Home » Vatican News » Challenges don’t lessen obligation to evangelize, Cardinal Wuerl says

Challenges don’t lessen obligation to evangelize, Cardinal Wuerl says

 

The challenges of being human and of living in a world that does not always want to hear about faith do not lessen the obligation to proclaim the Gospel and to call the baptized to live their faith more fully, said Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl of Washington.

“We already know our difficulties, the tensions, our restlessness, our faults and our human weakness,” Cardinal Wuerl told members of the Synod of Bishops on the new evangelization Oct. 17.

Nevertheless, God calls members of the church to proclaim salvation in Christ to the ends of the earth and to re-propose the Gospel “to those who are now distant from the church,” said the cardinal, who was serving as the synod’s relator.

Summarizing — in Latin — the speeches Pope Benedict XVI and synod members gave Oct. 7-17, the Washington cardinal also formulated more than a dozen questions participants might want to discuss in their small groups before drafting propositions to present to the pope.

The “two great pillars of evangelization” must be a commitment to know and proclaim the truth of Christ and to do so with love, he said.

In the more than 230 speeches delivered at the synod, Cardinal Wuerl said, members agreed that the duty to proclaim the Gospel “is not just the responsibility of clergy and religious.” Laypeople share the obligation as well, so the church must prepare them, educate them and support them, he said.

The cardinal asked members to consider in their small groups concrete ways to increase people’s awareness of their responsibility.

“It is the task of the individual Catholic to invite people back to the practice of the faith,” he said.

The family and the parish deserve special recognition and special support, because they are the places where most people first encounter the faith and where they most grow in faith, he said.

Cardinal Wuerl asked members to consider ways the church could devise a program of catechesis that is “basic, complete and inspiring in the search for truth, goodness and beauty” and suggested the small groups discuss the idea advanced by several synod members of formally establishing the ministry of catechist in the church. [More]

SOURCE

Catholic News Service

 
 
 
 

3 Comments

  1. Tony says:

    Laypeople must proclaim their truth as realized by their lived experience.

  2. Florian says:

    Cardinal Donald should realize that lots of Catholics who believe in Jesus and live his teachings choose not to proclaim Benedict XVI’s gospel of “sex abuse and coverup without accountability,” because to do so would amount to co-operation in intrinsic evil.

    • Catholic Lady says:

      Florian; The “Gospel” is the “Good News” of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ – nothing more – nothing less.

 
 

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