Four Points to Keep in Mind About Be Missionary Disciples

  1. Be Missionary Disciples is focused on conversion
  • Personal conversion that compels us to look inward at our own faith life and the way in which our relationship with Christ is growing and being shared with others.
  • Parish conversion that compels us to examine the way in which our parishes enable personal conversion through the formation of disciples and the embodiment of the mission to live and share the Gospel message of love and redemption.
  • Archdiocesan conversion that compels us to be good stewards of the gifts God has given this local church by configuring our parishes to be vibrant and sustainable centers of evangelization.

 

  1. It has a goal of creating a stable environment for conversion to occur
  • Archbishop Lori’s pastoral letter, “A Light Brightly Visible,” outlined why pastoral planning must move forward in the archdiocese and what he hopes to achieve as a result. Growing and evolving social outreach and pastoral care needs, rising religious disaffiliation, shifting demographics and impending clergy retirements have created a “new normal” for the church that requires a different way of carrying out the mission.
  • The pastorate design and Be Missionary Disciples planning process are meant to create the conditions that promote long-term stability and predictability, so that the essential work of disciple-making can be the focus.

 

  1. The effort will be archdiocesan-wide
  • Every parish in every pastorate in the archdiocese is being asked to engage in this process – some earlier, some later.
  • Even those pastorates where the missionary impulse is strong are called, as Pope Francis encourages, “to make this missionary impulse ever more focused, generous and fruitful (through) a resolute process of discernment, purification, and reform” (Evangelii Gaudium, §30).
  • A phased implementation of the pastorates will allow for pastor retirements to occur naturally, and for any new pastors to go through the planning process with their new pastorate from the beginning. It also will allow for adequate support for the pastorates from archdiocesan staff.
  • In the meantime, later-phase pastorates can focus on disciple formation and relationship building, so that their planning is built on a firm foundation when it does begin.

 

  1. Any changes will be gradual and discerned by the pastorate
  • Many people want to know what will be different and when. They may have questions, such as:
    • Will my pastor change?
    • Is my church closing?
    • Will my Mass time change?
    • How will this affect the staff at my parish?
  • Questions such as these will only be answered once the pastorate pastor is named and planning begins. It will be a process that is locally driven and the answer to these questions will come from the pastorate parishes and parishioners themselves. It is likely that some things will remain the same but that other things will, after due deliberation, be changed.