NO To Cafetaria Catholics, no to divorce, no to women priests, no to
gays and no to condoms! The holy spirit through the Cardinals has
decided. This we must accept.

Viva Papa.

http://www.ewtn.com/vnews/getstory.asp?number=19347

CARDINAL RATZINGER ON THE FUTURE OF CHRISTIANITY

"Above All, We Should Be Missionaries"

VATICAN CITY, (ZENIT.org-Avvenire).- Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger has a
blunt message for Catholics today. "We cannot calmly accept the rest
of humanity falling back again into paganism," says the prefect of the
Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in "God and the
World," the new book-interview he granted German journalist Peter
Seewald. St. Paul�s in Italy recently published the book. Following
are some of the book�s questions and answers that were highlighted by
the Italian newspaper Avvenire.

� Q: Many years ago, you spoke in prophetic terms about the Church of
the future. At the time you said, "it will be reduced in its
dimensions, it will be necessary to start again. However, from this
test a Church would emerge that will have been strengthened by the
process of simplification it experienced, by its renewed capacity to
look within itself." What are the prospects that await us in Europe?

� Cardinal Ratzinger: To begin with, the Church "will be numerically
reduced." When I made this affirmation, I was overwhelmed with
reproaches of pessimism.

And today, when all prohibitions seem obsolete, among them those that
refer to what has been called pessimism and which, often, is nothing
other than healthy realism, increasingly more [people] admit the
decrease in the percentage of baptized Christians in today�s Europe:
in a city like Magdeburg, Christians are only 8% of the total
population, including all Christian denominations. Statistical data
shows irrefutable tendencies. In this connection, in certain cultural
areas, there is a reduction in the possibility of identification
between people and Church. We must take note, with simplicity and
realism. The mass Church may be something lovely, but it is not
necessarily the Church�s only way of being. The Church of the first
three centuries was small, without being, by this fact, a sectarian
community. On the contrary, it was not closed in on itself, but felt a
great responsibility in regard to the poor, the sick-in regard to all.
There was room in its heart for all those nourished by a monotheist
faith, in search of a promise. This awareness of not being a closed
club, but of being open to the totality of the community, has always
been a constant component of the Church. The process of numerical
reduction, which we are experiencing today, will also have to be
addressed precisely by exploring new ways of openness to the outside,
of new ways of participation by those who are outside the community of
believers. I have nothing against people who, though they never enter
a church during the year, go to Christmas midnight Mass, or go on the
occasion of some other celebration, because this is also a way of
coming close to the light. Therefore, there must be different forms of
involvement and participation.

� Q: However, can the Church really renounce its aspiration to be a
Church of the majority?

� Cardinal Ratzinger: We must take note of the decrease in our lines
but, likewise, we must continue to be an open Church. The Church
cannot be a closed, self-sufficient group.

Above all, we should be missionaries, in the sense of proposing again
to society those values that are the foundation of the constitutive
form that society has given itself, and which are at the base of the
possibility to build a really human social community. The Church will
continue to propose the great universal human values. Because, if law
no longer has common moral foundations, it collapses insofar as it is
law. From this point of view, the Church has a universal
responsibility. As the Pope says, missionary responsibility means,
precisely, to really attempt a new evangelization. We cannot calmly
accept the rest of humanity falling back again into paganism. We must
find the way to take the Gospel, also, to nonbelievers. The Church
must tap all her creativity so that the living force of the Gospel
will not be extinguished.

� Q: What changes will the Church undergo?

� Cardinal Ratzinger: I think we will have to be very cautious when it
comes to the risk of forecasts, because historical development has
always produced many surprises. Futurology often crashes.

For example, no one risked forecasting the fall of the Communist
regimes. World society will change profoundly, but we are still not in
a position to predict what the numerical decrease of the Western world
will imply, which is still dominant, what Europe�s new face will be
like, given the migratory currents, what civilization, and what social
forms will be imposed. What is clear, in any event, is the different
composition of the potential on which the Western Church will be
sustained. What is most important, in my opinion, is to look at the
"essence," to use an expression of Romano Guardini. It is necessary to
avoid elaborating fantastic pre-constructions of something that could
manifest itself very differently and that we cannot prefabricate in
the meanderings of our brain, but to concentrate on the essential,
which later might find new ways of incarnating itself. A process of
simplification is important, which will enable us to distinguish
between what is the master beam of our doctrine, of our faith, what is
of perennial value in it. It is important to propose again the great
underlying constants in their fundamental components, the questions on
God, salvation, hope, life, especially what has a basic ethical value.



-- 
Cheers,

Gabe Menezes.
London, England

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