Education:
Helping New Generations Relate To The World
VATICAN CITY, May 28, 2010, 11:00 Hrs (VIS):
The
Holy Father met with participants in the general assembly of
the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI), who are meeting from
24 to 28 May to consider their general pastoral guidelines for
the period 2010 - 2020.
"The
Holy Spirit guides the Church in the world and in history",
said the Pope. "Thanks to this gift from the Risen One,
the Lord remains present in midst of historical events. It is
through the Spirit that we can recognise the meaning of human
vicissitudes in Christ".
"Supported
by the Spirit and continuing down the path shown us by Vatican
Council II, in particular with the pastoral guidelines of the
last decade, you have chosen to adopt education as the principal
theme for the next ten years. This temporal horizon is proportioned
to the importance and breadth of educational requirements, which
call on us to take responsibility for the new generations with
a united, integral and harmonious witness which helps us to
think, propose and live the truth, beauty and goodness of the
Christian experience".
Benedict
XVI went on to speak of modern culture, where sometimes "the
dignity of the person, the value of life, and the very meaning
of truth and goodness" are placed in doubt, and where "nothing
beyond the individual is recognised as definitive". In
this situation "it becomes arduous and difficult to present
new generations with the 'bread' of truth' for which it is worth
spending one's life and accepting, when necessary, the rigour
of discipline and the fatigue of commitment.
"Though
aware of the weight of these difficulties", the Holy Father
added, "we cannot resign ourselves to lack of confidence
and despair. Education has never been easy, but we must not
surrender for we would fail in the mandate the Lord Himself
entrusted to us when He called us to feed His sheep with love.
... Education means forming new generations that they may know
how to relate to the world, strengthened by a significant memory,
by a shared inner patrimony of real knowledge which, while recognising
the transcendent goal of life, guides thoughts, emotions and
judgements".
Pope Benedict
continued: "The inner thirst of the young is a call for
meaning, for authentic human relationships which can help them
not to feel alone in the face of life's challenges. ... Our
response is to announce God, the friend of man Who in Jesus
approached each one of us. The transmission of the faith is
an indispensable part of the integral formation of the person.
... The personal meeting with Jesus is the key to understanding
God's relevance in everyday life".
The Pope
explained how "the quality of our witness remains a decisive
factor" in the duty to educate in families, schools and
parishes.
Going on
them to mention "the weakness and sin" of some members
of the Church, he highlighted how "this humble and painful
admission must not, however, make us forget the gratuitous and
zealous service of many believers, first among them, priests.
The special year dedicated to the clergy has sought to be an
opportunity to promote their interior renewal as a condition
for more incisive evangelical and ministerial commitment".
"What
gives rise to scandal must, for us, translate into a profound
reminder of the need to re-learn penance and accept purification;
to learn, on the one hand, forgiveness and, on the other, the
need for justice".
Benedict
XVI encouraged the bishops "never to lose faith in the
young. ... Frequent all areas of life", he told them, "including
those of the new communications technologies which now permeate
culture in all its expressions. It is not a question of adapting
the Gospel to the world, but of drawing from the Gospel that
perennial novelty which, in all times, enables us to find the
best way to announce the Word that does not fail, fecundating
and serving human life. Let us, then, again present the young
with the exalted and transcendent measure of life as vocation".
Referring
then to the "current cultural, spiritual and economic crisis",
the Pope concluded by renewing his call "to the leaders
of public life and to business people to do everything they
can to lessen the effects of the employment crisis. I exhort
everyone to reflect on the premises of a good and meaningful
life, which lie at the basis of that authoritativeness which
alone educates".