APOSTOLIC LETTER
ISSUED “MOTU PROPRIO”
BY THE SUPREME PONTIFF
FRANCIS
antiquum ministerium
INSTITUTING
THE MINISTRY OF CATECHIST
1. The ministry of Catechist in the Church is an
ancient one. Theologians commonly hold that the
first examples are already present in the
writings of the New Testament. The service of
catechesis may be traced back to those
“teachers” mentioned by the Apostle in writing
to the community of Corinth: “Some people God
has designated in the Church to be, first,
apostles; second, prophets; third, teachers;
then, mighty deeds; then, gifts of healing,
assistance, administration, and varieties of
tongues. Are all apostles? Are all prophets? Are
all teachers? Do all work mighty deeds? Do all
have gifts of healing? Do all speak in tongues?
Do all interpret? Strive eagerly for the
greatest spiritual gifts. But I shall show you a
still more excellent way” (1 Cor 12:28-31).
Saint Luke begins his Gospel by stating: “I too
have decided, after investigating everything
accurately anew, to write it down in an orderly
sequence for you, most excellent Theophilus, so
that you may realize the certainty of the
teachings you have received” (Lk 1:3-4). The
evangelist seems to be well aware that his
writings offer a specific form of instruction
that can give firm assurance to those already
baptized. The Apostle Paul, for his part, tells
the Galatians that: “one who is being instructed
in the word should share all good things with
his instructor” (Gal 6:6). As is evident, this
text provides yet another detail; it speaks of
the communion of life as a sign of the
fruitfulness of an authentic catechesis.
2. From the beginning, the Christian community
was characterized by many different forms of
ministry carried out by men and women who,
obedient to the working of the Holy Spirit,
devoted their lives to the building up of the
Church. At times, the charisms that the Spirit
constantly pours out on the baptized took on a
visible and tangible form of immediate service
to the Christian community, one recognized as an
indispensable diakonia for the community. The
Apostle Paul authoritatively attests to this
when he states that “there are different kinds
of spiritual gifts but the same Spirit; there
are different forms of service but the same
Lord; there are different workings but the same
God who produces all of them in everyone. To
each individual the manifestation of the Spirit
is given for some benefit. To one is given
through the Spirit the expression of wisdom; to
another the expression of knowledge according to
the same Spirit; to another faith by the same
Spirit; to another gifts of healing by the one
Spirit; to another mighty deeds; to another
prophecy; to another discernment of spirits; to
another varieties of tongues; to another
interpretation of tongues. But one and the same
Spirit produces all of these, distributing them
individually to each person as he wishes” (1 Cor
12:4-11).
Within the broader charismatic tradition of the
New Testament, then, we can see that certain
baptized persons exercised the ministry of
transmitting in a more organic and stable form
related to different situations in life the
teaching of the apostles and evangelists (cf.
SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic
Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei Verbum,
8). The Church wished to acknowledge this
service as a concrete expression of a personal
charism that contributed greatly to the exercise
of her mission of evangelization. This glance at
the life of the first Christian communities
engaged in the spread of the Gospel also
encourages the Church in our day to appreciate
possible new ways for her to remain faithful to
the word of the Lord so that his Gospel can be
preached to every creature.
3. The history of evangelization over the past
two millennia clearly shows the effectiveness of
the mission of catechists. Bishops, priests and
deacons, together with many men and women in the
consecrated life, devoted their lives to
catechetical instruction so that the faith might
be an effective support for the life of every
human being. Some of them also gathered around
themselves others of their brothers and sisters
sharing the same charism, and founded religious
orders wholly dedicated to catechesis.
Nor can we forget the countless lay men and
women who directly took part in the spread of
the Gospel through catechetical instruction. Men
and women of deep faith, authentic witnesses of
holiness, who in some cases were also founders
of Churches and eventually died as martyrs. In
our own day too, many competent and dedicated
catechists are community leaders in various
parts of the world and carry out a mission
invaluable for the transmission and growth of
the faith. The long line of blesseds, saints and
martyrs who were catechists has significantly
advanced the Church’s mission and deserves to be
recognized, for it represents a rich resource
not only for catechesis but also for the entire
history of Christian spirituality.
4. Beginning with the Second Vatican Ecumenical
Council, the Church has come to a renewed
appreciation of the importance of lay
involvement in the work of evangelization. The
Council Fathers repeatedly emphasized the great
need for the lay faithful to be engaged
directly, in the various ways their charism can
be expressed, in the “plantatio Ecclesiae” and
the development of the Christian community.
“Worthy of praise too is that army of
catechists, both men and women, to whom
missionary work among the nations is so
indebted, who imbued with an apostolic spirit
make an outstanding and absolutely necessary
contribution to the spread of the faith and the
Church by their great work. In our days, when
there are so few clerics to evangelize such
great multitudes and to carry out the pastoral
ministry, the role of catechists is of the
highest importance” (cf. SECOND VATICAN
ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the Church’s
Missionary Activity Ad Gentes, 17).
Along with the important teaching of the
Council, mention should be made of the constant
interest of the Popes, the Synod of Bishops, the
Episcopal Conferences and individual Bishops
who, in recent decades have contributed to a
significant renewal of catechesis. The Catechism
of the Catholic Church, the Apostolic
Exhortation Catechesi Tradendae, the General
Catechetical Directory, the General Directory
for Catechesis and the recent Directory for
Catechesis, as well as the many national,
regional and diocesan Catechisms, have confirmed
the centrality of a catechesis that gives
priority to the education and ongoing formation
of believers.
5. Without prejudice to the Bishop’s mission as
the primary catechist in his Diocese, one which
he shares with his presbyterate, or to the
particular responsibility of parents for the
Christian formation of their children (cf. CIC
can. 774 §2; CCEO can. 618), recognition should
be given to those lay men and women who feel
called by virtue of their baptism to cooperate
in the work of catechesis (cf. CIC can. 225;
CCEO cans. 401 and 406). This presence is all
the more urgently needed today as a result of
our increasing awareness of the need for
evangelization in the contemporary world (cf.
Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium,
163-168), and the rise of a globalized culture
(cf. Encyclical Letter Fratelli Tutti, 100,
138). This requires genuine interaction with
young people, to say nothing of the need for
creative methodologies and resources capable of
adapting the proclamation of the Gospel to the
missionary transformation that the Church has
undertaken. Fidelity to the past and
responsibility for the present are necessary
conditions for the Church to carry out her
mission in the world.
Awakening personal enthusiasm on the part of all
the baptized and reviving the awareness of their
call to carry out a proper mission in the
community demands attentiveness to the voice of
the Spirit, who is unfailingly present and
fruitful (cf. CIC can. 774 §1; CCEO can. 617).
Today, too, the Spirit is calling men and women
to set out and encounter all those who are
waiting to discover the beauty, goodness, and
truth of the Christian faith. It is the task of
pastors to support them in this process and to
enrich the life of the Christian community
through the recognition of lay ministries
capable of contributing to the transformation of
society through the “penetration of Christian
values into the social, political and economic
sectors” (Evangelii Gaudium, 102).
6. The lay apostolate is unquestionably
“secular”. It requires that the laity “seek the
kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs
and directing them according to God’s will” (cf.
SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 31).
In their daily life, interwoven with family and
social relationships, the laity come to realize
that they “are given this special vocation: to
make the Church present and fruitful in those
places and circumstances where it is only
through them that she can become the salt of the
earth” (ibid., 33). We do well to remember,
however, that in addition to this apostolate,
“the laity can be called in different ways to
more immediate cooperation in the apostolate of
the hierarchy, like those men and women who
helped the apostle Paul in the Gospel, working
hard in the Lord” (ibid.).
The role played by catechists is one specific
form of service among others within the
Christian community. Catechists are called first
to be expert in the pastoral service of
transmitting the faith as it develops through
its different stages from the initial
proclamation of the kerygma to the instruction
that presents our new life in Christ and
prepares for the sacraments of Christian
initiation, and then to the ongoing formation
that can allow each person to give an accounting
of the hope within them (cf. 1 Pet 3:15). At the
same time, every catechist must be a witness to
the faith, a teacher and mystagogue, a companion
and pedagogue, who teaches for the Church. Only
through prayer, study, and direct participation
in the life of the community can they grow in
this identity and the integrity and
responsibility that it entails (cf. Pontifical
Council for the Promotion of the New
Evangelization, Directory for Catechesis, 113).
7. With great foresight, Saint Paul VI issued
the Apostolic Letter Ministeria Quaedam with the
intention not only of adapting the ministries of
Lector and Acolyte to changed historical
circumstances (cf. Apostolic Letter Spiritus
Domini), but also of encouraging Episcopal
Conferences to promote other ministries,
including that of Catechist. “In addition to the
ministries common to the entire Latin Church,
nothing prevents Episcopal Conferences from
asking the Apostolic See for the institution of
others, which for particular reasons, they
consider necessary or very useful in their own
region. Among these are, for example, the
offices of Porter, Exorcist and Catechist.” The
same pressing invitation is found in the
Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi; in
calling for a discernment of the present needs
of the Christian community in faithful
continuity with its origins, the Pope encouraged
the development of new forms of ministry for a
renewed pastoral activity. “Such ministries,
apparently new but closely tied up with the
Church’s living experience down the centuries,
such as that of catechists… are valuable for the
establishment, life, and growth of the Church,
and for her capacity to influence her
surroundings and to reach those who are remote
from her” (SAINT PAUL VI, Apostolic Exhortation
Evangelii Nuntiandi, 73).
To be sure, “there has been a growing awareness
of the identity and mission of the laity in the
Church. We can indeed count on many lay persons,
although still not nearly enough, who have a
deeply-rooted sense of community and great
fidelity to the tasks of charity, catechesis and
the celebration of the faith” (Evangelii
Gaudium, 102). It follows that the reception of
a lay ministry such as that of Catechist will
emphasize even more the missionary commitment
proper to every baptized person, a commitment
that must however be carried out in a fully
“secular” manner, avoiding any form of
clericalization.
8. This ministry has a definite vocational
aspect, as evidenced by the Rite of Institution,
and consequently calls for due discernment on
the part of the Bishop. It is in fact a stable
form of service rendered to the local Church in
accordance with pastoral needs identified by the
local Ordinary, yet one carried out as a work of
the laity, as demanded by the very nature of the
ministry. It is fitting that those called to the
instituted ministry of Catechist be men and
women of deep faith and human maturity, active
participants in the life of the Christian
community, capable of welcoming others, being
generous and living a life of fraternal
communion. They should also receive suitable
biblical, theological, pastoral and pedagogical
formation to be competent communicators of the
truth of the faith and they should have some
prior experience of catechesis (cf. SECOND
VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Decree on the
Pastoral Office of Bishops in the Church
Christus Dominus, 14; CIC can. 231 §1; CCEO can.
409 §1). It is essential that they be faithful
co-workers with priests and deacons, prepared to
exercise their ministry wherever it may prove
necessary, and motivated by true apostolic
enthusiasm.
Therefore, after having taken all things into
consideration, and by apostolic authority
I establish
the lay ministry of Catechist
The Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Discipline of the Sacraments will soon publish
the Rite of Institution of the lay ministry of
Catechist.
9. I invite the Episcopal Conferences to render
effective the ministry of Catechist, determining
the necessary process of formation and the
normative criteria for admission to this
ministry and devising the most appropriate forms
for the service which these men and women will
be called to exercise in conformity with the
content of this Apostolic Letter.
10. The Synods of the Oriental Churches or the
Assemblies of Hierarchs may adopt what is
established here for their respective Churches
sui iuris, in accordance with their particular
law.
11. Bishops should make every effort to comply
with the exhortation of the Council Fathers:
“Pastors… know that they were not established by
Christ to undertake by themselves the entire
saving mission of the Church to the world. They
appreciate, rather, that it is their exalted
task to shepherd the faithful and at the same
time acknowledge their ministries and charisms
so that all in their separate ways, but of one
mind, may cooperate in the common task” (Lumen
Gentium, 30). May the discernment of the gifts
that the Holy Spirit never fails to grant to the
Church sustain their efforts to make the lay
ministry of Catechist effective for the growth
of their communities.
I order that what has been laid down by this
Apostolic Letter issued “Motu Proprio” have firm
and stable effect, anything to the contrary
notwithstanding, even if worthy of special
mention, and that it be promulgated by
publication in L’Osservatore Romano, taking
effect that same day, and published thereafter
in the official commentary of the Acta
Apostolicae Sedis.
Given in Rome, at Saint John Lateran, on the
tenth day of May in the year 2021, the
liturgical memorial of Saint John of Avila,
Priest and Doctor of the Church, the ninth of my
Pontificate.
FRANCIS
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