A rather disingeneous statement.
Keeping such documents secret, hidden from adherents and outsiders alike, this whole sequential initiation pattern reminds me of Gnostics, Freemasons, Scientology and such.
Most uncatholic a practice, I should say.
I would expect a transparent organisation to offer an official Q&A answering theological, liturgical, financial etc. scrutiny considering all the controversy. It’s quite telling it does not.
Why does it shirk bright daylight?
You are accusing the Pontifical Council for the Laity with having “uncatholic” practices.
The initiators of the NCW never meant to publish anything in fact. They spoke publicly. Later they invited those who were able and willing to continue their announcement of the Good News in other parishes to some meetings where they again spoke to them. Some of those took notes, someone brought a tape recorder…
When the Holy See wanted to examine what they say in the catechesis, that is when transcripts of the tape recordings were given them… These were footnoted with references to the CCC. In the parishes where the NCW is present, the catecheses are held with complete openness. Anyone can go and listen.
Your taking the occasion with these course of events to mention gnostics freemasons and scientology is only an attempt to “throw dirt” at a form of Christian Initiation which for some reason you don’t like, which, however, could not be farther from those.
I don’t see anything wrong with someone not publishing stuff he says. The parish priest, for example, in my parish gives homilies regularly – some are better then others – and he never published any of them. Were there someone having doubts whether he teaches error, he would have to go and listen to what he says.
The catecheses of the NCW are essentially preaching using mostly Scriptures, especially the Gospel, the Catechism of the Catholic Church and Patristic writings. I find nothing gnostic or masonic about it.