As I
re-emphasise the role and duty of lay people in the Catholic Church, I would
like to encourage you to pay a keen attention to my write-up. I also would like
to hear from you, what you think about the laity in our Church in these modern
times.
The
theme that I chose for this is, “The
Church of the People.” This theme is relevant to our times but has its root
in Greek word laikos, which means ‘of
the people’.
Never
before in the history of the Church has the absolutely essential role of the
layperson been so dramatically emphasised as it is now. Particularly since
Vatican II, the Church has called for a renewal in the life and role of the
laity. Yet among the faithful, there remains fundamental lack of understanding
of the lay vocation and its role in the Church’s mission. For many, there is a
notion that the only real vocation in the Church is the ordained or vowed
priesthood and religious. They believe “the Church” is the ordained office and
only people in habits or collars are called to serve. This is why, many think
that since, there is lack of priests in our parishes, laity should take care of
the parish. Many think that the role of the laity is to help out around the
parish and that they are not called to play an integral part in the mission of
the Church.
Lay vocation is not a substitute to
vocation to the priesthood: It is obvious from the Catholic Teaching that
God calls lay people not because there is lack of priests in the diocese but it
is the duty and privilege as the member of the Church to mind the business of
the Church.
“The
faithful, who by Baptism are incorporated into Christ and integrated into the
People of God, are made sharers in their particular way in the priestly,
prophetic, and kingly office of Christ, and have their own part to play in the
mission of the whole Christian people in the Church and in the world.”
It
is not wise to think that lay people have to take care and mind the Church
because there are not priests but laypersons must execute their rights and
privileges offered to them by baptism. If laypersons do not be integral part of
the parish, which means, one is not living the promise of the baptism.
Lay vocation is very real: Lay people
have a distinct and very real role in the spreading of the Gospel, which the
Church desperately needs them to carry out with the authority, creativity and
power that the Holy Spirit has given them in Baptism. This way the role of the
laity is essential in accomplishing the mission of the Church. Church must be everyone’s
business not only a select few. Lay people are called to engage in the affairs
of the world and direct them according to God’s will. This is the real way the
lay people live their baptismal commitments of priests, prophets and kings. So
let us not merely sit back rather let us rise to our vocation as Christians to
help the Church.
Being Church not merely belonging to the
Church: Lay people bring Christ’s divine message of salvation to every
aspect of life. Lay people take Christ’s message from the Eucharist to their
families, work places and hitherto, become witness to the Gospel. This is
called being the Church not merely belonging to the Church. Lay people discern
every day in their lives, i.e. marital life, student life, professional life etc.
Laity in the mystical body: Bishops,
priests and lay people make the mystical body of Christ, the Church who
ministry is to teach, sanctify and govern. Precisely, the laity are the
majority in the mystical body of Christ and certainly, can do the work of
evangelizing, sanctifying and renewing the rest of the world beyond the
sanctuary and the Church yard. Lay people need to permeate social, political
and economic realities because they have the experience of living those
realities. This makes lay people to be on the front line of the Church’s life,
and by doing so, laity bring Christ’s message to the whole world in a
substantial way.
Discerning laity: In order to fulfil
one’s mission as a layperson, discernment is the single greatest discipline or
skill necessary. That is, they must ‘read signs of the times’ in order to pay
attention to what the Holy Spirit is calling them to do. Pope St John Paul II
tells us, “to be able to discover the actual will of the Lord in our lives
always involves the following: a receptive listening to the Word of God and the
Church, fervent and constant prayer, recourse to a wise and loving spiritual
guide, and a faithful discernment of the gifts and talents given by God, as
well as the diverse social and historic situations in which one lives.” (Christifideles Iaici, 28).
I
would like to conclude with Fr. Karl
Rahner laymen’s duty; the lay man still has the duty – an old duty, but always
needing to be re-emphasised – to educate himself in religious and theological
matters up to a decent level, corresponding to his intellectual level in other
fields. He must have a deep-rooted knowledge of where the fixed boundaries of
his faith lie. Me must know something about Church history, so that he is not
always ready to accept the latest thing, his own period’s ‘dernier cri,’ as the end of all wisdom. He must have a really clear
understanding of the Church’s official teaching about all those matters, which,
because of his position in life and his personal relationships with others,
concern him most intimately. Catholics who want to take a real share in the
development of a public opinion within the Church must live like true
Christians and make the Church’s Mysteries the basis of their personal life.
The lay people must do all they can to make their own personal contribution to
the development of a public opinion within the Church, and its dissemination
outside Her.