
A Note from Kiko Arguello 
This is an adaptation from a news press release
written by Kiko Arguello, the Spanish artist
chosen by God to initiate this ecclesial
reality in the Church, and distributed to
the journalists at the Vatican on the occasion
of the formal recognition of Pope John Paul
II of the Neo-Catechumenal Way on 30th August
1990.
Holy Father, Dear Fathers of the Synod,
I think that it is almost impossible to give
a comprehensive view of the neo-catechumenal
way in such a brief report. However, I will
try and with this purpose in mind (insofar
as the limits of time permit) I will trace
what the apostles
In the early Church, in the midst of paganism,
when a man wanted to become a Christian he
had to do an itinerary of formation towards
Christianity, which was called a "Catechumenate"
from the word katekeo", which means
"to resound", "to listen".
Today, the contemporary situation of atheism
and secularisation puts the Church in a position
in which it is indispensable the recovery
of the Catechumenate, namely an itinerary
of formation into christianity. The Neocatechumenal
Way is a charism inspired by God and confirmed
by the Church which helps the parish to open
such a way of Christian initiation to baptism
in order to discover what it means to be
Christian. It does not want to form a movement
but simply be an instrument at the service
of the Bishop in the parishes. It is a theological-catechetical
synthesis, a living catechism, a post-baptismal
catechumenate for adults, an itinerary of
Christian formation for today's man, a way
to lead to faith so many people who have
abandoned it.
In the early Church the Catechumenate was
formed by a synthesis among Word (Kerygma),
Liturgy and Moral. The Primitive Church had,
first of all, a Kerygma, that is an "announcement
of salvation". This announcement of
the Gospel, which was done by itinerant apostles
like Paul and Silas, caused in those who
listened to it, a moral change. They changed
their lives helped by the Holy Spirit who
accompanied the Apostles. This moral change
was sealed and helped through the sacraments.
Concretely Baptism was given through stages.
So the primitive catechesis was a gestation
to Divine Life.
When in the following centuries the catechumenate
disappeared, this synthesis - kerygma-Change
of life-Liturgy, was lost. The Kerygma, as
a call to faith which implies a moral decision,
does not exist anymore, it became a "scholastic
doctrine". Moral was transformed into
'internal forum', that is, a private matter.
Liturgy became one and the same for everyone.
The Neocatechumenal Way recuperates again
this 'gestation', this synthesis between
Kerygma, Change of Life and Liturgy.
Why is it called Neo-catechumenate? Because
the Neocatechumenal Way is proposed basically
to people who have already been baptised,
but who do not have a sufficient Christian
formation. "Catechesis Tradendae"
states that the situation of many Christians
in the parish is that of "quasi-catechumens".
Pope John Paul II in an official letter to
Monsignor Paul Josef Cordes, Vice President
of the Pontifical Council for the Laity,
appointed ad personam responsible for the
Apostolate of the Neocatechumenal Communities,
dated 30th August 1990, formally recognised
the Neocatechumenal Way as "an itinerary
of Catholic formation, valid for our society
and for our times" and expressed his
wish that all Bishops value and support this
work for the new evangelisation "so
that it may be implemented according to the
lines proposed by its initiators".
In this letter, the Holy Father acknowledges
25 years of experience, begun in the poorest
outskirts of Madrid and which today has spread
to 700 dioceses, 4000 parishes, 95 countries,
with well over 10,000 communities.
This charism offers to the dioceses a complete
instrument of evangelisation. "It is
able to respond to the challenge of secularism,
the diffusion of sects and the shortage of
vocations. The reflection upon the word of
God and the participation in the Eucharist
make possible a gradual initiation into the
sacred mysteries, to form living cells of
the Church and renew the vitality of the
parish by means of mature Christians capable
of bearing witness to the truth through a
radically lived faith." (Pope John Paul
II, 12th April 1993)
"It is not difficult to list the fruits
of the Neocatechumenal Way : families who
have been reconciled, are open to life, and
are grateful to the Church, offer themselves
to bring the proclamation of the Gospel to
the ends of the earth...especially the poorest
and most dechristianised areas. From these
families are now springing up an enormous
number of vocations." (Pope John Paul
II - 17th January 1994).
This new flourishing of vocations has given
birth to missionary diocesan Seminaries that
can help those Churches who because of the
scarcity of priests find themselves in serious
difficulties. The novelty of these Seminaries
is that they join a serious Christian initiation,
the Neocatechumenate, to the formation of
presbyters. So, in a short time, many bishops
have decided to open these seminaries in
their dioceses ... in Rome, Madrid, Warsaw,
Medellin, Bogota, Bangalore, Callao (Lima),
Newark, Takamatsu (Japan) and in many other
countries they are being set in motion.
"Your Way - says the Pope - seeks to
draw on the spirit of the Second Vatican
Council, to offer an example of a new evangelisation
which gives hope to the Church on the eve
of the third Christian millennium."
(17th January 1994)
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
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