The Art of Accompaniment Book | Page 37

W H O I S I N V O LV E D I N T H E A P O S T O L AT E O F A C C O M PA N I M E N T ? I n accompaniment, the roles of mentor and the one accompanied make up the intentional apostolate of relationship. Accompaniment requires that both mentor and the one accompanied have certain qualities, par- ticipate in specific formation, and shape their participation in these roles in certain ways. Discipleship is central to the responsibilities and call of both mentor and the one accompanied. In order to facilitate and experience encounter, set an example, and be inspired by another’s witness, the mentor and the one accompanied must fundamentally live active lives as disciples: To create a culture of encounter and witness, we must live explicit lives of discipleship. We are called not only to believe in the Gos- pel but to allow it to take deep root in us in a way that leaves us incapable of silence: we cannot help but to announce the Gospel in word and in deed. This missionary outreach is at the heart of discipleship. (Living as Missionary Disciples, 14) By virtue of their goals, both the roles of the mentor and the one accompa- nied involve a deep commitment to being and growing as a witness to Jesus Christ: The witness of a Christian life is the first and irreplaceable form of mission: Christ, whose mission we continue, is the ‘witness’ par excellence. (Living as Missionary Disciples, 17) Mentor The apostolate of accompaniment is carried out on behalf of the entire Church through a mentor, who “exercises [the Church’s] maternal func- tion, giving birth to the freedom of the children of God,” and continues the “way in which the God of Jesus Christ acts towards his people: through constant and heartfelt presence, dedicated and loving closeness and tender- ness without limits” (Final Document of the Synod of Bishops on Young People, Faith and Vocational Discernment, 91). A mentor is one who makes possible the conditions for fruitful spiritual accompaniment by responding to the 27