|
CCC Paragraphs 811 through 870
Paragraph 3.
The Church Is One, Holy, Catholic,
and Apostolic
811 "This
is the sole Church of Christ, which
in the Creed we profess to be one,
holy, catholic and apostolic."
These four characteristics, inseparably
linked with each other, indicate
essential features of the Church
and her mission. The Church does
not possess them of herself; it is
Christ who, through the Holy Spirit,
makes his Church one, holy, catholic,
and apostolic, and it is he who calls
her to realize each of these qualities.
812 Only
faith can recognize that the Church
possesses these properties from her
divine source. But their historical
manifestations are signs that also
speak clearly to human reason. As
the First Vatican Council noted,
the "Church herself, with her
marvelous propagation, eminent holiness,
and inexhaustible fruitfulness in
everything good, her catholic unity
and invincible stability, is a great
and perpetual motive of credibility
and an irrefutable witness of her
divine mission."
I. THE CHURCH IS ONE
"The sacred mystery of the Church's
unity" (UR 2)
813 The
Church is one because of her source: "the
highest exemplar and source of this
mystery is the unity, in the Trinity
of Persons, of one God, the Father
and the Son in the Holy Spirit."
The Church is one because of her
founder: for "the Word made
flesh, the prince of peace, reconciled
all men to God by the cross, . .
. restoring the unity of all in one
people and one body." The Church
is one because of her "soul": "It
is the Holy Spirit, dwelling in those
who believe and pervading and ruling
over the entire Church, who brings
about that wonderful communion of
the faithful and joins them together
so intimately in Christ that he is
the principle of the Church's unity."
Unity is of the essence of the Church:
What an astonishing mystery! There
is one Father of the universe, one
Logos of the universe, and also one
Holy Spirit, everywhere one and the
same; there is also one virgin become
mother, and I should like to call
her "Church."
814 From
the beginning, this one Church has
been marked by a great diversity
which comes from both the variety
of God's gifts and the diversity
of those who receive them. Within
the unity of the People of God, a
multiplicity of peoples and cultures
is gathered together. Among the Church's
members, there are different gifts,
offices, conditions, and ways of
life. "Holding a rightful place
in the communion of the Church there
are also particular Churches that
retain their own traditions."
The great richness of such diversity
is not opposed to the Church's unity.
Yet sin and the burden of its consequences
constantly threaten the gift of unity.
And so the Apostle has to exhort
Christians to "maintain the
unity of the Spirit in the bond of
peace."
815 What
are these bonds of unity? Above all,
charity "binds everything together
in perfect harmony." But the
unity of the pilgrim Church is also
assured by visible bonds of communion:
- profession of one faith received
from the Apostles;
- common celebration of divine
worship, especially of the sacraments;
- Apostolic Succession through
the sacrament of Holy Orders,
maintaining the fraternal concord
of God's family.
816 "The
sole Church of Christ [is that] which
our Savior, after his Resurrection,
entrusted to Peter's pastoral care,
commissioning him and the other apostles
to extend and rule it.... This Church,
constituted and organized as a society
in the present world, subsists in
(subsist in) in) the Catholic Church,
which is governed by the successor
of Peter and by the bishops in communion
with him."
The Second Vatican Council's Decree
on Ecumenism explains: "For
it is through Christ's Catholic Church
alone, which is the universal help
toward salvation, that the fullness
of the means of salvation can be
obtained. It was to the apostolic
college alone, of which Peter is
the head, that we believe that our
Lord entrusted all the blessings
of the New Covenant, in order to
establish on earth the one Body of
Christ into which all those should
be fully incorporated who belong
in any way to the People of God."
Wounds to unity
817 In
fact, "in this one and only
Church of God from its very beginnings
there arose certain rifts, which
the Apostle strongly censures as
damnable. But in subsequent centuries
much more serious dissension appeared
and large communities became separated
from full communion with the Catholic
Church - for which, often enough,
men of both sides were to blame." The
ruptures that wound the unity of
Christ's Body - here we must distinguish
heresy, apostasy, and schism - do
not occur without human sin:
Where there are sins, there are
also divisions, schisms, heresies,
and disputes. Where there is virtue,
however, there also are harmony
and unity, from which arise the
one heart and one soul of all
believers.
818 "However,
one cannot charge with the sin of
the separation those who at present
are born into these communities [that
resulted from such separation] and
in them are brought up in the faith
of Christ, and the Catholic Church
accepts them with respect and affection
as brothers .... All who have been
justified by faith in Baptism are
incorporated into Christ; they therefore
have a right to be called Christians,
and with good reason are accepted
as brothers in the Lord by the children
of the Catholic Church."
819 "Furthermore,
many elements of sanctification and
of truth" are found outside
the visible confines of the Catholic
Church: "the written Word of
God; the life of grace; faith, hope,
and charity, with the other interior
gifts of the Holy Spirit, as well
as visible elements." Christ's
Spirit uses these Churches and ecclesial
communities as means of salvation,
whose power derives from the fullness
of grace and truth that Christ has
entrusted to the Catholic Church.
All these blessings come from Christ
and lead to him, and are in themselves
calls to "Catholic unity."
Toward unity
820 "Christ
bestowed unity on his Church from
the beginning. This unity, we believe,
subsists in the Catholic Church as
something she can never lose, and
we hope that it will continue to
increase until the end of time."
Christ always gives his Church the
gift of unity, but the Church must
always pray and work to maintain,
reinforce, and perfect the unity
that Christ wills for her. This is
why Jesus himself prayed at the hour
of his Passion, and does not cease
praying to his Father, for the unity
of his disciples: "That they
may all be one. As you, Father, are
in me and I am in you, may they also
be one in us, . . . so that the world
may know that you have sent me."
The desire to recover the unity of
all Christians is a gift of Christ
and a call of the Holy Spirit.
821 Certain
things are required in order to respond
adequately to this call:
- a permanent renewal of the Church
in greater fidelity to her vocation;
such renewal is the driving-force
of the movement toward unity;
- conversion of heart as the faithful "try
to live holier lives according
to the Gospel"; for it is
the unfaithfulness of the members
to Christ's gift which causes
divisions;
- prayer in common, because "change
of heart and holiness of life,
along with public and private
prayer for the unity of Christians,
should be regarded as the soul
of the whole ecumenical movement,
and merits the name 'spiritual
ecumenism;"'
- fraternal knowledge of each other;
- ecumenical formation of the
faithful and especially of priests;
- dialogue among theologians and
meetings among Christians of the
different churches and communities;
- collaboration among Christians
in various areas of service to
mankind. "Human service" is
the idiomatic phrase.
822 Concern
for achieving unity "involves
the whole Church, faithful and clergy
alike." But we must realize "that
this holy objective - the reconciliation
of all Christians in the unity of
the one and only Church of Christ
- transcends human powers and gifts." That
is why we place all our hope "in
the prayer of Christ for the Church,
in the love of the Father for us,
and in the power of the Holy Spirit."
II THE CHURCH IS HOLY
823 "The
Church . . . is held, as a matter
of faith, to be unfailingly holy.
This is because Christ, the Son of
God, who with the Father and the
Spirit is hailed as 'alone holy,'
loved the Church as his Bride, giving
himself up for her so as to sanctify
her; he joined her to himself as
his body and endowed her with the
gift of the Holy Spirit for the glory
of God." The Church, then, is "the
holy People of God,"
and her members are called "saints."
824 United
with Christ, the Church is sanctified
by him; through him and with him
she becomes sanctifying. "All
the activities of the Church are
directed, as toward their end, to
the sanctification of men in Christ
and the glorification of God."
It is in the Church that "the
fullness of the means of salvation"
has been deposited. It is in her
that "by the grace of God we
acquire holiness."
825 "The
Church on earth is endowed already
with a sanctity that is real though
imperfect."
In her members perfect holiness is
something yet to be acquired: "Strengthened
by so many and such great means of
salvation, all the faithful, whatever
their condition or state - though
each in his own way - are called
by the Lord to that perfection of
sanctity by which the Father himself
is perfect."
826 Charity
is the soul of the holiness to which
all are called: it "governs,
shapes, and perfects all the means
of sanctification."
If the Church was a body composed
of different members, it couldn't
lack the noblest of all; it must
have a Heart, and a Heart burning
with love.
And I realized that this love alone
was the true motive force which enabled
the other members of the Church to
act; if it ceased to function, the
Apostles would forget to preach the
gospel, the Martyrs would refuse
to shed their blood. Love, in fact,
is the vocation which includes all
others; it's a universe of its own,
comprising all time and space - it's
eternal!
827 "Christ,
'holy, innocent, and undefiled,'
knew nothing of sin, but came only
to expiate the sins of the people.
The Church, however, clasping sinners
to her bosom, at once holy and always
in need of purification, follows
constantly the path of penance and
renewal." All members of the
Church, including her ministers,
must acknowledge that they are sinners.
In everyone, the weeds of sin will
still be mixed with the good wheat
of the Gospel until the end of time.
Hence the Church gathers sinners
already caught up in Christ's salvation
but still on the way to holiness:
The Church is therefore holy, though
having sinners in her midst, because
she herself has no other life but
the life of grace. If they live her
life, her members are sanctified;
if they move away from her life,
they fall into sins and disorders
that prevent the radiation of her
sanctity. This is why she suffers
and does penance for those offenses,
of which she has the power to free
her children through the blood of
Christ and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
828 By
canonizing some of the faithful,
i.e., by solemnly pro claiming that
they practiced heroic virtue and
lived in fidelity to God's grace,
the Church recognizes the power of
the Spirit of holiness within her
and sustains the hope of believers
by proposing the saints to them as
models and intercessors. "The
saints have always been the source
and origin of renewal in the most
difficult moments in the Church's
history." Indeed, "holiness
is the hidden source and infallible
measure of her apostolic activity
and missionary zeal."
829 "But
while in the most Blessed Virgin
the Church has already reached that
perfection whereby she exists without
spot or wrinkle, the faithful still
strive to conquer sin and increase
in holiness. And so they turn their
eyes to Mary": in her, the Church
is already the "all-holy."
III. THE CHURCH IS CATHOLIC
What does "catholic" mean?
830 The
word "catholic" means "universal," in
the sense of "according to the
totality" or "in keeping
with the whole." The Church
is catholic in a double sense: First,
the Church is catholic because Christ
is present in her. "Where there
is Christ Jesus, there is the Catholic
Church." In her subsists the
fullness of Christ's body united
with its head; this implies that
she receives from him "the fullness
of the means of salvation"
which he has willed: correct and
complete confession of faith, full
sacramental life, and ordained ministry
in apostolic succession. The Church
was, in this fundamental sense, catholic
on the day of Pentecost and will
always be so until the day of the
Parousia.
831 Secondly,
the Church is catholic because she
has been sent out by Christ on a
mission to the whole of the human
race:
All men are called to belong
to the new People of God. This
People, therefore, while remaining
one and only one, is to be spread
throughout the whole world and
to all ages in order that the
design of God's will may be fulfilled:
he made human nature one in the
beginning and has decreed that
all his children who were scattered
should be finally gathered together
as one.... The character of universality
which adorns the People of God
is a gift from the Lord himself
whereby the Catholic Church ceaselessly
and efficaciously seeks for the
return of all humanity and all
its goods, under Christ the Head
in the unity of his Spirit.
Each particular Church is "catholic"
832 "The
Church of Christ is really present
in all legitimately organized local
groups of the faithful, which, in
so far as they are united to their
pastors, are also quite appropriately
called Churches in the New Testament....
In them the faithful are gathered
together through the preaching of
the Gospel of Christ, and the mystery
of the Lord's Supper is celebrated....
In these communities, though they
may often be small and poor, or existing
in the diaspora, Christ is present,
through whose power and influence
the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic
Church is constituted."
833 The
phrase "particular church," which
is the diocese (or eparchy), refers
to a community of the Christian faithful
in communion of faith and sacraments
with their bishop ordained in apostolic
succession. These particular Churches "are
constituted after the model of the
universal Church; it is in these
and formed out of them that the one
and unique Catholic Church exists."
834 Particular
Churches are fully catholic through
their communion with one of them,
the Church of Rome "which presides
in charity." "For with
this church, by reason of its pre-eminence,
the whole Church, that is the faithful
everywhere, must necessarily be in
accord."
Indeed, "from the incarnate
Word's descent to us, all Christian
churches everywhere have held and
hold the great Church that is here
[at Rome] to be their only basis
and foundation since, according to
the Savior's promise, the gates of
hell have never prevailed against
her.
835 "Let
us be very careful not to conceive
of the universal Church as the simple
sum, or . . . the more or less anomalous
federation of essentially different
particular churches. In the mind
of the Lord the Church is universal
by vocation and mission, but when
she pub down her roots in a variety
of cultural, social, and human terrains,
she takes on different external expressions
and appearances in each part of the
world." The rich variety of
ecclesiastical disciplines, liturgical
rites, and theological and spiritual
heritages proper to the local churches "unified
in a common effort, shows all the
more resplendently the catholicity
of the undivided Church."
Who belongs to the Catholic
Church?
836 "All
men are called to this catholic unity
of the People of God.... And to it,
in different ways, belong or are
ordered: the Catholic faithful, others
who believe in Christ, and finally
all mankind, called by God's grace
to salvation."
837 "Fully
incorporated into the society of
the Church are those who, possessing
the Spirit of Christ, accept all
the means of salvation given to the
Church together with her entire organization,
and who - by the bonds constituted
by the profession of faith, the sacraments,
ecclesiastical government, and communion
- are joined in the visible structure
of the Church of Christ, who rules
her through the Supreme Pontiff and
the bishops. Even though incorporated
into the Church, one who does not
however persevere in charity is not
saved. He remains indeed in the bosom
of the Church, but 'in body' not
'in heart.'"
838 "The
Church knows that she is joined in
many ways to the baptized who are
honored by the name of Christian,
but do not profess the Catholic faith
in its entirety or have not preserved
unity or communion under the successor
of Peter." Those "who believe
in Christ and have been properly
baptized are put in a certain, although
imperfect, communion with the Catholic
Church." With the Orthodox Churches,
this communion is so profound "that
it lacks little to attain the fullness
that would permit a common celebration
of the Lord's Eucharist."
The Church and non-Christians
839 "Those
who have not yet received the Gospel
are related to the People of God
in various ways." The relationship
of the Church with the Jewish People.
When she delves into her own mystery,
the Church, the People of God in
the New Covenant, discovers her link
with the Jewish People, "the
first to hear the Word of God."
The Jewish faith, unlike other non-Christian
religions, is already a response
to God's revelation in the Old Covenant.
To the Jews "belong the sonship,
the glory, the covenants, the giving
of the law, the worship, and the
promises; to them belong the patriarchs,
and of their race, according to the
flesh, is the Christ", "for
the gifts and the call of God are
irrevocable."
840 And
when one considers the future, God's
People of the Old Covenant and the
new People of God tend towards similar
goals: expectation of the coming
(or the return) of the Messiah. But
one awaits the return of the Messiah
who died and rose from the dead and
is recognized as Lord and Son of
God; the other awaits the coming
of a Messiah, whose features remain
hidden till the end of time; and
the latter waiting is accompanied
by the drama of not knowing or of
misunderstanding Christ Jesus.
841 The
Church's relationship with the Muslims. "The
plan of salvation also includes those
who acknowledge the Creator, in the
first place amongst whom are the
Muslims; these profess to hold the
faith of Abraham, and together with
us they adore the one, merciful God,
mankind's judge on the last day."
842 The
Church's bond with non-Christian
religions is in the first place the
common origin and end of the human
race:
All nations form but one community.
This is so because all stem from
the one stock which God created to
people the entire earth, and also
because all share a common destiny,
namely God. His providence, evident
goodness, and saving designs extend
to all against the day when the elect
are gathered together in the holy
city. . .
843 The
Catholic Church recognizes in other
religions that search, among shadows
and images, for the God who is unknown
yet near since he gives life and
breath and all things and wants all
men to be saved. Thus, the Church
considers all goodness and truth
found in these religions as "a
preparation for the Gospel and given
by him who enlightens all men that
they may at length have life."
844 In
their religious behavior, however,
men also display the limits and errors
that disfigure the image of God in
them:
Very often, deceived by the Evil
One, men have become vain in their
reasonings, and have exchanged
the truth of God for a lie, and
served the creature rather than
the Creator. Or else, living and
dying in this world without God,
they are exposed to ultimate despair.
845 To
reunite all his children, scattered
and led astray by sin, the Father
willed to call the whole of humanity
together into his Son's Church. The
Church is the place where humanity
must rediscover its unity and salvation.
The Church is "the world reconciled." She
is that bark which "in the full
sail of the Lord's cross, by the
breath of the Holy Spirit, navigates
safely in this world." According
to another image dear to the Church
Fathers, she is prefigured by Noah's
ark, which alone saves from the flood.
"Outside the Church
there is no salvation"
846 How
are we to understand this affirmation,
often repeated by the Church Fathers?
Re-formulated positively, it means
that all salvation comes from Christ
the Head through the Church which
is his Body:
Basing itself on Scripture and
Tradition, the Council teaches
that the Church, a pilgrim now
on earth, is necessary for salvation:
the one Christ is the mediator
and the way of salvation; he is
present to us in his body which
is the Church. He himself explicitly
asserted the necessity of faith
and Baptism, and thereby affirmed
at the same time the necessity
of the Church which men enter
through Baptism as through a door.
Hence they could not be saved
who, knowing that the Catholic
Church was founded as necessary
by God through Christ, would refuse
either to enter it or to remain
in it.
847 This
affirmation is not aimed at those
who, through no fault of their own,
do not know Christ and his Church:
Those who, through no fault of
their own, do not know the Gospel
of Christ or his Church, but who
nevertheless seek God with a sincere
heart, and, moved by grace, try
in their actions to do his will
as they know it through the dictates
of their conscience - those too
may achieve eternal salvation.
848 "Although
in ways known to himself God can
lead those who, through no fault
of their own, are ignorant of the
Gospel, to that faith without which
it is impossible to please him, the
Church still has the obligation and
also the sacred right to evangelize
all men."
Mission - a requirement of
the Church's catholicity
849 The
missionary mandate. "Having
been divinely sent to the nations
that she might be 'the universal
sacrament of salvation,' the Church,
in obedience to the command of her
founder and because it is demanded
by her own essential universality,
strives to preach the Gospel to all
men": "Go therefore and
make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that
I have commanded you; and Lo, I am
with you always, until the close
of the age."
850 The
origin and purpose of mission. The
Lord's missionary mandate is ultimately
grounded in the eternal love of the
Most Holy Trinity: "The Church
on earth is by her nature missionary
since, according to the plan of the
Father, she has as her origin the
mission of the Son and the Holy Spirit."
The ultimate purpose of mission is
none other than to make men share
in the communion between the Father
and the Son in their Spirit of love.
851 Missionary
motivation. It is from God's
love for all men that the Church
in every age receives both the
obligation and the vigor of her
missionary dynamism, "for
the love of Christ urges us on."
Indeed, God "desires all men
to be saved and to come to the knowledge
of the truth"; that is, God
wills the salvation of everyone through
the knowledge of the truth. Salvation
is found in the truth. Those who
obey the prompting of the Spirit
of truth are already on the way of
salvation. But the Church, to whom
this truth has been entrusted, must
go out to meet their desire, so as
to bring them the truth. Because
she believes in God's universal plan
of salvation, the Church must be
missionary.
852 Missionary
paths. The Holy Spirit is
the protagonist, "the principal
agent of the whole of the Church's
mission." It is he who leads
the Church on her missionary paths. "This
mission continues and, in the
course of history, unfolds the
mission of Christ, who was sent
to evangelize the poor; so the
Church, urged on by the Spirit
of Christ, must walk the road
Christ himself walked, a way of
poverty and obedience, of service
and self-sacrifice even to death,
a death from which he emerged
victorious by his resurrection."
So it is that "the blood of
martyrs is the seed of Christians."
853 On
her pilgrimage, the Church has also
experienced the "discrepancy
existing between the message she
proclaims and the human weakness
of those to whom the Gospel has been
entrusted." Only by taking the "way
of penance and renewal," the "narrow
way of the cross," can the People
of God extend Christ's reign. For "just
as Christ carried out the work of
redemption in poverty and oppression,
so the Church is called to follow
the same path if she is to communicate
the fruits of salvation to men."
854 By
her very mission, "the Church
. . . travels the same journey as
all humanity and shares the same
earthly lot with the world: she is
to be a leaven and, as it were, the
soul of human society in its renewal
by Christ and transformation into
the family of God." Missionary
endeavor requires patience. It begins
with the proclamation of the Gospel
to peoples and groups who do not
yet believe in Christ, continues
with the establishment of Christian
communities that are "a sign
of God's presence in the world,"
and leads to the foundation of local
churches. It must involve a process
of inculturation if the Gospel is
to take flesh in each people's culture.
There will be times of defeat. "With
regard to individuals, groups, and
peoples it is only by degrees that
[the Church] touches and penetrates
them and so receives them into a
fullness which is Catholic."
855 The
Church's mission stimulates efforts
towards Christian unity. Indeed, "divisions
among Christians prevent the Church
from realizing in practice the fullness
of catholicity proper to her in those
of her sons who, though joined to
her by Baptism, are yet separated
from full communion with her. Furthermore,
the Church herself finds it more
difficult to express in actual life
her full catholicity in all its aspects."
856 The
missionary task implies a respectful
dialogue with those who do not yet
accept the Gospel. Believers can
profit from this dialogue by learning
to appreciate better "those
elements of truth and grace which
are found among peoples, and which
are, as it were, a secret presence
of God." They proclaim the Good
News to those who do not know it,
in order to consolidate, complete,
and raise up the truth and the goodness
that God has distributed among men
and nations, and to purify them from
error and evil "for the glory
of God, the confusion of the demon,
and the happiness of man."
IV. THE CHURCH IS APOSTOLIC
857 The
Church is apostolic because she is
founded on the apostles, in three
ways:
- she was and remains built on "the
foundation of the Apostles," the
witnesses chosen and sent on mission
by Christ himself;
- with the help of the Spirit
dwelling in her, the Church keeps
and hands on the teaching,
the "good deposit," the
salutary words she has heard from
the apostles;
- she continues to be taught,
sanctified, and guided by the
apostles until Christ's return,
through their successors in pastoral
office: the college of bishops, "assisted
by priests, in union with the
successor of Peter, the Church's
supreme pastor":
You are the eternal Shepherd who
never leaves his flock untended.
Through the apostles you watch over
us and protect us always. You made
them shepherds of the flock to share
in the work of your Son....
The Apostles' mission
858 Jesus
is the Father's Emissary. From the
beginning of his ministry, he "called
to him those whom he desired; ....
And he appointed twelve, whom also
he named apostles, to be with him,
and to be sent out to preach."
From then on, they would also be
his "emissaries" (Greek apostoloi).
In them, Christ continues his own
mission: "As the Father has
sent me, even so I send you."
The apostles' ministry is the continuation
of his mission; Jesus said to the
Twelve: "he who receives you
receives me."
859 Jesus
unites them to the mission he received
from the Father. As "the Son
can do nothing of his own accord," but
receives everything from the Father
who sent him, so those whom Jesus
sends can do nothing apart from him,
from whom they received both the
mandate for their mission and the
power to carry it out. Christ's apostles
knew that they were called by God
as "ministers of a new covenant," "servants
of God," "ambassadors for
Christ," "servants of Christ
and stewards of the mysteries of
God."
860 In
the office of the apostles there
is one aspect that cannot be transmitted:
to be the chosen witnesses of the
Lord's Resurrection and so the foundation
stones of the Church. But their office
also has a permanent aspect. Christ
promised to remain with them always.
The divine mission entrusted by Jesus
to them "will continue to the
end of time, since the Gospel they
handed on is the lasting source of
all life for the Church. Therefore,
. . . the apostles took care to appoint
successors."
The bishops - successors
of the apostles
861 "In
order that the mission entrusted
to them might be continued after
their death, [the apostles] consigned,
by will and testament, as it were,
to their immediate collaborators
the duty of completing and consolidating
the work they had begun, urging them
to tend to the whole flock, in which
the Holy Spirit had appointed them
to shepherd the Church of God. They
accordingly designated such men and
then made the ruling that likewise
on their death other proven men should
take over their ministry."
862 "Just
as the office which the Lord confided
to Peter alone, as first of the apostles,
destined to be transmitted to his
successors, is a permanent one, so
also endures the office, which the
apostles received, of shepherding
the Church, a charge destined to
be exercised without interruption
by the sacred order of bishops."
Hence the Church teaches that "the
bishops have by divine institution
taken the place of the apostles as
pastors of the Church, in such wise
that whoever listens to them is listening
to Christ and whoever despises them
despises Christ and him who sent
Christ."
The apostolate
863 The
whole Church is apostolic, in that
she remains, through the successors
of St. Peter and the other apostles,
in communion of faith and life with
her origin: and in that she is "sent
out" into the whole world. All
members of the Church share in this
mission, though in various ways. "The
Christian vocation is, of its nature,
a vocation to the apostolate as well." Indeed,
we call an apostolate "every
activity of the Mystical Body" that
aims "to spread the Kingdom
of Christ over all the earth."
864 "Christ,
sent by the Father, is the source
of the Church's whole apostolate";
thus the fruitfulness of apostolate
for ordained ministers as well as
for lay people clearly depends on
their vital union with Christ. In
keeping with their vocations, the
demands of the times and the various
gifts of the Holy Spirit, the apostolate
assumes the most varied forms. But
charity, drawn from the Eucharist
above all, is always "as it
were, the soul of the whole apostolate."
865 The
Church is ultimately one, holy, catholic,
and apostolic in her deepest and
ultimate identity, because it is
in her that "the Kingdom of
heaven," the "Reign of
God," already exists and will
be fulfilled at the end of time.
The kingdom has come in the person
of Christ and grows mysteriously
in the hearts of those incorporated
into him, until its full eschatological
manifestation. Then all those he
has redeemed and made "holy
and blameless before him in love,
will be gathered together as the
one People of God, the "Bride
of the Lamb," "the holy
city Jerusalem coming down out of
heaven from God, having the glory
of God." For "the wall
of the city had twelve foundations,
and on them the twelve names of the
twelve apostles of the Lamb."
IN BRIEF
866 The
Church is one: she acknowledges one
Lord, confesses one faith, is born
of one Baptism, forms only one Body,
is given life by the one Spirit,
for the sake of one hope (cf. Ephesians
4:3-5), at whose fulfillment all
divisions will be overcome.
867 The
Church is holy: the Most Holy God
is her author; Christ, her bridegroom,
gave himself up to make her holy;
the Spirit of holiness gives her
life. Since she still includes sinners,
she is "the sinless one made
up of sinners." Her holiness
shines in the saints; in Mary she
is already all-holy.
868 The
Church is catholic: she proclaims
the fullness of the faith. She bears
in herself and administers the totality
of the means of salvation. She is
sent out to all peoples. She speaks
to all men. She encompasses all times.
She is "missionary of her very
nature".
869 The
Church is apostolic. She is built
on a lasting foundation: "the
twelve apostles of the Lamb" (Revelation
21:14). She is indestructible (cf.
Matthew 16:18). She is upheld infallibly
in the truth: Christ governs her
through Peter and the other apostles,
who are present in their successors,
the Pope and the college of bishops.
870 "The
sole Church of Christ which in the
Creed we profess to be one, holy,
catholic, and apostolic, . . . subsists
in the Catholic Church, which is
governed by the successor of Peter
and by the bishops in communion with
him. Nevertheless, many elements
of sanctification and of truth are
found outside its visible confines"
|