Parish mission - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Wed, 23 Feb 2022 10:00:38 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Parish mission - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Growing the synodal parish — the cornerstone of a synodal Church https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/02/24/synodal-parish/ Thu, 24 Feb 2022 07:11:40 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=143933 synodal parish

By now we should have adjusted to the idea and talk of a synodal Church and the meeting of a Synod of Bishops to discuss synodality. Pope Francis dropped the proposal out of the blue, really, last October, although he had been hinting at the notion for years. We have a date and place, critical Read more

Growing the synodal parish — the cornerstone of a synodal Church... Read more]]>
By now we should have adjusted to the idea and talk of a synodal Church and the meeting of a Synod of Bishops to discuss synodality.

Pope Francis dropped the proposal out of the blue, really, last October, although he had been hinting at the notion for years.

We have a date and place, critical themes, an ample handbook and supporting documents to go with the formal announcement. October 2023 in Rome is fixed in the calendar.

The whole Church is to contribute. That is why it has been billed as the largest consultation process in history.

Growing the synodal parish

But can we have a synodal Church if we don't start the process of growing the synodal parish?

There is no rush to perfect the model instantly because we are on a journey — together. But this journey needs many travellers and a commitment to go the distance.

No need for blinding light but conversion is definitely involved.

We are familiar with the idea of a pilgrim people journeying to their God and the Promised Land. We have just journeyed with Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem for the birth of our Savior. We have travelled with the Wise men from the East.

We are now called to embark on, arguably, the most significant journey in the history of the Church — since that enabling birth. The challenges of the Reformation pale into insignificance.

We are Church

As we are the Church, the People of God, we have the highest duty to renew the Sacrament of the Church that Jesus gave us.

The Church is not the brick or stone building we have become comfortable in; it is not over there but right here, where we are.

That means the change Pope Francis contemplates requires us to change.

We know that we can no longer persist in the old paradigm of comfort from inside. The public square requires us, individually and collectively, to take the Lord's message to the people and to act differently.

There is the clearest imperative to start the process. There are three key elements of synodality — Communion, Participation and Mission. If they are to have real bite we need to begin at the local level.

We, as a local parish, are a microcosm of the Church. No better place to start.

Discernment for the Synod meeting will be enlivened by actual experience of existential parish practice.

As we embrace the pope's call to become a Church that acts differently (not a new Church) there is no reason for delay.

The first key element — Communion

How might we start - locally?

If communion means conversations that lead to a conversion to Christ and commitment to active participation in the mission given by Christ, we can do that better. There is nothing new here -- in substance — but there is ample room for radical improvement.

Francis explained that in detail more than eight years ago in Evangelii Gaudium, the apostolic exhortation from 2013.

Improvement is the nature of Christian life. If we add to the mix recognition that we are now living in a secular society where religion has an optional place there is a crying need for missionary discipleship to take on a new dimension.

The second key element - Participation
Equally, the idea of the People of God talking with one another and importantly listening to one another is not new.

But it must now be different, and the listening must be genuinely active - at all levels and on all subjects.

The third key element - Mission

The communion that exists for a common purpose will enable the mission to flow - ever more smoothly.

Missionary discipleship must be the impulse for the whole Church as Francis invites us. The inseparable bond between our faith and the poor must remain axiomatic (EG 48).

On this journey, it is essential that we abandon any vestige of clericalism -on the part of clerics and the baptized faithful. That's easier said than done, given our historical attachment to monarchical structure, class, power and position.

Hopefully, the concept of collaboration in all parish affairs will be recognized and practiced uniformly.

"Father" is no longer expected to approve the replacement of failed light globes, let alone actually undertake the replacement task.

The parish council or leadership group is elected or appointed after consultation. In its operations, it will act collaboratively and consult widely.

Its role will be welcomed.

The engagement between the parish council and the pastor will be a model of collaboration. The mutual role of service will be embraced.

Parish tasks will be shared as widely as possible and not held tightly by a few.

The end of anonymity

Pope Francis says communion describes the very nature and mystery of the Church. That implies parish members will know more than a handful of parishioners' names.

There's no room for anonymous arrival, private prayer and unchallenged departure under the guise of celebrating the Eucharist.

All will arrive at church or place of worship in communion, greet each other warmly and worship in communion.

  • Full, active participation will be transformative because of the connection of a people no longer present as individuals but intimately linked in the Paschal Mystery.
  • The Word of God will be broken open to participants who increasingly appreciate the detail of the scriptural message of redemption and companionship, a familiarity too long neglected.
  • The memorial of the Last Supper and Calvary will offer an impact like never before as we gather in communion at the foot of the cross.
  • The Body and Blood of Jesus Christ will be received in communion for the ultimate earthly encounter with the Lord and the fuel of the mission to follow.
  • The dismissal that concludes the formal celebration of Eucharist will more clearly signal the beginning of the missionary work of Christ, as parishioners depart in communion to "put out into the deep".

Parish groups will be open, collaborative and reflect the sense of communion that underpins the synodal parish. Territorialism, power, "we have always done it this way", anonymity and control must be abandoned.

Parish activities will reflect the new order - in practice not just in theory.

We are talking about deep change and we know most change is anathema!

There are many potholes, loose rock and byways to encounter on this journey. The change cannot happen overnight. But let's make a start.

Let's grow synodal parishes for a synodal Church.

  • Justin Stanwix is a deacon at St Mary's Star of the Sea Parish, Milton in the Diocese of Wollongong (Australia).
  • First published in La-Croix International. Republished with permission.
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Moving from community parish to Mission https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/02/21/extending-the-parish/ Mon, 21 Feb 2022 07:12:09 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=143670 extending the parish

Father Jean-Luc Gebelin leads a cluster of parishes in a large rural area of the Diocese of Nîmes in Southern France. He explained to Mélinée Le Priol how he embraced a more collaborative view of ministry and being Church through the parish missions carried out by visiting religious order priests. La Croix: Your parish extends Read more

Moving from community parish to Mission... Read more]]>
Father Jean-Luc Gebelin leads a cluster of parishes in a large rural area of the Diocese of Nîmes in Southern France.

He explained to Mélinée Le Priol how he embraced a more collaborative view of ministry and being Church through the parish missions carried out by visiting religious order priests.

La Croix: Your parish extends over 20 towns and villages. What does the mission consist of in these rural areas?

Jean-Luc Gebelin: There are 40 kilometres between the two most distant towns of my parish! The main obstacle to Church life here is fragmentation, dispersion.

In a world where being a believer is no longer a given, Christians need to come together to live out their faith.

This observation was one of the starting points for the popular itinerant missions that took place here beginning in the 1980s, at the initiative of the former bishop of Nîmes, Mgr. Jean Cadilhac.

These missions, entrusted to the Lazarists [also known as the Vincentians], provided a powerful moment for the Church in the villages, bringing people together.

Personally, I took part in the missions in the different parishes where I was parish priest almost continuously from 1999 until 2020, before the first lockdown…

How are they going?

I will speak in the past tense because, unfortunately, to my knowledge, there are no more today due to a lack of succession among the Lazarists.

In the past, a missionary team of a few Lazarists would come and spend three weeks in a group of two to four villages.

The parish priest and the laity also took part in the mission, which mixed different states of life. During these three weeks, we all worked at the same task.

But once this bond was created between the people, and even once the Lazarists left, I said to myself that we had to continue!

Every year in our villages, for about fifteen years, we organized events with the laity. It was a way to extend the three weeks of the initial mission.

In any case, we had a lot to learn from the Lazarists and their missionary charism, with this capacity to always go elsewhere, without settling down too much.

What was the issue? Mobilizing beyond the parish circle, by reaching people who are sometimes far from the Church?

Yes. A team of volunteers went to all the houses in the few villages that hosted the mission, to bring the invitation to the residents. This invitation took the form of a leaflet detailing the events of the mission (celebrations, shows, walks, Bible stories, etc.).

To do this, we had to overcome a lot of reticence because it requires involvement to ring the doorbell of your neighbours while presenting yourself as Catholic!

It was not easy for me either...

I had never done this before, going to strangers' homes to invite them to Church events.

You wonder how you will be received. But the reception was almost always favourable. People were touched that we were interested in them.

This is perhaps what we Catholics miss the most: being aware that, as long as we are not intransigent, people are happy to meet us.

In what way were you, the laity and the Lazarists "co-responsible" in the mission?

We were above all responsible for a very concrete project!

Choosing activities, designing a poster, reserving a room with the town hall. Organizing the mission called on the skills of each one of us, on our knowledge of the territory, on our close relationships, etc.

In the various shows we put on, on the Passion or on the Emmaus witnesses, there were up to forty of us on stage!

For each mission, we also wrote a prayer to distribute to the people with the invitation leaflet. Each person would come up with his or her own ideas and we would share them.

I reread some of these prayers years later and was moved to see that they were partly answered.

What fruits did these missions bear?

We remain fragile, and there are not many more of us in church on Sundays. But I am convinced that if we still exist today, it is because of that.

Most of the current members of the pastoral animation team in my parish have been involved in missions.

That says a lot about how they have welded our community together and pushed Christians to get involved. We have experienced that doing something together is possible.

So even though we can see the metamorphosis of society and of the Church, we say to ourselves that there are still resources and that not everything has been exploited. We have a great future ahead of us.

Moreover, one of the fruits of these missions are the "Gospel Houses", which are spreading today in our diocese of Nîmes, allowing people to meet around the Word of God.

Why do you think the complementarity between priests and laity is so central to the missionary dynamic?

Simply because one cannot do a mission alone!

The mission - just as, more broadly, the Church - is a collective work.

In the Gospels, Jesus much more often addresses his apostles in the plural rather than the singular. And he asks them to pray by saying "our father," not "my father".

Carrying the pastoral load together is so much easier! On my own, there are many things I would not do. For the mission, we must pool our strengths and our weaknesses.

I insist on the weaknesses because otherwise we are tempted to believe we are all-powerful, and that cannot work.

As a priest, you don't have a position of authority?

No. I always start from the principle that we have to do it together. If you want people to be involved, then you have to get involved yourself.

In the missions, I have always remained at the side of the parishioners, for example by playing a role in the shows, just like the others.

The mission is also for us priests: we need it a lot! It stimulated me a lot.

In any case, I like working in a team. On my own, it drags, I don't know where I'm going.

In a team, the vision is broader and, sometimes, light breaks out. Succeeding together brings me a lot of joy.

We learn to receive from each other, we realize that we do not own things. The diversity of our talents makes something happen that was not planned.

In your opinion, what will be the proper place of the priest in a more synodal Church?

It is clear that for the future of the Church, priests alone will not be able to do anything.

I find that lay people help us to get out of our sterile oppositions between priests of different sensibilities: they help us to go further.

For me, being a priest means above all being a servant of dialogue between people.

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Running parishes at higher capacities https://cathnews.co.nz/2021/11/25/running-parishes-higher-capacities/ Thu, 25 Nov 2021 07:01:34 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=142673

If the "engine" of a parish involves mobilising the laity and harvesting their gifts, running parishes at higher capacities would be the norm. At present, the engine running parishes is running low - at about five per cent capacity. That's what Canada's Fr James Mallon, author of "Divine Renovation — From Maintenance to a Missional Church" and Read more

Running parishes at higher capacities... Read more]]>
If the "engine" of a parish involves mobilising the laity and harvesting their gifts, running parishes at higher capacities would be the norm.

At present, the engine running parishes is running low - at about five per cent capacity.

That's what Canada's Fr James Mallon, author of "Divine Renovation — From Maintenance to a Missional Church" and member of the Global Catholic Alpha Board, told around 100 participants at October's Divine Renovation (DR) Aotearoa conference.

At the Hamilton diocese-facilitated Zoom conference, Mallon challenged listeners to dream big - to imagine a parish were running at 60 per cent engine capacity or better.

The ability to unleash the full potential in the Church is found in the People of God, but it doesn't often happen Mallon said.

He then set out a broad overview of the DR framework for turning parishes from "maintenance" to mission. Now operating in 75 countries, Mallon introduced DR to New Zealand at a national priests' assembly in 2018.

DR is not a programme, but a model of parish operation, he said. It is a concrete way of implementing Pope Francis's vision for his 2013 apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium.

"Some of our best churches do a really good job of saying to people on the outside, you can come in, whereas really what we need to do to be a missionary church is, we have to say to people on the inside, you should go out."

If a parish adopts a missionary posture and allows it to be normalised into its culture, eventually that parish's identity is transformed and becomes a missionary.

Mallon said the three "keys" for Divine Renovation are represented in its new logo.

The first is being open to and utilizing the power of the Holy Spirit.

The second is the "primacy" of evangelization. Mallon said for many parishes, if they address evangelisation at all, they "mush it together with catechesis.

"Guess what happens? Eighty per cent of the energy gets put into catechesis and 20 per cent into evangelization.

"If you want to turn a parish missionary, you have got to over-invest, you have to go to disproportionately invest in evangelization, in adult evangelization". The DR approach encourages parishes to use a tool of adult evangelization, such as Alpha courses adapted for use in the Catholic Church.

"What matters is that you have a tool that is accessible for adults, that is directed at adults, and is accessible to people who don't go to Church, who don't believe."

The third key is developing leadership and training people for it.

"Someone once said that leadership is the gift that unleashes all the other gifts," Mallon said. "And yet we don't train leadership, we don't train priests to be leaders. And we have to offer some leadership..."

These three keys make all the difference, he said.

The Eucharist is the "keyring" in this imagery, linking all the others, being the source and summit of the Christian life. But the Eucharist itself is not the 'locus of evangelization'.

"The Eucharist is not the Church evangelizing," Mallon said.

"The Eucharist is the Church at worship.

"If you actually use the Eucharist successfully to really be a front-line evangelizing tool, you have probably squeezed it to the point where it is not recognizable. That is my conviction.

"The Eucharist is built on a presumption that you believe certain things, that you belong. There are a lot of presumptions there that simply don't apply to your average non-Churchgoer, non-believer person."

Summarising his talk, Mallon said DR is a framework: it's about taking the values inherent in that and putting them to use.

  • Michael Otto is the editor of NZ Catholic. First published in NZ Catholic. Republished with permission.
  • Image: YouTube
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