I led a study day on the New Evangelisation last week. The first talk was simply about what it all means.
In one sense, it’s an odd phrase: Isn’t evangelisation always new?
Even Blessed John Paul II’s famous tag-line is not too helpful in this respect. He said we need an evangelisation that is ‘new in its ardour, new in its methods, and new in its means of expression’. But there is nothing new about needing this newness – haven’t we always needed new ardour, new expressions, new methods? And hasn’t the Church always (well, nearly always) responded with some magnificent and unexpected and new embodiment of the missionary spirit?
On the other hand, perhaps there is something truly new about the present situation, meaning the situation of the Church during and since Blessed John Paul II’s pontificate. Some of the new factors might include: the crisis of ‘missiology’ (the theology of mission and evangelisation) in the second half of the twentieth century, and the corresponding crisis within the Church’s missionary outreach; the number of baptised people, of people who have been ‘initiated’ sacramentally, who have not really heard the Gospel message in a personal way, who have not been evangelised themselves, or perhaps have not been well catechised after their initiation; the need to re-evangelise former Christian cultures and societies (this isn’t new, but it is certainly pressing and it feels new to those living through it); or the challenge for Western societies to hold onto their Christian moral and spiritual roots before they truly slip into a post-Christian secularism – one of Pope Benedict’s themes.
I’m just summarising. If you are interested, please listen to the talk yourself.
You can download the talk here.
[I post about the second half of the study day here, which includes the audio links: The New Evangelisation in practice: five UK initiatives and their significance for the wider Church]
I’d like to hear the second part!
I joined an adult education book discussion group last year that included a number of disillusioned or even bitter former / lapsed Christians. A few of them went to ‘An Introduction to Islam’ course and came back with a whole new respect for Muslims. There’s no way they’d have attended a similar Christian event.
I’ve asked around about the New Ev, and got nothing very clear. One priest said it meant pushing the Catechism of the Catholic Church. It is supposed to be at the heart of the half-century celebration of Vatican II, so presumably the bishops are preparing to launch something. These two talks were very helpful and interesting.
It would still be useful to know more about the guts of the N.E. rather than just the need and some means of delivering it. The uncatechised, even the ones still in the pews, need the faith in a nutshell rather than the faith in a pretty un-readable 1000+ page tome. Keep at it.
Thanks David. Have you seen the YouCat? Simpler, shorter, and with cartoons!
http://www.cts-online.org.uk/acatalog/info_DO845.html