1270303432_icontexto-inside-facebook.png|1270303400_icontexto-inside-twitter.png

O Blog do TriploV

 

Revista

logo.jpg

ABSOLUTAMENTE N'OVO

Revista TriploV de Artes, Religiões e Ciências

» Nova Série

Arquivo do Blog

À PROCURA DA PALAVRA e outros textos

January 17th, 2007 by Estela Guedes - Editor TriploG

À PROCURA DA PALAVRA

P. Vitor Gonçalves

 

DOMINGO III COMUM     Ano C

“O corpo não é constituído por um só membro,

mas por muitos.”

1 Cor 12, 14

 

“Aprender” a unidade

        

         Em plena semana de oração pela unidade dos cristãos, lembra-nos S. Paulo a imagem do corpo e dos membros para falar da união em Cristo. No fundo, experimentamos todos os dias que se “a cabeça não anda bem, o corpo é que paga”, e como é difícil fazer qualquer coisa quando dói um dente, ou estamos constipados, ou simplesmente cansados. O nosso corpo é uma grande parábola da vida, e bem ansiamos por uma unidade que não é fácil construir. Há uma solidariedade que facilmente se esquece. A mesma que nos revela o quanto dependemos uns dos outros para uma vida mais abundante.

         Entrevistado sobre os caminhos da ética, Victor Cláudio, doutorado em Psicologia, disse à revista Xis: ” A solidariedade, que era um valor fundamental antes de 74-75, caiu em desuso. Quando somos solidários com os outros não lhes estamos a pedir nada. […] Hoje, nem convém sermos solidários, porque a ideia é competir com os outros. Veja-se a competição entre os miúdos, que é uma coisa atroz (…). É um movimento claramente individualista. Ser solidário é ser tolo, é ser idiota. Mas é importante perceber que não ganhamos nada se passarmos por ciam do outro. […] A educação ética deveria começar em casa, passar pela escola, da pré-primária até ao doutoramento.” E será que há doutoramento para esta aprendizagem da corresponsabilidade? O que nos faz pessoas são os laços mútuos de partilha e compromisso, de procura da verdade e construção da justiça, de valorização dos dons de cada um, ou tudo pode ser relativizado ao individualismo e à sede de “ter”?

         Mas um corpo “aprende” a unidade com esforço e trabalho. Se cede aos apetites imediatos de alguns membros, não se desenvolve. Se foge das dificuldades nos momentos próprios (ou o protegem demasiado!), não se robustece para desafios maiores. Se age sem pensar nas consequências, põe em causa a sua própria existência. Não adianta esconder a cabeça na areia: crescer implica sempre alguma espécie de sofrimento. Porque pede uma profundidade de pensamento, uma responsabilização, e uma coragem, pouco valorizadas na mentalidade “descartável” e facilitadora que é tanto a do nosso tempo!

         Para a missão libertadora do homem, que Jesus anuncia na sinagoga de Nazaré, o Espírito quer contar com todos. Um corpo pode viver sem alguns dos seus membros, mas fica sempre mais pobre. Não imaginamos as inúmeras raízes que fazemos no coração uns dos outros. E conseguimos imaginar as que Deus faz? Assim, ainda que difíceis, as opções da solidariedade e do compromisso são essenciais. Ou trocamos isso pelas modas de cada estação?

 

**************************

Caros amigos

Permitam-me que vos chame a atenção para este encontro sobre a participação de crianças na missa: é no dia 17, na Igreja de Stª Isabel, de acordo com o programa que envio em anexo.

Peço-vos ainda, pf, que circulem pelos potenciais interessados.

Muito obrigado.

**************************

 

National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen, Jr. - All Things Catholic

December 22, 2006

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Greetings!

This week’s column has been posted. You may view it at:
<
http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=p6sob8bab.0.6xvpb8bab.i8t49xbab.495&ts=S0216&p=http
%3A%2F%2Fncrcafe.org%2Fnode%2F782> All Things Catholic by John L. Allen, Jr.
for December 22, 2006
Ten mega-trends shaping the Catholic church

By John L Allen Jr Weekly

Created Dec 22 2006 - 10:19

All Things Catholic by John L. Allen, Jr.

Friday, Dec. 22, 2006 - Vol. 6, No. 16

Christmas is a season of giving, and in a rather self-serving application of
that spirit, this week I’m asking readers to give me something.
Specifically, I’m asking for reactions to my list of the 10 most important
“mega-trends” in Catholicism today, which appears below.

My next book is titled “The Upside Down Church,” a sort of sneak preview of
Catholic history in the 21st century. I outline a series of mega-trends
which I believe are turning the church on its head, especially with respect
to the dominant paradigms in the 40-plus years since the close of the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). In order for that analysis to hold water,
however, I have to identify these mega-trends correctly.

By “mega-trend,” I mean a deep impulse shaping Catholic thought and life at the universal level, a sort of “tectonic plate” whose shifts lie beneath the
fault lines and upheavals of the present. I have in mind not single issues,
but currents of history which cause some issues to rise in importance and
others to fall. A mega-trend, by the way, does not have to be specifically
Catholic, but rather something that affects Catholicism in a significant
way. For example, the rise of Islam, especially its more radical forms,
certainly belongs on the list.

My request is this: Read this list, and ponder it. Are there major forces
I’ve neglected? Are there items here that don’t belong? Does this list
correspond with your own sense of what’s happening in the church?

Some readers may want to react using the “comments” box below, which will allow a conversation to develop in this space. Others may not want to share their thoughts with the rest of the world, but wouldn’t mind passing them along to me. If that’s the case, address them to jallen@ncronline.org [1].
Either way, I will be grateful.

The list is not organized in order of importance.

One: The North/South Shift
In 1900, there were 459 million Catholics in the world, 392 million of whom
lived in Europe and North America. Christianity 100 years ago remained an
overwhelmingly white, first world phenomenon. By 2000, there were 1.1
billion Catholics, with just 380 million in Europe and North America, and
the rest, 720 million, in the global South. Africa alone went from 1.9
million Catholics in 1900 to 130 million in 2000, a growth rate of almost
7,000 percent. This is the most rapid and sweeping demographic
transformation of Catholicism in its 2,000 year history. Sao Paolo, Jakarta
and Nairobi will become what Leuven, Milan and Paris were in the Counter
Reformation period, meaning major centers of pastoral and intellectual
energy. Different experiences and priorities will set the Catholic agenda as
leaders from Africa, Asia and Latin America rise through the system,
reshaping the texture of church life.

Two: Quest for Catholic Identity
Another major force is the relentless press for a stronger sense of Catholic
identity, an impulse felt in virtually every area, from liturgy to
education, from religious orders to the church’s engagement with secular
politics. In his famous homily 24 hours before his election as pope,
then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger laid out what he saw as the central challenge facing the church: a “dictatorship of relativism,” meaning the rejection of objective truth. Like John Paul II before him, Benedict is keenly concerned that Catholics do not assimilate to this broader secular mentality. As the practical translation of this imperative, the church has seen a growing emphasis over the last 25 years on what sociologists call the “politics of identity” — efforts to reinforce distinctively Roman Catholic language, practices and belief systems, our markers of difference in a rapidly homogenizing world. The emphasis on identity cuts across debates large and small, from whether theologians should have a mandatum from a bishop certifying their orthodoxy, to whether lay people should be allowed to purify the sacred vessels after Mass.

Three: The Rise of Islam
I was tempted to simply write “Regensburg,” and leave it at that. If the
importance of Islam to the church wasn’t already clear, the aftermath of
Benedict XVI’s Sept. 12 lecture at the University of Regensburg dispelled
any doubt. In the same way that the terrorist attacks of 9/11 put Islam,
especially its radical currents, at the center of global consciousness, the
“9/12″ of Regensburg did it for the Catholic church. Especially in the wake
of 9/12, Islam is coming to play the role for Catholicism once occupied by
Communism, meaning the church’s chief ideological rival on the world stage, the great question mark around which many debates revolve. As with
Communism, attitudes towards Islam are often markers for deeper options on issues such as the Christian identity of Europe, the limits of inter-faith
dialogue, the nature of missionary efforts, and the fate of Christians in
the Arab world. Given that Benedict seems determined to take a more
challenging stance in Catholic/Muslim relations on both terrorism and
religious freedom, there is likely to be further drama ahead.

Four: The Movements
The term “movement” is used loosely (and, in some cases, imprecisely) to
refer to a wide variety of new groups in the 20th century, primarily
composed of laity: Sant’Egidio, the Neocatechumenate, Focolare, Communion and Liberation, Opus Dei, L’Arche, Schönstatt, Regnum Christi, and others. Though they remain niche phenomena, the movements nevertheless have a high profile due to their passion, their commitment, and the strong patronage they enjoyed under John Paul II. With their visibility and reach expanding, they will increasingly set a tone in terms of the lay apostolate. While it’s something of a myth that the movements are predominantly “conservative” (Sant’Egidio and L’Arche, for example, don’t fit the bill), they do have a common thread in that their activity is directed more ad extra than ad intra; that is, they’re more concerned with changing the world than changing the church. In that sense, the growth of the movements is likely to produce a more outward-looking sense of the lay role; the model of an “empowered” Catholic lay person will not be primarily a DRE or liturgist, but a lawyer or bus driver or stay-at-home mother, striving to transform the secular world from the inside out.

Five: The Biotech Revolution
Given the dizzying pace of scientific change, Catholicism faces a whole new
series of ethical headaches. What are the limits, for example, to genetic
manipulation of human beings? Which breakthroughs in stem cell research pass doctrinal muster, such as “altered nuclear transfer”? What about calls for “embryo adoption,” meaning allowing women (even unwed women, or women in same-sex relationships) to bring embryos to term which would otherwise be destroyed? As science expands its capacity to preserve life, where does the distinction lie between “ordinary” and “extraordinary” measures, between a necessary defense of the right to life and a needless prolongation of suffering? What about genetically modified food, with its potential to feed the hungry, but its uncertain impact on human health and on traditional agricultural techniques? Could condoms be countenanced for a married, heterosexual couple where one partner has HIV/AIDS? All these questions, and scores more, bedevil moral theologians, lay activists, pastors and bishops, pulling Catholic debate into uncharted waters.

Six: The Wireless World
Once upon a time, the clerical caste held a near-monopoly on catechesis,
faith formation, education … essentially, on shaping the Catholic
imagination. That monopoly has been eroded over the centuries by the
invention of the printing press, the rise of a free press in the West, the
emergence of theologically sophisticated laity, the spread of independent
broadcast outlets, and a host of other factors. Today, anyone who can find
their way to a Starbucks with a laptop can be their own publisher. The
blogosphere is full of Catholic offerings: “Open Book,” “Relapsed Catholic,”
“The Cafeteria is Closed,” “Whispers in the Loggia,” “the Curt Jester,” to
name some of the better-known. The Catholic conversation is a wide-open
marketplace, and if bishops want to make themselves heard, it has to be by
dint of their message rather than their office. The potential to change the
calculus became clear in the Terry Schiavo case, when bloggers did more to
mobilize Catholic activism than pronouncements from either the bishops’
conference or the local hierarchy.

Seven: The Wojtyla Revolution
Pope John Paul II was an ad extra pope, more concerned with the struggle
against Soviet-style Communism or a “culture of death” in the West than he
was with the internal affairs of the Catholic church. In effect, John Paul
cried basta! (”enough!”) to the season of experimentation and reform that
followed the Second Vatican Council, calling Catholics to a strong sense of
internal unity in order to fuel a more effective engagement with the world
outside. If the documents of Vatican II, as well as more amorphous
understandings of their “spirit,” framed debate in the post-conciliar
period, it is the example of John Paul II which is most decisive for the
new, “upside down” era. For our purposes, his legacy can be boiled down to a simple formula: end the navel-gazing, stop tinkering with church teachings and structures, and get on with evangelizing the world. Critics would argue that this formula led John Paul to neglect festering internal problems, and that the sexual abuse crisis, to take one example, was the legacy of that neglect. Nevertheless, the Copernican shift of John Paul’s papacy was to direct the Catholic gaze to the outside world, to “take it to the street.”

Eight: Globalization
Growing integration of global finance, politics, and culture marks the
single most defining characteristic of our era, creating unparalleled wealth
and opportunity for some, while making the misery of others a permanent
source of outrage and instability. While one billion people enjoy standards
of living never before achieved, another billion people get by on less than
$1 a day, and some 10 million children each year die from avoidable,
poverty-related illnesses. Those inequities are generating deep concern both
for moral and security reasons, and they tend to engage leaders in the
global South in a special way, given that the losers in the new global game
tend to be predominantly in developing nations. As Southern voices become
more vocal within Catholicism, therefore, concern for what John Paul II
called the “globalization of solidarity” as well as markets will become an
increasingly central Catholic theme. There will likely continue to be widely
differing Catholic opinions on how best to express the church’s social
teaching in public policy, and this debate will intensify.

Nine: Polarization and its Discontents
One of the defining features of the post-conciliar era in Roman Catholicism
has been a kind of Catholic tribalism, pitting left against right,
liturgically oriented Catholics against social activists, local churches
against Rome, and so on down the familiar litany of internal fractures. It’s
not just that there is division, a fact of ecclesiastical life that dates
back to the Acts of the Apostles. Today’s Catholic tribes attend their own
conferences, read their own journals, applaud their own heroes, and have
developed their own languages, so that on the rare occasions when they
encounter Catholics of other perspectives it can actually be difficult to
communicate. In many ways, Catholics of all these tribes have been
unwittingly evangelized by the secular culture, seeing the church as one
more battlefield upon which interest group struggles are fought. Yet these
divisions are also puzzling and disheartening to many Catholics, especially
those under 40 who were born after Vatican II, and there are indications of
a growing desire for a different way of managing relationships in the
church.

Ten: The Sexual Abuse Crisis
Though the epicenter of the sexual abuse crisis remains the English-speaking world, the phenomenon is global. Its toll has been enormous, above all in the United States. It includes settlements of more than $1 billion and the bankruptcy of, to date, four American dioceses ( Portland, Davenport, Spokane, and Tucson). More deeply, the crisis has badly damaged the church’spublic image, caused a loss of confidence in the leadership of the church, injured relationships between bishops and priests, and made it much more difficult for good priests to carry out their ministry. All of this was brought back into focus recently when the Preacher of the Papal Household, Capuchin Fr. Rainero Cantalamessa, suggested the need for penance related to the scandals. To date, there is still debate within the church as to the causes and context of the crisis, but there seems little question that the fallout from this trauma will be with Catholicism for some time.

The e-mail address for John L. Allen Jr. is jallen@ncronline.org [4]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Esperamos a sua visita em:

www.we-are-church.org/pt

Posted in TriploG |

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.