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Society today is variously described as exciting, permissive,
individualistic, anti-clerical, secular, post-christian, a
time of great opportunities, freedom and choice, among others.
The mission of the Church and of Religious Congregations in
the culture of today is hugely different in some respects
to the mission at the time of the origins of the Church and
of Religious congregations themselves. This observation is
as relevant to Ireland as it is to most 'modern westernised'
cultures. And yet in some ways the mission is similar or at
least the fundamental mission remains the same.
Below
are a number of reflections pertinent to this debate. We would
be very interested to here your views.
Barometer
of vitality
The new emphasis on all sides is on a renewed sense of mission.
The Church has awakened to a growing awareness that its fundamental
task is to evangelise and that this requires a constant effort
to relate the Gospel to the real condition of the people.
In fact a sense of mission is being seen as a barometer of
the vitality of the Church and of each individual Christian
and religious community. Our communities are meant to be not
inward looking, closed in upon themselves, but communities
of hope lived and communicated.
Frank McKay sm.

New
Language
Marists who understand their life as mission realise that
it is not an easy life, and that it demands as much courage
and adaptability as it ever did. Even if they never leave
their own country, they realise that the world they are living
in is rapidly changing. They realise that they will need to
adapt themselves to this new world, this new world of the
young, for example, with its new language, its new way of
looking at things, its new way of doing things. This is all
a consequence of the decision made by their Marist predecessors
- to set out and even set out again for the sake of the new
Church which is emerging and coming to birth in our times.
Craig Larkin sm.

In
the shoes of others
Marist historian Jean Coste, commenting on the courage of
the pioneer Marists, said: "There have been great Marists?
Yes! They accomplished something really extraordinary in learning
two foreign languages a the same time, Maori and English;
in adapting to habits, ways of life so different from theirs
and in bringing the Word of God to these new people. Let us
be great Marists today. Let us ourselves learn the new language
of our time, understand the reactions, the feelings, the way
of life of those who are different from us; of this young
generation who sometimes seem so far from us in their rejection
of our artificial modern world, our affluent society."
Jean Coste sm.

The
World as mission
The striking thing is that today …. A whole world of people
who may have been baptised and may have lived for a time as
Christians, but whose faith has been fragmented or stifled
by the secularised world we live in - a world with a completely
different set of values and standards, a world which excludes
the Gospel or the presence of God, yet which at the same time
desperately seeks the power and mercy of God. The missionary
who comes to this modern global mission territory will need
to come with the attitudes of a mother handling the sensitivities
of her adolescent child, accepting this world on its own terms
without condemning it, speaking to this world in terms it
can understand, trying to give flesh to the Word of God. From
the beginning, some Marists had answered the call to step
out of their own culture and go to foreign lands. But even
those who remained in their own countries had to step out
into another culture, and to recognise the seeds of the Gospel
in the secularised world they had found at home.
Craig Larkin sm.

Culture
Shock
The Christian who steps out of the familiar world of traditional
faith into the modern secularised world is not unlike a missionary
stepping into a culture totally strange to him. Especially
if this strange culture has not yet been deeply influenced
by the Gospel he will be tempted to get a very negative impression,
one in which behaviour and values that are simply strange
to him arouse the same indignation as things that are perhaps
indeed sinful. Without becoming blind to what is really sinful,
he must gradually learn to appreciate the positive values
that hide behind patterns of behaviour that are foreign to
him, and that can be true "seeds of the Word" and stepping
stones to faith. We have learned to see the way of life of
peoples far away as simply "other cultures". We should also
have learned that "other cultures" are constantly being born,
to the extent that culture change today has accelerated. The
heart of Marist identity is indeed not a "way of life"....It
is a mission, not to a faraway exotic cultures, but to a new
culture, and that is the secularised culture of today.
Jan Snijders. Sm.

Not
dead but absent
The many millions of people who have drifted away from the
Churches, in anger, or in indifference, or simply in perplexity,
are by definition out of reach to clerical ministry, nor do
they usually want to have anything to do with priests. Most
unbelievers of today are not convinced and militant atheists.
They are the nice people next door who just don't know. They
are baffled if the subject is brought up at all and quite
happy to stick to the available evidence as far as they see
it. And that means they get along quite nicely without religion....Our
modern world is honestly and sincerely profane...God is not
so much dead as absent: and not absent as one who should be
there. He is absent as a sort of misunderstanding that has
fortunately been cleared up.
Jan Snijders, sm.

The
modern world a new culture
In an article he wrote for lay Marists in France, Marist Father
Jan Snijders points out that the Marist project came to birth
during the momentous upheaval of the Enlightenment. The Enlightenment
is the natural "parent" of the secularised age we now experience
at least in most parts of the western world. Jan Snijders
indicates that the Marist approach which was so successful
in the beginning, is just as relevant if not more relevant
than before. He puts before his readers seven propositions:
- The
whole of the modern world is a new "culture".
- The
apostle of today in the modern world needs the same attitude
of openness as any missionary in any new culture.
- The
new culture has not yet been effectively evangelised: it
too needs the Gospel.
- Though
this new culture needs the Gospel, it does shelter the "seeds
of the Gospel", which need to be recognised and cultivated.
- One
of the best helps for this delicate activity is to follow
the example of Jesus who became human and hid himself in
the human condition. (Phil.2:6-7) In Marist terms this is
the attitude of being "hidden and unknown".
- Our
Marist tradition helps us with its stress on Marists as
"instruments of Mercy", who do a great deal of good in a
hidden way.
- This
is the "new church" which Marists are called on to build.
Jan Snijders. Sm.
And can we do it? Can a religious life shaken to its foundation
by change come to life again? Oh, no doubt about it. The era
speaks for itself. The fact is that we have been doing it
for 30 long years, with little approval, limited understanding,
small appreciation and little certainty beyond the gospel,
but the results are clear; when our own hearts are aflame,
no effort is too much, no effort fails."
Joan Chittister, O.S.B. The Fire in these Ashes.
Additional
Information
Archbishop Diarmuid Martin - Imagining the Future for Organised Religion - a paper presented to the Ceifin Conference 2004
Olivia
O'Leary:
Challenges to Irish Society Today. - a paper presented to the Irish Provincial Chapter 2000
Con
Casey: Church and Ministry: Envisaging Possibilities. - a paper presented to the Irish Provincial Chapter 2000
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