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OCTOGESIMA
ADVENIENS
APOSTOLIC
LETTER
OF POPE PAUL VI
To Cardinal Maurice Roy
President of the Council of the Laity and of
the Pontifical Commission Justice and Peace
On the Occasion of the Eightieth Anniversary
of the Encyclical "Rerum Novarum"
Venerable
Brother,
1. The
eightieth anniversary of the publication of
the encyclical Rerum Novarum, the
message of which continues to inspire action
for social justice, prompts us to take up
again and to extend the teaching of our
predecessors, in response to the new needs
of a changing world. The Church, in fact,
travels forward with humanity and shares its
lot in the setting of history. At the same
time that she announces to men the Good News
of God's love and of salvation in Christ she
clarifies their activity in the light of the
Gospel and in this way helps them to
correspond to God's plan of love and to
realize the fullness of their aspirations.
Universal appeal
2. It is with
confidence that we see the Spirit of the
Lord pursuing his work in the hearts of men
and in every place gathering together
Christian communities conscious of their
responsibilities in society. On all the
continents, among all races, nations and
cultures, and under all conditions the Lord
continues to raise up authentic apostles of
the Gospel.
We have had
the opportunity to meet these people, to
admire them and to give them our
encouragement in the course of our recent
journeys. We have gone into the crowds and
have heard their appeals, cries of distress
and at the same time cries of hope. Under
these circumstances we have seen in a new
perspective the grave problems of our time.
These problems of course are particular to
each part of the world, but at the same time
they are common to all mankind, which is
questioning itself about its future and
about the tendency and the meaning of the
changes taking place. Flagrant inequalities
exist in the economic, cultural and
political development of the nations: while
some regions are heavily industrialized,
others are still at the agricultural stage;
while some countries enjoy prosperity,
others are struggling against starvation;
while some peoples have a high standard of
culture, others are still engaged in
eliminating illiteracy. From all sides there
rises a yearning for more justice and a
desire for a better guaranteed peace in
mutual respect among individuals and
peoples.
Diversity of
situations
3. There is
of course a wide diversity among the
situations in which Christians - willingly
or unwillingly - find themselves according
to regions, socio-political systems and
cultures. In some places they are reduced to
silence, regarded with suspicion and as it
were kept on the fringe of society, enclosed
without freedom in a totalitarian system. In
other places they are a weak minority whose
voice makes itself heard with difficulty. In
some other nations, where the Church sees
her place recognized, sometimes officially
so, she too finds herself subjected to the
repercussions of the crisis which is
unsettling society, some of her members are
tempted by radical and violent solutions
from which they believe that they can expect
a happier outcome. While some people,
unaware of present injustices, strive to
prolong the existing situations, others
allow themselves to be beguiled by
revolutionary ideologies which promise them,
not without delusion, a definitively better
world.
4. In the
face of such widely varying situations it is
difficult for us to utter a unified message
and to put forward a solution which has
universal validity. Such is not our
ambition, nor is it our mission. It is up to
the Christian communities to analyze with
objectivity the situation which is proper to
their own country, to shed on it the light
of the Gospel's unalterable words and for
action from the social teaching of the
Church. This social teaching has been worked
out in the course of history and notably, in
this industrial era, since the historic date
of the message of Pope Leo XIII on "the
condition of the workers", and it is an
honor and joy for us to celebrate today the
anniversary of that message. It is up to
these Christian communities, with the help
of the Holy Spirit, in communion with the
bishops who hold responsibility and in
dialogue with other Christian brethren and
all men of goodwill, to discern the options
and commitments which are called for in
order to bring about the social, political
and economic changes seen in many cases to
be urgently needed. In this search for the
changes which should be promoted, Christians
must first of all renew their confidence in
the forcefulness and special character of
the demands made by the Gospel. The Gospel
is not out-of-date because it was
proclaimed, written and lived in a different
sociocultural context. Its inspiration,
enriched by the living experience of
Christian tradition over the centuries,
remains ever new for converting men: end for
advancing the life of society. It is not
however to be utilized for the profit of
particular temporal options, to the neglect
of its universal and eternal message (1).
Specific message of
the Church
5. Amid the
disturbances and uncertainties of the
present hour, the Church has a specific
message to proclaim and a support to give to
men in their efforts to take in hand and
give direction to their future. Since the
period in which the encyclical Rerum Novarum
denounced in a forceful and imperative
manner the scandal of the condition of the
workers in the nascent industrial society,
historical evolution has led to an awareness
of other dimensions and other applications
of social justice. The encyclicals
Quadragesimo Anno (2)
and Mater et Magistra (3)
already noted this fact. The recent Council
for its part took care to point them out, in
particular in the Pastoral Constitution
Gaudium et Spes. We ourself have already
continued these lines of thought in our
encyclical Populorum Progressio.
"Today", we said, "the principal fact that
we must all recognize is that the social
question has become worldwide" (4).
"A renewed consciousness of the demands of
the Gospel makes it the Church's duty to put
herself at the service of all, to help them
grasp their serious problem in all its
dimensions, and to convince them that
solidarity in action at this turning point
in human history is a matter of urgency" (5).
6. It will
moreover be for the forthcoming Synod of
Bishops itself to study more closely and to
examine in greater detail the Church's
mission in the face of grave issues raised
today by the question of justice in the
world. But the anniversary of Rerum
Novarum, venerable brother, gives us the
opportunity today to confide our
preoccupations and thoughts in the face of
this problem to you as President of the
Pontifical Commission Justice and Peace and
of the Council of Laity. In this way it is
also our wish to offer these bodies of the
Holy See our encouragement in their
ecclesial activity in the service of men.
Extent of
present-day changes
7. In so
doing, our purpose- without however
forgetting the permanent problems already
dealt with by our predecessors-is to draw
attention to a number of questions. These
are questions which because of their
urgency, extent and complexity must in the
years to come take first place among the
preoccupations of Christians, so that with
other men the latter may dedicate themselves
to solving the new difficulties which put
the very future of man in jeopardy. It is
necessary to situate the problems created by
the modern economy in the wider context of a
new civilization. These problems include
human conditions of production, fairness in
the exchange of goods and in the division of
wealth, the significance of the increased
needs of consumption and the sharing of
responsibility. In the present changes,
which are so profound and so rapid, each day
man discovers himself anew, and he questions
himself about the meaning of his own being
and of his collective survival. Reluctant to
gather the lessons of a past that he
considers over and done with and too
different from the present, man nevertheless
needs to have light shed upon his future - a
future which he perceives to be as uncertain
as it is changing - by permanent eternal
truths. These are truths which are certainly
greater than man but, if he so wills, he can
himself find their traces (6).
New Social Problems
Urbanization
8. A major
phenomenon draws our attention, as much in
the industrialized countries as in those
which are developing: urbanization.
After long
centuries, agrarian civilization is
weakening. Is sufficient attention being
devoted to the arrangement and improvement
of the life of the country people, whose
inferior and at times miserable economic
situation provokes the flight to the unhappy
crowded conditions of the city outskirts,
where neither employment nor housing awaits
them?
This
unceasing flight from the land, industrial
growth, continual demographic expansion and
the attraction of urban, centers bring about
concentrations of population, the extent of
which is difficult to imagine, for people
are already speaking in terms of a
"megalopolis" grouping together tens of
millions of persons. Of course there exist
medium-sized towns, the dimension of which
ensures a better balance in the population.
While being able to offer employment to
those that progress in agriculture makes
available, they permit an adjustment of the
human environment which better avoids the
proletarianism and crowding of the great
built-up areas.
9. The
inordinate growth of these centers
accompanies industrial expansion, without
being identified with it. Based on
technological research and the
transformation of nature, industrialization
constantly goes forward, giving proof of
incessant creativity. While certain
enterprises develop and are concentrated,
others die or change their location. Thus
new social problems are created:
professional or regional unemployment,
redeployment and mobility of persons,
permanent adaptation of workers and
disparity of conditions in the different
branches of industry. Unlimited competition
utilizing the modern means of publicity
incessantly launches new products and tries
to attract the consumer, while earlier
industrial installations which are still
capable of functioning become useless. While
very large areas of the population are
unable to satisfy their primary needs,
superfluous needs are ingeniously created.
It can thus rightly be asked if, in spite of
all his conquests, man Is not turning back
against himself the results of his activity.
Having rationally endeavored to control
nature, (7)
is he not now becoming the slave of the
objects which he makes?
Christians in the City
10. Is not
the rise of an urban civilization which
accompanies the advance of industrial
civilization a true challenge to the wisdom
of man, to his capacity for organization and
to his farseeing imagination? Within
industrial society urbanization up" sets
both the ways of life and the habitual
structures of existence: the family, the
neighborhood, and the very framework of the
Christian community. Man is experiencing a
new loneliness; it is not in the face of a
hostile nature which it has taken him
centuries to subdue, but in an anonymous
crowd which surrounds him and in which he
feels himself a stranger. Urbanization,
undoubtedly an irreversible stage in the
development of human societies, confronts
man with difficult problems. How is he to
master its growth, regulate its
organization, and successfully accomplish
its animation for the good of all?
In this
disordered growth, new proletariats are
born. They install themselves in the heart
of the cities sometimes abandoned by the
rich; they dwell on the outskirts - which
become a belt of misery besieging in a still
silent protest the luxury which blatantly
cries out from centers of consumption and
waste. Instead of favoring fraternal
encounter and mutual aid, the city fosters
discrimination and also indifference. It
lends itself to new forms of exploitation
and of domination whereby some people in
speculating on the needs of others derive
inadmissible profits. Behind the facades
much misery is hidden, unsuspected even by
the closest neighbors; other forms of misery
spread where human dignity founders:
delinquency, criminality, abuse of drugs and
eroticism.
11. It is in
fact the weakest who are the victims of
dehumanizing living conditions, degrading
for con science and harmful for the family
institution. The promiscuity of working
people's housing makes a minimum of intimacy
impossible; young couples waiting in vain
for a decent dwelling at a price they can
afford are demoralized and their union can
thereby even be endangered; youth escape
from a home which is too confined and seek
in the streets compensations and
companionships which cannot be supervised.
It is the grave duty of those responsible to
strive to control this process and to give
it direction.
There is an
urgent need to remake at the level of the
street, of the neighborhood or of the great
agglomerative dwellings the social fabric
whereby man may be able to develop the needs
of his personality. Centers of special
interest and of culture must be created or
developed at the community and parish levels
with different forms of associations,
recreational centers, and spiritual and
community gatherings where the individual
can escape from isolation and form anew
fraternal relationships.
12. To build
up the city, the place where men and their
expanded communities exist, to create new
modes of neighborliness and relationships,
to perceive an original application of
social justice and to undertake
responsibility for this collective future,
which is foreseen as difficult, is a task in
which Christians must share. To those who
are heaped up in an urban promiscuity which
becomes intolerable it is necessary to bring
a message of hope. This can be done by
brotherhood which is lived and by concrete
justice. Let Christians, conscious of this
new responsibility, not lose heart in view
of the vast and faceless society; let them
recall Jonah who traversed Niniveh, the
great city, to proclaim therein the good
news of God's mercy and was upheld in his
weakness by the sole strength of the word of
Almighty God. In the Bible, the city is in
fact often the place of sin and pride-the
pride of man who feels secure enough to be
able to build his life without God and even
to affirm that he is powerful against God.
But there is also the example of Jerusalem,
the Holy City, the place where God is
encountered, the promise of the city which
comes from on high (8).
Youth
13. Urban
life and industrial change bring strongly to
light questions which until now were poorly
grasped. What place, for example, in this
world being brought to birth, should be
given to youth? Everywhere dialogue is
proving to be difficult between youth, with
its aspirations, renewal and also insecurity
for the future, and the adult generations.
It is obvious to all that here we have a
source of serious conflicts, division and
opting out, even within the family, and a
questioning of modes of authority, education
for freedom and the handing on of values and
beliefs, which strikes at the deep roots of
society.
The role of
women
Similarly, in
many countries a charter for women which
would put an end to an actual discrimination
and would establish relationships of
equality in rights and of respect for their
dignity is the object of study and at times
of lively demands. We do not have in mind
that false equality which would deny the
distinction with woman's proper role, which
is of such capital importance, at the heart
of the family as well as within society.
Developments in legislation should on the
contrary be directed to protecting her
proper vocation and at the same time
recognizing her independence as a person,
and her equal rights to participate in
cultural, economic, social and political
life.
Workers
14. As the
Church solemnly reaffirmed in the recent
Council, "the beginning, the subject and the
goal of all social institutions is and must
be the human person" (9).
Every man has the right to work, to a chance
to develop his qualities and his personality
in the exercise of his profession, to
equitable remuneration which will enable him
and his family "to lead a worthy life on the
material, social, cultural and spiritual
level" (10)
and to assistance in case of need arising
from sickness or age.
Although for
the defense of these rights democratic
societies accept today the principle of
labor union rights, they are not always open
to their exercise. The important role of
union organizations must be admitted: their
object is the representation of the various
categories of workers, their lawful
collaboration in the economic advance of
society, and the development of the sense of
their responsibility for the realization of
the common good. Their activity, however, is
not without its difficulties. Here and there
the temptation can arise of profiting from a
position of force to impose, particularly by
strikes - the right to which as a final
means of defense remains certainly
recognized - conditions which are too
burdensome for the overall economy and for
the social body, or to desire to obtain in
this way demands of a directly political
nature. When it is a question of public
service, required for the life of an entire
nation, it is necessary to be able to assess
the limit beyond which the harm caused to
society become inadmissible.
Victims of
Changes
15. In short,
progress has already been made in
introducing, in the area of human
relationships, greater justice and greater
sharing of responsibilities. But in this
immense field much remains to be done.
Further reflection, research and
experimentation must be actively pursued,
unless one is to be late in meeting the
legitimate aspirations of the workers -
aspirations which are being increasingly
asserted according as their education, their
consciousness of their dignity and the
strength of their organizations increase.
Egoism and
domination are permanent temptations for
men. Likewise an ever finer discernment is
needed, in order to strike at the roots of
newly arising situations of injustice and to
establish progressively a justice which will
be less and less imperfect. In industrial
change, which demands speedy and constant
adaptation, those who will find themselves
injured will be more numerous and at a
greater disadvantage from the point of view
of making their voices heard. The Church
directs her attention to those new "poor" -
the handicapped and the maladjusted, the
old, different groups of those on the fringe
of society, and so on - in order to
recognize them, help them; defend their
place and dignity in a society hardened by
competition and the attraction of success.
Discrimination
16. Among the
victims of situations of injustice -
unfortunately no new phenomenon - must be
placed those who are discriminated against,
in law or in fact, on account of their race,
origin, color, culture, sex or religion.
Racial
discrimination possesses at the moment a
character of very great relevance by reason
of the tension which it stirs up both within
countries and on the international level.
Men rightly consider unjustifiable and
reject as inadmissible the tendency to
maintain or introduce legislation or
behavior systematically inspired by
racialist prejudice. The members of mankind
share the same basic rights and duties, as
well as the same supernatural destiny.
Within a country which belongs to each one,
all should be equal before the law, find
equal admittance to economic, cultural,
civic and social life and benefit from a
fair sharing of the nation's riches.
Right to emigrate
17. We are
thinking of the precarious situation of a
great number of emigrant workers whose
condition as foreigners makes it all the
more difficult for them to make any sort of
social vindication, in spite of their real
participation in the economic effort of the
country that receives them. It is urgently
necessary for people to go beyond a narrowly
nationalist attitude in their regard and to
give them a charter which will assure them a
right to emigrate, favor their integration,
facilitate their professional advancement
and give them access to decent housing
where, if such is the case, their families
can join them (11).
Linked to
this category are the people who, to find
work, or to escape a disaster or a hostile
climate, leave their regions and find
themselves without roots among other people.
It is
everyone's duty, but especially that of
Christians (12),
to work with energy for the establishment of
universal brotherhood, the indispensable
basis for authentic justice and the
condition for enduring peace: "We cannot in
truthfulness call upon that God who is the
Father of all if we refuse to act in a
brotherly way toward certain men, created to
God's image. A man's relationship with God
the Father and his relationship with his
brother men are so linked together that
Scripture says: 'He who does not love does
not know God' (I Jn. 4, 8)"(13).
Creating Employment
18. With
demographic growth, which is particularly
pronounced in the young nations, the number
of those failing to find work and driven to
misery or parasitism will grow in the coming
years unless the conscience of man rouses
itself and gives rise to a general movement
of solidarity through an effective policy of
investment and of organization of production
and trade, as well as of education. We know
the attention given to these problems within
international organizations, and it is our
lively wish that their members will not
delay bringing their actions into line with
their declarations.
It is
disquieting in this regard to note a kind of
fatalism which is gaining a hold even on
people in positions of responsibility. This
feeling sometimes leads to Malthusian
solutions inculcated by active propaganda
for contraception and abortion. In this
critical situation, it must on the contrary
be affirmed that the family, without which
no society can stand, has a right to the
assistance which will assure it of the
conditions for a healthy development. "It is
certain", we said in our encyclical
Populorum Progressio, "that public
authorities can intervene, within the limit
of their competence, by favoring the
availability of appropriate information and
by adopting suitable measures, provided that
these be in conformity with the moral law
and that they respect the rightful freedom
of married couples. Where the inalienable
right to marriage and procreation is
lacking, human dignity has ceased to
exists"(14).
19. In no
other age has the appeal to the imagination
of society been so explicit. To this should
be devoted enterprises of invention and
capital as important as those invested for
armaments or technological achievements. If
man lets himself rush ahead without
foreseeing in good time the emergence of new
social problems, they will become too grave
for a peaceful solution to be hoped for.
Media of
social communication
20. Among the
major changes of our times, we do not wish
to forget to emphasize the growing role
being assumed by the media of social
communication and their influence on the
transformation of mentalities of knowledge,
of organizations and of society itself.
Certainly they have many positive aspects.
Thanks to them news from the entire world
reaches us practically in an instant,
establishing contacts which supersede
distances and creating elements of unity
among all men. A greater spread of education
and culture is becoming possible.
Nevertheless, by their very action the media
of social communication are reaching the
point of representing as it were a new
power. One cannot but ask about those who
really hold this power, the aims that they
pursue and the means they use, and finally,
about the effect of their activity on the
exercise of individual liberty, both in the
political and ideological spheres and in
social, economic and cultural life. The men
who hold this power have a grave moral
responsibility with respect to the truth of
the information that they spread, the needs
and the reactions that they generate and the
values which they put forward. In the case
of television, moreover, what is coming into
being is an original mode of knowledge
and a new civilization: that of the image.
Naturally,
the public authorities cannot ignore the
growing power and influence of the media of
social communication and the advantages and
risks which their use involves for the civic
community and for its development and real
perfecting.
Consequently
they are called upon to perform their own
positive function for the common good by
encouraging every constructive expression,
by supporting individual citizens and groups
in defending the fundamental values of the
person and of human society, and also by
taking suitable steps to prevent the spread
of what would harm the common heritage of
values on which orderly civil progress is
based (15).
The environment
21. While the
horizon of man is thus being modified
according to the images that are chosen for
him, another transformation is making itself
felt, one which is the dramatic and
unexpected consequence of human activity.
Man is suddenly becoming aware that by an
ill-considered exploitation of nature he
risks destroying it and becoming in his turn
the victim of this degradation. Not only is
the material environment becoming a
permanent menace - pollution and refuse, new
illness and absolute destructive capacity -
but the human framework is no longer under
man's control, thus creating an environment
for tomorrow which may well be intolerable.
This is a wide-ranging social problem which
concerns the entire human family.
The Christian
must turn to these new perceptions in order
to take on responsibility, together with the
rest of men, for a destiny which from now on
is shared by all.
Fundamental
Aspirations and Currents of Ideas
22. While
scientific and technological progress
continues to overturn man's surroundings,
his patterns of knowledge, work, consumption
and relationships, two aspirations
persistently make themselves felt in these
new contexts, and they grow stronger to the
extent that he becomes better informed and
better educated: the aspiration to equality
and the aspiration to participation, two
forms of man's dignity and freedom.
Advantages
and limitations of juridical recognition
23. Through
the statement of the rights of man and the
seeking for international agreements for the
application of these rights, progress has
been made towards inscribing these two
aspirations in deeds and structures (16).
Nevertheless various forms of discrimination
continually reappear - ethnic cultural,
religious, political and so on. In fact,
human rights are still too often
disregarded, if not scoffed at, or else they
receive only formal recognition. In many
cases legislation does not keep up with real
situations. Legislation is necessary, but it
is not sufficient for setting up true
relationships of justice and equity. In
teaching us charity, the Gospel instructs us
in the preferential respect due to the poor
and the special situation they have in
society: the more fortunate should renounce
some of their rights so as to place their
goods more generously at the service of
others. If, beyond legal rules, there is
really no deeper feeling of respect for and
service to others, then even equality before
the law can serve as an alibi for flagrant
discrimination, continued exploitation and
actual contempt. Without a renewed education
in solidarity, an overemphasis of equality
can give rise to an individualism in which
each one claims his own rights without
wishing to be answerable for the common
good.
In this
field, everyone sees the highly important
contribution of the Christian spirit, which
moreover answers man's yearning to be loved.
"Love for man, the prime value of the
earthly order" ensures the conditions for
peace, both social peace and international
peace, by affirming our universal
brotherhood (17).
The political society
24. The two
aspirations, to equality and to
participation, seek to promote a democratic
type of society. Various models are
proposed, some are tried out, none of them
gives complete satisfaction, and the search
goes on between ideological and pragmatic
tendencies. The Christian has the duty to
take part in this search and in the
organization and life of political society.
As a social being, man builds his destiny
within a series of particular groupings
which demand, as their completion and as a
necessary condition for their development, a
vaster society, one of a universal
character, the political society. All
particular activity must be placed within
that wider society, and thereby it takes on
the dimension of the common good. (18)
This
indicates the importance of education for
life in society, in which there are called
to mind, not only information on each one's
rights, but also their necessary
correlative: the recognition of the duties
of each one in regard to others. The sense.
and practice of duty are themselves
conditioned by self-mastery and by the
acceptance of responsibility and of the
limits placed upon the freedom of the
individual or of the group.
25. Political
activity - need one remark that we are
dealing primarily with an activity, not an
ideology? - should be the projection of a
plan of society which is consistent in its
concrete means and in its inspiration, and
which springs from a complete conception of
man's vocation and of its differing social
expressions. It is not for the State or even
for political parties, which would be closed
unto themselves, to try to impose an
ideology by means that would lead to a
dictatorship over minds, the worst kind of
all. It is for cultural and religious
groupings, in the freedom of acceptance
which they presume, to develop in the social
body, disinterestedly and in their own ways,
those ultimate convictions on the nature,
origin and end of man and society.
In this
field, it is well to keep in mind the
principle proclaimed at the Second Vatican
Council: "The truth cannot impose itself
except by virtue of its own truth, and it
makes its entrance into the mind at once
quietly and with power" (19).
Ideologies
and human liberty
26. Therefore
the Christian who wishes to live his faith
in a political activity which he thinks of
as service cannot without contradicting
himself adhere to ideological systems which
radically or substantially go against his
faith and his concept of man. He cannot
adhere to the Marxist ideology, to its
atheistic materialism, to its dialectic of
violence and to the way it absorbs
individual freedom in the collectivity, at
the same time denying all transcendence to
man and his personal and collective history;
nor can be adhere to the liberal ideology
which believes it exalts individual freedom
by with drawing it from every limitation, by
stimulating it through exclusive seeking of
interest and power, and by considering
social solidarities as more or less
automatic consequences of individual
initiatives, not as an aim and a major
criterion of the value of the social
organization.
27. Is there
need to stress the possible ambiguity of
every social ideology? Sometimes it leads
political or social activity to be simply
the application of an abstract, purely
theoretical idea; at other times it is
thought which becomes a mere instrument at
the service of activity as a simple means of
a strategy.
In both cases
is it not man that risks finding himself
alienated? The Christian faith is above and
is sometimes opposed to the ideologies, in
that it recognizes God, who is transcendent
and the Creator, and who, through all the
levels of creation, calls on man as endowed
with responsibility and freedom.
28. There
would also be the danger of giving adherence
to an ideology which does not rest on a true
and organic doctrine, to take refuge in it
as a final and sufficient explanation of
everything, and thus to build a new idol,
accepting, at times without being aware of
doing so, its totalitarian and coercive
character. And people imagine they find in
it a justification for their activity, even
violent activity, and an adequate response
to a generous desire to serve. The desire
remains but it allows itself to be consumed
by an ideology which, even if it suggests
certain paths to man's liberation, ends up
by making him a slave.
29. It has
been possible today to speak of a retreat of
ideologies. In this respect the present time
may be favorable for an openness to the
concrete transcendence of Christianity. It
may also be a more accentuated sliding
towards a new positivism: universalized
technology as the dominant form of activity,
as the overwhelming pattern of existence,
even as a language, without the question of
its meaning being really asked.
Historical
movements
30. But
outside of this positivism which reduces man
to a single dimension even if it be an
important one today and by so doing
mutilates him, the Christian encounters in
his activity concrete historical movements
sprung from ideologies and in part distinct
from them. Our venerated predecessor Pope
John XXIII in Pacem in Terris already
showed that it is possible to make a
distinction: "Neither can false
philosophical teachings regarding the
nature, origin and destiny of the universe
and of man be identified with historical
movements that have economic, social.
cultural or political ends, not even when
these movements have originated from those
teachings and have drawn and still draw
inspiration therefrom. Because the
teachings, once they are drawn up and
defined, remain always the same, while the
movements, being concerned with historical
situations in constant evolution, cannot but
be influenced by these latter and cannot
avoid, therefore, being subject to changes,
even of a profound nature. Besides, who can
deny that those movements, in so far as they
conform to the dictates of right reason and
are interpreters of the lawful aspirations
of the human person, contain elements that
are positive and deserving of approval?" (20).
Attraction of
socialist currents
31. Some
Christians are today attracted by socialist
currents and their various developments.
They try to recognize therein a certain
number of aspirations which they carry
within themselves in the name of their
faith. They feel that they are part of that
historical current and wish to play a part
within it. Now this historical current takes
on, under the same name, different forms
according to different continents and
cultures, even if it drew its inspiration,
and still does in many cases, from
ideologies incompatible with faith. Careful
judgment is called for. Too often Christians
attracted by socialism tend to idealize it
in terms which, apart from anything else,
are very general: a will for justice,
solidarity and equality. They refuse to
recognize the limitations of the historical
socialist movements, which remain
conditioned by the ideologies from which
they originated. Distinctions must be made
to guide concrete choices between the
various levels of expression of socialism: a
generous aspiration and a seeking for a more
just society, historical movements with a
political organization and aim, and an
ideology which claims to give a complete and
self-sufficient picture of man.
Nevertheless, these distinctions must not
lead one to consider such levels as
completely separate and independent. The
concrete link which, according to
circumstances, exists between them must be
clearly marked out. This insight will enable
Christians to see the degree of commitment
possible along these lines, while
safeguarding the values, especially those of
liberty, responsibility and openness to the
spiritual, which guarantee the integral
development of man.
Historical
evolution of Marxism
32. Other
Christians even ask whether an historical
development of Marxism might not authorize
certain concrete rapprochements. They note
in fact a certain splintering of Marxism,
which until now showed itself to be a
unitary ideology which explained in
atheistic terms the whole of man and the
world since it did not go outside their
development process. Apart from the
ideological confrontation officially
separating the various champions of
Marxism-Leninism in their individual
interpretations of the thought of its
founders, and apart from the open opposition
between the political systems which make use
of its name today, some people lay down
distinctions between Marxism's various
levels of expression.
33. For some,
Marxism remains essentially the active
practice of class struggle. Experiencing the
ever present and continually renewed force
of the relationships of domination and
exploitation among men, they reduce Marxism
to no more than a struggle - at times with
no other purpose - to be pursued and even
stirred up in permanent fashion. For others,
it is first and foremost the collective
exercise of political and economic power
under the direction of a single party, which
would be the sole expression and guarantee
of the welfare of all, and would deprive
individuals and other groups of any
possibility of initiative and choice. At a
third level, Marxism' whether in power or
not, is viewed as a socialist ideology based
on historical materialism and the denial of
everything transcendent. At other times,
finally, it presents itself in a more
attenuated form, one also more attractive to
the modern mind: as a scientific activity,
as a rigorous method of examining social and
political reality, and as the rational link,
tested by history, between theoretical
knowledge and the practice of revolutionary
transformation. Although this type of
analysis gives a privileged position to
certain aspects of reality to the detriment
of the rest, and interprets them in the
light of its ideology, it nevertheless
furnishes some people not only with a
working tool but also a certitude
preliminary to action: the claim to decipher
in a scientific manner the mainsprings of
the evolution of society.
34. While,
through the concrete existing form of
Marxism, one can distinguish these various
aspects and the questions they pose for the
reflection and activity of Christians, it
would be illusory and dangerous to reach a
point of forgetting the intimate link which
radically binds them together, to accept the
elements of Marxist analysis without
recognizing their relationships with
ideology, and to enter into the practice of
class struggle and its Marxist
interpretations, while failing to note the
kind of totalitarian and violent society to
which this process leads.
The liberal
ideology
35. On
another side, we are witnessing a renewal of
the liberal ideology. This current asserts
itself both in the name of economic
efficiency, and for the defense of the
individual against the increasingly
overwhelming hold of organizations, and as a
reaction against the totalitarian tendencies
of political powers. Certainly, personal
initiative must be maintained and developed.
But do not Christians who take this path
tend to idealize liberalism in their turn,
making it a proclamation in favor of
freedom? They would like a new model, more
adapted to present-day conditions, while
easily forgetting that at the very root of
philosophical liberalism is an erroneous
affirmation of the autonomy of the
individual in his activity, his motivation
and the exercise of his liberty. Hence, the
liberal ideology likewise calls for careful
discernment on their part.
Christian
discernment
36. In this
renewed encounter of the various ideologies,
the Christian will draw from the sources of
his faith and the Church's teaching the
necessary principles and suitable criteria
to avoid permitting himself to be first
attracted by and then imprisoned within a
system whose limitations and totalitarianism
may well become evident to him too late, if
he does nor perceive them in their roots.
Going beyond every system, without however
failing to commit himself concretely to
serving his brothers, he will assert, in the
very midst of his options, the specific
character of the Christian contribution for
a positive transformation of society (21).
Rebirth of utopias
37. Today
moreover the weaknesses of the ideologies
are better perceived through the concrete
systems in which they are trying to affirm
themselves. Bureaucratic socialism,
technocratic capitalism and authoritarian
democracy are showing how difficult it is to
solve the great human problem of living
together in justice and equality. How in
fact could they escape the materialism,
egoism or constraint which inevitably go
with them? This is the source of a protest
which is springing up more or less
everywhere, as a sign of a deep-seated
sickness, while at the same time we are
witnessing the rebirth of what it is agreed
to call "utopias". These claim to resolve
the political problem of modern societies
better than the ideologies. It would be
dangerous to disregard this. The appeal to a
utopia is often a convenient excuse for
those who wish to escape from concrete tasks
in order to take refuge in an imaginary
world. To live in a hypothetical future is a
facile alibi for rejecting immediate
responsibilities. But it must clearly be
recognized that this kind of criticism of
existing society often provokes the
forward-looking imagination both to perceive
in the present the disregarded possibility
hidden within it, and to direct itself
towards a fresh future; it thus sustains
social dynamism by the confidence that it
gives to the inventive powers of the human
mind and heart; and, if it refuses no
overture, it can also meet the Christian
appeal. The Spirit of the Lord, who animates
man renewed in Christ, continually breaks
down the horizons within which his
understanding likes to find security and the
limits to which his activity would willingly
restrict itself; ;here dwells within him a
power which urges him to go beyond every
system and every ideology. At the heart of
the world there dwells the mystery of man
discovering himself to be God's son in the
course of a historical and psychological
process in which constraint and freedom as
well as the weight of sin and the breath of
the Spirit alternate and struggle for the
upper hand.
The dynamism
of Christian faith here triumphs over the
narrow calculations of egoism. Animated by
the power of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, the
Savior of mankind, and upheld by hope, the
Christian involves himself in the building
up of the human city, one that is to be
peaceful, just and fraternal and acceptable
as an offering to God. (22)
In fact, "the expectation of a new earth
must not weaken but rather stimulate our
concern for cultivating this one. For here
grows the body of a new human family, a body
which even now is able to give some kind of
foreshadowing of the new age" (23).
The
questioning of the human sciences
38. In this
world dominated by scientific and
technological change, which threatens to
drag it towards a new posivitism, another
more fundamental doubt is raised. Having
subdued nature by using his reason, man now
finds that he himself is as it were
imprisoned within his own rationality; he in
turn becomes the object of science. The
"human sciences" are today enjoying a
significant flowering. On the one hand they
are subjecting to critical and radical
examination the hitherto accepted knowledge
about man, on the grounds that this
knowledge seems either too empirical or too
theoretical. On the other hand,
methodological necessity and ideological
presuppositions too often lead the human
sciences to isolate, in the various
situations, certain aspects of man, and yet
to give these an explanation which claims to
be complete or at least an interpretation
which is meant to be all-embracing from a
purely quantitative or phenomenological
point of view. This scientific reduction
betrays a dangerous presupposition. To give
a privileged position in this way to such an
aspect of analysis is to mutilate man and,
under the pretext of a scientific procedure,
to make it impossible to understand man in
his totality.
39. One must
be no less attentive to the action which the
human sciences can instigate, giving rise to
the elaboration of models of society to be
subsequently imposed on men as
scientifically tested types of behavior. Man
can then become the object of manipulations
directing his desires and needs and
modifying his behavior and even his system
of values. There is no doubt that there
exists here a grave danger for the societies
of tomorrow and for man himself. For even if
all agree to build a new society at the
service of men, it is still essential to
know what sort of man is in question.
Widening the
horizons
40. Suspicion
of the human sciences affects the Christian
more than others, but it does not find him
disarmed. For, as we ourself wrote in
Populorum Progressio, it is here that there
is found the specific contribution of the
Church to civilizations: "Sharing the
noblest aspirations of men and suffering
when she sees them not satisfied, she wishes
to help them attain their full flowering,
and that is why she offers men what she
possesses as her characteristic attribute: a
global vision of man and of the human race".
(24)
Should the Church in its turn contest the
proceedings of the human sciences, and
condemn their pretentions? As in the case of
the natural sciences, the Church has
confidence in this research also and urges
Christians to play an active part in it (25).
Prompted by the same scientific demands and
the desire to know man better, but at the
same time enlightened by their faith,
Christians who devote themselves to the
human sciences will begin a dialogue between
the Church and this new field of discovery,
a dialogue which promises to be fruitful. Of
course, each individual scientific
discipline will be able, in its own
particular sphere, to grasp only a
partial-yet true-aspect of man; the complete
picture and the full meaning will escape it.
But within these limits the human sciences
give promise of a positive function that the
Church willingly recognizes. They can even
widen the horizons of human liberty to a
greater extent than the conditioning
circumstances perceived enable one to
foresee. They could thus assist Christian
social morality, which no doubt will see its
field restricted when it comes to suggesting
certain models of society, while its
function of making a critical judgment and
taking an overall view will be strengthened
by its showing the relative character of the
behavior and values presented by such and
such a society as definitive and inherent in
the very nature of man. These sciences are a
condition at once indispensable and
inadequate for a better discovery of what is
human. They are a language which becomes
more and more complex, yet one that deepens
rather than solves the mystery of the heart
of man; nor does it provide the complete and
definitive answer to the desire which
springs from his innermost being.
Ambiguous
nature of progress
41. This
better knowledge of man makes it possible to
pass a better critical judgment upon and to
elucidate a fundamental notion that remains
at the basis of modern societies as their
motive, their measure and their goal:
namely, progress. Since the nineteenth
century, western societies and, as a result,
many others have put their hopes in
ceaselessly renewed and indefinite progress.
They saw this progress as man's effort to
free himself in face of the demands of
nature and of social constraints; progress
was the condition for and the yardstick of
human freedom. Progress, spread by the
modern media of information and by the
demand for wider knowledge and greater
consumption, has become an omnipresent
ideology. Yet a doubt arises today regarding
both its value and its result What is the
meaning of this never-ending, breathless
pursuit of a progress that always eludes one
just when one believes one has conquered it
sufficiently in order to enjoy it in peace?
If it is not attained, it leaves one
dissatisfied. Without doubt, there has been
just condemnation of the limits and even the
misdeeds of a merely quantitative economic
growth; there is a desire to attain
objectives of a qualitative order also. The
quality and the truth of human relations,
the degree of participation and of
responsibility, are no less significant and
important for the future of society than the
quantity and variety of the goods produced
and consumed.
Overcoming
the temptation to wish to measure everything
in terms of efficiency and of trade, and in
terms of the interplay of forces and
interests, man today wishes to replace these
quantitative criteria with the intensity of
communication, the spread of knowledge and
culture, mutual service and a combining of
efforts for a common task. Is not genuine
progress to be found in the development of
moral consciousness, which will lead man to
exercise a wider solidarity and to open
himself freely to others and to God? For a
Christian, progress necessarily comes up
against the eschatological mystery of death.
The death of Christ and his resurrection and
the outpouring of the Spirit of the Lord
help man to place his freedom, in creativity
and gratitude, within the context of the
truth of all progress and the only hope
which does not deceive (26).
Christians Face to
Face with These New Problems
Dynamism of the
Church's social teaching
42. In the
face of so many new questions the Church
makes an effort to reflect in order to give
an answer, in its own sphere, to men's
expectations. If today the problems seem
original in their breadth and their urgency,
is man without the means of solving them? It
is with all its dynamism that the social
teaching of the Church accompanies men in
their search. If it does not intervene to
authenticate a given structure or to propose
a ready-made model, it does not thereby
limit itself to recalling general
principles. It develops through reflection
applied to the changing situations of this
world, under the driving force of the Gospel
as the source of renewal when its message is
accepted in its totality and with all its
demands. It also develops with the
sensitivity proper to the Church which is
characterized by a disinterested will to
serve and by attention to the poorest.
Finally, it
draws upon its rich experience of many
centuries which enables it, while continuing
its permanent preoccupations, to undertake
the daring and creative innovations which
the present state of the world requires.
For greater
justice
43. There is
a need to establish a greater justice in the
sharing of goods, both within national
communities and on the international level.
In international exchanges there is a need
to go beyond relationships based on force,
in order to arrive at agreements reached
with the good of all in mind. Relationships
based on force have never in fact
established justice in a true and lasting
manner, even if at certain times the
alteration of positions can often make it
possible to find easier conditions for
dialogue. The use of force moreover leads to
the setting in motion of opposing forces,
and from this springs a climate of struggle
which opens the way to situations of extreme
violence and to abuses (27).
But, as we
have often stated, the most important duty
in the realm of justice is to allow each
country to promote its own development,
within the framework of a cooperation free
from any spirit of domination, whether
economic or political. The complexity of the
problems raised is certainly great, in the
present intertwining of mutual dependences.
Thus it is necessary to have the courage to
undertake a revision of the relationships
between nations, whether it is a question of
the international division of production,
the structure of exchanges, the control of
profits, the monetary system- without
forgetting the actions of human solidarity -
to question the models of growth of the rich
nations and change people's outlooks, so
that they may realize the prior call of
international duty, and to renew
international organizations so that they may
increase in effectiveness.
44. Under the
driving force of new systems of production,
national frontiers are breaking down, and we
can see new economic powers emerging, the
multinational enterprise, which by the
concentration and flexibility of their means
can conduct autonomous strategies which are
largely independent of the national
political powers and therefore not subject
to control from the point of view of the
common good. By extending their activities,
these private organizations can lead to a
new and abusive form of economic domination
on the social, cultural and even political
level. The excessive concentration of means
and powers that Pope Pius XI already
condemned on the fortieth anniversary of
Rerum Novarum is taking on a new and very
real image.
Change of attitudes
and structures
45. Today men
yearn to free themselves from need and
dependence. But this liberation starts with
the interior freedom that men must find
again with regard to their goods and their
powers; they will never reach it except
through a transcendent love for man, and, in
consequence, through a genuine readiness to
serve. Otherwise, as one can see only too
clearly, the most revolutionary ideologies
lead only to a change of masters; once
installed in power in their turn, these new
masters surround themselves with privileges,
limit freedom and allow other forms of
injustice to become established.
Thus many
people are reaching the point of questioning
the very model of society. The ambition of
many nations, in the competition that sets
them in opposition and which carries them
along, is to attain technological, economic
and military power. This ambition then
stands in the way of setting up structures
in which the rhythm of progress would be
regulated with a view to greater justice,
instead of accentuating inequalities and
living in a climate of distrust and struggle
which would unceasingly compromise peace.
Christian
meaning of political activity
46. Is it not
here that there appears a radical limitation
to economics? Economic activity is necessary
and, if it is at the service of man, it can
be "a source of brotherhood and a sign of
Providence" (28).
It is the occasion of concrete exchanges
between man, of rights recognized, of
services rendered and of dignity affirmed in
work. Though it is often a field of
confrontation and domination, it can give
rise to dialogue and foster cooperation. Yet
it runs the risk of taking up too much
strength and freedom (29).
This is why the need is felt to pass from
economics to politics. It is true that in
the term "politics" many confusions are
possible and must be clarified, but each man
feels that in the social and economic field,
both national and international, the
ultimate decision rests with political
power.
Political
power, which is the natural and necessary
link for ensuring the cohesion of the social
body, must have as its aim the achievement
of the common good. While respecting the
legitimate liberties of individuals,
families and subsidiary groups, it acts in
such a way as to create, effectively and for
the well-being of all, the conditions
required for attaining man's true and
complete good, including his spiritual end.
It acts within the limits of its competence,
which can vary from people to people and
from country to country. It always
intervenes with care for justice and with
devotion to the common good, for which: it
holds final responsibility. It does not, for
all that, deprive individuals and
intermediary bodies of the field of activity
and responsibility which are proper to them
and which lead them to collaborate in the
attainment of this common good. In fact,
"the true aim of all social activity should
be to help individual members of the social
body, but never to destroy or absorb them" (30).
According to the vocation proper to is, the
political power must know how to stand aside
from particular interests in order to view
its responsibility with regard to the good
of all men, even going beyond national
limits. To take politics seriously at its
different levels - local, regional, national
and worldwide - is to affirm the duty of
man, of every man, to recognize the concrete
reality and the value of the freedom of
choice that is offered to him to seek to
bring about both the good of the city and of
the nation and of mankind. Politics are a
demanding manner - but not the only one - of
living the Christian commitment to the
service of others. Without of course solving
every problem, it endeavors to apply
solutions to the relationships men have with
one another. The domain of politics is wide
and comprehensive, but it is not exclusive.
An attitude of encroachment which would tend
to set up politics as an absolute value
would bring serious danger. While
recognizing the autonomy of the reality of
politics, Christians who are invited to take
up political activity should try to make
their choices consistent with the Gospel
and, in the framework of a legitimate
plurality, to give both personal collective
witness to the seriousness of their faith by
effective and disinterested service of men.
Sharing in
responsibility
47. The
passing to the political dimension also
expresses a demand made by the man of today:
a greater sharing in responsibility and in
decision-making. This legitimate aspiration
becomes more evident as the cultural level
rises, as the sense of freedom develops and
as man becomes more aware of how, in a world
facing an uncertain future, the choices of
today already condition the life of
tomorrow. In Mater et Magistra (31)
Pope John XXIII stressed how much the
admittance to responsibility is a basic
demand of man's nature, a concrete exercise
of his freedom and a path to his
development, and he showed how, in economic
life and particularly in enterprise, this
sharing in responsibilities should be
ensured.(32)
Today the field is wider, and extends to the
social and political sphere in which a
reasonable sharing in responsibility and in
decisions must be established and
strengthened. Admittedly, it is true that
the choices proposed for a decision are more
and more complex; the considerations that
must be borne in mind are numerous and
foreseeing of the consequences involves
risk, even if new sciences strive to
enlighten freedom at these important
moments. However, although limits are
sometimes called for, these obstacles must
not slow down the giving of wider
participation in working out decisions,
making choices and putting them into
practice. In order to counterbalance
increasing technocracy, modern forms of
democracy must be devised, not only making
it possible for each man to become informed
and to express himself, but also by
involving him in a shared responsibility.
Thus human
groups will gradually begin to share and to
live as communities. Thus freedom, which too
often asserts itself as a claim for autonomy
by opposing the freedom of others, will
develop in its deepest human reality: to
involve itself and to spend itself in
building up active and lived solidarity.
But, for the Christian, it is by losing
himself in God who sets him free that man
finds true freedom, renewed in the death and
resurrection of the Lord.
Call to Action
Need to become
involved in action
48. In the
social sphere, the Church has always wished
to assume a double function: first to
enlighten minds in order to assist them to
discover the truth and to find the right
path to follow amid the different teachings
that call for their attention; and secondly
to take part in action and to spread, with a
real care for service and effectiveness, the
energies of the Gospel. Is it not in order
to be faithful to this desire that the
Church has sent on an apostolic mission
among the workers priests who, by sharing
fully the condition of the worker, are at
that level the witnesses to the Church's
solicitude and seeking?
It is to all
Christians that we address a fresh and
insistent call to action. In our encyclical
on the Development of Peoples we urged that
all should set themselves to the task:
"Laymen should take up as their own proper
task the renewal of the temporal order. If
the role of the hierarchy is to teach and to
interpret authentically the norms of
morality to be followed in this matter, it
belongs to the laity, without waiting
passively for orders and directives, to take
the initiatives freely and to infuse a
Christian spirit into the mentality,
customs, laws and structures of the
community in which they live" (33).
Let each one examine himself, to see what he
has done up to now, and what he ought to do.
It is not enough to recall principles, state
intentions, point to crying injustice and
utter prophetic denunciations; these words
will lack real weight unless they are
accompanied for each individual by a
livelier awareness of personal
responsibility and by effective action. It
is too easy to throw back on others
responsibility for injustice, if at the same
time one does not realize how each one
shares in it personally, and how personal
conversion is needed first. This basic
humility will rid action of all
inflexibility and sectarianism, it will also
avoid discouragement in the face of a task
which seems limitless in size. The
Christian's hope comes primarily from the
fact that he knows that the Lord is working
with us in the world, continuing in his Body
which is the Church - and, through the
Church, in the whole of mankind - the
Redemption which was accomplished on the
Cross and which burst forth in victory on
the morning of the Resurrection (34).
This hope springs also from the fact that
the Christian knows that other men are at
work, to undertake actions of justice and
peace working for the same ends. For beneath
an outward appearance of indifference, in
the heart of every man there is a will to
live in brotherhood and a thirst for justice
and peace, which is to be expanded.
Each one to determine
49. Thus,
amid the diversity of situations, functions
and organizations, each one must determine,
in his conscience, the actions which he is
called to share in. Surrounded by various
currents into which, besides legitimate
aspirations, there insinuate themselves more
ambiguous tendencies, the Christian must
make a wise and vigilant choice and avoid
involving himself in collaboration without
conditions and contrary to the principles of
a true humanism, even in the name of a
genuinely left solidarity. If in fact he
wishes to play a specific part as a
Christian in accordance with his faith - a
part that unbelievers themselves expect of
him - he must take care in the midst of his
active commitment to clarify his motives and
to rise above the objectives aimed at, by
taking a more all-embracing view which will
avoid the danger of selfish particularism
and oppressive totalitarianism.
Pluralism of
options
50. In
concrete situations, and taking account of
solidarity in each person's life, one must
recognize a legitimate variety of possible
options. The same Christian faith can lead
to different commitments (35).
The Church invites all Christians to take up
a double task of inspiring and of
innovating, in order to make structures
evolve, so as to adapt them to the real
needs of today. From Christians who at first
sight seem to be in opposition, as a result
of starting from differing options, she asks
an effort at mutual understanding of the
other's positions and motives; a loyal
examination of one's behavior and its
correctness will suggest to each one an
attitude of more profound charity which,
while recognizing the differences, believes
nonetheless in the possibility of
convergence and unity. "The bonds which
unite the faithful are mightier than
anything which divides them" (36).
It is true
that man; people, in the midst of modern
structures and conditioning circumstances,
are determined by their habits of thought
and their functions, even apart from the
safeguarding of material interests. Others
feel so deeply the solidarity of classes and
cultures that they reach the point of
sharing without reserve all the judgments
and options of their surroundings (37).
Each one will take great care to examine
himself and to bring about that true freedom
according to Christ which makes one
receptive to the universal in the very midst
of the most particular conditions.
"Awakening the People
of God"
51. It is in
this regard too that Christian
organizations, under their different forms,
have a responsibility for collective action.
Without putting themselves in the place of
the institutions of civil society, they have
to express, in their own way and rising
above their particular nature, the concrete
demands of the Christian faith for a just,
and consequently necessary, transformation
of society (38).
Today more
than ever the World of God will be unable to
be proclaimed and heard unless it is
accompanied by the witness of the power of
the Holy Spirit, working within the action
of Christian in the service of their
brothers, at the points in which their
existence and their future are at stake.
52. In
expressing these reflections to you,
venerable brother, we are of course aware
that we have not dealt with all the social
problems that today face the man of faith
and men of goodwill. Our recent declarations
- to which has been added your message of a
short time ago on the occasion of the
launching of the Second Development Decade -
particularly concerning the duties of the
community of nations in the serious question
of the integral and concerted development of
man are still fresh in people's minds. We
address these present reflections to you
with the aim of offering to the Council of
the Laity and the Pontifical Commission
Justice and Peace some fresh contributions,
as well as an encouragement, for the pursuit
of their task of "awakening the People of
the God to a full understanding of its role
at the present time" and of "promoting the
apostolate on the international level" (39).
It is with
these sentiments, venerable brother, that we
impart to you our Apostolic Blessing.
From the Vatican, 14 May 1971.
PAUL VI
Endnotes
1)
Gaudium et Spes, 10: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1033.
2)
AAS 23 (1931), p. 209 ff.
3)
AAS 53 (1961), p. 429.
4)
3: AAS 59 (1967), p. 258.
5)
Ibidem, 1: p. 257.
6)
Cf. 2 Cor 4:17.
7)
Populorum Progressio, 25: AAS 59 (1967), pp.
269-270.
8)
Cf. Rev 3:12; 21:2.
9)
Gaudium et Spes, 25: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1045.
10)
Ibidem, 67: p. 1089.
11)
Populorum Progressio, 69: AAS 59 (1967), pp.
290-291.
12)
Cf. Mt 25:35.
13)
Nostra Aetate, 5: AAS 58 (1966), p. 743.
14)
37: AAS 59 (1967), p. 276.
15)
Inter Mirifica,12: AAS 56 (1964), p. 149.
16)
Cf. Pacem in Terris: AAS 55 (1963), p. 261
ff.
17)
Cf. Message for the World Day of Peace,
1971: AAS 63 (1971), pp. 5-9.
18)
Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 74: -AAS 58 (1966), pp.
1095-1096.
19)
Dignitatis Humanae, 1: AAS 58 (1966), p.
930.
20)
AAS 55 (1963), p. 300.
21)
Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 11: AAS 58 (1966), p.
1033.
22)
Cf. Rom 15:16.
23)
Gaudium et Spes, 39: AAS 58 (1966), p, 1057.
24)
Populorum Progressio, 13: AAS 59 (1967), p.
264.
25)
Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 36:- AAS 58 (1966), p.
1054.
26)
Cf. Rom 5:5.
27)
Populorum Progressio, 56 95.: AAS 59 (1967),
pp. 235 ff.
28)
Ibidem, 86: p. 299.
29)
Gaudium et Spes, 63: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1085.
30)
Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931), p. 203,
cf. Mater et Magistra: AAS 53 (1961), pp.
414, 428; Gaudium et Spes, 74-76: AAS 58
(1966), pp. 1095-1100.
31)
AAS 53 (19fil), pp. 420-422.
32)
Gaudium et Spes, 68, 75: AAS 58 (1966), pp.
1089-1090 1097.
33)
81: AAS 59 (1967); pp. 296-297.
34)
Cf. Mt 28:30; Phil 2:8-11.
35)
Gaudium et Spes, 43: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1061.
36)
Ibidem, 93: p. 1113.
37)
Cf. 1 Thess 5:21.
38)
Lumen Gentium, 31: AAS 57 (1965), pp. 37-38;
Apostolicam Actuositatem, 5: AAS 58 (1966),
p. 842.
39)
Catholicam Christi Ecclesiam, AAS 59 (1967),
Pp. 27 and 26.
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