Church, community and mission
Mark Richards
There was once an itinerant
preacher in the country north of Jerusalem.
What he taught, said and what he did was seen
by those around him as ‘Good News’ (“gospel”).
When they came to reflect on his life and why it
was life-giving, and when they looked at who they
were as a community after he was dead, they recognised
that he had done more than preach and teach. He had
formed them as a community. They had all learned
a core way of being that community by living in the
way he had taught them.
This new life that he brought was given to them in
two parts:
• a method to the formation he gave;
• a content to the message, told as stories of
the kingdom, and as activities the community had in
common.
Jesus
taught by the way he lived
Jesus walked on his own two feet. He
didn’t run, he didn’t ride, (other
than when he was a little baby and on a certain
afternoon as he entered Jerusalem). He walked,
and as he walked he talked and discussed. Every
day it seems, and on many named occasions,
he stopped walking and he and his friends sat
down at table; they talked and ate together.
They formed a group of disciples – women
and men who walked and lived with him.
As he walked, he called
people by name. Some came to him with
needs, but the disciples, the ones who were
around him and walked with him, he called
by name. He knew them and he invited them,
to walk, to be with, to dine, to listen,
to come apart with him, to be one of a group,
to be identified as his followers and to
serve. People responded to that call, and
they walked with him.
Then at a certain stage he began
to send them out to preach and teach
and to do what he was doing. There was a goodly
number of them, because he sent them out in
pairs, and he sent 72 of them in this way:
not alone, but with a companion (is it because
it is ‘not good for us to be alone’?)
There were also noted times
when he called them to a place apart,
and to prayer. On top of a mountain, he took
three of his closest friends and they saw his
glory. Later, as a community apart in an upper
room, they received the call to be servant,
to be broken and poured out to share the fullness
of life.
They went together into a garden
where they prayed, or slept, and learnt that
prayer is not simply joyful ecstasy; it is
also the facing of reality and the pain of
life. They left him alone – bar some
of the women, who walked as he suffered. Then
there were two walking to Emmaus; then as a
community they were gathered in the room when
he appeared and the Holy Spirit came upon them.
There was a method in all this.
You and I are called to be disciples in the
same way as the generations before us were
called, and called by name. We are called to
walk in a community that is characterised by
telling parables, healing the blind, the lame
and the deaf, sitting at a meal together; and
we receive the bidding to go out and preach
the Good News and serve the world in which
we live.
How was
this community around Jesus structured?
There was the preacher, and around him
was a group of 12 – and maybe an inner
group which was Peter, James and John – or
clearly at other times, Lazarus, Martha and
Mary. Then there was another wider group of
disciples: 72, or 36 pairs, who were sent out
to do what they had heard and to be what they
had seen.
In all this we can discern a
pattern which is life-giving. I can’t
be a follower on my own; I am chosen by Jesus,
and then I choose to be one with him and those
others he has called. We are one, “one
body, one Lord, one baptism”. This unity
is a communion with all believers, a communion
that demands openness and care, so that believers
can truly be one.
That demands a Spirit, the Holy
Spirit drawing believers together. That Spirit
is given to us in Baptism, fully and freely,
and the community proclaims that in it we are
given the gifts (charisms) that are special
to us and needed to create the whole body.
We are a people of prayer, because we must,
individually and communally, be aware of and
inspired by (have breathing within us), the
Spirit we share.
We continue in dialogue with
the Spirit, and as such we are formed and vitalised.
From the first days of the church the disciples
went up every day for prayer as a community,
and then on the first day of the week they
gathered to listen to the word and to celebrate
Jesus’ presence among them in the breaking
of the bread.
We are a people who are aware
that the gifts we have, the talents and the
very gift of life, are given to us. You and
I didn’t create ourselves; we received
life through the love and life of others. Our
response and the choice we make is to be thankful.
As followers we know the way in which Jesus
called us by name, in which he taught us the
Way and spoke words of truth, and that
these are words we don’t hear anywhere
else.
It is in and through him that
we have learnt the way that is fully alive.
And therefore on a daily basis, individually
and as a community, we come together to give
thanks. We call this Eucharist; we
live Eucharist and give thanks to God the Father,
in and through Jesus and in the unity of the
Holy Spirit. That is the public work of the
church, to be a living sign of thanksgiving
to God, a real sign of God’s presence
in the midst of the world.
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What
is the content of the message Jesus gave
us?
This Way Jesus asks us to live
is different, as is the truth he invites us to
believe. There is a fullness of content, and many
before us have reflected and learned and taught
that truth, which it is our turn to live and teach.
Jesus teaches us forgiveness;
he teaches gentleness and humility; he teaches
truth and respect of the poor and the marginalised;
he teaches how to pray Our Father...
Jesus teaches – and this
community has learned.
This Jesus community, this teaching,
this Spirit, this church is not for itself.
It has only one purpose: to go out and preach
the good news to the ends of the earth. Moreover: “when
you did this to one of these the least, you
did it to me” – and when you didn’t
do it, you didn’t do it to me. We are
called in our mission and in our ministry to
spread the Good News in what we say and what
we do.
To summarise what Jesus taught
and did:
• A community formed the disciples – and
it forms us;
• They received a gospel;
• They were given public works, a liturgy of
prayer and thanksgiving;
• This all strengthens and forms a people who
serve the poor and weak and needy and bring them Good
News, fullness of life and peace;
• To ensure that there was unity he then called
some to be a ‘the rock’, an overseer of
the talents and the gifts and to preach the good news
publicly;
• and then in the early church they chose others
to look after the resources and the needs of the widows
and needy of the community, to distribute from those
who had to those who had need, within the community.
Some
consequences
I want to call these six separate offices ‘communio’, ‘teach
and preach’, ‘prayer and liturgy’, ‘service
of the needy’, ‘leadership’,
and ‘stewardship of the gifts’.
What the church has learned over the centuries
is that one cannot have one of these without
the others. All are required for Christian
life and a Christian community to flourish.
I want to draw it all together
into a simple model for parishes, school communities,
for base communities and even for the structure
of a diocese. Is it coincidental that there
were/are six areas of ministry and mission;
and Jesus arranged everything in pairs, so
there were six pairs among the inner 12, and
more than that, there were then six pairs of
12 among the 72. Here is a model for a parish
or a base community (be it a school, a Marae,
a religious community, a youth outreach, a
JPD cell).
We organise ourselves so that
there are two of us on the servant leadership
group for each of these great areas of concern.
There are then at least six
pairs of people who are focused on the leadership
and organising of the ministry in each of the
areas. And every baptised Christian has one
talent in one of these areas, and it is for
the service of the whole.
More than that, there is only
one talent, one charism that you are called
to exercise for the good of the whole at this
time. Therefore, when we are planning we need
to decide what is the most important element
for liturgy, or prayer, teaching or proclaiming
the good news; who are the most needy we can
serve; and having focused on that, we then ‘send
a pair out’ to design, organise, ensure
that this ministry happens.
In a small community it may
be that they are the two who do the visitation
of the sick, or are the musicians for Sunday
gathering. And once we are doing all that we
need to do to fulfil the basic call of a Christian
community, we can liberate our resources to
carry out the things we would love to do, or
we can add more resources to the central tasks
if we find they are overburdened. This model
helps us to focus and to support a rich and
vital ministry.
The catechumenate
Here is an an example. In any parish
or church community that has ears to hear,
there will be a call to seek out and welcome
those who receive the Good News. This is called
the RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation
for Adults). When prioritising what the
call of the Gospel is and what the church asks
us to do, the first thing is to go out and
welcome people in – and then to “baptize
them in the Name of the Father the Son and
the Holy Spirit”. In each ministry stream
this should end up the highest priority.
What we see is a pair of the
teaching/ preaching group and a pair of the
liturgy/prayers and a pair of the service group
and a pair of the community builders in strong
debate as to who is going to take the lead
in the development of the RCIA for the forthcoming
year. And by the time we find that the cooperating
communities of the Pastoral area are focusing
on RCIA and its preparation, we should be able
to liberate the resources and build a warm,
vital and rich outreach. We will have the best
of our catechists engaged, the best focus on
music and where are we called to serve, and
a pair purely focused on the introduction to
the community and to the celebration of new
life in the church.
The Lord, when he called the
disciples, asked them to “leave everything
and follow me”. The message hasn’t
changed. The Good News is such good news that
we are impelled to serve and to give and to
love unconditionally. But the difficulty many
communities find is that a small group holds
too many ministries in few hands. This model
is predicated on the theory of ‘one person
one ministry”.
Yet we are ALL gifted with one
charism for the up-building of the church and
one for the mission of the church. What is
yours, what is your son’s, your daughter’s,
your wife’s, your husband’s? What
do I know my neighbour is great at, and yet
is not yet being called to bear fruit?
Finally, let’s celebrate
when that talent is being gifted in the community,
in the place you and I are called to serve
and bring new life and the Good News to our
workplace, our community and our daily life.
“ Give us THIS day our
daily bread... and may your Kingdom come!” ?
Mark Richards is Manager
of Pastoral Services Team in the diocese
of Palmerston North and responsible for adult
formation programmes |
The Future in Parishes
Alan Roberts
In writing this, I have before
me Mark Richards’ article printed in
this issue (pp.6-8). It is an article which
makes sense to me and my purpose here is to
comment from a practical point of view and
hopefully expound on some points Mark has made.
As I write, I am conscious that we in New Zealand
are looking at new ways of running our parishes,
as we try to live up to the laity’s right
to be involved and as we find ourselves unable
to supply a priest for every parish. Particularly
affected are the laity who may be clinging
to the model which leaves the priest as the
focal point
Community
Mark Richards begins his article by
pointing out that Jesus formed his followers
into a community. It is primarily
through being community that we find the Risen
Jesus to be life-giving. Cardinal Williams,
when first beginning the Launch Out training
programme for Lay Pastoral Leaders (LPL) in
Wellington, made much of the fact that no parish
would be closed. This brings home Richards’ point
that community is the all important
thing, but thereby raises questions about supplying
Eucharist, and questions about the role of
a priest.
Should a priest be asked to stretch himself
out and risk burning himself out? I maintain
that this will almost inevitably happen, simply
because he will miss the nourishment from the
primary community he is called to serve? Looking
back I realise, especially as a young priest,
how much the communities I served gave me.
I know I thrived because of the friendships,
fun, challenge and the questions which came
from so many in those early years. I met with
small groups and I grew with these people as
we struggled together to face issues in the
church of the time. I was inspired by their
commitment and desire to create a life-giving
community.
Today, I realise that the stress I feel is
not in being asked to say an extra Mass or
two but in missing out on what is happening
in my home parish when I am away. As a priest
I still need and enjoy community as much as
the next person.
Walking
Richards next explains the aspect of how Jesus lived
his ministry. He walked. This point is made to
emphasise Jesus’ availability to listen,
explain and be with others. Then, he sent out in
twos those who followed him. In short, he wasn’t
rushing around being the Messiah!
What a model of priesthood this is! If Jesus
came today, I wouldn’t mind betting that
many would label him “a lazy b!” Very
quickly, it seems, Jesus let go of the idea
that he was the only one who could pastor the
flock. A priest, or a lay pastoral leader,
has to understand this, and a parish also has
to understand it. Evangelisation will never
begin in our parishes unless this point is
understood.
Just think: every person in our pews probably
lives in close range to a Catholic who no longer
practices their faith, or to someone who is
searching for meaning through faith. In this
light, believing that evangelisation is the
responsibility of only the priest or the lay
pastoral leader is just ludicrous.
Going out ‘in
pairs’
Then there is the point Richards makes of Jesus sending
them out in twos. Some years ago Team Ministry became
a popular concept – but possibly because a
young priest had to endure years of being a curate!
The fact that we had to dream it up as a solution
to a problem says plenty about the way we were then
operating in ministry! |
I was fortunate to be part
of a Team (another priest and myself) after
eight years of ministry. For the first time
in parish, we worked in twos. It was a very
satisfying time in my priesthood and, dare
I say it, possibly the most blessed time. But
more importantly, the community recognised
it and gave us enormous support. Particularly
blessed was our Catechumenate, and it was the
community who made it live.
Looking back over more than 30 years of ministry,
when I have worked closely with others it has
been refreshing, enriching and complete. When
I have worked alone, it has been frustrating,
tiring and lonely. When that was allowed to
continue, it produced
burnout and cynicism. It is foolish to work alone.
You may satisfy your ego, but you’ll die in
the end.
Gifts within the community
The Australian Scripture scholar, Michael Fallon,
made the point some years ago while in New Zealand
that a primary work of a pastor was to help parishioners
identify their ministry. How could each parishioner
serve in their parish? Richards emphasises: “I
can’t be a follower on my own,.. that the
Spirit is given to us in Baptism,.. that in the
community we are given the gifts (charisms) that
are special to us and needed to create the
whole body.”
Today we are more conscious of bringing out
the gifts of each one and my concept of Team
Ministry has moved on. What I once gained from
working with another priest I must now find
in my parishioners. The shortage of priests
necessitates this, but even so, I wonder whether
we should not still work to find ways for priests
or LPLs to follow the model Mark Richards proposes,
namely that there are two on the servant leadership
group for each of the great areas of concern,
concerns which he identifies in his article.
Next, I want to refer to Richards comments
on prayer. He explains how the disciples discovered
that prayer was not just about joyful ecstasy
but also the facing of reality and the pain
of life. This is particularly worth noting
because this kind of prayer is how we understand
contemplation today. The distractions we experience
tell us so much about ourselves.
The revival of Ignatian spirituality copes
well with all this and encourages us to be
before God as we are. Like the disciples in
their master’s hour of need, we fall
asleep when commanded to pray. Our prayer is
just a frail attempt to open up and be filled
with God. Teresa of Avila got so bored in prayer
she shook the hour glass! But we persevere
because we know we cannot do without it. And
this principle applies to the laity who desire
to build the reign of God, just as it does
to any priest. As we employ the laity to work
as leaders, then perhaps at least one of their
hours each day of paid employment needs to
be set aside for prayer.
Conclusion
I would note that at the present time our bishops
are stretching priests out to provide sacraments
for our parishes. I questioned the wisdom of this
earlier. Is it not true that at some point we will
have to ask what happens when we can stretch priests
no further?
I think the model Mark Richards proposes
gives us a clue, and would add that instead
of leaving the smaller parishes without a priest,
we consider leaving the larger ones where there
is a greater variety of gifts to call upon.
If we accepted the model Richards proposes,
is it possible to set up and maintain life-giving
communities which do not have a resident priest,
yet still are very Catholic? I am not intending
to negate the role of the ordained minister
or the importance of Sacraments. But if the
present trends continue, the day will surely
come when we will have will have to choose
to close parishes, or allow them to operate
with only rare contact with a priest.
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