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A
PATH TO RE-DISCOVERY OF BAPTISM
Kiko
Arguello talks about the Neocatechumenal Way
The
media never talk about it and even in the Church community many mistakes are
made in its regard. And yet the Neo-Catechumenal Way is an initiative that is
bound to have a profound influence on the Church in the third millennium.
There are about a million people in more than a hundred countries who already
belong, thousands of priests and dozens of seminaries throughout the world,
thousands of parishes that have decided to take to the Way. And the growth
rate shows no sign of slowing. The Catechumenate is an ancient formula but as
offered today its flavor is so novel that people can be so startled to the
point of indulging in real persecution of the Way and of the two people who
started it all, the Spanish painter Francisco Argüello, known as Kiko, and
Carmen Hernandez. This hostility contrasts with the steady and public
encouragement that the Neo-Catechumenal communities have been given and
continue to be given by John Paul II, as they were already by Paul VI.
Currently Kiko Argüello and the other people in charge of the Way are busy
drafting a statute to give it definitive shape within the Church.
What is
the Neo-Catechumenal Way?
KIKO
ARGÜELLO : It is a path to conversion whereby one re-discovers the riches of
baptism. The current process of secularization has led a great many people to
abandon the faith and the Church. Perhaps that is the reason the Lord prompted
us to set up formation itinerary through which we can help renew the Council
and pave a way for those who have drifted off.
The
Neo-Catechumenal Way does not aim at being a movement in itself but at helping
the dioceses and parishes to open up a path of initiation that purposes to
evangelize the people of today. It's worth noting that in his Letter Pope John
Paul II says: 'I recognize the Neo-Catechumenal Way as a way of Catholic
formation valid for modern society and times' and expresses his hope 'that
brothers in the episcopate, along with their presbyters, will appreciate and
help this work for the new evangelization'. It's an instrument at the service
of bishops and parish priests to bring back to the faith the great many who
have abandoned it.
What is
the link between the Neo-Catechumenal Way and the catechumenate of the early
Church?
ARGÜELLO: In
the early Church, in the midst of paganism, a person who wanted to become a
Christian had to follow instruction in Christianity that was called the 'catechumenate'
from the word 'catecheo' which means 'I resound' and 'I listen'. But we might
ask: 'Listen to what?' Not just God speaking through the Scriptures: a
catechumen is somebody who has learned to listen to God speaking throughout
history. Among the eastern religions which claim to overcome the passions by
taking flight into transcendence through techniques of prayer (as does Zen
philosophy, the Tao and Buddhism itself), and the divide between the sacred
and the profane in natural religion in the West, which entails a divorce
between religion and life, the great revolution of Christianity is the
Incarnation, God who becomes man in the concrete history of mankind. The
Fathers say that what befits a Christian is not humility, obedience or even
sanctity but discernment, without which neither humility nor obedience nor
sanctity exists. Discerning what? The divine action in our history. Discerning
the snares of the devil and the reason why certain things happen to us and
what sense they have ... There lies the meaning, the renewal of the
post-baptismal Neocatechumenate. Christ says to the Samaritan woman: 'Believe
me, woman, the moment has come when neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem
will you worship the Father ... The moment has come, and it is this, in which
the true worshipers will worship the Father in Spirit and ,truth. Because the
Father seeks such worshipers.' In a Christian initiation the catechumen
discovers that we are the true temple and our life is a liturgy of holiness,
the ritual of which is the Book of Psalms. But before everything the
catechumenate of the early Church was shaped out of a synthesis between Word,
Changed Life and Liturgy. What the early Church had was a kerygma, a
proclamation of salvation. This proclaiming of the Gospels was done by
itinerant apostles such as Paul and Silla and brought about a moral change in
those who heard it. They changed their lives with the help of the Holy Spirit
accompanying the apostles. This changed life was sealed and helped through the
sacraments. Concretely, baptism was given in stages. The Neo-Catechumenal Way
wants to bring back that 'gestation', that synthesis of Kerygma, Changed life
and Liturgy.
Why is it
called "Neocatechumenate"?
ARGÜELLO:
Basically because it is offered to people who are already baptized but who
haven't had enough Christian instruction. Even the Catechesi tradendae states
that the situation of very many Christians in parishes is that of 'quasi
catechumens'. When we were called in 1974 by the Congregation for Divine
Worship to look again at the rites for the first baptismal vows, there were
scholars there who were drafting the Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum
under the charge of Monsignor Bugnini, the Congregation Secretary. Even though
there were some who wanted to call us 'catechistic communities', in the end we
agreed on the name 'neo-catechumenate'.
In what
state of health is the Neo-Catechumenal Way?
ARGÜELLO:
The Neo-Catechumenal Way has spread to 105 countries over the five continents,
with almost 15,000 communities. It is also represented in 800 dioceses and
5,000 parishes. It has helped to open 35 diocesan missionary seminaries
throughout the world. There are families with children who leave everything
friends, home, work - to set off for the more difficult areas of the world. At
the moment there are over 400. It is very heartening for us to see the number
of young people who want to rediscover and ripen their faith through the
Neo-Catechumenal Way. We are thankful to the Lord of all things, though
there's no lack of persecution and the necessary difficulties.
You
mention families belonging to the Way who leave everything to go off on
missions. Why do they do it?
ARGÜELLO :
Out of gratitude. Because they've been saved and they want to let others share
in that salvation. The outskirts of so many cities, in South America for
example, have been invaded by sects. Bishops have asked for help, given the
fact of huge human settlements without a Church presence. So families are
sent, with the blessing of the Holy Father, who through their witness and the
Word begin to evangelize in the poorest areas and form small Christian
communities. Then bishops, also thanks to the Redemptoris Mater seminaries,
send priests, and so new parishes are born, giving a chance to lots of people
who had gone over to the sects to return to the Church, as is happening in
fact, for example, among the poor waterfront people of Guayaquil in Ecuador,
among the 'Pueblos jovenes' of Lima in Peru, among the miners of Coronel in
Chile, etc.
Concretely,
where have you chosen to set up the Way?
ARGÜELLO :
We didn't choose anything. The Lord has led us through a series of events from
the shanty towns to the parishes, by the express wish of the Archbishop of
Madrid and the pleas of priests, and there we are engaged in the task the Lord
has entrusted to us. Just think of the great need for catechesis that exists
in the Church. We desperately need to rediscover what it means to be
Christian, what it means to receive eternal life, what it means that Christ
has conquered death. Encountering Christ or not encountering him isn't the
same thing at all. People who have not encountered Christ are constantly
coming up against the fact of death and it limits them and they have no reply
to it, because no man has defeated death. Those who have encountered him and
have received the Holy Spirit from heaven have eternal life within them,
Christ's victory over death, which enables them to face up to the fact in a
new way, I mean, to go beyond death. It's an enormous thing. When we are
baptized we are asked: 'What do you ask of the Church of God?' Answer: 'The
faith'. And again: 'What does faith give you?' 'Eternal life.' It is not a
metaphor. Eternal life is in us. Saint John says: 'Whoever hates his brother
is a murderer and no murderer has eternal life'. Faith enables you not only
not to hate your brother but even to love your enemy. We say: 'You are
Christian? Show that you have eternal life'. And how does it show concretely?
In what? On the Way, the testing out of this takes place gradually in stages
and through scrutinies, in line with the early practice of the catechumenate,
re-proposed again today in the Ordo Initiationis Christianae Adultorum,
wherein chapter IV it says that this way of proceeding, these stages, can be
applied to those who are already baptized but insufficiently catechized or not
confirmed.
We are
about to enter the third Christian millennium. What most worries you about the
period we are going through?
ARGÜELLO :
We are immersed in a mass media, technological, audio-visual culture.
According to the statistics every Italian spends three hours and 40 minutes a
day in front of the television. In some American countries the figure reaches
nine hours. If one conducts a serious analysis of what people get from films,
soaps, variety, discussion programs, etc., what emerges? That people are
actually receiving every day in constant fashion an anthropology, a
'catechesis' so to speak, contrary to Revelation. The real challenge of the
third millennium is what we can call the 'anthropological revolution', which
invades us, at subliminal levels as well, with values that run counter to
Christian ones. Concepts such as nature, body, sexuality, family, sin ... no
longer have any Christian content, How is the Church replying to all of this
if in our parishes, for the great majority of Christians, there's almost
nothing but Sunday Mass?
The
problem is that this dominant way of thinking is making its way among
Christians as well, the mentality is influencing the Church also. Jean Guitton,
the French philosopher who was a friend of Paul VI, told me of a dramatic
confidence the Pope made to him: "Let me tell you a fear of mine,
"he said. "There is a danger that non-Christian thinking may work
its way into the Church. And that one day it may become prevalent"...
ARGÜELLO :
It's true. Some time ago in New York we organized a conference of bishops
centering on the worry I mentioned earlier. An Australian bishop told me of an
episode that gives backing to what we're saying. He was convinced that
something had to be done to oppose this 'dominant way of thinking' and decided
to produce a television program against the legalization of euthanasia. He
brought together the committed lay people of the diocese to see how they might
reply to the media bombardment on the issue. He was stunned to discover that
his committed laity were all in favor of euthanasia. They all thought like the
television. Where is it possible to listen to a catechesis, get instruction
that can stand against this culture? If we don't set up a serious education in
the faith, inevitably in the end we'll come to think in the way imposed on us
by the means of communication. That is why I believe that the Way, like the
new Church groups and movements, is of great importance. Only an adult faith
can find a reply to the fact of secularization surrounding us.
During the
recent Italian Eucharistic Congress held in Bologna the founders and those in
charge of the movements and the new Church bodies met for the first time. What
was the significance of the gathering
ARGÜELLO :
It was very important. We are witnesses to a great event: the Holy Spirit is
breathing on his Church, despite our sins, to assist it. Our experience
throughout the world is that we have always found help in other groups and
movements, from Communion and Liberation in the universities, the priests of
Opus Dei in the parishes, the Focolarini, the Charismatics, etc. It is
important and a source of enrichment, to know how to help oneself: within
diversity there is just the one mission we all have towards the world. Saint
Paul says God constituted some people as apostles, others as prophets, others
as evangelizers and teachers to serve to edify the Body of Christ so that we
may all achieve the state of perfection, the full maturity of Christ (cf
Ephesians 4, 11-13). The difficulty and problems arise in the parishes when we
come across groups of lay people and certain priests who have a different
anthropology and even a different Christology and ecclesiology.
One hears
often that these Church groups are a little shut in on themselves. And some
bishops have asked that they should be open towards each other, without
quarreling or rivalry ...
ARGÜELLO :
It's an outside judgment that I don't believe corresponds with reality. Our
experience is quite the opposite. It's like when the disciples came to Jesus
and told him, 'They do miracles but they are not of us' and he replies, 'Do
not prevent them. No one can do miracles in my name and speak ill of me'. We
find that's how it is all the time: everything that is stirred within the
Church by the Holy Spirit gives us help. It's the outsiders who say we are
divided, that there are problems.
Why is
this hostility almost automatic whenever anything new is born in the Church?
You have come across it, as has almost every movement ...
ARGÜELLO :
It's a normal reaction, I think it's a sociological fact one has to accept. In
fact, whenever anything new comes up everybody wonders 'Who are they? What do
they think? Do they think they're better than anybody else?' Sure enough, we
have undergone persecution within the Church, it has happened and is happening
in various places. But I always think of Saint Ignatius Loyola who was asked
on his deathbed what his hopes were for the Society and he replied:
'Persecution'. As for myself, I think of persecution as a very great grace.
It's the only thing in which I resemble Christ a little. As for the rest,
nothing, since I'm a very great sinner
Is the
hostility slackening now?
ARGÜELLO:
Yes. I think that bishops and parish priests know us better and are seeing the
practical results: families back together, young people in Church, vocations
for the seminaries, etc. In Paris in August, during the meeting with the Pope,
there were a great many young people from the new Church groups, including
50,000 from the Way. At the end we had a meeting about vocations led by
Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, and 5000 young people stood up and offered
themselves for seminaries and monasteries. What is taking place has surprised
even us.
Some years
ago I happened to come across a confidential document of the Congregation for
Catholic Education. The cardinal who then led it stated that he had conducted
an inquiry in reply to your request to open diocesan seminaries for
missionaries. The majority of the experts consulted were against it. More or
less they said: "You can't let a movement have charge of a
seminary". John Paul II himself intervened to settle the question and
entrusted seminaries to you. There are now 35 of them scattered throughout the
world. Why seminaries, and how did they come about?
ARGÜELLO :
Here again it was the Lord and one sees his hand in the pattern of events. The
Pope had already sent more than a hundred families to the more difficult areas
of South America and the world. These families were forming Christian
communities, and many people were coming back into the Church from the sects.
Given the lack of clergy, however, and the difficulties the local priests had
in going to these poverty-stricken areas where there wasn't even a church
building, after a good many attempts - both with the Roman Seminary and by
forming a group backed by the Rector of the Capranica Seminary, Monsignor
Luciano Pacomio, who helped us a great deal - we decided to make the situation
of these families known to the Holy Father. We didn't intend to found any kind
of congregation or movement, but rather to bring together the parishes out of
which these families had come for the mission. So we suggested to the Pope
that a missionary diocesan seminary be opened from which the presbyters might
be sent anywhere. At the end of the meeting the Pope stood up and said it was
a good thing necessary for the Church and should be done. That's how the 'Redemptoris
Mater' seminaries came into being. The second thing to say is that they are
true diocesan seminaries and missionary. Which means that it's the bishops who
are in charge and responsible for the priests. The special nature of the
seminaries lies in the fact that the presbyters can be sent by the bishop all
over the world, thus reducing the scarcity of clergy in many dioceses.
Providentially it was also noticed that Council documents, Number 10 of "Presbyterorum
ordinis" for example, suggest the opening of international missionary
seminaries to meet the need for clergy. As for the rest, I understand the
experts' reaction but the confusion lies in the term 'movement', because we,
as I said earlier, do not feel we are a movement but a Christian
post-baptismal initiation which begins and ends in the parishes with the
making of adult Christians. I, for example, as a catechist have already
finished the Way in various parishes. The brethren who have followed this
Neo-Catechumenal way and have completed it do not constitute an association or
a congregation, or anything of the sort, but are adult Christians in the
parish carrying on the pastoral work of the bishop. It's obvious that the
small community as such doesn't disappear, given that today it's the salvation
of the family. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger recently wrote in his book The Salt
of the Earth that it is very difficult today to live the faith on one's own
and he suggests that the Church open paths of faith in small communities where
Christians may help and sustain each other. And in the Letter sent by the Holy
Father John Paul II to Monsignor Paul Josef Cordes, the novelty lies in his
recognition that the Neo-Catechumenal Way is a Christian initiation for adults
of the catechumen type and that he does not take it for a religious order, an
association or a movement. More than once in the history of the Church men and
women have striven to re-awaken the spirit of the Gospels in the people of God
without having perforce to circumscribe it in a religious order. Perhaps the
times weren't ripe for it. But today, after Vatican II, the contemporary
situation of atheism and secularization puts the Church in a position where
the catechumenate needs renewal, both for the non-baptized, and for those who,
baptized as children, need to re-discover the riches of their baptism. Paul VI
also, on his first meeting with the Way in 1974, said: 'To live and promote
this 'reawakening' is what you call a form of 'post-baptism catechumenate'
which in the Christian community of today can renew those effects of maturity
and ripening which were brought about in the early Church by the period of
preparation of baptism. You set it afterwards: before or afterwards is a
secondary matter, I would say. The fact is that you aim at the authenticity,
at the fullness, at the sincerity of the Christian life. And that is a very
great merit which consoles us enormously...'.
If a
parish priest calls you in to open the Way and is then replaced by another who
doesn't want you, how do you react?
ARGÜELLO: We
obey.Sometimes the brethren have to endure the lack of understanding of the
new parish priest for years. Sometimes when the new pastor finds these
communities he doesn't want them and gets rid of them, especially in Latin
America where the priest is changed every few years in the parishes of the
religious orders. If they can, the catechists invite the brethren to follow
the Way in another parish, but what we never do is make a parallel Church. The
re-discovery of baptism always means the re-discovery of the Christian 'primum'
which is: 'As I have loved you', that is, love for one's enemy, bearing the
sins of those who get rid of the communities. In such cases we have often seen
heroic behavior in the brethren. The problem of many priests, aside from
Liberation Theology and the differing ecclesiologies that arose after the
Council, is not knowing where to place the importance of charisms in the
Church.
Which is
where?
ARGÜELLO: I
think, as the Pope told us at the January meeting, that institution and
charisms are co-essential in the Church. When the institution refuses to
accept charisms its arteries harden and the people suffer. And when a charism
refuses the institution it becomes a sect or splits away, as one saw with
Peter Waldo at the time of Saint Francis.
You spoke
earlier of persecution and difficulty. There are many objections raised
against you as well. Can we look at them in detail?
ARGÜELLO:
Agreed.
They
mainly concern the liturgy ...
ARGÜELLO:
The liturgy plays a highly important role in gestation towards the faith. It
is through it that grace touches us and the new man is born. The sacraments
give and increase grace. The whole renewal brought about by Vatican Council II
has a fundamental core: the full and fruitful participation in what the
sacraments mean and achieve. Let me give an example: if you go to a fountain
(meaning grace) with a basket you bring it back empty; whereas if you go with
a bucket you come back with a bucketful. The fount is always the same but the
result is diametrically opposed. Many people go to Mass and take the
sacraments but with little participation. That is why it is important to
educate the participants into experiencing the richness of the sacraments with
the greatest possible fullness.
Are you
saying that your essential aim is a fuller participation in the liturgy?
ARGÜELLO:
Precisely. Ours is an attempt at experiencing it as fully as possible, so that
the people participating sanctify themselves. If young people don't understand
or don't know how to live what is happening, sooner or later they stop going.
Whereas if we manage to make them understand what's happening by explaining
the meaning of certain signs, that is, if we help them really to participate,
then gradually they open up to the action of grace and receive the gratuitous
gift that the sacraments give and which will help them be saintly, be
Christians. Christianity is not Pelagianism, an effort of will alone, but a
liberation, a new creation which we receive gratuitously through the merits of
Jesus Christ who suffered and gave his life for each of us. For example, how
can one educate a young person of today in Christianity without rooting it in
the Easter of the Lord? That's why it's fundamental that the Easter vigil be
experienced in all its fullness, so that the sacrament yields its meaning.
Educating people in the signs, in the fast, in the night, in baptism by
immersion to teach them to die with Christ and rise again with Christ, to pass
over to the other shore, turning them into heavenly 'pilgrims', Easter people,
in a new exodus that helps to lead the people of this generation to heaven.
Many times we come across difficulties because in many parts of Spain, for
example, the vigil is reduced to evening Mass with hardly any congregation
because most of them are away on holiday. What's to be done so that young
people don't go on holiday but stay the night to die with Christ and rise
again with him? In France, for example, in certain parishes, the date of the
Easter vigil is changed and it is celebrated on return from the holidays. But
our feeling, as already happens in many parishes, is not to have a parallel or
our own vigil but to renew the Easter vigil with all its force and sacramental
fullness of the signs, as the Roman Missal says. But to do that there's need
of a path, sacramental propaedeutics. Pope John Paul II once said that he saw
the community as a 'sacramental laboratory' where the liturgical renewal of
the Council could gradually be brought about.
The fact
of celebrating the liturgy behind closed doors has also often created problems
for you. Some bishops have prevented you from saying Mass in their dioceses
...
ARGÜELLO :
We don't do the liturgy behind closed doors. It's simply that we have a course
to follow. If one goes to university one knows that there's a first year, a
second year and so on. And I suppose that sophomores know that they're not
going to be put in the fourth year but in the first. We too have a course with
stages, two periods. The early catechumenate had first a pre-catechumenate,
then the catechumenate, election, and neophytism. All terms that indicate
moments of passage. The problem is that for about 16 centuries there's been no
catechumenate in the Church. No one knows what it is any longer. We are among
those who are recuperating it after 16 centuries. So, it's obvious there's a
lot of ignorance about what the catechumenate is and about what we do. And
distrust arises, sometimes among parish groups who don't understand us. What
the Gospels tell in the parable of the prodigal son happens again, the elder
brother won't come in, scandalized by the fact that his father has killed the
fatted calf for that fellow there who spent all his father's money on
prostitutes, and so he can't stand the feasting and the dancing. We see in the
Gospels that it's the father who goes out to talk to him. He mediates and
says: 'Your brother was dead and has come back to life...'. The point is that
in some parishes in northern Europe, for example, various members of parish
councils don't have this anthropology, that is they don't believe that lapsed
and secularized people, people who have abandoned God, are dead inside. That
is why they don't understand the effort we make to bring the lapsed back to
Christ and they're scandalized by Sunday Mass being celebrated in community on
Saturday evening with all the richness of the signs wished for by the Council
(for example, communion under the two species of bread and wine, as we've been
granted by the Holy See). Even if we tell them that these people have need of
mediation, of sacramental propaedeutics, that they are lost sheep, very often
it's pointless. And yet over 30 years of the Way these celebrations have shown
themselves to be a marvelous means of instruction for experiencing the Easter
mystery, helping the brethren to pass from death to life, with the genuine
fruits of conversion, especially among the young who, through the force of
these Eucharistic rites, have been rescued from the drugs and the madness of
Saturday night discos. These celebrations have been the source of thousands of
priestly and religious vocations, Not least because in the Neo-Catechumenal
Way, throughout the world, there are people who had drifted a long way from
the Church, very wounded and sick, who were extremely weak and who had to be
lifted, as the Good Shepherd does on his shoulders, so as to be carried home
to his Father's house. That is the spirit of the Way: not to step over
anyone's corpse. It isn't that mankind is for the Neo-Catechumenal Way, but
that the Way is for mankind.
In
concrete terms how does an actual Neo-Catechumenal community come into being?
ARGÜELLO :
If a parish priest decides to adopt the Way he gets in touch with another
parish where Neo-Catechumenal communities already exist or with the diocesan
Neo-Catechumenal center. He is shown what the Way is and if he agrees he is
sent catechists who will lead the Neo-Catechumenal Way along with him. The
teams of catechists are always made up of a priest, who is the guarantor of
the orthodoxy and ecclesiality of the message, of one or two couples and of a
young person. The catechists talk to the church leaders, to the parish
council, then they meet whatever movements are present in the parish and
finally, during Sunday Masses, they offer an invitation to all the faithful.
This is the moment of the kerygma, of the proclaiming of the salvation brought
by the Lord. It's an echo of what the apostles did, when, transformed by the
Holy Spirit after Pentecost, they went around the synagogues in small teams
proclaiming the good news and calling on people to convert. It was strong
preaching that confronted people with a fact, an event: Jesus Christ is the
Lord, only in him can we find salvation. He died for our sins and rose again
for our redemption, he has risen into heaven and intercedes for us so that we
may receive the Holy Spirit, eternal life. To those touched by grace who
asked, 'What must we do?', Saint Peter replied, 'Convert and let each of you
be baptized in the name of Jesus for the forgiveness of all his sins;
afterwards you will receive the promised gift of the Holy Spirit'. That
coincides with the phase we call kerygmatic, when the tripod
Word-Liturgy-Community, on which the whole Neo-Catechumenal process is based,
is displayed and gone through. This kerygmatic phase ends with a three-day
retreat during which the community starting on the different stages of pre-catechumenate,
catechumenate, election, etc. is formed, guided by the same team of catechists
in communion with the parish priest. To the extent to which these brethren
begin to grow in the faith and to give witness in their workplace and family,
other people are drawn to the faith and ask to be set on the same path. And in
this way a second, third, fourth community is formed .. . and there is a new
situation in the parish, small communities all heading for conversion. In this
way a pastoral campaign for the lapsed opens in the parish which, without
wrecking anything and without imposing itself, presents the harvest of a
Church in renewal that tells its fathers that they have been fertile for it
was from it that they were born. After 30 years of the Way one of the results
that makes it worthwhile is to see families knitted together again which, open
towards life, become a real 'domestic Church' where the fundamental task of
the family is carried out, that of handing on the faith to the children. It
becomes fundamental in a domestic liturgy on Sunday mornings. In this liturgy
parents read the Scriptures to their children and ask: 'What does this Word
mean to you, for your life?' It's astonishing to see how the children are able
to apply the Word of God to their own concrete experience. At the end the
father and mother give a word or two of commentary based on their own
experience and invite everyone to pray for the Pope, the Church, etc. It
concludes with the Our Father and the peace, And the parents bless every
child. Finding a moment of dialogue between the two generations is a very,
very important thing these days. These families shaped on a Way of faith know
how to hand on the faith to their children. The result of it all is to have
almost one hundred percent of these children in the Church. From these
families, almost all of them large, thousands of vocations for the seminaries
and the monasteries are emerging. Let us thank the Lord our God.
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