
s
some of our congregations and provinces decline in number,
there is a danger that we become rather inward looking,
self-protective and insular and the impulse to evangelization
weakens in us. Where this is so, it is important to
set before ourselves - and those in formation - the
challenge of Evangelization.
Speaking
of the early Dominicans, Honorius III said: "The
Brothers of this order are totally deputed to evangelization."
A striking statement. But it is no less striking than
that of Paul VI in 1970 when he reminded us that: "the
Dominican order would undoubtedly sin against itself
if it turned away from this missionary duty", or
the assertion of fr. Vicaire that the Order was the
"first truly missionary Institute in the history
of the Church."
Our
present understanding of evangelization has been transformed
by the insights of Vatican II, Evangelii Nuntiandi and
the intense reflection of recent years.
Before
Vatican II the thrust of evangelization put emphasis
on bringing the Gospel to the non-Christian, a movement
from the center to the periphery. Today this 'movement
has been enriched by another movement; from the periphery
to the center in which the "new churches"
give witness and in their turn help to evangelize "older
churches". Europe now learns from Latin America,
Africa and the churches in Asia. We have entered a stage
of listening to one another, a coresponsibility of all
for all.
Conscious
of this movement and the challenge it presents we are
also enriched by Dominic's original vision, his enthusiasm
for evangelization.
Dominic's
unfolding Vision
Dominic's
burning passion for the salvation of all left a powerful
impression on those who were his closest associates.
The young William of Kontferrat tells us, that "Dominic
was filled with a greater zeal for the salvation of
all than anyone else I have ever met." "So
both agreed and even promised each other that when Brother
Dominic had organized his Order and I had studied theology
for two years, we would go away together and do all
that we could to convert the pagans, in Prussia and
in other lands of the North."
Statements
such as these are to be found in many of the depositions
made at the process of canonization. Jordan of Saxony
echoes them in the Libellus when he says: "…
with all his energy and with passionate zeal, (Dominic)
set himself to win all the souls he could for Christ.
His heart was full of an extraordinary, almost incredible
yearning for the salvation of everyone". Jordan
also tells us: "He had a special prayer which he
often made to God, that God would grant him true charity,
which would be effective in caring for and winning the
salvation of all; he thought he would only really be
a member of Christ's Body when he would spend himself
utterly with all his strength in the winning of souls.
Dominic
never achieved his ambition to be a missionary to the
non-Christian world but he directed the Order to this
path. At the Chapter of 1221 it was decided to send
bands of Dominicans to three different territories beyond
the frontiers of Christendom. Those who were sent with
Paul of Hungary asked to go to the Cumans thus fulfilling
Dominic's ambition. It was the Chapter that made these
decisions but the inspiration came from Dominic.
Dominic's
Method of Evangelization
William
of Montferrat tells us; "Many times we talked about
the means of salvation for ourselves and others."
Dominic developed precise convictions about the way
in which evangelization should take place. As in so
many other areas, these often ran counter to the accepted
ideas about evangelization at the time.
1.
Preaching in Poverty on the Apostolic Model :
We know the exact moment when this conviction was first
manifested and became his own personal way of preaching
God's Word. It was June 1206 when Diego and Dominic
met the Cistercian legates at Montpellier. Discouraged
by the apparent failure of their preaching they turned
to the bishop for advice. His comment was: "I do
not think that you are setting about this in the right
way. In my opinion you will never be able to bring these
people back to the faith by talking to them, because
they are much more inclined to be swayed by example."
For the heretics a preacher of preacher of the Gospel
was one who lived according to the apostolic model.
Diego and Dominic made this their own personal way of
preaching and Dominic continued to develop the method
after Diego's death, His intuition came from the connection
in the Gospels, between mission and the form of life
enjoined by Christ. Dominic's principal commitment was
to preach the Gospel. "His own personal vocation
was something more definite still: to bring the Gospel
to far-distant people who had not received it."
2.
Itinerancy - Apostolic Mobility : Apostolic
mobility was a key element in Dominic's evangelical
method. In this too, he wanted to conform his life to
that of Christ. Even in houses of the order he had no
room that he could call his own. This mobility was an
apostolic tool which enabled him to be with and among
people. Fr. Vicaire is careful to note that "if
his ministry was universal in the type of person addressed
and in the immediate success he hoped for, his plan
of action was precise. It was contact by preaching not
by involvement in the localised pastoral activity."
3.
The Role of Communion with the Church : When
Diego and Dominic went to Rome in 1206 they requested
the Pope to permit them to devote themselves to a mission
among the people of Northern Europe. He refused. It
must have been a painful obedience as it appeared to
run counter to their apostolic inspiration. And yet
without these acts of obedience there would have been
no Order. Furthermore, had they received permission,
they would probably have become part of the missionary
movement current in Northern Europe at the time - a
method based on conquest. It was not the model of evangelization
envisaged by Dominic or the first Dominican missionaries.
They wanted no support from any army. Dominic and the
order could so easily have become a part of a missionary
movement which tied evangelization to conquest. Obedience
saved them from this. They rejected this form of evangelization
in favour of a method based on that of the apostles
- preaching in poverty, independent of the civil power.
In
a letter to the order in 1970 Cardinal Villot described
Dominic as being "stupifyingly free." For
Dominic freedom of spirit was not an accident but a
deliberate choice.
Dominic's
convictions about evangelization are mirrored in what
Paul VI says about the means of Evangelization in E.N.
40-48.
Mission
to the World
Under
Dominic's successors the frontiers of evangelization
expanded to include the world. This occurred in two
phases - that which followed Dominic's death and that
which coincided with the great maritime discoveries
of the 15th and 16th centuries.
On
Dominic's death Jordan of Saxony established missions
in North Africa and the Middle East. Raymond of Penyafort
opened schools for the study of oriental languages and
Islamic studies and a succession of Popes entrusted
the order with new areas for evangelization.
The
second phase began with the discovery of the Americas
and the sea routes to Asia. It is a good story but it
is not all good. On the 15th July, 1582, Paul Constabile,
the then Master of the order wrote saying that the Dominicans
had fallen behind in their missionary activity. It was
in response to this letter that the Dominicans of the
Rosary Province began work in Asia. It is from among
these early missionaries that the Japanese and Vietnamese
martyrs were drawn.
The
Japanese and Vietnamese Martyrs
On
18th October last year, John Paul II canonized Lorenzo
Ruiz, a Filipino layman and fifteen companions. The
Decree of Beatification in 1980 noted: "in one
way or another all... belong to the Order of Preachers."
They comprised two catechists, two women members of
the Dominican Laity, two Lay brothers novices and nine
priests together with Lorenzo who was a member of the
Rosary Confraternity. Nine were Japanese, four Spanish
and one each from the Philippines, Italy and France
reflecting the international character of the missionaries.
As
I write this letter, the canonization of the Vietnamese
martyrs is about to take place. They include 10 members
off: the Dominican Laity, 3 Tertiary Priests, 6 Dominican
Bishop and 16 priests.
These
events coincide with the celebration of the 4th centenary
of the Rosary Province in the Orient. Thirty-two of
the new saints were members of the province.
When
Humbert of Romans appealed for volunteers for the mission
in 1255 he noted that two things tended to inhibit the
brethren from volunteering for the work of evangelization.
"One is an ignorance of languages, the study of
which, scarcely any brother will undertake, the majority
preferring to exercise their intellects on all sorts
of novelties rather than study what would be really
useful... The other obstacle is love of one's country…
" A noteworthy aspect of the canonizations this
year is the insistence that was placed at the time on
learning the languages of the people. Missionaries were
given six months to learn the local language. If they
did not succeed, they were sent home.
Another
striking feature was their use of music and drama in
evangelization - their dependence on the Word of God
alone, and a refusal to be identified with the colonial
power.
Fourthly,
there was their opposition to slavery and all forms
of injustice and greed and the insistence of men like
Domingo de Salazar that those who had been enslaved
should receive restitution.
Striking
too was their closeness to the peoplethey evangelized
and their loyalty and support for one another during
their imprisonment and trial. They made community with
one another. When Magdalena of Nagasaki heard that Jordan
Esteban had been imprisoned she immediately gave herself
up to the authorities that she might share his martyrdom.
Her only crime was that she had given them hospitality.
We celebrated these men and women and we recognize that
in these canonizations there is a message for us today.
At
the same time we are aware that, today, we cannot work
in precisely the same way, for the methods of evangelization
change according to the times.
Before
Vatican II, evangelization tended to have a geographical
and juridical significance. The first Missionary Congress
of Brothers and Sisters held at Madrid in 1973 passed
several resolutions with regard to this which are now
summed up in LCO 112.
Geographical
and Juridical Models
These
models identified evangelization with work in non Christian
countries and certain countries were identified as mission
territories. But the widespread growth of secularism
which denies the place of God in human life has created
the need for a second evangelization in many Christian
countries. And indifference to the faith and the spread
of unbelief among the baptized presents an urgent need
for an evangelization directed to the baptized. Closely
related to this is the challenge of consumerism and
the consumer mentality which tends to make the pursuit
of pleasure the supreme value in human life, cf. E.N.
55.
Another
weakness, is that those who worked in mission territories,
irrespective of the work they engaged in, were termed
missionaries. Evangelii Nuntiandi corrected this in
stating that "there is no true evangelization,
if the name, the teaching, life, the promises, the kingdom
and the mystery of Jesus of Nazareth are not proclaimed",
(E.N.22.). This is the criterion for judging whether
we are truly evangelizers or not.
While
conscious of the limitations of such models there is
still an urgent need to proclaim the Good News to those
who have not received it. Faithful to the memory of
St. Dominic, we Dominicans should continue to seek to
work in those countries which are beyond the borders
of western culture. Asia, home to 60% of the world's
population, immediately springs to mind, as does Africa
and parts of the Americas.
New
and Emerging Models of Evangelization
Evangelii
Nuntiandi reminded us that “the methods of evangelization
change according to the times...” (E.N.40). As
a response to this, new models of evangelization have
begun to emerge.
There
is the realization that as we approach the end of the
second millennium of Christianity the progress of evangelization
over 2,000 years has been extremely limited. Catholics
account for just 18% of the world's population. While
the structures of the Church exist almost everywhere,
the saving message of Jesus has not been universally,
or indeed, widely accepted. Evangelization remains as
urgent a task today as in the time of St. Dominic.
Building
the kingdom involves a struggle with all those things
that obstruct its growth - sin in all its forms. In
one society, it may be characterized by a struggle with
the unjust structures that oppress people, in another
it may involve a struggle with the corrosive influence
of a creeping materialism and consumer mentality. As
a consequence, evangelization must necessarily develop
different facets according to the circumstances in which
it is conducted. The message of Jesus, the promise of
salvation and the kingdom will be the same but the message
will be contextualized in that it will respond in a
specific way to the challenges presented by this or
that situation. This discernment requires a sensitive
awareness among evangelizers.
The
complexity of modern society suggests that those who
devote themselves to the work of evangelization need
the assistance of those skilled in the social sciences
to enable them to respond in a meaningful way. Not every
vicariate, province or congregation is able tai supply
such skilled personnel. If we do not have such skills
among ourselves, we should seek them from others, in
the Church or the secular world. Our history instructs
us in this new orientation. The Chapter of 1232 discouraged
the study of pagan philosophers and the secular sciences
among Dominicans. Within twenty years of taking this
decision Thomas and Albert saw the need for such study
and another Chapter reversed the decision. Today we
need the help of those skilled in social psychology,
cultural anthropology, comparative religions... to help
us devise new methods of evangelization for today. A
failure to avail ourselves of such skills will impoverish
the work we do.
In
this regard, I wish to state the need for on-going or
permanent formation, the need for a sabbatical year
for evangelizers. There is a marked difference between
those provinces and vicariates who have accepted the
need for such formation and have made the necessary
sacrifices to implement such a policy and those provinces
which have not done so.
In
his work on the "Offices of the Order", Humbert
of Romans remarks that it is the duty of the Master
to have a "special care and fervent zeal"
in promoting the work of evangelization. In this regard
he adds that it is the duty of the Master to see that
there is always some writing regarding the beliefs of
other peoples. If I were to pick out one area in which
the order has fallen behind today in evangelization
it is the lack of theological reflection on the whole
question of mission in the Church and absence of a Dominican
contribution, with a few exceptions, to the search for
new methods of evangelization urged on the Church by
John Paul II. The document on Mission from the Avila
Chapter benefited greatly from the presence of a number
of theologians involved in Evangelization.
Inculturation
Intimately
connected with the search for new methods of evangelization
is the question of culture. In the colonial era evangelization
tended to be identified with the culture of the colonizer.
The success of evangelization often appeared to bear
a relationship to the success with which she culture
of the colonizer penetrated and transformed the culture
of the colonized. Where this process was successful
the progress of evangelization was likewise numerically
successful. But where the implantation of the colonizing
culture was superficial, the numerical growth of Christianity
was likewise limited. The rapid christianization of
the Americas in the 16th century was in marked contrast
to the progress of evangelization in Asia but as long
as the relationship between evangelization and the culture
of the colonist bore fruit there was little reflection
on its side effects, in particular, the alienation of
Christian communities from their cultural roots, and
identification of Christianity with an alien culture.
Today,
the relationship between the Gospel and culture has
become the focus of intense reflection. Reflection focuses
not only on the content of evangelization but, in particular,
upon the way it is communicated (c.f., E.N.20).
While
it is easy to speculate about inculturation, it is extremely
difficult to put it into reality. There is no such thing
as a disembodied Christianity. Wherever Christianity
exists it is incarnate in a culture - either the culture
of the people among whom the Christian community lives
or that of the evangelizes: It presupposes a special
sensitivity on the part of the evangelizer to evangelize
in a culture other than his/her own.
What
is certain is that the progress of evangelization has
been hampered by a failure to appreciate other cultures.
"Our first task in approaching another people,
another culture, another religion" says Kenneth
Cragg, "is to take off our shoes for the place
we are approaching is holy. Else we may find ourselves
treading on people’s dreams. More seriously still,
we may forget that God was there before we arrived."
Inculturation
is a continuing challenge urged upon us by the Holy
Father. If its implications are not as yet fully understood,
we should nevertheless be a part of that ecclesial search.
To
assist this process of inculturation provinces might
consider the possibility of those destined for the mission
pursuing part of their studies and formation in the
countries where they will be working, (c.f. LCO. 119).
Collaboration
in Evangelization
The
decline in numbers throughout the Order over the past
twenty years has been most severely experienced in the
emerging churches. Provinces which once sent big numbers
too evangelize in other countries are no longer able
to do so. This has led to an acute shortage ref key
personnel in number of mission vicariates and provinces.
In certain cases the addition of just two or three would
alleviate a critical situation.
The
great need of the order in some vicariates and provinces
urges me to make a direct appeal to the brethren throughout
the order. I urge you to discern in community those
who are able and willing to engage in inculturated evangelization
in the context of another country that as an order we
may witness to the greater universality of the Church.
The international character of the Japanese martyrs,
drawn from five different countries, is a lesson for
us. Today, there is a similar need for an international
approach to the work of evangelization.
It
is time, too to examine the possibility of more collaboration
between entities who have small numbers.
If
a small Province/Vicariate tries to have all its own
formation it must ask itself several questions:
(1)
Has it sufficient and suitable formators?
(2)
Is it putting the needs of the formandi in the first
place?
(3)
Are the studies sufficient to enable the students become
good doctrinal and prophetic preachers open to the needs
of the times?
(4)
Is it sufficiently appreciative of the international
character of the Order?
Likewise
I urge those working in the developed countries of the
North to become evangelizing communities. The recent
Acts of the Province of England state: "we regard
all of our houses as mission stations from which we
may exercise our vocation as heralds of the Gospel of
Christ."
Collaboration
with the Sisters and the Laity
In
1968 fr. Aniceto Fernandez wrote to the Dominican sisters
throughout the world in response to enquiries concerning
their place in the order. He wrote: "The time has
now come to examine our relationships carefully. In
this modern world where our Saviour has put us together
to carry on his great work of salvation, we are called
to embrace together the spirit and tradition bequeathed
to us by St. Dominic, to search together and to build
together our communities of brothers and sisters in
the service of the Church." Fr. Aniceto speaks
of the sisters as equals and invites them to search
together with the brothers for the best way of carrying
out their apostolate.
Much
has been achieved in the intervening years - collaboration
in formation, pastoral ministry, teaching at the University
level, preaching, jointly run conference and retreat
centers... The president of one of our finest faculties
of theology is a sister. Wherever such collaboration
has been realized, despite initial difficulties, there
has been mutual enrichment. And we are only beginning.
Since
1968, successive Chapters and Mission Congresses have
urged cooperation in formation, joint preparation of
future missionaries, in the ministry of the word, retreats,
promotion of vocations, in the work of justice and peace,
common prayer, teaching.
Likewise
I urge on you the need for collaboration with the laity
in the work of evangelization. Again our history is
instructive. The first efforts of Bartolome de Las Casas
to evangelize the people of Venezuela ended in failure.
Later in Guatemala in an area called "The Land
of War" because of the ferocity of its people he
evolved a completely new method of evangelization. He
and his colleagues first mastered the language composing
verses in the dialect of the people about creation,
the fall and redemption and taught them to Christian
Indian traders who penetrated the mountains, sang them
and aroused the curiosity of the people to hear more.
The laity were the key to the first evangelization of
Guatemala.
To
this day it is interesting to visit the shrine of our
Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico on the feast in December
and see the people re-enact in song and drama the story
of creation and redemption.
In
conclusion, let me repeat once again what was stated
at Quezon City: “What lies before us at this time
is a challenge to become what St. Dominic had begun;
a family joined in unity of life and complementarity
of service to the Church and the world.” This
has particular application in the work of evangelization.

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