This fact leads to new problems of a pastoral nature, involving Christian education and spiritual
formation, religious life in the family, marriages between Catholics of various rites and between
Catholics and Orthodox, pastoral care of isolated groups etc.
How much is known of the liturgical and spiritual life of the ancient Christian traditions of these
new neighbours? Are serious efforts being made to acquire and spread this knowledge and to draw
suitable conclusions of a pastoral nature? In some areas, at least, has the presence of these new
communities led to renewed misunderstanding and further alienation?
3. The present century has seen a remarkable growth in publishing the theological, liturgical and
ascetical writings of the Fathers and spiritual leaders of the Christian East. Their works are
appearing in many languages, in both academic and popularized forms. Many Christians seek to
practise the "prayer of the heart" taught by Eastern spiritual authors. Religious communities, in
seeking the renewal of their own community life, are searching into the writers of East and West for
inspiration.
The question may be asked, however, as to how far these treasures from a common tradition are
becoming properly understood and assimilated by Catholics. Are they sometimes treated in a
superficial way as transitory movements of the moment? Are serious efforts being made to study
them in depth so that they may be legitimate aids to growth in prayer and in individual and
communal life?
4. The years during and after Vatican Council II have been full of intense activity for renewal and
reform in the Catholic Church, The Council itself, in a special decree (Orientalium Ecclesiarum),
stressed the importance of the Eastern Catholic Churches, the development which should continue
to take place in their communities, and the legitimate role they have to play in the life of the
universal Church. In its decree on ecumenism (Unitatis Redintegratio,chapter 3A) the Council
developed its understanding of the many Christian treasures from a common tradition which
Catholics still share with Orthodox despite the fact that, at present, there is not full ecclesial
communion between them. It pointed out how much a knowledge and appreciation of this is
necessary if effective work is to be done towards re-establishing full communion in faith, the
celebration of the sacraments and in community life.
5. In the development of its own decisions, and in the encouragement it gave to Catholic
theologians and teachers, the Council also showed how greatly it appreciated the fact that a sincere
and profound study of the Tradition of the Church of Christ cannot ignore the particular traditions
of the various Christian Churches, including those of the East. By returning to the essential sources
of the faith, the theologian who belongs to a particular Church not only enriches himself through
this experience of the "others", but also, through this method, returns to his own roots.
In the first centuries of the Christian era, though there was a great variety in forms of expression
and in language, there still existed a marvellous spiritual communion so that the principal concepts
of the faith were formulated in the languages of different peoples in a way which could serve as an
example to the whole of Christianity. Studied in this wide historical context, the teachings of the
faith are better understood because they are seen as rising out of a truly living environment.
6. Another question stressed by the Vatican Council II (e.g. Lumen Gentium, Gaudium et Spes, Ad
Gentes) was that of knowing how to plant the message of the Gospel in the native soil of the
genuine traditions of various peoples. This need for inculturation was underlined by the recent
Extraordinary Synod of Bishops (Final Report, D, 4). The Eastern Churches have a long tradition in