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GRACE FOR THE NEW SPRINGTIME
The NCCB Ad Hoc Committee for Catholic
Charismatic Renewal prepared this statement on the occasion
of the thirtieth anniversary of Catholic Charismatic Renewal.
In March 1997 the Administrative Committee of the National
Conference of Catholic Bishops approved the publication
of Grace for the New Springtime as a statement
of the Ad Hoc Committee for Catholic Charismatic Renewal.
The statement is authorized for publication by the undersigned.
Monsignor Dennis M. Schnurr
General Secretary
NCCB/USCC
Foreword
As part of the preparation for the Great Jubilee Year
2000, Pope John Paul II has asked the Church to focus
on the role and charisms of the Holy Spirit. Our Ad
Hoc Committee for the Catholic Charismatic Renewal felt
it was appropriate to issue a statement of affirmation,
support and encouragement to those who have experienced
the release of gifts and charisms of the Holy Spirit--
known as baptism in the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:4).
Specifically on the occasion of the thirtieth anniversary
of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in the United States,
we desire to affirm the positive impact this move of
the Spirit has had in the lives of millions of people
and through them the life of the Church.
Because we believe that God in His great love for His
people continues to fulfill His promise to pour out
His Spirit anew, we have entitled this statement: Grace
for the New Springtime. We are reminded of the
words of Peter on Pentecost in reference to the vision
he had of the future impact this anointing and empowerment
by the Holy Spirit would have: It was to you and
your children that the promise was made and to all those
still far off whom the Lord our God calls(Acts
2:39).
Come, Holy Spirit, Come!
As We Prepare for the Third Millennium
On the occasion of the Catholic Charismatic Renewals
thirtieth anniversary, as well as the one hundredth
anniversary of Pope Leo XIIIs encyclical on the
Holy Spirit, Divinum Illud, we, the U.S. Bishops
Ad Hoc Committee on the Catholic Charismatic Renewal,
want to affirm again all those Catholics involved in
this movement of the Holy Spirit in our day. We, likewise,
encourage them in their efforts to renew the life
of the Church. (A Pastoral Statement on the Catholic
Charismatic Renewal, 1984, NCCB/USCC)
As we prepare for the Third Millennium, as called for
by Pope John Paul II in his Apostolic Letter, Tertio
Millennio Adveniente (As the Third Millennium Draws
Near), we believe the Catholic Charismatic Renewal is
particularly called and gifted by God to be with the
Church as it prepares for the Great Jubilee and for
the challenges it faces as we enter the new millennium.
In its thirty years of existence, the Catholic
Charismatic Renewal has brought personal spiritual renewal
to the lives of millions of priests, deacons, religious,
and lay Catholics. It has called countless alienated
Catholics to reconciliation with the Lord and with the
Church. It has deepened a love for Jesus and the Church
among young people as well as so many others, including
the unchurched.
Thus, for us, the Catholic Charismatic Renewal is one
of the signs of hope our Holy Father is referring to
as present in the last part of this century
when he speaks of a greater attention to the voice
of the Spirit through the acceptance of charisms and
the promotion of the laity. (Tertio Millennio
Adveniente, 46)
We believe that the renewed outpouring of the
Spirit of Pentecost in our times (cf. Called and
Gifted for the Third Millennium, NCCB/USCC) is particularly
present in the Catholic Charismatic Renewal and in the
grace of baptism in the Holy Spirit.
Catholic Charismatic Renewal
As early as 1969, we affirmed the good fruits of the
Renewal. Our Holy Father and other Bishops Conferences
have testified to these abundant fruits. In 1984 we
wrote:
Insofar as the Renewal makes its own what is central
to the enduring reality of the Gospel, it cannot be
dismissed as peripheral to the life of the Church. .
. . It witnesses to elements of the Good News which
are central, not optional: the covenant love of the
Father, the Lordship of Jesus, the power of the Spirit,
sacramental and community life, prayer, charisms, and
the necessity of evangelization.
The Catholic Charismatic Renewal is, as Pope John Paul
II said in 1979, A sign of the Spirits action
. . (and) a very important component in the total renewal
of the Church.
Impact of the Renewal on the Broader Church
The impact of the Charismatic Renewal on the broader
Church has been significant. The Renewal has nourished
the call of all to holiness as a gift from the Spirit
and helped the Church come to a greater awareness and
expectancy of the Holy Spirit and the charismatic gifts
of the Spirit. The Charismatic Renewal has led the people
of God in a revival of the ministry of healing, encouraging
them--laity and clergy alike--to pray for the sick with
faith and expectancy.
It has renewed the appreciation for the role of praise
in individual and communal prayer and enriched the Church
with many gifted musicians, music ministries, and songwriters.
The Renewal has taught a commitment to the Pope, the
Bishops, and to orthodox teaching. Vocations to priesthood,
diaconate, and religious life have been fostered. It
has called forth the gifts of the laity who are today
serving in a variety of ecclesial lay ministries; e.g.,
in the liturgy, religious education, and youth ministry,
and ministries for the transformation of the world.
Catholic Charismatic Renewal Today
Among the areas in which the Renewal continues to make
an impact today are its response to the Holy Fathers
call to new evangelization, the increased
awareness of Marys role in the Church and in individual
lives, and in ecumenism.
New Evangelization
The Renewal is at its best when, from its internal
prayerful reflection, it looks outward to the lives
of the many, both churched and unchurched, who do
not have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
Charismatic empowerment in community has supplied
the Church in this country and throughout the world
with a host of committed and effective evangelists
bringing the gospel to persons and places otherwise
without hope of hearing the good news. (Fanning
the Flame, p. 13)
The witness of lives lived under the Lordship of Jesus
Christ and of fervent Catholics telling others about
Jesus Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit have
always been and continue to be a constitutive part
of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal and a fruit of
the baptism in the Holy Spirit.
Baptism in the Holy Spirit is empowerment of individuals
and of the Church for its mission in the world: the
proclamation of the Lordship of Jesus Christ and of
His power to transform society.
Mary
Authentic Marian devotion and imitation is a welcome
and growing dimension of the Catholic Charismatic
Renewal in the United States. Mary, Mother of the
Church, who was overshadowed by the Holy Spirit when
the fullness of time had come (Gal 4:4), will
lead the men and women of the new millennium
toward the One who is the true light that enlightens
every man (Jn 1:9). (Tertio, 59) It is
thus with great anticipation that we find within the
Renewal this joyful awareness of the relationship
of Mary and the Holy Spirit.
Ecumenism
In this moment in history the Lord has also called
us all to a deepened awareness of the brokenness of
the Body of Christ. In 1995 the Holy Father issued
his twelfth Encyclical, Ut Unum Sint (That All May
Be One), in which he states clearly that the Catholic
Church is committed irrevocably to following
the path of the ecumenical venture, thus heeding the
Spirit of the Lord, who teaches people to interpret
carefully the signs of the times
(#3).
We believe that the Holy Spirit has been poured out
in our day to bring about unity of the Body of Christ
for which our Lord prayed (Jn 17:21). Thus, efforts
in authentic ecumenism--e.g., the Congresses of the
Holy Spirit and World Evangelization held in New Orleans
(1987), Indianapolis (1990), and Orlando (1995), are
some of the great fruits of the Catholic Charismatic
Renewal. As we stated in 1984, we see in the
Catholic Charismatic Renewal an ecumenical force in
which we rejoice.
Baptism in the Holy Spirit
In the Sacraments of Initiation we experience the action
of the Triune God. As regards the Third Person of the
Trinity, in Baptism we become temples of the Holy Spirit;
in Eucharist we share in the Body and Blood of Jesus through
the power of the Holy Spirit; in Confirmation we are empowered
with the gifts and charisms of the Spirit to be witnesses
for Jesus Christ. In this statement, we want not only
to affirm the good fruit of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal
but also the grace which is at the heart of this Renewal,
namely, baptism in the Holy Spirit, or the fuller release
of the Holy Spirit, as some would prefer.
As experienced in the Catholic Charismatic Renewal baptism
in the Holy Spirit makes Jesus Christ known and loved
as Lord and Savior, establishes or reestablishes an immediacy
of relationship with all those persons of the Trinity,
and through inner transformation affects the whole of
the Christians life. There is new life and a new
conscious awareness of Gods power and presence.
It is a grace experience which touches every dimension
of the Churchs life: worship, preaching, teaching,
ministry, evangelism, prayer and spirituality, service
and community. Because of this, it is our conviction that
baptism in the Holy Spirit, understood as the reawakening
in Christian experience of the presence and action of
the Holy Spirit given in Christian initiation, and manifested
in a broad range of charisms, including those closely
associated with the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, is part
of the normal Christian life.
Pastoral Encouragement
We encourage the whole Church to look into and embrace
baptism in the Holy Spirit as the power of personal
and communal transformation with all the graces and charisms
needed for the upbuilding of the Church and for our mission
in the world. (Fanning the Flame, p. 27)
We want also to encourage those in the Renewal to continue
to bring an awareness of the Holy Spirit and the gifts
of the Spirit to the Church; to foster balanced devotion
to Mary; to teach and grow in the discernment of spiritual
experiences, and to continue in faithful cooperation with
the mission and the vision of the local Church in which
they serve. By its shared life, the Renewal can be an
example and fostering agent of small Christian communities
in the Church. Through the Cross and the embrace
of the paschal mystery (Called and Gifted for the
Third Millennium , p. 24), the Renewal can deepen life
in the Spirit.
We encourage leaders in the Catholic Charismatic Renewal
to work to bring the various streams of this Renewal into
cooperative unity.
Finally, aware of various pastoral concerns and needs,
we want to affirm the National Service Committee and the
various ethnic national service committees that have emerged
in recent years; diocesan liaisons and their Association
of Diocesan Liaisons; the various networks of covenant
communities, such as the Fraternity of Catholic Charismatic
Communities and Fellowships; and others in providing leadership
for the Renewal.
Conclusion
In 1975 Leon Joseph Cardinal Suenens convinced Pope Paul
VI of the value of the Renewal for the Church and continued
to offer it guidance through the early theological documents
called the Malines Documents. Even as recently as five
years ago he offered his wisdom to the Renewal at the
1992 National Catholic Charismatic Renewal Conference
when, via videotape, he encouraged us to open ourselves
fully to the power of God, stressing that today more than
ever before the world needs the witness of people open
to the Spirit.
It is the Holy Fathers conviction and ours that
we stand on the threshold of a new springtime for
Christianity.
In Tertio Millennio Adveniente, Pope John Paul II states
that this new springtime of Christian life will
be revealed by the Great Jubilee if Christians are docile
to the action of the Holy Spirit (#18), and he exhorts
his venerable brothers in the episcopate and the
ecclesial communities entrusted to us to open our
hearts to the promptings of the Spirit (#59).
Thus, in the spirit of Cardinal Suenens and our Holy Father
John Paul II, we say again, with great thanksgiving and
enthusiasm, that in the Catholic Charismatic Renewal and
in the grace of baptism in the Holy Spirit we see Gods
outpouring of a new Pentecost. This is a blessing for
the Church and for the world as we near the celebration
of our Lords 2000th birthday and the beginning of
the Third Millennium of Christianity.
Copyright ©1997 by the United States
Catholic Conference, Inc., Washington, D.C. All rights
reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted
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including photocopying, recording, or by any information
storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing
from the copyright owner.
For copies, contact:
NATIONAL SERVICE COMMITTEE
CHARISCENTER
1-800-338-2445
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