Catechists must share God’s love, uphold church teaching, says Pope Francis

03 Feb 2021

By Contributor

By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service

Pope Francis greeting participants.
Pope Francis greets participants in a meeting organized by the Italian bishops’ National Catechetical Office, during an audience at the Vatican Jan. 30, 2021. Photo: CNS photo/Vatican Media.

Religious education must focus on leading people to a personal relationship with Christ and building a community of believers where the talents of each person are valued and where all go out to share the Gospel and serve the poor, Pope Francis has said.

“The first protagonists of catechesis are those messengers of the Gospel, often laypeople, who generously get involved to share the beauty of having encountered Jesus,” the Holy Father has said on 30 January, to participants in a meeting organised by the Italian bishops’ National Catechetical Office.

Catechesis must “express God’s saving love, which precedes any moral and religious obligation on our part,” he said.

“‘You are loved, you are loved’ – this comes first; this is the gateway.”

Catechesis does “not impose the truth but appeals to freedom, like Jesus did,” he said, and “it should be marked by joy, encouragement, liveliness and a harmonious balance which will not reduce preaching to a few doctrines which are at times more philosophical than evangelical.”

However, Pope Francis said, a catechist always must teach what the church teaches and that includes the vision and teachings of the Second Vatican Council.

“This is magisterium: the council is the magisterium of the church,” he said.

“Either you are with the church and therefore you follow the council, or if you do not follow the council or you interpret it in your own way, as you wish, you are not with the church.”

“We must be demanding and strict on this point,” Pope Francis said.

“Selectivity with respect to the council” is something that has happened throughout the history of the church with its various councils, he said.

“It makes me think of a group of bishops who, after Vatican I (1869-70), left with a group of lay people, of groups, to continue the ‘true doctrine’ that was not that of Vatican I.”

“Today they ordain women,” the Holy Father said, apparently referring to the Old Catholic Churches that are part of the Union of Utrecht.

“Please,” Pope Francis told the group, “no concessions to those who try to present a catechesis that does not agree with the magisterium of the church.”

Pope Francis also told the group that after five years of on-again, off-again discussions, the Italian bishops’ conference “must begin the process for a national synod – community by community, diocese by diocese.”

Pope Francis gives a talk during an audience with participants in a meeting organized by the Italian bishops’ National Catechetical Office, at the Vatican Jan. 30, 2021. Photo: CNS photo/Vatican Media.

The bishops, religious and laypeople who gathered in Florence in 2015 for the Italian church’s national convention, held every 10 years, spoke about the idea of having a synod, but no formal steps were taken to organise it.

“Now, take it up again. It’s time,” Pope Francis said.

Quoting from his speech to the convention delegates in Florence, Pope Francis told members of the catechetical office that religious education must place the community dimension of the church at its centre.

“This is not the time for elitist strategies,” he said.

“This is the time to be artisans of open communities that know how to value the talents of each one. It is a time for missionary communities, free and disinterested, that do not seek relevance and advantage, but walk the paths of the people of our time, bending down to those on the margins.”

“It is the time for communities that can look disappointed young people in the eye, that welcome strangers and give hope to the disheartened,” he said.

“It is a time for communities that fearlessly dialogue with those who have different ideas. It is a time for communities that, like the good Samaritan, know how to draw near to those wounded by life, to bind up their wounds with compassion.”