NATIONAL BLACK CATHOLIC
APOSTOLATE FOR LIFE |
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Pastoral Letter: News Release News Release
Prepared
by: Therese Wilson Favors |
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Pastoral
Letter:
In each generation, the Spirit gives a specific
assignment to it’s spiritual leaders. The assignment given usually
is a unique, yet prophetic call to move God’s people to a higher
level of mission. This is what happened twenty five years ago (1984)
when the African American Catholic Bishops acted in unison to speak
about evangelization within the African American Catholic community
through the Pastoral Letter, “What We Have Seen and Heard” .
In its Introduction, the Black Bishops speak… “Within the history of every Christian community there comes a time when it reaches adulthood. This maturity brings with it the duty, the privilege and the joy to share with others the rich experience of the ‘Word of Life.’ Always conscious of the need to hear the Word and ever ready to listen to its proclamation, the mature Christian community feels the irresistible urge to speak that Word … We write to you, Black brothers and sisters, because each one of us is called to a special task. The Holy Spirit now calls all to the work of evangelization.”
At that hour, the Black Bishops called to memory a quote of Pope Paul VI to the peoples of Africa when he said to them in Kampala in Uganda:” You are now missionaries to yourselves”…And Pope Paul VI laid out for all sons and daughters of Africa the nature of the response: “You must now give your gifts of Blackness to the whole Church ( The Pope Speaks, 1969 Symposium in Kampala, Uganda)
Twenty five years ago, through this landmark document, the Black Bishops speak of the role that culture plays in the ministry of evangelization. “There is a richness in our Black experience that we must share with the entire People of God.” A discussion on the universality of the Catholic Church follows the previously mentioned statement. The Bishops then remind us that to be “universal does not mean to be uniformed”, instead a sharing of the gift of Blackness is our part of building up the whole Church. They continue…”We have heard with Black ears and we have seen with Black eyes and we have understood with an African heart”. It is through this understanding of culture and the universality of the Church that the Black Bishops call forth the specific task of African American Catholics to evangelize among our own… “it is our way to witness to our brothers and sisters within the Black community that the Catholic Church is both one and also home to us all.”
The Pastoral Letter “What We Have Seen and Heard”
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Understanding that
African American spirituality is based on
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Proclaiming that the
“good news” is a message of liberation and · Placing special interest and outreach on the family and the extended family. Church is extended family, that is why we call each other Brother and Sister. Our Parishes can evangelize just through family outreach and being family to one another, especially when family-hood is threaten.
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Confronting racism as
it particularly impacts Black men and at the same time calling forth
Black men in their role of fostering a “vocation of fatherhood”
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Supporting the role of
women as sources of strength
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Promoting Black
values, “especially new life within the mother,
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Nurturing Vocations.
Sr. Thea Bowman said, · Honoring Ecumenism within our evangelization efforts.
“What We Have Seen and Heard” was
issued on the feast day (September 9,)
The Spirit that moved among the ten Black Bishops of yesterday to
compose this Pastoral Letter still has a potent force today,
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The National Black Catholic Apostolate
for Life was inaugurated in the fall of 1997, with the National Black
Catholic Clergy Caucus and the Franciscan Solid Ground Ministry as sponsors
and with the support of John Cardinal O'Connor, Archbishop of New York and
the Archdiocese's Office of Black Ministry.
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