AN INTRODUCTION TO "ACTS II: CONVERSION, PROCLAMATION, COMMUNITY" -- A PARISH EVANGELIZATION TRAINING PROCESS
What Is Evangelization? The word comes to us from ancient history when a slave was chosen to bring back to the ruler the good news of victory in battle. The bearer of this good news was always granted his freedom and so he would come running, nearly dancing for joy, as he bore the good news of victory that would gain freedom for him. So, too, the Christian should proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ and his victory over sin and death, the victory that frees men and women to become joyful children of God.
In the strict sense, evangelization means the proclamation of the Good News, that in Jesus Christ, the Son of God made man, salvation is offered to the whole world, as a gift of God's grace and mercy.
In a broader sense, evangelization means any activity rooted in Christ that promotes the transformation of humanity from within making it new.
Essentially, evangelization is bringing others to know the love of Jesus and to experience his healing, forgiving love.
How Does Jesus Prepare His People To Carry Out This Mission?
He gives to his people his very own Spirit who empowers them to carry out this mission of evangelization. It is the role of the Holy Spirit to unite believers to himself and to one another, forming them into the Community of the Church.
By baptism, every believer in Jesus Christ has the call to give authentic witness of a life lived in the world according to the Gospel, and to explicitly proclaim, with humility and the power of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor. 2:1-5), that salvation is in Jesus Christ.
"And Jesus came and said to them, 'All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 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, to the close of the age'" (Mt. 28:18ff).
"But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the end of the earth" (Acts 1:8).
Pope Paul VI, in his Apostolic Exhortation, Evangelization in the Modern World (E.N.), states very clearly to the Catholic Church its primary mission, evangelization: to proclaim the Good News that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of the Father. Jesus Christ is the Answer to our deepest needs. He does make a difference in personal life.
The fundamental mission of the Church is to proclaim a Person, Jesus Christ, who is the Good News, who is the Gospel. Every believer has this duty and is to do this by lifestyle and by explicit words that result in persons brought to Jesus Christ.
The heart of why most Christians are afraid to carry out their fundamental mission to evangelize is that they have no idea of how to make a clear, succinct, yet easy to understand presentation of the Good News of Jesus Christ, the Gospel.
ACTS II: Conversion, Proclamation, Community overcomes this fear by training our people in how to make a clear, succinct, yet easy to understand presentation of the Good News of Jesus Christ, the Gospel.
ACTS II: CONVERSION, PROCLAMATION, COMMUNITY
ACTS II: Conversion, Proclamation, Community consists of four components: Recruitment, Evangelization Training, Evangelistic Outreach and the Parish Small Group System.
It is a comprehensive process having as its purpose the goal of facilitating the formation of an evangelizing parish community: a caring, bearing, sharing community. The means to accomplishing this is the Parish Small Group System: the networking of small home groups (small Christian communities) whose primary purpose is evangelistic outreach.
The Parish Small Group System (PSGS) is a strategy of action for evangelization that provides persons who have been initially evangelized with pastoral follow-up until such time that they are ready, if unchurched, to enter the catechumenate of the R.C.I.A., or, if alienated/inactive, to enter the re-membering process of the parish.
The purpose of the ACTS II Process is twofold:
- To provide a training that will evangelize active Catholics by creating an environment and a process that will lead to inner healing, reconciliation, personal conversion, empowerment and support, and enabling them to live out the Christian mission to witness and disciple others for the Lord Jesus Christ under the power of the Holy Spirit;
- To provide an evangelistic outreach that will not only evangelize others but will offer pastoral follow-up through small group home gatherings (small Christian communities) to those who are initially evangelized.
By means of this process, trainees will be enabled and empowered for community and for mission in their parishes.
For Community:
Bringing about evangelizing communities (the Parish Small Group System) where the caring, bearing, sharing life witness of Christ is experienced by those to whom the parish is reaching out in its evangelizing efforts.
For Mission:
Trained evangelizers so filled with Jesus that each will have a burning desire:
- To reach out and share Jesus with the unchurched and the alienated/inactive Catholic (E.N. 50-53) and bring them into the Community of love, the Church, where they can be nourished by a caring, bearing, sharing community and its sacramental life; and
- To recruit and encourage those who already believe (E.N. 54) to take the evangelizing training so that they, too, will be equipped to share Jesus with others.
ACTS II is based on the experience given in the Book of the Acts of the Apostles, chapter 2. This portion of Scripture demonstrates very powerfully that the apostles underwent a profound conversion experience with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon them. This conversion experience radically transformed the apostles, changing them from being scared men (Mt. 26:56b; Mk.14:50) into bold, courageous men (Acts 2:14ff; 4:13, 18-20).
The result of the apostles' conversion experience was the proclamation of the Good News without fear (Acts 2:14-36), conversion for those who heard the Good News (Acts 2:37-42) resulting in community (Acts 2:43-47). The Church was not proclaimed but the Lord Jesus Christ. The Church was the result of the proclamation which effected conversion leading to community. Those converted went on to proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ to others and the process continued.
ACTS II: Conversion, Proclamation, Community is based, therefore, on chapter 2 of the Book of the Acts of the Apostles: first the apostles (the leaders) experience conversion; they go out and proclaim Jesus; those who hear and accept Jesus undergo conversion and come into community and the process continues.
Why The Parish Small Group System (PSGS)?
Our Catholic people must be ready to take some agreed responsibility for their own lives and for the lives of their brothers and sisters in the faith. Small home groups with their intimacy, mutual care, support and discipline are the key to bringing about this shared responsibility.
The Lord's desire for his people is that there be a genuine concern for one another, that each person become a caring, bearing, sharing person (John 15:12, 16f). The Scriptures clearly show the need for pastoral care to be shared (Exodus 18:13-22; Numbers 11:16f). Both Moses and the people were being worn out because the burden of caring for all the people was too heavy for Moses.
In our parishes today, there is a similar situation. The pastor is expected to carry the burden of all the parish families. A crying need for capable people willing to take pastoral responsibility for their brother and sister parishioners is being felt. The responsibility of caring belongs not just to one person or to a few but to everyone. In the small groups (PSGS), caring, bearing and nurturing can take place. In this, the whole parish can "endure and be at peace" (Exodus 18:21-23).
ACTS II: Conversion, Proclamation, Community has been designed to meet this great need that parishes are experiencing. The rich experience of our people must be tapped. The ACTS II Process enables our people to undertake shared responsibility (1 Corinthians 12:4-7). The Holy Spirit is the one who equips each for serving and for caring.
Our parishes will be renewed and become evangelistic in nature when the people of God are themselves evangelized, and learn to call on the Holy Spirit to empower them to witness to the Good News of Jesus: that there is someone who cares, who enables people to share and empowers them to bear one another's burdens.
Those coming into a small group must first of all be initially evangelized, led to commit personally to the Lord (Mt. 6:33). The wisdom behind this is that it ensures that the trained evangelizers are evangelizing. This built-in dynamic prevents the small groups from growing too fast but, at the same time, the small group must grow or else it will die. Just as with the human body, if a cell grows too fast, it becomes a tumor and, if it does not grow, it dies. Through personal and spiritual growth, these small groups will become strong living cells within the body of Christ, the Church.
Specifics About The Parish Small Group System (PSGS)
More specifically, as a pastoral plan for the parish, the number one pastoral benefit of the ACTS II Process to the parish is the formation of the parish into small groups (PSGS), small Christian communities.
A small Christian community is a group of 10 to 20 men or women who meet together at fixed times to pray over the Scriptures together, share their love for Jesus, intercede for the needs of others, help one another when difficulties arise, feast together, mourn together, just like the first Christians did in chapter 2 of the Book of the Acts of the Apostles. This pastoral method takes the Word of God right down to the grassroot level and brings a "sense of belonging" to our Catholic Christians.
What The ACTS II Evangelization Training Will Accomplish
The Leadership Training is concerned with training some of the parishioners as Coordinators and Small Group Leaders for the ACTS II Process.
For the ACTS II Process to be effective in the parish, the pastor must want the Association in his parish and fully support those carrying out the Process.