The Church is Missionary by her nature
Quest:
39. “The Church is Missionary by her nature”(A.G.-2). How to exercise this
Mission in the dialogue with cultures and religions?
Introduction: “Go therefore
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit” (Mt. 28:19). The very commission Jesus
reveals the very nature of the Church. The Chuch is the mystical body of
Christ, a basic sacrament of salvation. This mission of the Church springs from
a FOUNTAIN OF LOVE (the very Nature of Triune God), that is from the love of
God the Father, as the principle without principle, from whom the Son is
generated and made FLESH and from whom the Holy Spirit proceeds through the
Son. It brings forth the salvefic presen
of Christ in the world. This commission also reveals that the salvation is open
for all. So the the establisment of God’s kinfdom entrusted on tthe Chuch. So
the Church is not the menifestation static nture rathe it is dynamic and
missionay which will be dicussed in the folllowing description.
The
Church is Missionary by Nature:
This statement is quoted from the Second Vatican Council’s decree on
AD
GENTES (on the Mission Activity of the Church). Since it is from the mission of the Son and
the mission of the Holy Spirit that she draws her origin, in accordance with
the decree of God the Father. The recevies her nature from the truine God that
we find in the sacred scriptures.
Old
Testament:
The scriptural foundation of Old Testament reveals the promise of God’s
salvation. This salvation is universal as well as specific. “I will put enmity
between you and the woman, and between your seed and her, he shall bruise your
head” (Gen 3:15). It is known as Pro-Evangelium, pre-preparation for Gospel
(the coming of the Saviour). Moreover, Gen, Chapters 1-11: it is not only
ontological value but more than that it contains a theology of history and a
witness to the faithfulness of God towards his creatures. He called Abraham
(Gen 12:3), “I will bless you those who bless you, and him who curses you I
will curse; and by you all the families of the earth shall bless themselves.”
This verse is “the conclusion of Pre-history of mankind” and also “the point
where pre-history and a new beginning of salvation history interlock”. Abraham
was chosen not for his own, not even for Israel’s sake, but for the
peoples.
The Prophets were tasked to chastise the
sin of the people, defend the rights of the oppressed and exploited and
proclaim the justice and mercy of God. Deutero-Isaiah called for greater openness
and he attributed to Cyrus, the king of the Persia, characteristics of Moses
(Is 45:1-7), proclaim the salvation of God “to the ends of the earth” (Is 49:6)
and put these words to into the mouth of Yahweh, “To the eunuchs…I will give,
in my house and within my walls, a monument and a name better than sons and
daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall never be effaced”
(56:5)
Although the OT knows nothing about a
missionary commission of the people of God, about a “going out” to the peoples,
it belongs to the framework of salvation history in which subsequently mission
will become possible. The action of God is the Old Covenant is essentially
promise; what Israel experiences with God in its history are open to the final
fulfillment which is realized in Christ”. Yet the OT is the foundation of the
mission theology of the NT.
New
Testament:
It shows in a very concrete way the Fulfillment of Promise in definitive form
in the “person Jesus Christ”. The “fulfillment” in Jesus the NT has a progressive
development that has interlink with OT. As we look at Jesus and on his mission,
we find in him “Exclusive and Inclusive” elements of salvation. The historical
Jesus (event-incarnation) and the risen Christ (faith-resurrection) proved by
his preaching, behavior and living that the promise of salvation is open for
all. “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel” (Mt 15:24, Mk
7:27b) and “And I tell you that many will come from east and west to take the
places with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob at the feast in the Kingdom of heaven”
(Mt 8:11ff). Thy kingdom come is central to Jesus’ entire ministry. God’s reign
is interpreted as the expression of God’s caring authority over the whole life.
Jesus inaugurated this mission. Finally Jesus’ passion, death and ressurection
reveals the nature of God’s Mission in Chist for His Church. The resurrection
was ultimately viewed as the fulfillment of God’s promise in the person Jesus
Christ. The resurrection and exaltation of Jesus are the signs of the victory
of Jesus over death, evil and sin. It is the fulfillment of God’s promise and
the gift of the Spirit and integrally linked to mission. It has determined the
early Christian community’s self-definition-identity-mission in Jesus Christ.
Trinitarian
Aspect:
This mission of the Church springs from a FOUNTAIN OF LOVE (the very Nature of
Triune God), that is from the love of God the Father, as the principle without
principle, from whom the Son is generated and made FLESH and from whom the Holy
Spirit proceeds through the Son. God the Father reveals his SAVING PLAN through
his Son and continues through the Holy Spirit.
The Eternal
Father: In the Father’s plan, the Church
was: a) prefigured from the beginning of the world; b) prepared wonderfully in the history of Israel, c) instituted finally in these last times, d) manifested
in the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, e)
to be brought to completion at
the end of time (LG 2; CCC 760-69).
The Incarnate Son, Jesus Christ:
“Christ, the one Mediator, established and ceaselessly sustains here on earth
his holy Church” (CCC 763-66).
The Church originated and grew from Christ. Like the Incarnate Son, the Church
is both visible and invisible, human and divine. As the Son of God “became
flesh” to save us from our sins, so the spiritual community of the Church takes
on visible social structure to serve its mission (LG 8; CCC 771-73).
The
Holy Spirit:
who
dwells in the Church and in the hearts of the faithful as in a temple (1 Cor 3:16), and bears witness to
their adoptive sonship (Gal 4:6).
The Spirit guides the Church into the fullness of truth (Jn 16:13), gives her a unity of fellowship and service, and
constantly renews and leads her to perfect union with her Spouse, Christ (CCC 767).
The Church is mystery because of its relationship to Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit.
It manifests the Blessed Trinity by both its nature and mission.
First, by its origin the
Church arose from the saving design of the Father, the redemptive mission of
the Son and the sanctifying work of the Spirit. Second, in structure:
just as the Trinity is a community, the communion of
love of Father, Son and
Holy Spirit, so too the Church is a community, a communion of believers drawn together by Christ in the power
of the Holy Spirit. Third, the mission of
the Church originates “from the mission of the Son and the mission of the Holy
Spirit, in accordance with the decree of God the Father” (cf. AG 2).
Ecclesiological Aspect: It shows the image of the Church
as “Missio dei”( Kingdom of God). It is the the Apostolic Kerygma centred on Jesus
Christ rather the Kingdom of God (Acts 8:12; 28:31; Eph 5:5; 2 Pet 1:11). As
the church participates in the mission of Jesus Christ, it participates in
God's mission in God's world through the power of the Holy Spirit. Thus, Jesus
Christ is the central to the Church’s proclamation of the Kingdom. “The Kingdom
of God…is before all else a person with the face and name of Jesus of Nazareth,
the image of the invisible God” (RM 18).
This is the major theme of Christ’s own
teaching in the Synoptic Gospels. But what exactly is this “kingdom”? The
biblical images: the Kingdom of God is the Good News preached to the poor, the
gift of God, our “Abba,”
(Father) who is sensitive to the needs and sufferings of every human being. It
is the seed quietly sown, the offer of pardon to sinners, and the banquet of
table-fellowship and joyful communion with the Lord and our fellow men and
women, the gift of salvation, eternal life. But it is a gift we must seek,
demanding vigilance and active use of talents — a task and project as well as a gift (II 39-47).
Christ “inaugurated his Church by
preaching the coming of God’s Kingdom” (cf.
LG 5). His parables about the Kingdom of God employed many specific
images: a treasure hidden
in a field, the leaven
raising the dough, the tiny mustard seed
growing into a tall tree, a fish net
catching the good and the bad.
Redemptoris Missio, the encyclical of
John Paul II also affirmed the Vat II councils’ notion of Church’s missionary
nature, “basing it in a dynamic way on the Trinitarian mission itself” (RM 1).
“Missionary Nature of the Church” and “Trinitarian Foundation” these two
fundamental concepts are emphasized: a) “Missionary Nature” has be to
understood as missionary character which is “constitutive element” of the
Church; and b) “Trinitarian Foundation” expresses divine ad-intra (loving
relationship, freedom and nature: communion) and ad-extra: Trinitarian mission
entrusted to be continued through the Church, being revealed through the Person
Jesus Christ.
Church’s
carrying out mission in a dialogical approach with Culture and Religions: It is the basic
kergma which accoplissed by proclaimamation and mission of the church. The
fundamental source of dialogical approch lies in God which has been menifested
in and through the incarnation of his son Jesus Christ.
Incarnation: The Incarnation represents the belief that Jesus, who is the non-created
second hypostasis of the triune God, took on a human
body and nature and became both man and God. In the Bible its clearest teaching is in John 1:14: "And the
Word became flesh, and dwelt among us." The identification of Jesus as the “Logos” which became incarnated. It is the
absolute primacy of Christ is that begins from above (with God’s plan), and not
from below (with man’s need). It also menifests the value of human cultures
that God embraced.
Culture and
Religion: The
Catholic Church rejects nothing that is true and holy in these religions. She
regards with sincere reverence those ways of conduct and of life, those
precepts and teachings which, though differing in many aspects from the ones
she holds and sets forth, nonetheless often reflect a ray of that Truth which
enlightens all men. The Church, therefore, exhorts her sons, that through
dialogue and collaboration with the followers of other religions, carried out
with prudence and love and in witness to the Christian faith and life, they
recognize, preserve and promote the good things, spiritual and moral, as well
as the socio-cultural values found among these men. (NA-2). The varrious cultures are the diffrent
gift of the Holy Spirit.
Dialogical Approch: The preceedins
discussion help us to understand how God made dialogue with his people through
covenant which got its finality through giving his son to us who was man like
us. This anticiption with the cultures was thus elevated and purified by God.
It is at the same way the entrusted to Chuch as the instrument of Christ to
carry out the salvifi mission of the God through doalogical appraoch. Here are
some that the involves the dialogical approch to fulfil the mossion of the
Church.
The
Church in the service of God’s Kingdom: We find in the Scripture that the
central theme of Jesus’ proclamation was the Kingdom of God. “Thy Kingdom
Come”: Jesus in his prayers instructs his the apostles and also us to pray for
the coming of God’s Kingdom. He sums up his whole mission in terms of God’s
Kingdom. “I must proclaim the good news of the kingdom of God..because this is
what I was sent to do” (Lk 4:43; EN 1). The kingdom is essentially open to all;
it is universal; all are invited to it (RM 14). One manifests acceptance of the
kingdom through conversion: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is close at
hand” (Mt 3:2). It is our dutu to introduce the kingdom of God in diffrent
contex and culture through our loving service. As the Father Sent Me, So Am I
Sending You”: The sending of the Church to proclaim the Good News was a
continuation of the sending of Jesus himself. As Jesus Christ was sent, so did
he send the Apostles and us.
The Church Sends Missionaries: As Jesus
sent the Apostles, likewise, the Church sends missionaries. Proclamation and
evangelization are ecclesial acts. Every evangelizer and evangelical activity
is linked to the Universal Church. The Congregation for the Evangelization of
Peoples coordinates the evangelizing tasks in practical level.
Growing
in Communication:
God desires that all humankind to be united in the oneness of a family, modeled
on the Holy Trinity. The Church is entrusted this mission to proclaim and work
tangible for establishing communion.
Witness
through Life:
Jesus sent his Apostles with explicit command to be his witnesses, “You will be
my witnesses not only in Jerusalem but throughout Judea and Samaria, and indeed
to the ends of the Earth” (Acts 1:8). This vocation is for all Christians.
Self
Evangelization:
The Christian community in order to be true evangelizing community needs
constantly be evangelized. The Church living in this world is always exposed to
dangers. She needs to listen to the Gospel and renew the grace of conversion.
Only a community that is aware of its own need to be evangelized is capable of
sharing the message of salvation with others (EN 13).
Conclusion: The whole
Church is of its its nature missionary
and the work of evangelisation is to be considered a fundamental duty of the
people of God, all Christ's faithful must be conscious of the responsibility to
play their part in missionary activity. From the time of Christ, we are given
the great commission of Christ -“Go therefore and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit”
(Mt. 28:19). It deals with the missionary mandate to evangelize. It is not our
mission but God’s mission in this world, in the Church and the entire cosmos
which is entrusted to us. As Christian, it is our duty to prcalim the that
mission from church to the entire world, from faith in Christ to believers of
other faiths by word and deed the coming of the kingdom of God in Jesus
Christ. This task is achieved by means
of the church's participation in God's mission of reconciling people to God, to
themselves, to each other, and to the world, and gathering them into the church
through repentance and faith in Jesus Christ by the work of the Holy Spirit
with a view to the transformation of the world as a sign of the coming of the
kingdom in Jesus Christ.
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