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Discovering Christ

Discovering Christ is a six-week course ChristLife is developing to equip dioceses, parishes, and Catholic communities with the means to practically respond to the Church's call to a new evangelization.

The primary purpose of this course is to give parishes a turnkey, pre-catechetical program that provides inactive and nominal Catholics an opportunity to explore the basics of the Gospel and experience conversion in the context of a welcoming community.

The course is currently in production phase. As part of the production and theological review, ChristLife is running pilot courses in parishes and other venues in the Archdiocese of Baltimore in 2007 and 2008 before we consider making the course available nationally.

This page contains resources designed to help you more completely understand Discovering Christ as an evangelizing course.

Press

Resources

What People are Saying

Process of Evangelization

Course Dynamics

Contact Us


Press

All blog posts on Discovering Christ by ChristLife staff

Changed Lives at UMBC by Pete Ascosi

ChristLife on Campus by Christy Soboleski, ChristLife

Young Adults Discover Christ Through Catonsville Program by Meghan Walton, Catholic Review

Discovering Christ at the Church of the Crucifixion by Fr. Erik Arnold


Resources

Photo Album (from OLPH course)

Brochure (Adobe PDF)

Teaching Content (updated October 30, 2007)

Photo Album (from St. Agnes young adult course)


What People are Saying

"I am particularly encouraged by the Discovering Christ course and your work with young adults on campus and in parishes here in Baltimore. "
-Archbishop Edwin O'Brien

"In the Fall of 2007 I invited ChristLife to train some of our students in order to host the Discovering Christ course. The course attracted 23-32 students each week for seven weeks, including a Sunday retreat. The fruit that has resulted from this course has been impressive."
-Fr. Richard Gray (UMBC Campus Chaplain)

"My parish [Crucifixtion] was richly blessed during Discovering Christ and I look forward to it being made available to other parishes in the future...There is no silver bullet or magic program that will do the work for us, but for those who want to move from information to offering inspiration and transformation, then Discovering Christ is it."
-Fr. Erik Arnold (Pastor OLPH)

"I went to confession for the first time in ten years."
-St Agnes Participant

"The past seven weeks have been amazing. I feel so much closer to God, my prayer life has grown dramatically. I have the best connection with God and the Holy Spirit that I've ever had."
-UMBC Participant

“During the retreat I asked Jesus to reveal Himself to me, and I just surrendered…and I’ve noticed a change in my life and my perceptions.”
-OLPH Participant


Process of Evangelization

Understanding the Catholic Church’s teaching on the process of evangelization illuminates the absolute need for the first component of Building Evangelizing Eucharistic Communities (BEEC), which is Discovering Christ.

The first step in all evangelization is primary proclamation[1].  The National Directory for Catechesis explains, “This form of the ministry of the word is directed toward non-believers…. In our age it may also be addressed to those who may have been baptized but have little or no awareness of their Baptism and who consequently live on the margins of Christian life.”[2]  The function of primary proclamation is to proclaim the Gospel and to call to conversion, which Pope John Paul II defines as “accepting by personal decision the saving sovereignty of Jesus Christ and becoming his disciple.”[3]

The second step in the evangelization process is initiatory catechesis. “Catechesis, distinct from the primary proclamation of the Gospel, promotes and matures initial conversion.”[4]

Proclamation vs. Catechesis

A frequent tension exists between proclamation and catechesis, as “many who present themselves for catechesis truly require genuine conversion.”  The Directory continues, “because of this the Church usually desires that the first stage in the catechetical process be dedicated to ensuring conversion.”

However, all across the United States the reality is that our parishes, while even running the best catechetical programs in the world, miss the foundational proclamation of the Gospel and the call to conversion. Furthermore, even though many forms of catechesis do assume, at least partially, a missionary objective and call participants to conversion, this “does not dispense a particular Church from promoting an institutionalized program of primary proclamation to execute more directly Jesus’s missionary command.”[5]

Young Adults at the Final Discovering Christ session at OLPH. To see more pictures from the course check out our photo album.

Fr. Erik Arnold, ChristLife Board Member and Discovering Christ speaker, presents session 4 at UMBC

A small group discussion of young adults. See more pictures from our St. Agnes course in our photo album.

Download a flyer (PDF)

Download a Fact Sheet (PDF) on Discovering Christ Teachings
*(still being updated)*

Contact Us

Would you like Discovering Christ in your parish or community? Contact us or sign up for our newsletter by emailing us at info@christlife.org

Pope Benedict XVI touched on this point when he addressed the German Bishops in August 2005:

"We must reflect seriously on how we might carry out a true evangelization today, not just a new evangelization, but often a true first evangelization. People don't know God, they don't know Christ. A new paganism is present, and it is not enough just to maintain the community of believers, although this is very important. I believe that together we must find new ways of bringing the Gospel to today's world by preaching Christ anew and by establishing the faith."

What is true first evangelization? In July 2007 Pope Benedict XVI clarified to a group of priests what the central proclamation of the Christian people should be:

"Christianity is not a highly complicated collection of so many dogmas that it is impossible for anyone to know them all; it is not something exclusively for academicians who can study these things, but it is something simple: God exists and God is close in Jesus Christ. Thus, to sum up, Jesus Christ himself said that the Kingdom of God had arrived. Basically, what we preach is one, simple thing. All the dimensions subsequently revealed are dimensions of this one thing and all people do not have to know everything but must certainly enter into the depths and into the essential. In this way, the different dimensions also unfold with ever increasing joy."

The purpose of Discovering Christ is to expose seekers, fallen away Catholics, regular Catholics to the "one simple thing," that is Jesus Christ - who he is, what he did, the good news, the kerygma.

The Kerygma

Discovering Christ seeks to directly serve Jesus’s missionary command and the Catholic Church by providing “an institutionalized program of primary proclamation.” The primary aim will be “those who may have been baptized but have little or no awareness of their Baptism and who consequently live on the margins of Christian life.”[6]  The course will appropriately meet the needs of this large demographic of Catholics and serve the cause of the new evangelization through “kerygmatic catechesis.”[7] The kerygma is the proclamation of the central and core Gospel message of salvation; namely, the “clear and unequivocal proclamation of the person of Jesus Christ.”[8]  This saving message is a radical call to conversion and the “acceptance of a personal relationship with Christ.”[9] 

The objective of Discovering Christ finds its expression in the second goal of the U.S. Bishop’s evangelization plan, Go and Make Disciples: “To invite every person in the United States to come to know Jesus in the fullness of our Catholic faith.”[10]  Discovering Christ intends to ambitiously meet this goal by equipping Catholic individuals and parishes with a simple set of tools to explicitly invite others to embrace the Gospel.

ChristLife views Discovering Christ as an essential element and foundation of any faith community. We see this course and the entire BEEC package as providing Catholic parishes and small faith communities with a concrete and foundational response to the Church’s call to a new evangelization.


Course Dynamics

Designed to be conducted while sharing a meal, Discovering Christ will focus on relationship building – establishing friendships that will serve to support the evangelized as they turn to Christ.

Five basic principles will be examined—1) God’s purpose, human nature, and rebellion against God; 2) the solution given to us through Jesus Christ; 3) the call of the Holy Spirit for repentance and commitment; 4) the necessity of making a personal response; and 5) the importance of becoming disciples as members of the Catholic Church.

For more on the principles examined, read our PDF on the Teaching Content.


Contact Us

If you interested in implementing Discovering Christ in your parish or community, please contact us at 888.498.8474 or at info@christlife.org


[1] Congregation for the Clergy, General Directory for Catechesis (GDC) (Washington DC: USCCB, 1998), no. 61.

[2] USCCB, National Directory for Catechesis (NDC) (Washington DC: USCCB 2005), no. 17c.

[3] Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Encyclical, Redemptoris Missio (Rome: Vatican 1990), no. 46.

[4] NDC, no. 17c.

[5] GDC, no. 62

[6] NDC, no. 17c.

[7] Ibid.

[8] Pope John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation, Ecclesia in America (Rome: Vatican 1999), no. 66.

[9] NDC, no. 17b.

[10] Cf., USCCB, Go and Make Disciples: A National Plan and Strategy for Catholic Evangelization in the United States (Washington DC: USCCB, 2002), no. 53.

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