communities as an effective way of promoting communion and
participation in parishes and Dioceses, and as a genuine force for
evangelization. 132 These small groups help the faithful to
live as believing, praying and loving communities like the early
Christians (cf. Acts 2:44-47; 4:32-35). They aim to help their
members to live the Gospel in a spirit of fraternal love and service,
and are therefore a solid starting point for building a new society, the
expression of a civilization of love. With the Synod, I encourage
the Church in Asia, where possible, to consider these basic communities
as a positive feature of the Church's evangelizing activity. At the same
time they will only be truly effective if—as Pope Paul VI wrote—they
live in union with the particular and the universal Church, in heartfelt
communion with the Church's Pastors and the Magisterium, with a
commitment to missionary outreach and without yielding to isolationism
or ideological exploitation. 133 The presence of these small
communities does not do away with the established institutions and
structures, which remain necessary for the Church to fulfil her mission.
The Synod also recognized the role of renewal
movements in building communion, in providing opportunities for a
more intimate experience of God through faith and the sacraments, and in
fostering conversion of life. 134 It is the responsibility of
Pastors to guide, accompany and encourage these groups so that they may
be well integrated into the life and mission of the parish and Diocese.
Those involved in associations and movements should offer their support
to the local Church and not present themselves as alternatives to
Diocesan structures and parish life. Communion grows stronger when the
local leaders of these movements work together with the Pastors in a
spirit of charity for the good of all (cf. 1 Cor 1:13).
Solidarity among the Churches
26. This communion ad intra contributes to solidarity
among the particular Churches themselves. Attention to local needs
is legitimate and indispensable, but communion requires that the
particular Churches remain open to one another and collaborate with one
another, so that in their diversity they may preserve and clearly
manifest the bond of communion with the universal Church. Communion
calls for mutual understanding and a coordinated approach to mission,
without prejudice to the autonomy and rights of the Churches according
to their respective theological, liturgical and spiritual traditions.
History however shows how divisions have often wounded the communion of
the Churches in Asia. Down the centuries, relations between particular
Churches of different ecclesiastical jurisdictions, liturgical
traditions and missionary styles have sometimes been tense and
difficult. The Bishops present at the Synod acknowledged that even today
within and among the particular Churches in Asia there are sometimes
unfortunate divisions, often connected with ritual, linguistic, ethnic,
caste and ideological differences. Some wounds have been partially
healed, but there is not yet full healing. Recognizing that wherever
communion is weakened the Church's witness and missionary work suffer,
the Fathers proposed concrete steps to strengthen relations between the
particular Churches in Asia. As well as the necessary spiritual
expressions of support and encouragement, they suggested a more
equitable distribution of priests, more effective financial solidarity,
cultural and theological exchanges, and increased opportunities for
partnership between Dioceses. 135
Regional and continental associations of Bishops,
notably the Council of Catholic Patriarchs of the Middle East and the
Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences have helped to foster union
among the local Churches and have provided venues for cooperation in
resolving pastoral problems. Similarly, there are many centres of
theology, spirituality and pastoral activity across Asia which foster
communion and practical cooperation. 136 It must be the
concern of all to see these promising initiatives develop further for
the good of both the Church and society in Asia.
The Catholic Eastern Churches
27. The situation of the Catholic Eastern Churches,
principally of the Middle East and India, merits special attention. From
Apostolic times they have been the custodians of a precious spiritual,
liturgical and theological heritage. Their traditions and rites, born of
a deep inculturation of the faith in the soil of many Asian countries,
deserve the greatest respect. With the Synod Fathers, I call upon
everyone to recognize the legitimate customs and the legitimate freedom
of these Churches in disciplinary and liturgical matters, as stipulated
by the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches. 137 Following
the teaching of the Second Vatican Council, there is an urgent need to
overcome the fears and misunderstandings which appear at times between
the Catholic Eastern Churches and the Latin Church, and among those
Churches themselves, especially with regard to the pastoral care of
their people, also outside their own territories. 138 As
children of the one Church, reborn into the newness of life in Christ,
believers are called to undertake all things in a spirit of common
purpose, trust and unfailing charity. Conflicts must not be allowed to
create division, but must instead be handled in a spirit of truth and
respect, since no good can come except from love. 139
These venerable Churches are directly involved in
ecumenical dialogue with their sister Orthodox Churches, and the Synod
Fathers urged them to pursue this path. 140 They have also
had valuable experiences in interreligious dialogue, especially with
Islam. This can be helpful to other Churches in Asia and elsewhere. It
is clear that the Catholic Eastern Churches possess a great wealth of
tradition and experience which can greatly benefit the whole Church.
Sharing Hopes and Sufferings
28. The Synod Fathers were also aware of the need for
effective communion and cooperation with the local Churches present in
the ex-Soviet territories of Asia, which are rebuilding in the trying
circumstances inherited from a difficult period of history. The Church
accompanies them in prayer, sharing their sufferings and their new-found
hopes. I encourage the whole Church to lend moral, spiritual and
material support, and much needed ordained and non-ordained personnel to
help these communities in the task of sharing with the peoples of these
lands the love of God revealed in Jesus Christ. 141
In many parts of Asia, our brothers and sisters
continue to live their faith in the midst of restrictions or even the
total denial of freedom. For these suffering members of the Church, the
Synod Fathers expressed special concern and solicitude. With the Bishops
of Asia, I urge our brothers and sisters of these Churches in difficult
circumstances to join their sufferings to those of the crucified Lord,
for we and they know that the Cross alone, when borne in faith and love,
is the path to resurrection and new life for humanity. I encourage the
various national Episcopal Conferences in Asia to establish an office to
help these Churches; and I pledge the Holy See's continued closeness to
and concern for all those who are suffering persecution for their faith
in Christ. 142 I appeal to governments and the leaders of
nations to adopt and implement policies that guarantee religious freedom
for all their citizens.
On many occasions the Synod Fathers turned their
thoughts to the Catholic Church in Mainland China and prayed that the
day may soon come when our beloved Chinese brothers and sisters will be
completely free to practise their faith in full communion with the See
of Peter and the universal Church. To you, dear Chinese brothers and
sisters, I make this fervent exhortation: never allow hardship and
sorrow to diminish your devotion to Christ and your commitment to your
great nation. 143 The Synod also expressed a cordial sense of
solidarity with the Catholic Church in Korea, and supported "the
efforts of Catholics to give assistance to the people of North Korea who
are deprived of the minimal means of survival, and to bring
reconciliation among two countries of one people, one language and one
cultural heritage". 144
Likewise, the Synod's thoughts frequently returned to
the Church in Jerusalem, which has a special place in the hearts of all
Christians. Indeed, the words of the Prophet Isaiah find an echo in the
hearts of millions of believers throughout the world, for whom Jerusalem
occupies a unique and cherished position: "Rejoice with Jerusalem,
and be glad for her, all you who love her... that you may drink deeply
with delight from the abundance of her glory" (66:10-11).
Jerusalem, the city of reconciliation of men with God and among
themselves, has so often been a place of conflict and division. The
Synod Fathers called upon the particular Churches to stand in solidarity
with the Church in Jerusalem by sharing her sorrows, by praying for her
and cooperating with her in serving peace, justice and reconciliation
between the two peoples and the three religions present in the Holy
City. 145 I renew the appeal which I have often made to
political and religious leaders and to all people of good will to search
for ways to ensure the peace and integrity of Jerusalem. As I have
already written, it is my own fervent wish to go there on a religious
pilgrimage, like my predecessor Pope Paul VI, to pray in the Holy City
where Jesus Christ lived, died and rose again and to visit the place
from which, in the power of the Holy Spirit, the Apostles went forth to
proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the world. 146
A Mission of Dialogue
29. The common theme of the various
"continental" Synods which have helped to prepare the Church
for the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 is that of the new
evangelization. A new era of proclamation of the Gospel is essential
not only because, after two millennia, a major part of the human family
still does not acknowledge Christ, but also because the situation in
which the Church and the world find themselves at the threshold of the
new millennium is particularly challenging for religious belief and the
moral truths which spring from it. There is a tendency almost everywhere
to build progress and prosperity without reference to God, and to reduce
the religious dimension of the human person to the private sphere.
Society, separated from the most basic truth about man, namely his
relationship to the Creator and to the redemption brought about by
Christ in the Holy Spirit, can only stray further and further from the
true sources of life, love and happiness. This violent century which is
fast coming to a close bears terrifying witness to what can happen when
truth and goodness are abandoned in favour of the lust for power and
self-aggrandizement. The new evangelization, as a call to conversion,
grace and wisdom, is the only genuine hope for a better world and a
brighter future. The question is not whether the Church has something
essential to say to the men and women of our time, but how she can say
it clearly and convincingly!
At the time of the Second Vatican Council, my
predecessor Pope Paul VI declared, in his Encyclical Letter Ecclesiam
Suam, that the question of the relationship between the Church and
the modern world was one of the most important concerns of our time. He
wrote that "its existence and its urgency are such as to create a
burden on our soul, a stimulus, a vocation". 147 Since
the Council the Church has consistently shown that she wants to pursue
that relationship in a spirit of dialogue. The desire for dialogue,
however, is not simply a strategy for peaceful coexistence among
peoples; it is an essential part of the Church's mission because it has
its origin in the Father's loving dialogue of salvation with humanity
through the Son in the power of the Holy Spirit. The Church can
accomplish her mission only in a way that corresponds to the way in
which God acted in Jesus Christ: he became man, shared our human life
and spoke in a human language to communicate his saving message. The
dialogue which the Church proposes is grounded in the logic of the
Incarnation. Therefore, nothing but fervent and unselfish solidarity
prompts the Church's dialogue with the men and women of Asia who seek
the truth in love.
As the sacrament of the unity of all mankind, the
Church cannot but enter into dialogue with all peoples, in every time
and place. Responding to the mission she has received, she ventures
forth to meet the peoples of the world, conscious of being a
"little flock" within the vast throng of humanity (cf. Lk 12:32),
but also of being leaven in the dough of the world (cf. Mt 13:33).
Her efforts to engage in dialogue are directed in the first place to
those who share her belief in Jesus Christ the Lord and Saviour. It
extends beyond the Christian world to the followers of every other
religious tradition, on the basis of the religious yearnings found in
every human heart. Ecumenical dialogue and interreligious dialogue
constitute a veritable vocation for the Church.
Ecumenical Dialogue
30. Ecumenical dialogue is a challenge and a call to
conversion for the whole Church, especially for the Church in Asia where
people expect from Christians a clearer sign of unity. For all peoples
to come together in the grace of God, communion needs to be restored
among those who in faith have accepted Jesus Christ as Lord. Jesus
himself prayed and does not cease to call for the visible unity of his
disciples, so that the world may believe that the Father has sent him
(cf. Jn 17:21). 148 But the Lord's will that his
Church be one awaits a complete and courageous response from his
disciples.
In Asia, precisely where the number of Christians is
proportionately small, division makes missionary work still more
difficult. The Synod Fathers acknowledged that "the scandal of a
divided Christianity is a great obstacle for evangelization in
Asia". 149 In fact, the division among Christians is
seen as a counter-witness to Jesus Christ by many in Asia who are
searching for harmony and unity through their own religions and
cultures. Therefore the Catholic Church in Asia feels especially
impelled to work for unity with other Christians, realizing that the
search for full communion demands from everyone charity, discernment,
courage and hope. "In order to be authentic and bear fruit,
ecumenism requires certain fundamental dispositions on the part of the
Catholic faithful: in the first place, charity that shows itself in
goodness and a lively desire to cooperate wherever possible with the
faithful of other Churches and Ecclesial Communities; secondly, fidelity
towards the Catholic Church, without however ignoring or denying the
shortcomings manifested by some of her members; thirdly, a spirit of
discernment in order to appreciate all that is good and worthy of
praise. Finally, a sincere desire for purification and renewal is also
needed". 150
While recognizing the difficulties still existing in
the relationships between Christians, which involve not only prejudices
inherited from the past but also judgments rooted in profound
convictions which involve conscience, 151 the Synod Fathers
also pointed to signs of improved relations among some Christian
Churches and Ecclesial Communities in Asia. Catholic and Orthodox
Christians, for example, often recognize a cultural unity with one
another, a sense of sharing important elements of a common ecclesial
tradition. This forms a solid basis for a continuing fruitful ecumenical
dialogue into the next millennium, which, we must hope and pray, will
ultimately bring an end to the divisions of the millennium that is now
coming to a close.
On the practical level, the Synod proposed that the
national Episcopal Conferences in Asia invite other Christian Churches
to join in a process of prayer and consultation in order to explore the
possibilities of new ecumenical structures and associations to promote
Christian unity. The Synod's suggestion that the Week of Prayer for
Christian Unity be celebrated more fruitfully is also helpful. Bishops
are encouraged to set up and oversee ecumenical centres of prayer and
dialogue; and adequate formation for ecumenical dialogue needs to be
included in the curriculum of seminaries, houses of formation and
educational institutions.
Interreligious Dialogue
31. In my Apostolic Letter Tertio Millennio
Adveniente I indicated that the advent of a new millennium offers a
great opportunity for interreligious dialogue and for meetings with the
leaders of the great world religions. 152 Contact, dialogue
and cooperation with the followers of other religions is a task which
the Second Vatican Council bequeathed to the whole Church as a duty and
a challenge. The principles of this search for a positive relationship
with other religious traditions are set out in the Council's Declaration
Nostra Aetate, promulgated on 28 October 1965, the Magna Carta of
interreligious dialogue for our times. From the Christian point of view,
interreligious dialogue is more than a way of fostering mutual knowledge
and enrichment; it is a part of the Church's evangelizing mission, an
expression of the mission ad gentes. 153 Christians
bring to interreligious dialogue the firm belief that the fullness of
salvation comes from Christ alone and that the Church community to which
they belong is the ordinary means of salvation. 154
Here I repeat what I wrote to the Fifth Plenary Assembly of the
Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences: "Although the Church
gladly acknowledges whatever is true and holy in the religious
traditions of Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam as a reflection of that truth
which enlightens all people, this does not lessen her duty and resolve
to proclaim without failing Jesus Christ who is ‘the way and the truth
and the life'... The fact that the followers of other religions can
receive God's grace and be saved by Christ apart from the ordinary means
which he has established does not thereby cancel the call to faith and
baptism which God wills for all people". 155
In the process of dialogue, as I have already written
in my Encyclical Letter Redemptoris Missio, "there must be
no abandonment of principles nor false irenicism, but instead a witness
given and received for mutual advancement on the road of religious
inquiry and experience, and at the same time for the elimination of
prejudice, intolerance and misunderstandings". 156 Only
those with a mature and convinced Christian faith are qualified to
engage in genuine interreligious dialogue. "Only Christians who are
deeply immersed in the mystery of Christ and who are happy in their
faith community can without undue risk and with hope of positive fruit
engage in interreligious dialogue". 157 It is therefore
important for the Church in Asia to provide suitable models of
interreligious dialogue—evangelization in dialogue and dialogue for
evangelization—and suitable training for those involved.
Having stressed the need in interreligious dialogue
for firm faith in Christ, the Synod Fathers went on to speak of the need
for a dialogue of life and heart. The followers of Christ must
have the gentle and humble heart of their Master, never proud, never
condescending, as they meet their partners in dialogue (cf. Mt 11:29).
"Interreligious relations are best developed in a context of
openness to other believers, a willingness to listen and the desire to
respect and understand others in their differences. For all this, love
of others is indispensable. This should result in collaboration, harmony
and mutual enrichment". 158
To guide those engaged in the process, the Synod
suggested that a directory on interreligious dialogue be drawn up.
159 As the Church explores new ways of encountering other
religions, I mention some forms of dialogue already taking place with
good results, including scholarly exchanges between experts in the
various religious traditions or representatives of those traditions,
common action for integral human development and the defence of human
and religious values. 160 I repeat how important it is to
revitalize prayer and contemplation in the process of dialogue. Men and
women in the consecrated life can contribute very significantly to
interreligious dialogue by witnessing to the vitality of the great
Christian traditions of asceticism and mysticism. 161
The memorable meeting held in Assisi, the city of
Saint Francis, on 27 October 1986, between the Catholic Church and
representatives of the other world religions shows that religious men
and women, without abandoning their own traditions, can still commit
themselves to praying and working for peace and the good of humanity.
162 The Church must continue to strive to preserve and foster at
all levels this spirit of encounter and cooperation between religions.
Communion and dialogue are two essential aspects of
the Church's mission, which have their infinitely transcendent exemplar
in the mystery of the Trinity, from whom all mission comes and to whom
it must be directed. One of the great "birthday" gifts which
the members of the Church, and especially her Pastors, can offer the
Lord of History on the two thousandth anniversary of his Incarnation is
a strengthening of the spirit of unity and communion at every
level of ecclesial life, a renewed "holy pride" in the
Church's continuing fidelity to what has been handed down, and a new
confidence in the unchanging grace and mission which sends her out among
the peoples of the world to witness to God's saving love and mercy. Only
if the People of God recognize the gift that is theirs in Christ will
they be able to communicate that gift to others through proclamation and
dialogue.
CHAPTER VI
THE SERVICE
OF HUMAN PROMOTION
The Social Doctrine of the Church
32. In the service of the human family, the Church
reaches out to all men and women without distinction, striving to build
with them a civilization of love, founded upon the universal values of
peace, justice, solidarity and freedom, which find their fulfilment in
Christ. As the Second Vatican Council said so memorably: "The joys
and the hopes, the griefs and the anxieties of the people of this age,
especially those who are poor or in any way afflicted, these too are the
joys and hopes, the griefs and anxieties of the followers of Christ.
Indeed, nothing genuinely human fails to raise an echo in their
hearts". 163 The Church in Asia then, with its multitude
of poor and oppressed people, is called to live a communion of life
which shows itself particularly in loving service to the poor and
defenceless.
If in recent times the Church's Magisterium has
insisted more and more upon the need to promote the authentic and
integral development of the human person, 164 this is in
response to the real situation of the world's peoples, as well as to an
increased consciousness that not just the actions of individuals but
also structures of social, political and economic life are often
inimical to human well-being. The imbalances entrenched in the
increasing gap between those who benefit from the world's growing
capacity to produce wealth and those who are left at the margin of
progress call for a radical change of both mentality and structures in
favour of the human person. The great moral challenge facing
nations and the international community in relation to development is to
have the courage of a new solidarity, capable of taking
imaginative and effective steps to overcome both dehumanizing
underdevelopment and the "overdevelopment" which tends to
reduce the person to an economic unit in an ever more oppressive
consumer network. In seeking to bring about this change, "the
Church does not have technical solutions to offer", but
"offers her first contribution to the solution of the urgent
problem of development when she proclaims the truth about Christ, about
herself and about man, applying this truth to a concrete
situation". 165 After all, human development is never a
merely technical or economic question; it is fundamentally a human
and moral question.
The social doctrine of the Church, which proposes a
set of principles for reflection, criteria for judgement and directives
for action, 166 is addressed in the first place to the
members of the Church. It is essential that the faithful engaged in
human promotion should have a firm grasp of this precious body of
teaching and make it an integral part of their evangelizing mission. The
Synod Fathers therefore stressed the importance of offering the
faithful—in all educational activities, and especially in seminaries
and houses of formation—a solid training in the social doctrine of the
Church. 167 Christian leaders in the Church and society, and
especially lay men and women with responsibilities in public life, need
to be well formed in this teaching so that they can inspire and vivify
civil society and its structures with the leaven of the Gospel. 168
The social doctrine of the Church will not only alert these Christian
leaders to their duty, but will also give them guidelines for action in
favour of human development, and will free them from false notions of
the human person and human activity.
The Dignity of the Human Person
33. Human beings, not wealth or technology, are the
prime agents and destination of development. Therefore, the kind of
development that the Church promotes reaches far beyond questions of
economy and technology. It begins and ends with the integrity of the
human person created in the image of God and endowed with a God-given
dignity and inalienable human rights. The various international
declarations on human rights and the many initiatives which these have
inspired are a sign of growing attention on a worldwide level to the
dignity of the human person. Unfortunately, these declarations are often
violated in practice. Fifty years after the solemn proclamation of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, many people are still subjected
to the most degrading forms of exploitation and manipulation, which make
them veritable slaves to those who are more powerful, to an ideology,
economic power, oppressive political systems, scientific technocracy or
the intrusiveness of the mass media. 169
The Synod Fathers were well aware of the persistent
violations of human rights in many parts of the world, and particularly
in Asia, where "teeming millions are suffering from discrimination,
exploitation, poverty and marginalization". 170 They
expressed the need for all God's people in Asia to come to a clear
awareness of the inescapable and unrenounceable challenge involved in
the defence of human rights and the promotion of justice and peace.
Preferential Love of the Poor
34. In seeking to promote human dignity, the Church
shows a preferential love of the poor and the voiceless, because the
Lord has identified himself with them in a special way (cf. Mt 25:40).
This love excludes no one, but simply embodies a priority of service to
which the whole Christian tradition bears witness. "This love of
preference for the poor, and the decisions which it inspires in us,
cannot but embrace the immense multitudes of the hungry, the needy, the
homeless, those without medical care and, above all, those without hope
of a better future. It is impossible not to take account of the
existence of these realities. To ignore them would mean becoming like
the ‘rich man' who pretended not to know the beggar Lazarus lying at
his gate (cf. Lk 16:19-31)". 171 This is
especially so with regard to Asia, a continent of plentiful resources
and great civilizations, but where some of the poorest nations on earth
are to be found, and where more than half the population suffers
deprivation, poverty and exploitation. 172 The poor of Asia
and of the world will always find their best reason for hope in the
Gospel command to love one another as Christ has loved us (cf. Jn 13:34);
and the Church in Asia cannot but strive earnestly to fulfil that
command towards the poor, in word and in deed.
Solidarity with the poor becomes more credible if
Christians themselves live simply, following the example of Jesus.
Simplicity of life, deep faith and unfeigned love for all, especially
the poor and the outcast, are luminous signs of the Gospel in action.
The Synod Fathers called on Asian Catholics to adopt a lifestyle
consonant with the teachings of the Gospel, so that they may better
serve the Church's mission and so that the Church herself may become a
Church of the poor and for the poor. 173
In her love for the poor of Asia, the Church concerns
herself especially with migrants, with indigenous and tribal peoples,
with women and with children, since they are often the victims of the
worst forms of exploitation. In addition, untold numbers of people
suffer discrimination because of their culture, colour, race, caste,
economic status, or because of their way of thinking. They include those
who are victimized on the basis of their conversion to Christianity.
174 I join the Synod Fathers in appealing to all nations to
recognize the right to freedom of conscience and religion and the other
basic human rights. 175
At the present time Asia is experiencing an
unprecedented flow of refugees, asylum seekers, immigrants and overseas
workers. In the countries to which they come, these people often find
themselves friendless, culturally estranged, linguistically
disadvantaged and economically vulnerable. They need support and care in
order to preserve their human dignity and their cultural and religious
heritage. 176 Despite limited resources, the Church in Asia
generously seeks to be a welcoming home to the weary and heavy-burdened,
knowing that in the Heart of Jesus, where no one is a stranger, they
will find rest (cf. Mt 11:28-29).
In almost every Asian country, there are large
aboriginal populations, some of them on the lowest economic rung. The
Synod repeatedly noted that indigenous or tribal people often feel drawn
to the person of Jesus Christ and to the Church as a community of love
and service. 177 Herein lies an immense field of action in
education and health care, as well as in promoting social participation.
The Catholic community needs to intensify pastoral work among these
people, attending to their concerns and to the questions of justice
which affect their lives. This implies an attitude of deep respect for
their traditional religion and its values; it implies as well the need
to help them to help themselves, so that they can work to improve their
situation and become the evangelizers of their own culture and society.
178
No one can remain indifferent to the suffering of the
countless children in Asia who fall victim to intolerable exploitation
and violence, not just as the result of the evil perpetrated by
individuals but often as a direct consequence of corrupt social
structures. The Synod Fathers identified child labour, paedophilia and
the drug culture as the social evils which affect children most
directly, and they saw clearly that these ills are compounded by others
like poverty and ill-conceived programmes of national development.
179 The Church must do all she can to overcome such evils, to act
on behalf of those most exploited, and to seek to guide the little ones
to the love of Jesus, for to such belongs the Kingdom of God (cf. Lk 18:16).
180
The Synod voiced special concern for women, whose
situation remains a serious problem in Asia, where discrimination and
violence against women is often found in the home, in the workplace and
even within the legal system. Illiteracy is most widespread among women,
and many are treated simply as commodities in prostitution, tourism and
the entertainment industry. 181 In their fight against all
forms of injustice and discrimination, women should find an ally in the
Christian community, and for this reason the Synod proposed that where
possible the local Churches in Asia should promote human rights
activities on behalf of women. The aim must be to bring about a change
of attitude through a proper understanding of the role of men and women
in the family, in society and in the Church, through greater awareness
of the original complementarity between men and women, and through
clearer appreciation of the importance of the feminine dimension in all
things human. The contributions of women have all too often been
undervalued or ignored, and this has resulted in a spiritual
impoverishment of humanity. The Church in Asia would more visibly and
effectively uphold women's dignity and freedom by encouraging their role
in the Church's life, including her intellectual life, and by opening to
them ever greater opportunities to be present and active in the Church's
mission of love and service. 182
The Gospel of Life
35. The service of human development begins with the
service of life itself. Life is a great gift entrusted to us by God: he
entrusts it to us as a project and a responsibility. We are therefore
guardians of life, not its proprietors. We receive the gift freely and,
in gratitude, we must never cease to respect and defend it, from its
beginning to its natural conclusion. From the moment of conception,
human life involves God's creative action and remains forever in a
special bond with the Creator, who is life's source and its sole end.
There is no true progress, no true civil society, no true human
promotion without respect for human life, especially the life of those
who have no voice of their own with which to defend themselves. The life
of every person, whether of the child in the womb, or of someone who is
sick, handicapped or elderly, is a gift for all.
The Synod Fathers wholeheartedly reaffirmed the
teaching of the Second Vatican Council and the subsequent Magisterium,
including my Encyclical Letter Evangelium Vitae, on the sanctity of
human life. I join them here in calling upon the faithful in their
countries, where the demographic question is often used as an argument
for the need to introduce abortion and artificial population control
programmes, to resist "the culture of death". 183
They can show their fidelity to God and their commitment to true human
promotion by supporting and participating in programmes which defend the
life of those who are powerless to defend themselves.
Health Care
36. Following in the steps of Jesus Christ who had
compassion for all and cured "all kinds of disease and
illness" (Mt 9:35), the Church in Asia is committed to
becoming still more involved in the care of the sick, since this is a
vital part of her mission of offering the saving grace of Christ to the
whole person. Like the Good Samaritan of the parable (cf. Lk 10:29-37),
the Church wants to care for the sick and disabled in concrete ways,
184 especially where people are deprived of elementary medical
care as a result of poverty and marginalization.
On numerous occasions during my visits to the Church
in different parts of the world I have been deeply moved by the
extraordinary Christian witness borne by religious and consecrated
persons, doctors, nurses and other health care workers, especially those
working with the handicapped, or in the field of terminal care, or
contending with the spread of new diseases such as AIDS. Increasingly,
Christian health care workers are called to be generous and self-giving
in tending the victims of drug addiction and AIDS, who are often
despised and abandoned by society. 185 Many Catholic medical
institutions in Asia are facing pressures from public health care
policies not based on Christian principles, and many of them are
burdened by ever increasing financial difficulties. In spite of these
problems, it is the exemplary self-giving love and dedicated
professionalism of those involved that make these facilities an
admirable and appreciated service to the community, and a particularly
visible and effective sign of God's unfailing love. These health care
workers must be encouraged and supported in the good that they do. Their
continuing commitment and effectiveness is the best way to ensure that
Christian values and ethics enter deeply into the health care systems of
the continent and transform them from within. 186
Education
37. Throughout Asia, the Church's involvement in
education is extensive and highly visible, and is therefore a key
element of her presence among the peoples of the continent. In many
countries, Catholic schools play an important role in evangelization,
inculturating the faith, teaching the ways of openness and respect, and
fostering interreligious understanding. The Church's schools often
provide the only educational opportunities for girls, tribal minorities,
the rural poor and less privileged children. The Synod Fathers were
convinced of the need to extend and develop the apostolate of education
in Asia, with an eye in particular to the disadvantaged, so that all may
be helped to take their rightful place as full citizens in society.
187 As the Synod Fathers noted, this will mean that the system of
Catholic education must become still more clearly directed towards human
promotion, providing an environment where students receive not only the
formal elements of schooling but, more broadly, an integral human
formation based upon the teachings of Christ. 188 Catholic
schools should continue to be places where the faith can be freely
proposed and received. In the same way, Catholic universities, in
addition to pursuing the academic excellence for which they are already
well known, must retain a clear Christian identity in order to be a
Christian leaven in Asian societies. 189
Peacemaking
38. At the end of the twentieth century the world is
still threatened by forces which generate conflicts and wars, and Asia
is certainly not exempt from these. Among these forces are intolerance
and marginalization of all kinds—social, cultural, political, and even
religious. Day by day fresh violence is inflicted upon individuals and
entire peoples, and the culture of death takes hold in the unjustifiable
recourse to violence to resolve tensions. Given the appalling situation
of conflict in so many parts of the world, the Church is called to be
deeply involved in international and interreligious efforts to bring
about peace, justice and reconciliation. She continues to insist on the
negotiated and non-military resolution of conflicts, and she looks to
the day when nations will abandon war as a way of vindicating claims or
a means of resolving differences. She is convinced that war creates more
problems than it ever solves, that dialogue is the only just and noble
path to agreement and reconciliation, and that the patient and wise art
of peacemaking is especially blessed by God.
Especially troubling in Asia is the continual race to
acquire weapons of mass destruction, an immoral and wasteful expenditure
in national budgets, which in some cases cannot even satisfy people's
basic needs. The Synod Fathers also spoke of the vast number of
landmines in Asia, which have maimed or killed hundreds of thousands of
innocent people, while despoiling fertile land which could otherwise be
used for food production. 190 It is the responsibility of
all, especially of those who govern nations, to work more energetically
for disarmament. The Synod called for a stop to the manufacture, sale
and use of nuclear, chemical and biological arms and urged those who
have set landmines to assist in the work of rehabilitation and
restoration. 191 Above all the Synod Fathers prayed to God,
who knows the depths of every human conscience, to put sentiments of
peace in the hearts of those tempted to follow the ways of violence so
that the biblical vision will become a reality: "they shall beat
their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks;
nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn
war any more" (Is 2:4).
The Synod heard many testimonies concerning the
sufferings of the people of Iraq, and about the fact that many Iraqis,
especially children, have died because of the lack of medicines and
other basic commodities deriving from the continuing embargo. With the
Synod Fathers, I wish to express once again my solidarity with the Iraqi
people, and I am particularly close in prayer and hope to the sons and
daughters of the Church in that country. The Synod prayed that God will
enlighten the minds and hearts of all those who bear responsibility for
bringing about a just solution to the crisis, in order that an already
sorely tried people may be spared further suffering and sorrow. 192
Globalization
39. Considering the question of human promotion in
Asia, the Synod Fathers recognized the importance of the process of
economic globalization. While acknowledging its many positive effects,
they pointed out that globalization has also worked to the detriment of
the poor, 193 tending to push poorer countries to the margin
of international economic and political relations. Many Asian nations
are unable to hold their own in a global market economy. And perhaps
more significantly, there is also the aspect of a cultural globalization,
made possible by the modern communications media, which is quickly
drawing Asian societies into a global consumer culture that is both
secularist and materialistic. The result is an eroding of traditional
family and social values which until now had sustained peoples and
societies. All of this makes it clear that the ethical and moral
aspects of globalization need to be more directly addressed by the
leaders of nations and by organizations concerned with human promotion.
The Church insists upon the need for
"globalization without marginalization". 194 With
the Synod Fathers, I call upon the particular Churches everywhere, and
especially those in the Western countries, to work to ensure that the
Church's social doctrine has its due impact upon the formulation of
ethical and juridical norms for regulating the world's free markets and
for the means of social communication. Catholic leaders and
professionals should urge governments and financial and trade
institutions to recognize and respect such norms. 195
Foreign Debt
40. Furthermore, in her search for justice in a world
marred by social and economic inequalities, the Church cannot ignore the
heavy burden of debt incurred by many developing nations in Asia, with
its consequent impact upon their present and future. In many cases,
these countries are forced to cut down spending on the necessities of
life such as food, health, housing and education, in order to service
their debts to international monetary agencies and banks. This means
that many people are trapped in living conditions which are an affront
to human dignity. While aware of the technical complexities of this
matter, the Synod recognized that this issue tests the capacity of
peoples, societies and governments to value the human person and the
lives of millions of human beings more highly than financial and
material gain. 196
The approach of the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 is
an opportune time for the Episcopal Conferences of the world, especially
of the wealthier nations, to encourage international monetary agencies
and banks to explore ways of easing the international debt situation.
Among the more obvious are a renegotiation of debts, with either
substantial reduction or outright cancellation, as also business
ventures and investments to assist the economies of the poorer
countries. 197 At the same time the Synod Fathers also
addressed the debtor countries. They emphasized the need to develop a
sense of national responsibility, reminding them of the importance of
sound economic planning, transparency and good management, and invited
them to wage a resolute campaign against corruption. 198 They
called upon the Christians of Asia to condemn all forms of corruption
and the misappropriation of public funds by those holding political
power. 199 The citizens of debtor countries have too often
been victims of waste and inefficiency at home, before falling victim to
the international debt crisis.
The Environment
41. When concern for economic and technological
progress is not accompanied by concern for the balance of the ecosystem,
our earth is inevitably exposed to serious environmental damage, with
consequent harm to human beings. Blatant disrespect for the environment
will continue as long as the earth and its potential are seen merely as
objects of immediate use and consumption, to be manipulated by an
unbridled desire for profit. 200 It is the duty of Christians
and of all who look to God as the Creator to protect the environment by
restoring a sense of reverence for the whole of God's creation. It is
the Creator's will that man should treat nature not as a ruthless
exploiter but as an intelligent and responsible administrator. 201
The Synod Fathers pleaded in a special way for greater responsibility on
the part of the leaders of nations, legislators, business people and all
who are directly involved in the management of the earth's resources.
202 They underlined the need to educate people, especially the
young, in environmental responsibility, training them in the stewardship
over creation which God has entrusted to humanity. The protection of the
environment is not only a technical question; it is also and
above all an ethical issue. All have a moral duty to care for the
environment, not only for their own good but also for the good of future
generations.
In conclusion, it is worth remembering that in
calling on Christians to work and sacrifice themselves in the service of
human development the Synod Fathers were drawing upon some of the core
insights of biblical and ecclesial tradition. Ancient Israel insisted
passionately upon the unbreakable bond between worship of God and care
for the weak, represented typically in Scripture as "the widow, the
stranger and orphan" (cf. Ex 22:21-22; Dt 10:18;
27:19), who in the societies of the time were most vulnerable to the
threat of injustice. Time and again in the Prophets we hear the cry for
justice, for the right ordering of human society, without which there
can be no true worship of God (cf. Is 1:10-17; Am 5:21-24).
In the appeal of the Synod Fathers we thus hear an echo of the Prophets
filled with the Spirit of God, who wants "mercy not sacrifice"
(Hos 6:6). Jesus made these words his own (cf. Mt 9:13),
and the same is true of the Saints in every time and place. Consider the
words of Saint John Chrysostom: "Do you wish to honour the body of
Christ? Then do not ignore him when he is naked. Do not pay him silken
honours in the temple only then to neglect him when he goes cold and
naked outside. He who said; ‘This is my body' is the One who also
said, ‘You saw me hungry and you gave me no food'... What good is it
if the Eucharistic Table groans under the weight of golden chalices,
when Christ is dying of hunger? Start by satisfying his hunger, and then
with what remains you may adorn the altar as well!". 203
In the Synod's appeal for human development and for justice in human
affairs, we hear a voice which is both old and new. It is old because it
rises from the depths of our Christian tradition, which looks to that
profound harmony which the Creator intends; it is new because it speaks
to the immediate situation of countless people in Asia today.
CHAPTER VII
WITNESSES TO THE GOSPEL
A Witnessing Church
42. The Second Vatican Council taught clearly that
the entire Church is missionary, and that the work of evangelization is
the duty of the whole People of God. 204 Since the whole
People of God is sent forth to preach the Gospel, evangelization is
never an individual and isolated act; it is always an ecclesial task
which has to be carried out in communion with the whole community of
faith. The mission is one and indivisible, having one origin and one
final purpose; but within it there are different responsibilities and
different kinds of activity. 205 In every case it is clear
that there can be no true proclamation of the Gospel unless Christians
also offer the witness of lives in harmony with the message they preach:
"The first form of witness is the very life of the missionary, of
the Christian family, and of the ecclesial community, which reveal a new
way of living... Everyone in the Church, striving to imitate the Divine
Master, can and must bear this kind of witness; in many cases it is the
only possible way of being a missionary". 206 Genuine
Christian witness is needed especially now, because "people today
put more trust in witnesses than in teachers, in experience than in
teaching, and in life and action than in theories". 207
This is certainly true in the Asian context, where people are more
persuaded by holiness of life than by intellectual argument. The
experience of faith and of the gifts of the Holy Spirit thus becomes the
basis of all missionary work, in towns or villages, in schools or
hospitals, among the handicapped, migrants or tribal peoples, or in the
pursuit of justice and human rights. Every situation is an opportunity
for Christians to show forth the power which the truth of Christ has
become in their lives. Therefore, inspired by the many missionaries who
bore heroic witness to God's love among the peoples of the continent in
the past, the Church in Asia strives now to witness with no less zeal to
Jesus Christ and his Gospel. Christian mission demands no less.
Conscious of the Church's essentially missionary
character and looking to a new outpouring of the dynamism of the Holy
Spirit as the Church enters the new millennium, the Synod Fathers asked
that this Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation should offer some
directives and guidelines to those working in the vast field of
evangelization in Asia.
Pastors
43. It is the Holy Spirit who enables the Church to
accomplish the mission entrusted to her by Christ. Before sending out
his disciples as his witnesses, Jesus gave them the Holy Spirit (cf. Jn
20:22), who worked through them and stirred the hearts of those who
heard them (cf. Acts 2:37). The same is true of those whom he
sends out now. At one level, all the baptized, by the very grace of the
Sacrament, are deputed to take part in continuing the saving mission of
Christ, and they are capable of this task precisely because God's love
has been poured into their hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been
given to them (Rom 5:5). But on another level this common mission
is accomplished through a variety of specific functions and charisms in
the Church. The principal responsibility for the Church's mission has
been entrusted by Christ to the Apostles and their successors. By virtue
of episcopal ordination and hierarchical communion with the Head of the
Episcopal College, Bishops receive the mandate and authority to teach,
govern and sanctify the People of God. By the will of Christ himself,
within the College of Bishops, the Successor of Peter—the rock upon
which the Church is built (cf. Mt 16:18)—exercises a special
ministry of unity. Bishops therefore are to fulfil their ministry in
union with the Successor of Peter, the guarantor of the truth of their
teaching and of their full communion in the Church.
Associated with the Bishops in the work of
proclaiming the Gospel, priests are called upon at ordination to be
shepherds of the flock, preachers of the good news of salvation and
ministers of the sacraments. To serve the Church as Christ intends,
Bishops and priests need a solid and continuing formation, which should
provide opportunities for human, spiritual and pastoral renewal, as well
as courses on theology, spirituality and the human sciences. 208
People in Asia need to see the clergy not just as charity workers and
institutional administrators but as men whose minds and hearts are set
on the deep things of the Spirit (cf. Rom 8:5). The reverence
which Asian peoples have for those in authority needs to be matched by a
clear moral uprightness on the part of those with ministerial
responsibilities in the Church. By their life of prayer, zealous service
and exemplary conduct, the clergy witness powerfully to the Gospel in
the communities which they shepherd in the name of Christ. It is my
fervent prayer that the ordained ministers of the Churches in Asia will
live and work in a spirit of communion and cooperation with the Bishops
and all the faithful, bearing witness to the love which Jesus declared
to be the true mark of his disciples (cf. Jn 13:35).
I particularly wish to underline the Synod's concern
for the preparation of those who will staff and teach in seminaries and
theological faculties. 209 After a thorough training in the
sacred sciences and related subjects, they should receive a specific
formation focused on priestly spirituality, the art of spiritual
direction, and other aspects of the difficult and delicate task that
awaits them in the education of future priests. This is an apostolate
second to none for the Church's well-being and vitality.
The Consecrated Life and Missionary Societies
44. In the Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Vita
Consecrata, I emphasized the intimate connection between the consecrated
life and mission. Under its three aspects of confessio Trinitatis,
signum fraternitatis and servitium caritatis, the
consecrated life shows forth God's love in the world by its specific
witness to the saving mission which Jesus accomplished by his total
consecration to the Father. Recognizing that all action in the Church
has its support in prayer and communion with God, the Church in Asia
looks with profound respect and appreciation to the contemplative
religious communities as a special source of strength and inspiration.
Following the recommendations of the Synod Fathers, I strongly encourage
the establishment of monastic and contemplative communities wherever
possible. In this way, as the Second Vatican Council reminds us, the
work of building up the earthly city can have its foundation in the Lord
and can tend towards him, lest those who build labour in vain. 210
The search for God, a life of fraternal communion,
and service to others are the three chief characteristics of the
consecrated life which can offer an appealing Christian testimony to the
peoples of Asia today. The Special Assembly for Asia urged those in the
consecrated life to be witnesses to the universal call to holiness and
inspiring examples to Christians and non-Christians alike of self-giving
love for everyone, especially the least of their brothers and sisters.
In a world in which the sense of God's presence is often diminished,
consecrated persons need to bear convincing prophetic witness to the
primacy of God and to eternal life. Living in community, they attest to
the values of Christian fraternity and to the transforming power of the
Good News. 211 All who have embraced the consecrated life are
called to become leaders in the search for God, a search which has
always stirred the human heart and which is particularly visible in
Asia's many forms of spirituality and asceticism. 212 In the
numerous religious traditions of Asia, men and women dedicated to the
contemplative and ascetical life enjoy great respect, and their witness
has an especially persuasive power. Their lives lived in community, in
peaceful and silent testimony, can inspire people to work for greater
harmony in society. No less is expected of consecrated men and women in
the Christian tradition. Their silent example of poverty and abnegation,
of purity and sincerity, of self-sacrifice in obedience, can become an
eloquent witness capable of touching all people of good will and leading
to a fruitful dialogue with surrounding cultures and religions, and with
the poor and the defenceless. This makes the consecrated life a
privileged means of effective evangelization. 213
The Synod Fathers recognized the vital role played by
religious orders and congregations, missionary institutes and societies
of apostolic life in the evangelization of Asia in past centuries. For
this magnificent contribution, the Synod expressed to them the Church's
gratitude and urged them not to waver in their missionary commitment.
214 I join the Synod Fathers in calling on those in the
consecrated life to renew their zeal to proclaim the saving truth of
Christ. All are to have appropriate formation and training, which should
be Christ-centred and faithful to their founding charism, with emphasis
on personal sanctity and witness; their spirituality and lifestyle
should be sensitive to the religious heritage of the people among whom
they live and whom they serve. 215 While maintaining respect
for their specific charism, they should integrate themselves into the
pastoral plan of the Diocese in which they work. The local Churches, for
their part, need to foster awareness of the ideal of the religious and
consecrated life, and promote such vocations. This requires that each
Diocese should devise a pastoral programme for vocations, including the
assignment of priests and religious to full-time work among the young to
help them hear and discern the call of God. 216
In the context of the communion of the universal
Church, I cannot fail to urge the Church in Asia to send forth
missionaries, even though she herself needs labourers in the vineyard. I
am glad to see that in several Asian countries missionary institutes of
apostolic life have recently been founded in recognition of the Church's
missionary character and of the responsibility of the particular
Churches in Asia to preach the Gospel to the whole world. 217
The Synod Fathers recommended "the establishment within each local
Church of Asia, where such do not exist, of missionary societies of
apostolic life, characterized by their special commitment to the mission
ad gentes, ad exteros and ad vitam". 218
Such an initiative is sure to bear abundant fruit not only in the
Churches which receive the missionaries but also in the Churches which
send them.
The Laity
45. As the Second Vatican Council clearly indicated,
the vocation of lay people sets them firmly in the world to perform the
most varied tasks, and it is here that they are called to spread the
Gospel of Jesus Christ. 219 By the grace and call of Baptism
and Confirmation, all lay people are missionaries; and the arena of
their missionary work is the vast and complex worlds of politics,
economics, industry, education, the media, science, technology, the arts
and sport. In many Asian countries, lay people are already serving as
true missionaries, reaching out to fellow Asians who might never have
contact with clergy and religious. 220 To them I express the
thanks of the whole Church, and I encourage all lay people to assume
their proper role in the life and mission of the People of God, as
witnesses to Christ wherever they may find themselves.
It is the task of the Pastors to ensure that the
laity are formed as evangelizers able to face the challenges of the
contemporary world, not just with worldly wisdom and efficiency, but
with hearts renewed and strengthened by the truth of Christ. 221
Witnessing to the Gospel in every area of life in society, the lay
faithful can play a unique role in rooting out injustice and oppression,
and for this too they must be adequately formed. To this end, I join the
Synod Fathers in proposing the establishment at the diocesan or national
level of lay formation centres to prepare the laity for their missionary
work as witnesses to Christ in Asia today. 222
The Synod Fathers were most concerned that the Church
should be a participatory Church in which no one feels excluded, and
they judged the wider participation of women in the life and mission of
the Church in Asia to be an especially pressing need. "Woman has a
quite special aptitude in passing on the faith, so much so that Jesus
himself appealed to it in the work of evangelization. That is what
happened to the Samaritan woman whom Jesus met at Jacob's well: he chose
her for the first expansion of the new faith in non-Jewish
territory". 223 To enhance their service in the Church,
there should be greater opportunities for women to take courses in
theology and other fields of study; and men in seminaries and houses of
formation need to be trained to regard women as co-workers in the
apostolate. 224 Women should be more effectively involved in
pastoral programmes, in diocesan and parish pastoral councils, and in
diocesan synods. Their abilities and services should be fully
appreciated in health care, in education, in preparing the faithful for
the sacraments, in building community and in peacemaking. As the Synod
Fathers noted, the presence of women in the Church's mission of love and
service contributes greatly to bringing the compassionate Jesus, the
healer and reconciler, to Asian people, especially the poor and
marginalized. 225
The Family
46. The family is the normal place where the young
grow to personal and social maturity. It is also the bearer of the
heritage of humanity itself, because through the family life is passed
on from generation to generation. The family occupies a very important
place in Asian cultures; and, as the Synod Fathers noted, family values
like filial respect, love and care for the aged and the sick, love of
children and harmony are held in high esteem in all Asian cultures and
religious traditions.
Seen through Christian eyes, the family is "the
domestic Church" (ecclesia domestica). 226 The
Christian family, like the Church as a whole, should be a place where
the truth of the Gospel is the rule of life and the gift which the
family members bring to the wider community. The family is not simply
the object of the Church's pastoral care; it is also one of the Church's
most effective agents of evangelization. Christian families are today
called to witness to the Gospel in difficult times and circumstances,
when the family itself is threatened by an array of forces. 227
To be an agent of evangelization in such a time, the Christian family
needs to be genuinely "the domestic Church", humbly and
lovingly living out the Christian vocation.
As the Synod Fathers pointed out, this means that the
family should be active in parish life, partaking of the sacraments,
especially the Holy Eucharist and the Sacrament of Penance, and being
involved in service to others. It also means that parents should strive
to make the moments when the family naturally comes together an
opportunity for prayer, for Bible reading and reflection, for
appropriate rituals presided over by the parents and for healthy
recreation. This will help the Christian family to become a hearth of
evangelization, where each member experiences God's love and
communicates it to others. 228 The Synod Fathers also
acknowledged that children have a role in evangelization, both in their
family and in the wider community. 229 Convinced that
"the future of the world and of the Church passes through the
family", 230 I once again propose for study and
implementation what I wrote on the theme of the family in the Apostolic
Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, following the Fifth Ordinary
General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops in 1980.
Young People
47. The Synod Fathers were particularly sensitive to
the theme of youth in the Church. The many complex problems which young
people now face in the changing world of Asia impel the Church to remind
the young of their responsibility for the future of society and the
Church, and to encourage and support them at every step to ensure that
they are ready to accept that responsibility. To them the Church offers
the truth of the Gospel as a joyful and liberating mystery to be known,
lived and shared, with conviction and courage.
If young people are to be effective agents of
mission, the Church needs to offer them suitable pastoral care. 231
In agreement with the Synod Fathers, I recommend that, where possible,
every diocese in Asia should appoint youth chaplains or directors to
promote the spiritual formation and apostolate of young people. Catholic
schools and parishes have a vital role in providing all-round formation
for the young, by seeking to lead them in the way of true discipleship
and developing in them the human qualities that mission requires.
Organized youth apostolates and youth clubs can provide the experience
of Christian friendship which is so important for the young. The parish,
and associations and movements, can help young people to cope better
with social pressures by offering them not only a more mature growth in
the Christian life but also help in the form of career guidance,
vocational training and youth counselling.
The Christian formation of young people in Asia
should recognize that they are not only the object of the Church's
pastoral care but also "agents and co-workers in the Church's
mission in her various apostolic works of love and service".
232 In parishes and dioceses, young men and women should therefore
be invited to take part in the organization of activities which concern
them. Their freshness and enthusiasm, their spirit of solidarity and
hope can make them peacemakers in a divided world; and, on this score,
it is encouraging to see young people involved in exchange programmes
between the particular Churches and countries in Asia and elsewhere
fostering interreligious and intercultural dialogue.
Social Communication
48. In an era of globalization, "the means of
social communication have become so important as to be for many the
chief means of information and education, of guidance and inspiration in
their behaviour as individuals, families and within society at large. In
particular, the younger generation is growing up in a world conditioned
by the mass media". 233 The world is seeing the
emergence of a new culture that "originates not just from whatever
content is eventually expressed, but from the very fact that there exist
new ways of communicating, with new languages, new techniques and a new
psychology". 234 The exceptional role played by the
means of social communication in shaping the world, its cultures and
ways of thinking has led to rapid and far-reaching changes in Asian
societies.
Inevitably, the Church's evangelizing mission too is
deeply affected by the impact of the mass media. Since the mass media
have an ever increasing influence even in remote areas of Asia, they can
assist greatly in the proclamation of the Gospel to every corner of the
continent. However, "it is not enough to use the media simply to
spread the Christian message and the Church's authentic teaching. It is
necessary to integrate that message into the ‘new culture' created by
modern communications". 235 To this end, the Church
needs to explore ways of thoroughly integrating the mass media into her
pastoral planning and activity, so that by their effective use the
Gospel's power can reach out still further to individuals and entire
peoples, and infuse Asian cultures with the values of the Kingdom.
I echo the Synod Fathers' commendation of Radio
Veritas Asia, the only continent-wide radio station for the Church
in Asia, for its almost thirty years of evangelization through
broadcasting. Efforts must be made to strengthen this excellent
instrument of mission, through appropriate language programming,
personnel and financial help from Episcopal Conferences and Dioceses in
Asia. 236 In addition to radio, Catholic publications and
news agencies can help to disseminate information and offer continuing
religious education and formation throughout the continent. In places
where Christians are a minority, these can be an important means of
sustaining and nurturing a sense of Catholic identity and of spreading
knowledge of Catholic moral principles. 237
I take up the recommendations of the Synod Fathers on
the point of evangelization through social communications, the
"areopagus of the modern age", in the hope that it may serve
human promotion and the spreading of the truth of Christ and the
teaching of the Church. 238 It would help if each Diocese
would establish, where possible, a communications and media office.
Media education, including the critical evaluation of media output,
needs to be an increasing part of the formation of priests, seminarians,
religious, catechists, lay professionals, students in Catholic schools
and parish communities. Given the wide influence and extraordinary
impact of the mass media, Catholics need to work with the members of
other Churches and Ecclesial Communities, and with the followers of
other religions to ensure a place for spiritual and moral values in the
media. With the Synod Fathers, I encourage the development of pastoral
plans for communications at the national and diocesan levels, following
the indications of the Pastoral Instruction Aetatis Novae, with
appropriate attention to the circumstances prevailing in Asia.
The Martyrs
49. However important programmes of formation and
strategies for evangelization may be, in the end it is martyrdom
which reveals to the world the very essence of the Christian message. The
word itself, "martyr", means witness, and those who have shed
their blood for Christ have borne the ultimate witness to the true value
of the Gospel. In the Bull of Indiction of the Great Jubilee of the Year
2000, Incarnationis Mysterium, I stressed the vital importance of
remembering the martyrs: "From the psychological point of view,
martyrdom is the most eloquent proof of the truth of the faith, for
faith can give a human face even to the most violent of deaths and show
its beauty even in the midst of the most atrocious persecutions".
239 Through the ages, Asia has given the Church and the world a
great host of these heroes of the faith, and from the heart of Asia
there rises the great song of praise: Te martyrum candidatus laudat
exercitus. This is the song of those who died for Christ on Asian
soil in the first centuries of the Church, and it is also the joyful cry
of men and women of more recent times like Saint Paul Miki and his
companions, Saint Lorenzo Ruiz and his companions, Saint Andrew Dung Lac
and his companions, Saint Andrew Kim Taegon and his companions. May the
great host of Asian martyrs, old and new, never cease to teach the
Church in Asia what it means to bear witness to the Lamb in whose blood
they have washed their shining robes (cf. Rev 7:14)! May they
stand as indomitable witnesses to the truth that Christians are called
always and everywhere to proclaim nothing other than the power of the
Lord's Cross! And may the blood of Asia's martyrs be now as always
the seed of new life for the Church in every corner of the continent!
CONCLUSION
Gratitude and Encouragement
50. At the end of this Post-Synodal Apostolic
Exhortation which, seeking to discern the Spirit's word to the Churches
in Asia (cf. Rev 1:11), has endeavoured to set forth the fruits
of the Special Assembly for Asia of the Synod of Bishops, I wish to
express the Church's gratitude to all of you, dear Asian brothers and
sisters, who have contributed in any way to the success of this
important ecclesial event. First and foremost, we again praise God for
the wealth of cultures, languages, traditions and religious
sensibilities of this great continent. Blessed be God for the peoples of
Asia, so rich in their diversity yet one in their yearning for peace and
fullness of life. Especially now, in the immediate vicinity of the
2000th anniversary of the Birth of Jesus Christ, we thank God for
choosing Asia as the earthly dwelling place of his incarnate Son, the
Saviour of the world.
I cannot fail to express my appreciation to the
Bishops of Asia for their deep love of Jesus Christ, the Church and the
peoples of Asia, and for their testimony of communion and generous
dedication to the task of evangelization. I am grateful to all those who
form the great family of the Church in Asia: the clergy, the men and
women religious and other consecrated persons, the missionaries, the
laity, families, the young, indigenous peoples, workers, the poor and
afflicted. Deep in my heart there is a special place for those in Asia
who are persecuted for their faith in Christ. They are the hidden
pillars of the Church, to whom Jesus himself speaks words of comfort:
"You are blessed in the Kingdom of heaven" (cf. Mt 5:10).
The words of Jesus reassure the Church in Asia:
"Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to
give you the Kingdom" (Lk 12:32). Those who believe in
Christ are still a small minority in this vast and most populous
continent. Yet far from being a timid minority, they are lively in
faith, full of the hope and vitality which only love can bring. In their
humble and courageous way, they have influenced the cultures and
societies of Asia, especially the lives of the poor and the helpless,
many of whom do not share the Catholic faith. They are an example to
Christians everywhere to be eager to share the treasure of the Good News
"in season and out of season" (2 Tim 4:2). They find
strength in the wondrous power of the Holy Spirit who, despite the
generally small numbers of the Church in Asia, ensures that the Church's
presence is like the yeast which mixes with the flour in a quiet and
hidden way till it is all leavened (cf. Mt 13:33).
The peoples of Asia need Jesus Christ and his Gospel.
Asia is thirsting for the living water that Jesus alone can give (cf. Jn
4:10-15). The disciples of Christ in Asia must therefore be
unstinting in their efforts to fulfil the mission they have received
from the Lord, who has promised to be with them to the end of the age
(cf. Mt 28:20). Trusting in the Lord who will not fail those whom
he has called, the Church in Asia joyfully makes her pilgrim way into
the Third Millennium. Her only joy is that which comes from sharing with
the multitude of Asia's peoples the immense gift which she herself has
received—the love of Jesus the Saviour. Her one ambition is to
continue his mission of service and love, so that all Asians "may
have life and have it abundantly" (Jn 10:10).
Prayer to the Mother of Christ
51. Faced with such a challenging mission, we turn to
Mary, for whom, as the Synod Fathers said, Asian Christians have a great
love and affection, revering her as their own Mother and the Mother of
Christ. 240 Throughout Asia there are hundreds of Marian
sanctuaries and shrines where not only the Catholic faithful gather, but
also believers of other religions too.
To Mary, model of all disciples and bright Star of
Evangelization, I entrust the Church in Asia at the threshold of the
Third Millennium of the Christian era, trusting absolutely that hers is
an ear that always listens, hers a heart that always welcomes, and hers
a prayer that never fails:
O Holy Mary, Daughter of the Most High God,
Virgin Mother of the Saviour and Mother of us all,
look tenderly upon the Church of your Son
planted on Asian soil.
Be her guide and model
as she continues your Son's mission
of love and service in Asia.
You fully and freely accepted the Father's call
to be the Mother of God;
teach us to empty our hearts
of all that is not of God,
that we too may be filled
with the Holy Spirit from on high.
You pondered the mysteries of God's will
in the silence of your heart;
help us on our journey
to discern the signs of God's powerful hand.
You went quickly to visit Elizabeth
and help in her days of waiting;
obtain for us the same spirit of zeal and service
in our evangelizing task.
You sang the praises of the Lord;
lead us in joyful proclamation of faith
in Christ our Saviour.
You had compassion on the needy
and spoke to your Son on their behalf;
teach us never to fear
to speak of the world to Jesus
and of Jesus to the world.
You stood at the foot of the Cross
as your Son breathed his last;
be with us as we seek to be one
in spirit and service with all who suffer.
You prayed with the disciples in the Upper Room;
help us to wait upon the Spirit
and to go wherever he leads us.
Protect the Church from all the powers
that threaten her.
Help her to be a true image
of the Most Holy Trinity.
Pray that through the Church's love and service
all the peoples of Asia may come
to know your Son
Jesus Christ, the only Saviour of the world,
and so taste the joy of life in all its fullness.
O Mary, Mother of the New Creation
and Mother of Asia,
pray for us, your children, now and always!
Given at New Delhi, in India, on the sixth day of
November in the year 1999, the twenty-second of my Pontificate.