Diversity a challenge for Church

Features 7 November 2012 Archbishop John Dew tells synod of difficulties of rampant secularism The vibrancy of youth in the Pacific region inspired Archbishop John Dew’s address to the Synod of…

Features

7 November 2012

Archbishop John Dew tells synod of difficulties of rampant secularism

The vibrancy of youth in the Pacific region inspired Archbishop John Dew’s address to the Synod of Bishops on the New Evangelisation for the transmission of the Christian Faith in Rome on October 8.

As president of the Federation of Catholic Bishops’ Conferences of Oceania (FCBCO), Archbishop John was responding to the Synod document Instrumentum Laboris and cited the large numbers of young people who enthusiastically participated in World Youth Day Sydney 2008 as well as other festivals in the region, vocations to priesthood and religious life with a missionary outreach beyond Oceania.

‘In these young people we see a sincere and sometimes painful search for meaning and spirituality as they bridge traditional cultural values and the excitement of possibilities in the technological age with the swipe of a smart-phone. It is sometimes difficult for them to resist the false attractions of an aggressive media and entertainment industry, he said.

He also spoke of a growing vitality of Catholic life in New Zealand through the ethnic diversity wrought by immigration.

‘The largest populations are from the Pacific Islands and the Philippines with smaller yet significant numbers of Catholics settling in New Zealand from the Middle East, India, Korea, China and the Sudan. Migrants bring their Catholic faith and their spirituality, as well as their experiences of war, conflict, poverty and displacement that have forged their faith, he said.

‘This vitality is, however, set against the challenging backdrop of an aggressive secularism which fails to acknowledge the transcendent dignity of the human person and often blocks dialogue with society on key bioethical and social issues such as euthanasia, abortion and the definition of marriage, he said.

‘The call to new evangelisation in this environment means that we must talk about evangelisers. The ongoing formation of all involved in the evangelising mission of the Church must be our first priority.

‘This means a rediscovery of the gift and vocation of baptism, meeting the risen Jesus in the scriptures and church community gathered around the Eucharist, a renewed commitment to prayer and contemplation, biblical study and … generous and courageous services of the community of Church and society, upholding and promoting family life and values,’ he said.

‘We need to reclaim the Catholic kerygmatic tradition, to speak boldly of the word of God, in and out of season, to reclaim the prophetic voice of the Church, to discern the signs of the times that call for the new evangelisation and to engage in proclaiming and living a Christian response to these signs.’

Archbishop John ended by quoting Ecclesia in Oceania that the Church in Oceania ‘may have the strength to follow faithfully the way of Jesus Christ, to tell courageously the truth of Jesus Christ, to live joyfully the life of Jesus Christ.’