ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS
BENEDICT XVI
TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY ASSEMBLY
OF THE PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR JUSTICE AND PEACE
TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE PLENARY ASSEMBLY
OF THE PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR JUSTICE AND PEACE
Consistory Hall
Monday, 3 December 2012
Monday, 3 December 2012
Dear Cardinals,
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate and in the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate and in the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
I am pleased to welcome you all on the occasion of your Plenary Assembly. I
greet the Cardinal President, whom I thank for his kind words, and likewise
Monsignor the Secretary, the Officials of the Dicastery and all of you, Members
and Consultors, who have come together for this important moment of reflection
and planning. Your Assembly is being celebrated during the
Year of the Faith,
after the
Synod which was dedicated to the New Evangelization, and also — as was
stated — on the 50th anniversary of the
Second Vatican Council and — within a
few months — that of the Encyclical
Pacem in Terris of Blessed
Pope John XXIII.
It is a context which already in itself offers many incentives.
The Church’s social doctrine, as Blessed
Pope John Paul II taught us, is an
integral part of the Church’s evangelizing mission (cf. Encyclical
Centesimus
Annus, n. 54), and with all the more reason should be considered important
for the new evangelization (cf. ibid., n. 5; Encyclical Caritas in Veritate,
n. 15). By accepting Jesus Christ and his Gospel, not only in our personal life
but also in our social relationships, we become messengers of a vision of man,
of his dignity, of his freedom and of his capacity for relationships, which is
marked by transcendence, in both the horizontal and vertical directions.
Just as Blessed
John XXIII reminded us in
Pacem in Terris (cf. n. 9), the
foundation and meaning of human rights and duties depend on an integral
anthropology, which derives from Revelation and from the exercise of natural
reason. In fact rights and duties are not based solely on the social awareness
of peoples; they depend primarily on the natural moral law, which is inscribed
by God in the conscience of every person, and thus — in the final analysis — on
the truth regarding man and society.
Although the defence of rights has made great progress in our time, today’s
culture — characterized among other things by a utilitarian individualism and
technocratic economics — tends not to value the person, who, albeit immersed in
an infinite network of relations and communications, is conceived of as a
“fluid” being with no permanent substance. Paradoxically, man today often seems
to be an isolated being because he is indifferent to the constitutive
relationship of his being, which is the root of all his other relationships: his
relationship with God. The human being today is considered mainly in a
biological perspective, or as “human capital”, “a resource”, part of a
productive and financial mechanism that towers over him.
Even though on the one hand the dignity of the person continues to be
proclaimed, on the other, new ideologies — such as the hedonistic and selfish
one of sexual and reproductive rights, or a deregulated financial capitalism
that abuses politics and takes the real economy apart — contribute to forming a
view of the employee and of his or her work as “minor” goods. These ideologies
also contribute to undermining the natural foundations of society and especially
of the family.
In fact human beings — transcendent in their make up in comparison with other
beings and with earthly goods — enjoy real primacy which makes them responsible
both for themselves and for creation. Work, for Christianity, is a good
fundamental to man, with a view to his personalization and socialization and to
the formation of a family, as well as to the contribution it makes to the common
good and to peace. Precisely on this account, the objective of access to work
for all is always a priority, even during periods of economic recession (cf.
Caritas in Veritate, n. 32).
Both a new humanism and a renewed cultural commitment and planning can come from
a new evangelization of social life. This helps to dethrone the modern idols, to
replace individualism, materialistic consumerism and technocracy with a
fraternal culture, giving freely from a loving solidarity. Jesus Christ summed
up and completed the precepts in a new commandment: “as I have loved you, that
you also you love one another” (Jn 13:34); here lies the secret to all social
life that is truly human and peaceful, as well as to the renewal of politics and
the national and world institutions. Blessed
Pope John XXIII undertook the
construction of a global community, with a corresponding authority — literally
motivated by love — and precisely by love for the common good of the human
family. Thus we read in
Pacem in Terris: “there is an intrinsic
connection between... the inner significance of the common good on the one hand,
and the nature and function of public authority on the other.... Public
authority, as the means of promoting the common good in civil society, is a
postulate of the moral order. But the moral order likewise requires that this
authority be effective in attaining its end” (n. 136).
It is not, of course, the Church’s duty to suggest — from a juridical and
political viewpoint — the practical configuration of such an international
arrangement, but she offers to those who are responsible for it those principles
for reflection, criteria for judgement, and practical guidelines that can
guarantee the anthropological and ethical frame around the common good (cf.
Encyclical
Caritas in Veritate, n. 67). In reflection, in any case, we must
bear in mind that we must not imagine a superpower, concentrated in the hands of
a few, that would dominate all peoples, taking advantage of the weakest; rather,
any such authority must first of all be understood as a moral force with the
potential to influence in accordance with reason (cf. 27), that is, as a
participatory authority, limited in competence and by law.
I thank the
Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace because, together with
other pontifical institutions, it has set itself to delve more deeply into the
directives I offered in
Caritas in Veritate. And it has done this either
by reflecting on a reform of the international financial and monetary system or
through the Plenary Session of the past few days and the international Seminar
on
Pacem in Terris that will be held next year.
May the Virgin Mary, the One who with faith and love welcomed the Saviour within
her in order to give him to the world, guide us as we proclaim and bear witness
to the Church’s social doctrine to make the new evangelization more effective.
With this wish, I very gladly impart my Apostolic Blessing to each one of you.
Many thanks.
Benedict XVI
(http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/speeches/2012/december/documents/hf_ben-xvi_spe_20121203_justpeace_en.html)