January 24, 2011. Pope Benedict XVI is reminding all Catholics of their individual responsibility to go out and bring Christ to those who don't know Him. This is the core of the Pope's message for World Mission Day, which is slated for October 23.
His letter said: "We can't remain calm regarding the notion that, after two thousand years, there are still people that don't know Christ and still haven't heard his message of Salvation."
The Pope focused on the fact that there are a growing number of people who know God but have forgotten or abandoned the Gospel and the Church.
The pope said that even where Catholic traditions are dominant, people are reticent to open themselves up to the word of God. Instead, they act as if "God doesn't exist".
Aside counteracting these negative effects of globalization, some of the main objectives of World Mission Day is to garnering support for missions around the world. These organizations operate everything from sunday schools to hospitals and shelter for the world's most impovershed.
As the Pope says, it's a "universal mission involving all of us".
Vatican City, Jan 25, 2011 / 02:11 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Benedict said in a message on missionary efforts that the Gospel is not an "exclusive" message to an elite few but rather a gift to be shared and "a piece of good news to be passed on."
On Jan. 25, the Vatican released the Pope's official statement for the 85th annual World Mission Sunday which will be held on Oct. 23. The event is organized by the Propagation of the Faith and is set aside for Catholics worldwide to recommit themselves to the Church's missionary activity through prayer.
The theme of this year's celebration is, "As the Father has sent me, so I send you."
Pope Benedict opened his remarks by emphasizing that the "announcement of the Gospel is destined for everyone."
"The Church exists to evangelize," he said. "Her activity, in conformity with the word of Christ and under the influence of His grace and charity, becomes fully and truly present in all individuals and all peoples in order to lead them to faith in Christ."
The task of spreading the Gospel, then, "has lost none of its urgency," the Pope said. The Church cannot "rest easy" at the thought that "there are people who still do not know Christ, who have not yet heard His message of salvation."
Pope Benedict also addressed the growing number of individuals who've heard the Gospel but have forgotten it, abandoned it, or no longer identify themselves with the Church. He said that in modern times, even traditionally Christian societies are "reluctant to open themselves to the word of faith."
He cited a cultural shift -- influenced by globalization and increasing relativism -- as leading to mentalities and lifestyles "that ignore the Evangelical message as if God did not exist, and which exalt the search for well-being, easy earnings, career and success as the goals of life, even at the expense of moral values."
To those who hear and believe, the Pope said, the Gospel "is not the exclusive prerogative of those who received it, but a gift to be shared, a piece of good news to be passed on."
"This gift-commitment is entrusted not just to the few, but to all baptized people," he underscored.
Pope Benedict noted that the mission of evangelization entrusted to the Church is a complex process that includes "various elements."
He said that missionary activity must "maintain solidarity and sustain the institutions necessary to establish and consolidate the Church," as well as contribute to improving the living conditions of people in countries most affected by problems of poverty, malnutrition, disease, and lack of health care and education services.
"Ignoring the temporal problems of humanity," he said, "would not be in keeping with Jesus' own behavior, who 'went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and curing every disease and every sickness.'"
"Thus, by responsible participation in the mission of Christ, Christians become builders of the peace and solidarity that Christ gives us, and they collaborate in achieving God's plan of salvation for all humankind," Pope Benedict said.
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