Pastoral letter
from Bishop Joseph Zen Ze-kiun for the inauguration of the Year of
Evangelisation
What a joy to be an
evangeliser!
To celebrate the Year of Evangelisation
was one of the ten priorities discussed during the Diocesan Synod in 2002. Now
after a year of preparation, we are ready to inaugurate this great event.
In its deliberations, the Synod recognised
a deficiency in the area of evangelisation - both on the personal
and community level. In dealing with the demands of pastoral concerns, we
almost compromised our ability to carry out the work of evangelisation.
That said, the deliberations also
signalled a new awareness of our duty to evangelise; a realisation already made
manifest through the increase in our evangelisation activities over recent
years.
Actually, pastoral work and evangelisation
are complementary aspects of the same reality, both prompted by the same love
and both having the same purpose of bringing Jesus to live in everybody’s
heart.
The Church nourishes the faithful by
educating their faith; this is pastoral work. Educated and informed faith bears
fruit in gratitude, joy and an irresistible impulse to share the Gospel with
others; this is evangelisation. As the Gospel says: “What you have learned you
have to shout from rooftops”, “what you have received freely, give free of
charge”, or as St. Paul says: “Woe to me if I Fail to be an evangeliser!”
The Synod deliberations made “ten thousand
new baptisms” a target for the Year of Evangelisation. This is to be taken as a
desire and an exhortation, because the true result cannot possibly be
calculated in such a simple and immediate fashion.
While the whole initiative requires money
generated through fund-raising, what is most needed is a spirit of enthusiasm
through which we can tell everybody: “I have found Jesus and I am so happy!”
On the occasion of this year’s Mission
Sunday, the Holy Father, John Paul II, has giving us some precious gifts:
Strong and recent examples of missionary zeal. Two weeks ago he beatified the
founders of two missionary societies, St. Daniel Comboni of the Comboni
Missionary Society and St. Arnold Janssen of the Divine Word Missionary Society.
He also beatified St. Joseph Freinademetz the Divine Word missionary who worked
in China, and today, the pope has beatified Mother Teresa of Calucutta, founder
of the Missionaries of Charity.
Missionaries, both men and women, leave their families and countries for far away lands. As strangers they have to learn different cultures and adapt themselves to new life situations. They face difficulties and even hostility for no purpose other than to bring the Gospel to those to whom they are sent: their new brothers and sisters. They make Jesus’ desire their own; they want to quench His thirst.
The sacrifices of the missionaries laid
the foundations of the Church in China and in Hong Kong. They irrigated this
vineyard of God with their sweat and blood. Even today our diocese relies on
their support. May God bless them and reward them.
The diocese has shown its increasing
maturity through its participation in mission ad gentes (to foreign
countries). Our Catholic Lay Missionary Association was established in 1988 and
has 21 members who have gone on mission to Africa and Cambodia. This year our
first diocesan priest, Father Paul Kam Po-wai, was sent to the mission in
Tanzania as our representative.
When St. Joseph Freinademetz asked his
bishop to allow him to follow his missionary vocation, the bishop gave this
answer: “As Bishop of Bressanone I say no, bur as a bishop of the Catholic
Church I say yes, go, my son, and be a good missionary.” Our diocese is
suffering from a dire shortage of priests, but we must still be thankful that
God has made us part of the Church missionary endeavour. He will reward us with
many vocations for our diocese.
The examples of our sisters and brothers
who leave for the foreign the mission serve to encourage us to take up our
missionary role more seriously. The Church is not a private club. So when we
pray and sing in our churches we should not forget friends who are still
wandering outside in the dark. Our Lord wants them to join us too. We should
not have peace until they are with us.
Every time I gaze on our city from the
Peak or look at the thousands of illumined windows at night, I tell the Lord,
“The family you have entrusted to me is so big, how can I manage?” I believe I
hear His voice replying: “Joseph, do you love me? Shepherd my sheep!” Sisters
and brothers, do you hear the same voice calling your name?
+ Bishop Joseph Zen
Mission Sunday 2003