But the great variety of religious beliefs is found in ways very different from in earlier times. We
must be convinced that religions are first and foremost for the benefit of man and his freedom, and
are not just a yoke of precepts (even though these may be lawful), that can frequently become
instruments of power and domination because of obligatory rituals, categorization of people, etc.,
even though in the name of truth they aim at taking the faith of the individual and giving it a social
and cultural form.
Christ himself experienced this with the Jewish religion. This is the significance of his declarations
against the authorities and the temple; this is also at the origin of his remarkable behaviour towards
the poor, women, those known as public sinners, and exterior forms of devotion and precepts.
Religion, bereft of prophecy, charisma, challenge and love, becomes a heavy burden. We are
catechists, i.e. teachers of religion: we must first experience religion as a shared faith, and in this
way we shall become specialists in communicating it to others as a source of joy and wisdom, of
new horizons and new hope. We find ourselves in new family contexts in which convictions,
tolerance and the ability to meet others and dialogue with them are the order of the day.
The high seas can also refer to questions and problems which over the past fifty years have become
very worrying and have come to define a culture of their own. What are they? John Paul II declares
that at the origin of a genuine human culture lies spirituality. It is a matter almost of a new
educative program needed by humanity at the present day. Some of its headings are mentioned in
Novo Millennio Ineunte: education to life; recovery of the sense and ethics of love; the environment
and each one's responsibility in its regard; waste and the need for temperance; poverty and the
production of goods; foreign debt and international justice; solidarity among peoples at the level of
good will and institutional organization; the vigorous defence of the rights of those who are weaker
(children, women, the poor); peace as a permanent state and a way for the resolving of conflicts;
Awareness, sensitization, cooperation in finding a solution to today's great plagues, e.g. the
homeless, refugees, those suffering from AIDS, etc.
We could say therefore that the high seas represents an ensemble of new realities and values which
we have not yet lived and clarified sufficiently in the light of the redemption, and which we are
called upon today to take up as our task and testimony: Christ is the fulfilment and meaning of all
creation; the Father has made him the heart of the world; in the spirit of the incarnation, in him and
through him everything will be directed to man's good something which is not happening at present.
Jesus therefore must still redeem human reality and free it from the yoke of sin.
Summing up, the call to put out into the high seas is an encouragement to explore situations and
values, and to incorporate them positively in our formation and our educative practice.
But it is not sufficient merely to point to new settings, new needs, new realities.
The new millennium appears as a crossroads between civilization and faith which means a meeting
between humanity and grace, between human history and incarnation. Human reason has grown and
been challenged. You need think only of problems of truth, of meaning, of ethics, etc. Nowadays
when in education we speak of spirituality we include, without any lack of continuity, the search for
a better and deeper meaning in our life, religious experience with its fundamental elements, contents
and process, and the choice of a kind of existence. In this perspective spirituality takes on the
fundamental criteria of an expression of culture and fundamental ethics. Hence the recommendation
that a commitment should be authentic, enduring and effective.
We must contemplate the face of Jesus! Today he says to us once again: 'I am the truth'.[5] And he
speaks at length of the influence of mans attitude to truth, not least in welcoming the gift of faith: