The word "evangelization has always scared me.
I think it’s because most of the time I’ve only seen really awful examples of it.
I think it’s because most of the time I’ve only seen really awful examples of it.
And when there was really good examples of it . . . I didn’t
even really realize it was evangelization.
So now we have the NEW evangelization.
Catchy.
I don’t do catchy.
Further, it is like saying, “the NEW seafood platter.”
I didn’t like the old seafood platter and in fact do not
like seafood altogether. So sticking “new”
on the front of it is not all that enticing.
Tomorrow we’ll focus on making evangelization more
appetizing. Today we’ll focus on the
“new” aspect.
“new” aspect.
Dr. Peter Kreeft gave a lecture at St. Charles Borromeo
Seminary in Cleveland this past week and he spoke on the five points that make
the new evangelization “new”. This is a
VERY brief overview of what he said:
There are five points that make this current call to evangelization
new.
1.
NEW AUDIENCE:
We no longer need to go to the most remote parts of Africa to find “pagans”
in order to convert them. In fact,
Africa now is one of the most Christian continents on the planet. The “new Africa” is now Western
Catholics. After losing (he said one, I’ll
say two) generations of Catholics, we have lost the foundation of what it is to
be a Catholic. So we have many people
who have been sacramentalized, but they have not been catechized. Who is Jesus?
What is our relationship with him?
What does he teach us? We need to
evangelize those on the inside.
2.
NEW AGENTS:
“Here comes everybody” besides the title of a popular business book is
also a description of the Catholic Church.
The job of evangelization is not the job of priests or nuns or brothers
or deacons. If we leave it to them very
little will get done. There are 39,000
priests in the United States and 314,000,000 people. Not a good ratio for getting things like evangelization
done. There are 78.2 people however that
claim to be Catholic. With an army like
that, we can start doing something.
3.
NEW METHOD:
This is the part that scares me and most people who are scared. This is where I envision young men with black
ties on going door to door or a guy on a downtown corner handing out tracks and
telling people that they are going to hell.
But the new evangelization is about personal relationships. It is about loving people. It is about inviting, not condemning. It’s about patience.
4.
NEW END:
It is no longer about finding pagan babies and baptizing them. It is about finding the wandering baptized
and getting them to encounter Christ who is the foundation of their
sacraments. “The building has lost
contact with its foundation.” We are to
connect them.
5.
NEW HOPE:
As bad as things are, they provide hope for the future. The first millennium showed great unity
within the Church. The second millennium
was about division as the Church fractured into so called “denominations.” There is hope for the new unity that is even
greater in the third millennium. The
first unity was great but it was a unity based on the fact that there was
nothing else. The new unity, if and when
it occurs, will be even greater because it will be a chosen unity.
3 comments:
Thank you Father. You blog dampens my fear and anger, increases my hope and patience. I needed that.
Stephen
Dr. Scott Hahn and Ralph Martin (EWTN program entitled "The New Evangelization") said that every parish organization should be contributing to the New Evangelization.
How do we do that?
Gosh, you took good notes at that lecture!
The thing I liked the most about Peter Kreeft's message on Sunday was his hope in the face of what can so easily be characterized as the darkness of the current age. He is so very confident about the irrepressibility and irresistibility of the Goodness, Beauty, and Truth that is to be found in Christ, most accessibly in our Catholic Church.
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