postheadericon Being Church in Asia: New Evangelization and Challenges


Being Church in Asia: New
Evangelization and Challenges
Joseph Mattam, SJ.

(Asian Conference on New Evangelization, 4-6/9/2012, Ishvani Kendra, Pune).
Introduction     
Since some time, the expression “New Evangelization” has come into our theological and ecclesial vocabulary and the Pope has called for a Synod to articulate a vision and strategy for such an endeavor. This is addressed primarily to those who were once believers and are now no more interested in the Christian faith; millions in Europe and America show no more interest in the ‘faith’ that once governed their life. Proclaiming the gospel to such persons is not going to be an easy task. However, this invitation to New Evangelisation (NE) is a grace filled moment for the Church to return to Jesus and rediscover itself in the way Jesus had envisaged his Body to be in the world, as the salt, leaven and light.  If the Church responds to this invitation and becomes the kind of Church that Jesus wanted, then this NE will be a great blessing for the world.  This calls for a lot of honesty; we need to look at the past and see where we have gone wrong which has led so many to leave the church. It seems to me that the only way we can do this NE is by going back to the very old pattern of the early church of the first century, when there was a lot of enthusiasm, zeal and commitment to Jesus. Obviously, we cannot turn back the calendar and the clock, but we can look back to our roots and rediscover the essentials that we seem to have allowed to slip away.
In this paper I shall not focus on the normal themes like the wider context that affects the message, as we are familiar with our context: religious pluralism, religious intolerance, communalism, and fundamentalism; the massive poverty of the millions; illiteracy; female infanticide; child labour; abuse of women and many other factors that deeply affect our  mission work. This is an important area that we have to keep in mind. But I rather want to focus on the reasons for the present impasse, which unfortunately the Lineamenta does not seem to do, and see what it is that is going to be ‘new’ in our present day approach. Without a proper diagnosis, one cannot prescribe a remedy.
1. The Old Approach
At first we shall look briefly at the ‘old’, as what happened in the past has its effects on the Church today, and especially on the abandoning of the faith by millions of ‘believers’. In the early centuries, ‘gossiping the gospel’ by every member of the believing community was the way the faith spread; also the mutual love of the members of the community brought in followers (Acts). Later with more aggressive evangelisation, due to the natural-supernatural divide that made baptism absolutely necessary for salvation, evangelisation came to be the task only of the Clergy and Religious. In this period certain emphases marked our efforts.

1.1 Great importance to doctrines

The evangelisation work in the past emphasized a great deal (far too much) the importance of dogmas, doctrines and statements of faith formulated and taught by the Church.  Faith itself was understood as an assent to these truths. Catechism books emphasized doctrines and children had just to memorize many unintelligible formulae. This emphasis had devastating consequences like heresy hunting, the Inquisition, burning of heretics, torture, witch-burning and other cruelties in the name of the God, and divisions in the Body of Christ. There was a time when people were in awe of words like ‘hypostatic union’, ‘transubstantiation’, ‘consubstantial’, etc, but today people just do not care about these and similar words; they just ignore such.  I am not saying that doctrinal developments are unnecessary; they all had their reason at certain time in history; but now we need to go back to the Gospels and present Jesus to the people. What was originally a revolutionary, counter-cultural movement became dogmatic and ritualistic rather than being faithful to its original call to be radical, revolutionary and prophetic. There was also a shift from experiencing Jesus to thinking and talking about Jesus.

1.2 Emphasis on cultic practices

Another emphasis of this period was cultic practices and rituals. The Church has built thousands of beautiful churches and developed elaborate, lengthy liturgies in various Rites. The number of sacraments grew and finally, thanks to Peter Lombard’s synthesis, the 4th Lateran Council declared that there were the present seven sacraments. Prayers, Novenas and other devotions too grew, as also the number of saints and blessed, though it was during John Paul II’s time that the greatest number was added to the list of saints and blessed. The mediatory role of the saints was very much emphasized, as God came to be seen more and more like the emperor, inaccessible to the ordinary, requiring mediators on earth and in heaven. So, our unique God-given Mediator, Jesus suffered a setback.

1.3 Monoculturalism

Mono-culturalism ruled the Church for centuries. The church as it was in Europe was literally transplanted in the so-called mission countries allowing no creativity in these countries. Examples abound: Mateo Ricci, de Nobili and others who attempted something in line with the culture and habits of the people were not only opposed but were condemned. The perennial theology of St Thomas was compulsorily taught everywhere and that too, in Latin. That assured uniformity which was considered a great value. The Church remained basically Euro-centric; even today when one looks at the number of office bearers in the Vatican Curia and central commissions, and the number of Cardinals one sees that it is mostly Euro centric, though there are more Christians in Africa and Asia compared to the European countries.
1.4 The Clergy-Laity Divide
The clergy-laity divide is another characteristic of this period that has deeply affected the life of Christians. Without denying the great good the clerics have done throughout the centuries, we must not ignore the harm it has done to the Church. This division which was not known for the first two centuries, would eventually control the life of the Church. This division does not stem from Jesus, for he did not seem to want a two-tier Church made up of a superior class called Clerics and an inferior class of the laity. For Jesus, all his followers are equal as brothers /sisters/friends (Matt 23.8ff; Jn 13), though they have distinct functions. Paul was clear about the distinction of charisms and functions but without the notion of a hierarchy of persons (1Cor 12. 12ff; Rom 12.4ff; Eph 4.11ff) and was unaware of what today we call ‘priests’[1].
Jesus did not leave behind him a hierarchy, a class of people called “priests”. Whenever he used the term ‘priest’ it was about the Jewish priests for whom he had little regard (Luke 10.31; 17.14). Jesus never spoke of himself or any of his disciples as priests; the gospels and the genuine Pauline epistles do not present Jesus as a priest. If Jesus had spoken of himself as a ‘priest’ that would have totally misled the people about his identity and mission. Only the letter to the Hebrews, with justifiable reason presents Jesus as a priest and his murder as a sacrifice; but then that is the end of priesthood. The main function of the Jewish priests at Jesus’ time was offering sacrifices, and Jesus, like the prophets before him (e.g., Amos 5.21-22, 25) was opposed to sacrifices (Matt 9.13; 12.7); his cleansing of the temple, the prediction of its destruction and his words to the Samaritan woman (Jn 4. 21-24) show that he wanted a completely new form of worship and a new type of community which would give primacy to interpersonal relations over cultic acts (Matt 5.23; 25. 31ff). Jesus does not seem to have interest in cultic practices. His visits to the temple were primarily to teach. Through his attacks on them the temple priests became the arch enemies of Jesus and, ultimately it is they who turn him over to the Romans. Had Jesus wanted the priesthood to be the backbone of his community, definitely he would have spoken about it. The generally held view that on Maundy Thursday Jesus ‘ordained priests’ has no foundation in the NT.  Besides, from what I have mentioned above, it is clear that Jesus could not have thought of ordaining ‘priests’ before his death, as ‘priests’ were not in his horizon. Professor Herbert Haag of the Catholic Universities of Tubingen and Lucerne says: “The New Testament does not recognize any priesthood, whether sacramental or universal” (H. Haag 1997: 72)[2]. Quoting Haring, Haag says: “The Church of the first three centuries did not know…either the concept or the reality of a ‘clergy’” (p. 45); he traces the formation of classes of priests separated from the people back to the “fall of the Constantinian era” (p. 45).
          The NT had a multiplicity of ministries, but by the 3rd century these are channeled into the threefold ministry of Bishop, priests and deacons, formed into a hierarchy of an order of priests. With this, there emerged a class called the laity, the non-clerics. Clerics are the norm, just as when we used to speak of ‘non-Christians’ the understanding was the norm was ‘Christian’. “The brotherhood throughout the world” (1 Pet 5.9) eventually became 2 classes, the ordained and the non-ordained, one superior to the other, and their distinction became characteristic of the Church.  The majority of the members of the Body of Christ are devalued, as only the ordained can hold offices in the Church, preside over the worship and participate in the decision making processes.
1.5 The leaders Jesus wanted
Jesus spoke about and wanted to leave behind him leaders who would be different from leaders in the world and gave them very clear and precise instruction. “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, It will not be so among you; but whoever wishes to be great among you, must be your servant and whoever wishes to be first among you must be your slave” (Matt 20.24-28); “But you are not to be called rabbi, for you have one teacher, and you are all brothers. And call no one your father on earth…The greatest among you will be your servant” (Matt 23. 8-11); “But not so with you; rather the greatest among you must become like the youngest, and the leader like one who serves… I am among you as one who serves” (Lk 22. 24-27); see Mark 10. 35- 45 and John 13. 1-18).
Can anyone recognize in the present day Church leaders(Reverends, Lords, Graces, Excellencies, Eminences, Holiness) the kind of leaders Jesus envisaged? The function of the leaders Jesus wanted to leave behind was to “feed my lambs”, “take care of my sheep” and “feed my sheep” (Jn 21.15-17); namely, to care for and build up the community, and not the service of God by offering sacrifices and by producing and defending doctrines. The early disciples of Jesus followed his teaching and practiced the “brotherhood throughout the world” as is evident in the writings of Paul. While, he was conscious of his authority as an apostle (Gal 1.1), he speaks of himself as a servant (1 Cor 3.5), others as his brothers/ sisters/ fellow prisoners (Rom 1.13; 1 Cor 1.10; 2 Cor 1.8). Paul commissioned Timothy and others to leadership in the community by laying hands on them, but this cannot be seen as an ordination to the ‘priesthood’. The idea of a ‘priest’ does not arise in the first two centuries. Haag concludes: “This survey has shown that all ministries are the creation of the Church. None can be traced back to Jesus, not even that of the bishop, and least of all that of the priest.” (Haag,108). The ministries arose as response to the problems the community faced (e.g., Acts 6).
The later leaders either ignored or refused to follow the teaching of the Lord, and on their own authority declared themselves ‘priests’ busy with ‘sacrifice’, and patterned themselves on the empire, taking titles, dress code and behaviour pattern from the empire system: Reverends, Lords, Eminences, Excellencies and Holiness which have nothing to do with what Jesus wanted, and in fact, are explicitly opposed to what he had wanted. The empire system with its craze for power, privileges, wealth and luxury corrupted the leaders. The civil societies of Greece and Rome were highly hierarchical and that is the pattern the Church leaders followed instead of the Gospels. They also moulded God unto the image of the emperor. Yves Congar, in Power and Poverty in the Church,[3] has shown clearly how this development on the pattern of the empire happened. At a time when the Bible was not read by the people, any practice could be defended as coming from the Bible; but today, as everyone can read what is in the Bible, and biblical scholarship is spreading very much, we may not ignore what is given there so clearly about the leaders and how they have deviated from what Jesus wanted.

postheadericon Sadbhavana Forum

By Fr. William sj

St. Alberto Hurtado, SJ (1901–1952)

Alberto-Hurtado 

Alberto Hurtado, SJ, served the poor in Chile and founded the Hogar de Cristo for young people. Born in Chile (of Basque origin) on January 22, 1901, Hurtado was only four when his father died. He grew up with financial difficulties, but a scholarship enabled him to attend a Jesuit school in Santiago. Later he studied law at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile.

Hurtado entered the novitiate of the Society of Jesus in 1923. After philosophy and theology studies in Spain and Belgium (because the Jesuits were expelled from Spain), he was ordained to the priesthood in 1933.
Hurtado was interested in labor law before entering the Society and long desired to improve the lot of the poor. Upon his return to Chile in 1936, he became a teacher at his alma mater, the Pontifical Catholic University, but also reached out to the poor, especially to the young.

In 1940 he began working for Catholic Action and in the following year became the national director of the youth organization. He also published Is Chile a Catholic Country?—a book which challenged some long-held conservative beliefs. It caused considerable controversy and even had some critics labeling him a “communist.”

Alberto Hurtado founded his own organization for poor and abandoned young people, Hogar de Cristo. The Hogar de Cristo shelters quickly spread throughout Chile and served thousands of needy youngsters.

Hurtado established the Trade Union Association of Chile and published three volumes on the labor movement. He also founded a periodical, Mensaje.

Rushed to the hospital with intense pain one day in 1952, Hurtado was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and died soon afterwards. His death was national news.

Hurtado was beatified in 1994 and canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on October 23, 2005. He remains very popular in Chile to this day. His Facebook fan page has more than 50,000 followers.
The homily of Rev. Fr. General, Adolfo Nicolás, S.J.,
on the occasion of the feast of St. Ignatius Loyola,
Church of Gesu, Rome, 31 July, 2012
Translated from original in Italian
*************************************************

Perhaps, the crisis we are experiencing now made me think that the family is the best platform, the best gym, for holiness in the Church today. In the family, there is always the need to make choices and the mode of those choices is that someone has to sacrifice so that others may live; and are always the children who must live. Then the parents learn, in the family, how to be Christians, how to become Saints.

The crisis we are experiencing now has and continues to bring many choices for us, especially for us who live in the North or the West, depending on how you look at the world. Because the human family, we who are in the North and in the West, must make choices those are not easy, those are not pleasant. We must reduce the consumption we are accustomed to; we must live with less expenses, less pleasures, less comforts. If you recall, there was a time - I believe that the time of the encounters in America, there was a wide spread slogan: "Arms for prisoners", "weapons against prisoners." It was a trade: “weapons in exchange of prisoners.” I believe that in our world, we need another slogan, not that one, because that one does not help. But, perhaps, to live a poorer life so that others may have life; so that others also can live.

postheadericon LAL BAZAR CHURCH, BHARUCH, GUJARAT


                             
Lal  Bazar  means the Red  Market. For centuries, in this ancient city of Bharuch (Broach for the British) it was the location of the Catholic Church. The ancient church has been just in front of a colourful Moslem Masjid and only few yards away from a large Hindu temple. The three together make a veritable expression of the tolerant and beautiful India. A Moslem youth remarked joyfully:”we had the mosque and the temple, and now the church has come back”!

On August 5th 2012, on the feast day of Our Lady of the Snow, I offered Holy Mass in the ancient sanctuary with a select group. Present were families of Rojan and Davis,  Malayalees,  of Kirit Bhagat, Gujarathi and of Antony Robin Das, Bengali. We missed Kanthu Master. These are the people who helped me lovingly by their guidance and labour.  I would have liked the presence of my Provincial, Rev.Fr. Jose Changnachery, my benefactors and friends,  Rev. Fr. Joseph Auer, Lorraine Czachor, both of Chicago, Rev. Deacon Raymond and Marilyn Heap of  New Orleans, and, Anibal and Natividad Rojas of Carracas. These people provided me with the finance needed for the recovery and the repairing of this most ancient foot print of the Catholic Church, not just in Bharuch, but in the whole of Gujarat!. In all it has cost us rupees worth twenty thousand dollars.

As I was offering Mass in the ancient sanctuary on a temporary altar, I was overwhelmed with the thought, that for centuries from the same sanctuary Jesuit Missionaries from various lands offered the Sacred Body and Blood of Jesus to the glory of the Heavenly Father. The little group present was surprised to hear, that Bharuch has a special place in the history of Catholicism in India.  Bharuch is the only port in the list of Greek historian Ptolemy, between the Mediteranian and the Malabar coast. St. Thomas. the Apostle of India, could have very well been here before he reached the present day Kerala The first Bishop of Latin Church in India, that too in Kerala, was a Missionary in Bharuch almost eight hundred years ago. As per records in Rome, he had baptized ninety people in Bharuch!

The present structure, the church for the small number of families and the rectory, was entirely rebuilt in 1861 by Fr. Jacques S.J. chaplain of Surat, Bharuch and Baroda. I noticed that the Golden Bridge, a national heritage structure across the mighty Narmada, was built years later. As there was no possibility of expansion in the crowded ancient city, around the year 1960, Fr. Samada S.J. bought the property on the Station Road. Besides a new church, two high schools and two hostels for the tribal students, came up in the new property and all gradually forgot the existence of the old church building.   

Through a chance conversation with Kanthumaster, I came to know that the church building was still there and was rented out to a Parsi gentleman. I was excited. I had spent as seminarian three days with Fr. Samada in the old church and probably I am the only Jesuit alive who has slept in the old church. Being in the hands of a Parsi gave me great hope, as I had once received a gift of five acres of land from a Parsi to build the school in Hingoria village.

I suggested that he vacated the place and gave me some money, as he had used it for many years. I did not succeed in convincing him. I left the matter to the new parish priest Fr. Andrew Silveira and to our lawyer companion Fr. M.V. Joseph. They settled the matter for a just sum of Rupees four lakhs. I wanted to keep the building as it was. But the engineers decided that lack of maintenance during the last fifty years and the leaking roof had weakened the ancient walls and they would not be safe for the new asbestos roof. 

So the new roof has been put up on strong iron pillars. The old walls were plastered and painted anew. But the old floor was left as it was. The old building had no ceiling below the asbestos.  Now the rooms and the church have beautiful ceilings. A water tank is installed above the kitchen. The kitchen and the toilet are all beautifully made. Altogether new wiring for electricity has been installed. Tube lights and seven fans are provided. Fr. M.V. Joseph and his friends did all these jobs and presented the building back to me. On my request, the outside of the walls was left as it was.
                                              
People are asking me what am I going to do now? People of the local are expecting some new institution to come up there. I do not know anything about the future of this project. My object was to recover this oldest vestige of Catholicism in Gujarat. We know that there were Catholics in Bharuch centuries before the Western colonial era. We know that at least for a couple of centuries Worship was held in the very sanctuary of the recovered church building.  Now I hope that something beautiful will happen for the glory of God.

Immediately, I visualize a small programme.  I will spend most of my time in the Lal Bazar church. I plan to separate the sanctuary area with a curtain and keep always the Blessed Sacrament there. About ten people can pray in the sanctuary area any time undisturbed. We Jesuits are expected to pray about four hours a day. Besides, my next appointment will be, “to pray for the Church and for the Society of Jesus”. I will already start this final apostolate of long living Jesuits.  Besides I will spend time praying for Bharuch, Gujarat and for the whole world. At the same time, I will look around for opportunities for apostolic action and seek guidance for the same from the Lord and from people. I wish and hope that the project is Lord Jesus returning to the ancient port city of Bharuch on the banks of Nrmada. 
           
 Ad   Majoren   Dei   Gloriam 
 Anthony Moonnu S. J.
02640 – 240119  
                            
moonnu@jesuits.com                                       
 09879804971                    

postheadericon Mime on Life of St. Ignatius of Loyola


Here is the video of the performance put up by Geo George's team at St. Xavier's Loyola School on the eve of the Feast of
St. Ignatius of Loyola

Courtesy: Geo George
 http://www.facebook.com/geo.george.9843
When MOTHER TERESA received the Nobel Prize,

She was asked
" What can we do to Promote WORLD PEACE ?"

Her Answer was simple, " GO HOME AND LOVE YOUR FAMILY."