GAUDIUM
ET SPES: The Church in the Modern World
Laments growing world poverty and threat of nuclear war. States the responsibility of Christians to work for structures to make a more just and peaceful world. |
Issues 1.Technological changes have caused social changes. Hunger, poverty and illiteracy torment most of the world's citizens and foster disputes. 2.Vast economic inequalities exist in the world. 3.With modem weapons, humanity is in a crisis situation. The arms race fosters war and injures people who are poor. 4.Economic and political structures do not foster the common good. 5. Existing conditions of life and work sometimes thwart the cultural strivings of men [sic] and destroy in them the desire for self improvement. |
Responses 1. Base political and economic decisions on human dignity and the common good. 2. Urge States to distribute goods fairly; recognize aid to people who are poor as an obligation in justice of individuals and society. 3. Work for disarmament with adequate workable safeguards; see peace as an ordering of society built on justice. 4.Build international community based on subsidiarity; establish organizations to foster and harmonize world trade. 5. Christians should work strenuously in economic and political fields both nationally and internationally for a human and civic culture favorable to personal dignity and free from any discrimination on the grounds of race, sex, nationality, religious or social conditions. Everyone should acknowledge and favor the proper and necessary participation of women in cultural life. |
GAUDIUM
ET SPES
PREFACE
1. The joys and the hopes, the griefs and the anxieties of the
men of this age, especially those who are poor or in any way afflicted,
these are the joys and hopes, the griefs and anxieties of the
followers of Christ. Indeed, nothing genuinely human fails to
raise an echo in their hearts. For theirs is a community composed
of men. United in Christ, they are led by the Holy Spirit in their
journey to the Kingdom of their Father and they have welcomed
the news of salvation which is meant for every man. That is why
this community realizes that it is truly linked with mankind and
its history by the deepest of bonds.
2. Hence this Second Vatican Council, having probed more profoundly
into the mystery of the Church, now addresses itself without hesitation,
not only to the sons of the Church and to all who invoke the name
of Christ, but to the whole of humanity. For the council yearns
to explain to everyone how it conceives of the presence and activity
of the Church in the world of today.
Therefore, the council focuses its attention on the world of men,
the whole human family along with the sum of those realities in
the midst of which it lives; that world which is the theater of
man's history, and the heir of his energies, his tragedies and
his triumphs; that world which the Christian sees as created and
sustained by its Maker's love, fallen indeed into the bondage
of sin, yet emancipated now by Christ, Who was crucified and rose
again to break the strangle hold of personified evil, so that
the world might be fashioned anew according to God's design and
reach its fulfillment.
3. Though mankind is stricken with wonder at its own discoveries
and its power, it often raises anxious questions about the current
trend of the world, about the place and role of man in the universe,
about the meaning of its individual and collective strivings,
and about the ultimate destiny of reality and of humanity. Hence,
giving witness and voice to the faith of the whole people of God
gathered together by Christ, this council can provide no more
eloquent proof of its solidarity with, a, well as its respect
and love for the entire human family with which it is bound up,
than by engaging with it in conversation about these various problems.
The council brings to mankind light kindled from the Gospel, and
puts at its disposal those saving resources which the Church herself,
under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, receives from her Founder.
For the human person deserves to be preserved; human society deserves
to be renewed. Hence the focal point of our total presentation
will be man himself, whole and entire, body and soul, heart and
conscience, mind and will.
Therefore, this sacred synod, proclaiming the noble destiny of
man and championing the Godlike seed which has been sown in him,
offers to mankind the honest assistance of the Church in fostering
that brotherhood of all men which corresponds to this destiny
of theirs. Inspired by no earthly ambition, the Church seeks but
a solitary goal: to carry forward the work of Christ under the
lead of the befriending Spirit. And Christ entered this world
to give witness to the truth, to rescue and not to sit in judgment,
to serve and not to be served.(2)
INTRODUCTORY
STATEMENT THE SITUATION OF MEN IN THE MODERN WORLD
4.
To carry out such a task, the Church has always had the duty of
scrutinizing the signs of the times and of interpreting them in
the light of the Gospel. Thus, in language intelligible to each
generation, she can respond to the perennial questions which men
ask about this present life and the life to come, and about the
relationship of the one to the other. We must therefore recognize
and understand the world in which we live, its explanations, its
longings, and its often dramatic characteristics. Some of the
main features of the modern world can be sketched as follows.
Today, the human race is involved in a new stage of history. Profound
and rapid changes are spreading by degrees around the whole world.
Triggered by the intelligence and creative energies of man, these
changes recoil upon him, upon his decisions and desires, both
individual and collective, and upon his manner of thinking and
acting with respect to things and to people. Hence we can already
speak of a true cultural and social transformation, one which
has repercussions on man's religious life as well.
As happens in any crisis of growth, this transformation has brought
serious difficulties in its wake. Thus while man extends his power
in every direction, he does not always succeed in subjecting it
to his own welfare. Striving to probe more profoundly into the
deeper recesses of his own mind, he frequently appears more unsure
of himself. Gradually and more precisely he lays bare the laws
of society, only to be paralyzed by uncertainty about the direction
to give it.
Never has the human race enjoyed such an abundance of wealth,
resources and economic power, and yet a huge proportion of the
worlds citizens are still tormented by hunger and poverty, while
countless numbers suffer from total illiteracy. Never before has
man had so keen an understanding of freedom, yet at the same time
new forms of social and psychological slavery make their appearance.
Although the world of today has a very vivid awareness of its
unity and of how one man depends on another in needful solidarity,
it is most grievously turn into opposing camps by conflicting
forces. For political, social, economic, racial and ideological
disputes still continue bitterly, and with them the peril of a
war which would reduce everything to ashes. True, there is a growing
exchange of ideas, but the very words by which key concepts are
expressed take on quite different meanings in diverse ideological
systems. Finally, man painstakingly searches for a better world,
without a corresponding spiritual advancement.
Influenced by such a variety of complexities, many of our contemporaries
are kept from accurately identifying permanent values and adjusting
them properly to fresh discoveries. As a result, buffeted between
hope and anxiety and pressing one another with questions about
the present course of events, they are burdened down with uneasiness.
This same course of events leads men to look for answers; indeed,
it forces them to do so.
5. Today's spiritual agitation and the changing conditions of
life are part of a broader and deeper revolution. As a result
of the latter, intellectual formation is ever increasingly based
on the mathematical and natural sciences and on those dealing
with man himself, while in the practical order the technology
which stems from these sciences takes on mounting importance.
This scientific spirit has a new kind of impact on the cultural
sphere and on modes of thought. Technology is now transforming
the face of the earth, and is already trying to master outer space.
To a certain extent, the human intellect is also broadening its
dominion over time: over the past by means of historical knowledge;
over the future, by the art of projecting and by planning.
Advances in biology, psychology, and the social sciences not only
bring men hope of improved self-knowledge; in conjunction with
technical methods, they are helping men exert direct influence
on the life of social groups.
At the same time, the human race is giving steadily-increasing
thought to forecasting and regulating its own population growth.
History itself speeds along on so rapid a course that an individual
person can scarcely keep abreast of it. The destiny of the human
community has become all of a piece, where once the various groups
of men had a kind of private history of their own.
Thus, the human race has passed from a rather static concept of
reality to a more dynamic, evolutionary one. In consequence there
has arisen a new series of problems, a series as numerous as can
be, calling for efforts of analysis and synthesis.
6. By this very circumstance, the traditional local communities
such as families, clans, tribes, villages, various groups and
associations stemming from social contacts, experience more thorough
changes every day.
The industrial type of society is gradually being spread, leading
some nations to economic affluence, and radically transforming
ideas and social conditions established for centuries.
Likewise, the cult and pursuit of city living has grown, either
because of a multiplication of cities and their inhabitants, or
by a transplantation of city life to rural settings.
New and more efficient media of social communication are contributing
to the knowledge of events; by setting off chain reactions they
are giving the swiftest and widest possible circulation to styles
of thought and feeling.
It is also noteworthy how many men are being induced to migrate
on various counts, and are thereby changing their manner of life.
Thus a man's ties with his fellows are constantly being multiplied,
and at the same time "socialization" brings further
ties, without however always promoting appropriate personal development
and truly personal relationships.
This kind of evolution can be seen more clearly in those nations
which already enjoy the conveniences of economic and technological
progress, though it is also astir among peoples still striving
for such progress and eager to secure for themselves the advantages
of an industrialized and urbanized society. These peoples, especially
those among them who are attached to older traditions, are simultaneously
undergoing a movement toward more mature and personal exercise
of liberty.
7. A change in attitudes and in human structures frequently calls
accepted values into question, especially among young people,
who have grown impatient on more than one occasion, and indeed
become rebels in their distress. Aware of their own influence
in the life of society, they want a part in it sooner. This frequently
causes parents and educators to experience greater difficulties
day by day in discharging their tasks. The institutions, laws
and modes of thinking and feeling as handed down from previous
generations do not always seem to be well adapted to the contemporary
state of affairs; hence arises an upheaval in the manner and even
the norms of behavior.
Finally, these new conditions have their impact on religion. On
the one hand a more critical ability to distinguish religion from
a magical view of the world and from the superstitions which still
circulate purifies it and exacts day by day a more personal and
explicit adherence to faith. As a result many persons are achieving
a more vivid sense of God. On the other hand, growing numbers
of people are abandoning religion in practice. Unlike former days,
the denial of God or of religion, or the abandonment oœ them,
are no longer unusual and individual occurrences. For today it
is not rare for such things to be presented as requirements of
scientific progress or of a certain new humanism. In numerous
places these views are voiced not only in the teachings of philosophers,
but on every side they influence literature, the arts, the interpretation
of the humanities and of history and civil laws themselves. As
a consequence, many people are shaken.
8. This development coming so rapidly and often in a disorderly
fashion, combined with keener awareness itself of the inequalities
in the world beget or intensify contradictions and imbalances.
Within the individual person there develops rather frequently
an imbalance between an intellect which is modern in practical
matters and a theoretical system of thought which can neither
master the sum total of its ideas, nor arrange them adequately
into a synthesis. Likewise an imbalance arises between a concern
for practicality and efficiency, and the demands of moral conscience;
also very often between the conditions of collective existence
and the requisites of personal thought, and even of contemplation.
At length there develops an imbalance between specialized human
activity and a comprehensive view of reality.
As for the family, discord results from population, economic and
social pressures, or from difficulties which arise between succeeding
generations, or from new social relationships between men and
women.
Differences crop up too between races and between various kinds
of social orders; between wealthy nations and those which are
less influential or are needy; finally, between international
institutions born of the popular desire for peace, and the ambition
to propagate one's own ideology, as well as collective greeds
existing in nations or other groups.
What results is mutual distrust, enmities, conflicts and hardships.
Of such is man at once the cause and the victim.
9. Meanwhile the conviction grows not only that humanity can and
should increasingly consolidate its control over creation, but
even more, that it devolves on humanity to establish a political,
social and economic order which will growingly serve man and help
individuals as well as groups to affirm and develop the dignity
proper to them.
As a result many persons are quite aggressively demanding those
benefits of which with vivid awareness they judge themselves to
be deprived either through injustice or unequal distribution.
Nations on the road to progress, like those recently made independent,
desire to participate in the goods of modern civilization, not
only in the political field but also economically, and to play
their part freely on the world scene. Still they continually fall
behind while very often their economic and other dependence on
wealthier nations advances more rapidly.
People hounded by hunger call upon those better off. Where they
have not yet won it, women claim for themselves an equity with
men before the law and in fact. Laborers and farmers seek not
only to provide for the necessities of life, but to develop the
gifts of their personality by their labors and indeed to take
part in regulating economic, social, political and cultural life.
Now, for the first time in human history all people are convinced
that the benefits of culture ought to be and actually can be extended
to everyone.
Still, beneath all these demands lies a deeper and more widespread
longing: persons and societies thirst for a full and free life
worthy of man; one in which they can subject to their own welfare
all that the modern world can offer them so abundantly. In addition,
nations try harder every day to bring about a kind of universal
community.
Since all these things are so, the modern world shows itself at
once powerful and weak, capable of the noblest deeds or the foulest;
before it lies the path to freedom or to slavery, to progress
or retreat, to brotherhood or hatred. Moreover, man is becoming
aware that it is his responsibility to guide aright the forces
which he has unleashed and which can enslave him or minister to
him. That is why he is putting questions to himself.
10. The truth is that the imbalances under which the modern world
labors are linked with that more basic imbalance which is rooted
in the heart of man. For in man himself many elements wrestle
with one another. Thus, on the one hand, as a creature he experiences
his limitations in a multitude of ways; on the other he feels
himself to be boundless in his desires and summoned to a higher
life. Pulled by manifold attractions he is constantly forced to
choose among them and renounce some. Indeed, as a weak and sinful
being, he often does what he would not, and fails to do what he
would.(1) Hence he suffers from internal divisions, and from these
flow so many and such great discords in society. No doubt many
whose lives are infected with a practical materialism are blinded
against any sharp insight into this kind of dramatic situation;
or else, weighed down by unhappiness they are prevented from giving
the matter any thought. Thinking they have found serenity in an
interpretation of reality everywhere proposed these days, many
look forward to a genuine and total emancipation of humanity wrought
solely by human effort; they are convinced that the future rule
of man over the earth will satisfy every desire of his heart.
Nor are there lacking men who despair of any meaning to life and
praise the boldness of those who think that human existence is
devoid of any inherent significance and strive to confer a total
meaning on it by their own ingenuity alone.
Nevertheless, in the face of the modern development of the world,
the number constantly swells of the people who raise the most
basic questions of recognize them with a new sharpness: what is
man? What is this sense of sorrow, of evil, of death, which continues
to exist despite so much progress? What purpose have these victories
purchased at so high a cost? What can man offer to society, what
can he expect from it? What follows this earthly life?
The Church firmly believes that Christ, who died and was raised
up for all,(2) can through His Spirit offer man the light and
the strength to measure up to his supreme destiny. Nor has any
other name under the heaven been given to man by which it is fitting
for him to be saved.(3) She likewise holds that in her most benign
Lord and Master can be found the key, the focal point and the
goal of man, as well as of all human history. The Church also
maintains that beneath all changes there are many realities which
do not change and which have their ultimate foundation in Christ,
Who is the same yesterday and today, yes and forever.(4) Hence
under the light of Christ, the image of the unseen God, the firstborn
of every creature,(5) the council wishes to speak to all men in
order to shed light on the mystery of man and to cooperate in
finding the solution to the outstanding problems of our time.
PART I
THE CHURCH AND MAN'S CALLING
11. The People of God believes that it is led by the Lord's Spirit,
Who fills the earth. Motivated by this faith, it labors to decipher
authentic signs of God's presence and purpose in the happenings,
needs and desires in which this People has a part along with other
men of our age. For faith throws a new light on everything, manifests
God's design œor man's total vocation, and thus directs the
mind to solutions which are fully human.
This council, first of all, wishes to assess in this light those
values which are most highly prized today and to relate them to
their divine source. Insofar as they stem from endowments conferred
by God on man, these values are exceedingly good. Yet they are
often wrenched from their rightful function by the taint in man's
heart, and hence stand in need of purification.
What does the Church think of man? What needs to be recommended
for the upbuilding of contemporary society? What is the ultimate
significance of human activity throughout the world? People are
waiting for an answer to these questions. From the answers it
will be increasingly clear that the People of God and the human
race in whose midst it lives render service to each other. Thus
the mission of the Church will show its religious, and by that
very fact, its supremely human character.
CHAPTER
I
THE DIGNITY OF THE HUMAN PERSON
12.
According to the almost unanimous opinion of believers and unbelievers
alike, all things on earth should be related to man as their center
and crown.
But what is man? About himself he has expressed, and continues
to express, many divergent and even contradictory opinions. In
these he often exalts himself as the absolute measure of all things
or debases himself to the point of despair. The result is doubt
and anxiety. The Church certainly understands these problems.
Endowed with light from God, she can offer solutions to them,
so that man's true situation can be portrayed and his defects
explained, while at the same time his dignity and destiny are
justly acknowledged.
For Sacred Scripture teaches that man was created "to the
image of God," is capable of knowing and loving his Creator,
and was appointed by Him as master of all earthly creatures(1)
that he might subdue them and use them to God's glory.(2) "What
is man that you should care for him? You have made him little
less than the angels, and crowned him with glory and honor. You
have given him rule over the works of your hands, putting all
things under his feet" (Ps. 8:5-7).
But God did not create man as a solitary, for from the beginning
"male and female he created them" (Gen. 1:27). Their
companionship produces the primary form of interpersonal communion.
For by his innermost nature man is a social being, and unless
he relates himself to others he can neither live nor develop his
potential.
Therefore, as we read elsewhere in Holy Scripture God saw "all
that he had made, and it was very good" (Gen. 1:31).
13. Although he was made by God in a state of holiness, from the
very onset of his history man abused his liberty, at the urging
of the Evil One. Man set himself against God and sought to attain
his goal apart from God. Although they knew God, they did not
glorify Him as God, but their senseless minds were darkened and
they served the creature rather than the Creator.(3) What divine
revelation makes known to us agrees with experience. Examining
his heart, man finds that he has inclinations toward evil too,
and is engulfed by manifold ills which cannot come from his good
Creator. Often refusing to acknowledge God as his beginning, man
has disrupted also his proper relationship to his own ultimate
goal as well as his whole relationship toward himself and others
and all created things.
Therefore man is split within himself. As a result, all of human
life, whether individual or collective, shows itseLf to be a dramatic
struggle between good and evil, between light and darkness. Indeed,
man finds that by himself he is incapable of battling the assaults
of evil successfully, so that everyone feels as though he is bound
by chains. But the Lord Himself came to free and strengthen man,
renewing him inwardly and casting out that "prince of this
world" (John 12:31) who held him in the bondage of sin.(4)
For sin has diminished man, blocking his path to fulfillment.
The call to grandeur and the depths of misery, both of which are
a part of human experience, find their ultimate and simultaneous
explanation in the light of this revelation.
14. Though made of body and soul, man is one. Through his bodily
composition he gathers to himself the elements of the material
world; thus they reach their crown through him, and through him
raise their voice in free praise of the Creator.(6) For this reason
man is not allowed to despise his bodily life, rather he is obliged
to regard his body as good and honorable since God has created
it and will raise it up on the last day. Nevertheless, wounded
by sin, man experiences rebellious stirrings in his body. But
the very dignity of man postulates that man glorify God in his
body and forbid it to serve the evil inclinations of his heart.
Now, man is not wrong when he regards himself as superior to bodily
concerns, and as more than a speck of nature or a nameless constituent
of the city of man. For by his interior qualities he outstrips
the whole sum of mere things. He plunges into the depths of reality
whenever he enters into his own heart; God, Who probes the heart,(7)
awaits him there; there he discerns his proper destiny beneath
tho eyes of God. Thus, when he recognizes in himself a spiritual
and immortal soul, he is not being mocked by a fantasy born only
of physical or social influences, but is rather laying hold of
the proper truth of the matter.
15. Man judges rightly that by his intellect he surpasses the
material universe, for he shares in the light of the divine mind.
By relentlessly employing his talents through the ages he has
indeed made progress in the practical sciences and in technology
and the liberal arts. In our times he has won superlative victories,
especially in his probing of the material world and in subjecting
it to himself. Still he has always searched for more penetrating
truths, and finds them. For his intelligence is not confined to
observable data alone, but can with genuine certitude attain to
reality itself as knowable, though in consequence of sin that
certitude is partly obscured and weakened.
The intellectual nature of the human person is perfected by wisdom
and needs to be, for wisdom gently attracts the mind of man to
a quest and a love for what is true and good. Steeped in wisdom.
man passes through visible realities to those which are unseen.
Our era needs such wisdom more than bygone ages if the discoveries
made by man are to be further humanized. For the future of the
world stands in peril unless wiser men are forthcoming. It should
also be pointed out that many nations, poorer in economic goods,
are quite rich in wisdom and can offer noteworthy advantages to
others.
It is, finally, through the gift of the Holy Spirit that man comes
by faith to the contemplation and appreciation of the divine plan.(8)
16. In the depths of his conscience, man detects a law which he
does not impose upon himself, but which holds him to obedience.
Always summoning him to love good and avoid evil, the voice of
conscience when necessary speaks to his heart: do this, shun that.
For man has in his heart a law written by God; to obey it is the
very dignity of man; according to it he will be judged.(9) Conscience
is the most secret core and sanctuary of a man. There he is alone
with God, Whose voice echoes in his depths.(10) In a wonderful
manner conscience reveals that law which is fulfilled by love
of God and neighbor.(11) In fidelity to conscience, Christians
are joined with the rest of men in the search for truth, and for
the genuine solution to the numerous problems which arise in the
life of individuals from social relationships. Hence the more
right conscience holds sway, the more persons and groups turn
aside from blind choice and strive to be guided by the objective
norms of morality. Conscience frequently errs from invincible
ignorance without losing its dignity. The same cannot be said
for a man who cares but little for truth and goodness, or for
a conscience which by degrees grows practically sightless as a
result of habitual sin.
17. Only in freedom can man direct himself toward goodness. Our
contemporaries make much of this freedom and pursue it eagerly;
and rightly to be sure. Often however they foster it perversely
as a license for doing whatever pleases them, even if it is evil.
For its part, authentic freedom is an exceptional sign of the
divine image within man. For God has willed that man remain "under
the control of his own decisions,"(12) so that he can seek
his Creator spontaneously, and come freely to utter and blissful
perfection through loyalty to Him. Hence man's dignity demands
that he act according to a knowing and free choice that is personally
motivated and prompted from within, not under blind internal impulse
nor by mere external pressure. Man achieves such dignity when,
emancipating himself from all captivity to passion, he pursues
his goal in a spontaneous choice of what is good, and procures
for himself through effective and skilful action, apt helps to
that end. Since man's freedom has been damaged by sin, only by
the aid of God's grace can he bring such a relationship with God
into full flower. Before the judgement seat of God each man must
render an account of his own life, whether he has done good or
evil.(13)
18. It is in the face of death that the riddle a human existence
grows most acute. Not only is man tormented by pain and by the
advancing deterioration of his body, but even more so by a dread
of perpetual extinction. He rightly follows the intuition of his
heart when he abhors and repudiates the utter ruin and total disappearance
of his own person. He rebels against death because he bears in
himself an eternal seed which cannot be reduced to sheer matter.
All the endeavors of technology, though useful in the extreme,
cannot calm his anxiety; for prolongation of biological life is
unable to satisfy that desire for higher life which is inescapably
lodged in his breast.
Although the mystery of death utterly beggars the imagination,
the Church has been taught by divine revelation and firmly teaches
that man has been created by God for a blissful purpose beyond
the reach of earthly misery. In addition, that bodily death from
which man would have been immune had he not sinned(14) will be
vanquished, according to the Christian faith, when man who was
ruined by his own doing is restored to wholeness by an almighty
and merciful Saviour. For God has called man and still calls him
so that with his entire being he might be joined to Him in an
endless sharing of a divine life beyond all corruption. Christ
won this victory when He rose to life, for by His death He freed
man from death. Hence to every thoughtful man a solidly established
faith provides the answer to his anxiety about what the future
holds for him. At the same time faith gives him the power to be
united in Christ with his loved ones who have already been snatched
away by death; faith arouses the hope that they have found true
life with God.
19. The root reason for human dignity lies in man's call to communion
with God. From the very circumstance of his origin man is already
invited to converse with God. For man would not exist were he
not created by Gods love and constantly preserved by it; and he
cannot live fully according to truth unless he freely acknowledges
that love and devotes himself to His Creator. Still, many of our
contemporaries have never recognized this intimate and vital link
with God, or have explicitly rejected it. Thus atheism must be
accounted among the most serious problems of this age, and is
deserving of closer examination.
The word atheism is applied to phenomena which are quite distinct
from one another. For while God is expressly denied by some, others
believe that man can assert absolutely nothing about Him. Still
others use such a method to scrutinize the question of God as
to make it seem devoid of meaning. Many, unduly transgressing
the limits of the positive sciences, contend that everything can
be explained by this kind of scientific reasoning alone, or by
contrast, they altogether disallow that there is any absolute
truth. Some laud man so extravagantly that their faith in God
lapses into a kind of anemia, though they seem more inclined to
affirm man than to deny God. Again some form for themselves such
a fallacious idea of God that when they repudiate this figment
they are by no means rejecting the God of the Gospel. Some never
get to the point of raising questions about God, since they seem
to experience no religious stirrings nor do they see why they
should trouble themselves about religion. Moreover, atheism results
not rarely from a violent protest against the evil in this world,
or from the absolute character with which certain human values
are unduly invested, and which thereby already accords them the
stature of God. Modern civilization itself often complicates the
approach to God not for any essential reason but because it is
so heavily engrossed in earthly affairs.
Undeniably, those who willfully shut out God from their hearts
and try to dodge religious questions are not following the dictates
of their consciences, and hence are not free of blame; yet believers
themselves frequently bear some responsibility for this situation.
For, taken as a whole, atheism is not a spontaneous development
but stems from a variety of causes, including a critical reaction
against religious beliefs, and in some places against the Christian
religion in particular. Hence believers can have more than a little
to do with the birth of atheism. To the extent that they neglect
their own training in the faith, or teach erroneous doctrine,
or are deficient in their religious, moral or social life, they
must be said to conceal rather than reveal the authentic face
of God and religion.
20. Modern atheism often takes on a systematic expression which,
in addition to other causes, stretches the desires for human independence
to such a point that it poses difficulties against any kind of
dependence on God. Those who profess atheism of this sort maintain
that it gives man freedom to be an end unto himself, the sole
artisan and creator of his own history. They claim that this freedom
cannot be reconciled with the affirmation of a Lord Who is author
and purpose of all things, or at least that this freedom makes
such an affirmation altogether superfluous. Favoring this doctrine
can be the sense of power which modern technical progress generates
in man.
Not to be overlooked among the forms of modern atheism is that
which anticipates the liberation of man especially through his
economic and social emancipation. This form argues that by its
nature religion thwarts this liberation by arousing man's hope
for a deceptive future life, thereby diverting him from the constructing
of the earthly city. Consequently when the proponents of this
doctrine gain governmental rower they vigorously fight against
religion, and promote atheism by using, especially in the education
of youth, those means of pressure which public power has at its
disposal.
21. In her loyal devotion to God and men, the Church has already
repudiated(16) and cannot cease repudiating, sorrowfully but as
firmly as possible, those poisonous doctrines and actions which
contradict reason and the common experience of humanity, and dethrone
man from his native excellence.
Still, she strives to detect in the atheistic mind the hidden
causes for the denial of God; conscious of how weighty are the
questions which atheism raises, and motivated by love for all
men, she believes these questions ought to be examined seriously
and more profoundly.
The Church holds that the recognition of God is in no way hostile
to man's dignity, since this dignity is rooted and perfected in
God. For man was made an intelligent and free member of society
by God Who created him, but even more important, he is called
as a son to commune with God and share in His happiness. She further
teaches that a hope related to the end of time does not diminish
the importance of intervening duties but rather undergirds the
acquittal of them with fresh incentives. By contrast, when a divine
instruction and the hope of life eternal are wanting, man's dignity
is most grievously lacerated, as current events often attest;
riddles of life and death, of guilt and of grief go unsolved with
the frequent result that men succumb to despair.
Meanwhile every man remains to himself an unsolved puzzle, however
obscurely he may perceive it. For on certain occasions no one
can entirely escape the kind of self-questioning mentioned earlier,
especially when life's major events take place. To this questioning
only God fully and most certainly provides an answer as He summons
man to higher knowledge and humbler probing.
The remedy which must be applied to atheism, however, is to be
sought in a proper presentation of the Church's teaching as well
as in the integral life of the Church and her members. For it
is the function of the Church, led by the Holy Spirit Who renews
and purifies her ceaselessly,(17) to make God the Father and His
Incarnate Son present and in a sense visible. This result is achieved
chiefly by the witness of a living and mature faith, namely, one
trained to see difficulties clearly and to master them. Many martyrs
have given luminous witness to this faith and continue to do so.
This faith needs to prove its fruitfulness by penetrating the
believer's entire life, including its worldly dimensions, and
by activating him toward justice and love, especially regarding
the needy. What does the most reveal God's presence, however,
is the brotherly charity of the faithful who are united in spirit
as they work together for the faith of the Gospel(18) and who
prove themselves a sign of unity.
While rejecting atheism, root and branch, the Church sincerely
professes that all men, believers and unbelievers alike, ought
to work for the rightful betterment of this world in which all
alike live; such an ideal cannot be realized, however, apart from
sincere and prudent dialogue. Hence the Church protests against
the distinction which some state authorities make between believers
and unbelievers, with prejudice to the fundamental rights of the
human person. The Church calls for the active liberty of believers
to build up in this world God's temple too. She courteously invites
atheists to examine the Gospel of Christ with an open mind.
Above all the Church known that her message is in harmony with
the most secret desires of the human heart when she champions
the dignity of the human vocation, restoring hope to those who
have already despaired of anything higher than their present lot.
Far from diminishing man, her message brings to his development
light, life and freedom. Apart from this message nothing will
avail to fill up the heart of man: "Thou hast made us for
Thyself," O Lord, "and our hearts are restless till
they rest in Thee."(19)
22. The truth is that only in the mystery of the incarnate Word
does the mystery of man take on light. For Adam, the first man,
was a figure of Him Who was to come,(20) namely Christ the Lord.
Christ, the final Adam, by the revelation of the mystery of the
Father and His love, fully reveals man to man himself and makes
his supreme calling clear. It is not surprising, then, that in
Him all the aforementioned truths find their root and attain their
crown.
He Who is "the image of the invisible God" (Col. 1:15),(21)
is Himself the perfect man. To the sons of Adam He restores the
divine likeness which had been disfigured from the first sin onward.
Since human nature as He assumed it was not annulled,(22) by that
very fact it has been raised up to a divine dignity in our respect
too. For by His incarnation the Son of God has united Himself
in some fashion with every man. He worked with human hands, He
thought with a human mind, acted by human choice(23) and loved
with a human heart. Born of the Virgin Mary, He has truly been
made one of us, like us in all things except sin.(24)
As an innocent lamb He merited for us life by the free shedding
of His own blood. In Him God reconciled us(25) to Himself and
among ourselves; from bondage to the devil and sin He delivered
us, so that each one of us can say with the Apostle: The Son of
God "loved me and gave Himself up for me" (Gal. 2:20).
By suffering for us He not only provided us with an example for
our imitation,(26) He blazed a trail, and if we follow it, life
and death are made holy and take on a new meaning.
The Christian man, conformed to the likeness of that Son Who is
the firstborn of many brothers,(27) received "the first-fruits
of the Spirit" (Rom. 8:23) by which he becomes capable of
discharging the new law of love.(28) Through this Spirit, who
is "the pledge of our inheritance" (Eph. 1:14), the
whole man is renewed from within, even to the achievement of "the
redemption of the body" (Rom. 8:23): "If the Spirit
of him who raised Jesus from the death dwells in you, then he
who raised Jesus Christ from the dead will also bring to life
your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who dwells in you"
(Rom. 8:11).(29) Pressing upon the Christian to be sure, are the
need and the duty to battle against evil through manifold tribulations
and even to suffer death. But, linked with the paschal mystery
and patterned on the dying Christ, he will hasten forward to resurrection
in the strength which comes from hope.(30)
All this holds true not only for Christians, but for all men of
good will in whose hearts grace works in an unseen way.(31) For,
since Christ died for all men,(32) and since the ultimate vocation
of man is in fact one, and divine, we ought to believe that the
Holy Spirit in a manner known only to God offers to every man
the possibility of being associated with this paschal mystery.
Such is the mystery of man, and it is a great one, as seen by
believers in the light of Christian revelation. Through Christ
and in Christ, the riddles of sorrow and death grow meaningful.
Apart from His Gospel, they overwhelm us. Christ has risen, destroying
death by His death; He has lavished life upon us(33) so that,
as sons in the Son, we can cry out in the Spirit; Abba, Father(34)
CHAPTER
II
THE COMMUNITY OF MANKIND
23.
One of the salient features of the modern world is the growing
interdependence of men one on the other, a development promoted
chiefly by modern technical advances. Nevertheless brotherly dialogue
among men does not reach its perfection on the level of technical
progress, but on the deeper level of interpersonal relationships.
These demand a mutual respect for the full spiritual dignity of
the person. Christian revelation contributes greatly to the promotion
of this communion between persons, and at the same time leads
us to a deeper understanding of the laws of social life which
the Creator has written into man's moral and spiritual nature.
Since rather recent documents of the Church's teaching authority
have dealt at considerable length with Christian doctrine about
human society,(1) this council is merely going to call to mind
some of the more basic truths, treating their foundations under
the light of revelation. Then it will dwell more at length on
certain of their implications having special significance for
our day.
24. God, Who has fatherly concern for everyone, has willed that
all men should constitute one family and treat one another in
a spirit of brotherhood. For having been created in the image
of God, Who "from one man has created the whole human race
and made them live all over the face of the earth" (Acts
17:26), all men are called to one and the same goal, namely God
Himself.
For this reason, love for God and neighbor is the first and greatest
commandment. Sacred Scripture, however, teaches us that the love
of God cannot be separated from love of neighbor: "If there
is any other commandment, it is summed up in this saying: Thou
shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.... Love therefore is the fulfillment
of the Law" (Rom. 13:9-10; cf. 1 John 4:20). To men growing
daily more dependent on one another, and to a world becoming more
unified every day, this truth proves to be of paramount importance.
Indeed, the Lord Jesus, when He prayed to the Father, "that
all may be one. . . as we are one" (John 17:21-22) opened
up vistas closed to human reason, for He implied a certain likeness
between the union of the divine Persons, and the unity of God's
sons in truth and charity. This likeness reveals that man, who
is the only creature on earth which God willed for itself, cannot
fully find himself except through a sincere gift of himself.(2)
25. Man's social nature makes it evident that the progress of
the human person and the advance of society itself hinge on one
another. For the beginning, the subject and the goal of all social
institutions is and must be the human person which for its part
and by its very nature stands completely in need of social life.(3)
Since this social life is not something added on to man, through
his dealings with others, through reciprocal duties, and through
fraternal dialogue he develops all his gifts and is able to rise
to his destiny.
Among those social ties which man needs for his development some,
like the family and political community, relate with greater immediacy
to his innermost nature; others originate rather from his free
decision. In our era, for various reasons, reciprocal ties and
mutual dependencies increase day by day and give rise to a variety
of associations and organizations, both public and private. This
development, which is called socialization, while certainly not
without its dangers, brings with it many advantages with respect
to consolidating and increasing the qualities of the human person,
and safeguarding his rights.(4)
But if by this social life the human person is greatly aided in
responding to his destiny, even in its religious dimensions, it
cannot be denied that men are often diverted from doing good and
spurred toward and by the social circumstances in which they live
and are immersed from their birth. To be sure the disturbances
which so frequently occur in the social order result in part from
the natural tensions of economic, political and social forms.
But at a deeper level they flow from man's pride and selfishness,
which contaminate even the social sphere. When the structure of
affairs is flawed by the consequences of sin, man, already born
with a bent toward evil, finds there new inducements to sin, which
cannot be overcome without strenuous efforts and the assistance
of grace.
26. Every day human interdependence grows more tightly drawn and
spreads by degrees over the whole world. As a result the common
good, that is, the sum of those conditions of social life which
allow social groups and their individual members relatively thorough
and ready access to their own fulfillment, today takes on an increasingly
universal complexion and consequently involves rights and duties
with respect to the whole human race. Every social group must
take account of the needs and legitimate aspirations of other
groups, and even of the general welfare of the entire human family.(5)
At the same time, however, there is a growing awareness of the
exalted dignity proper to the human person, since he stands above
all things, and his rights and duties are universal and inviolable.
Therefore, there must be made available to all men everything
necessary for leading a life truly human, such as food, clothing,
and shelter; the right to choose a state of life freely and to
found a family, the right to education, to employment, to a good
reputation, to respect, to appropriate information, to activity
in accord with the upright norm of one's own conscience, to protection
of privacy and rightful freedom. even in matters religious.
Hence, the social order and its development must invariably work
to the benefit of the human person if the disposition of affairs
is to be subordinate to the personal realm and not contrariwise,
as the Lord indicated when He said that the Sabbath was made for
man, and not man for the Sabbath.(6)
This social order requires constant improvement It must be founded
on truth, built on justice and animated by love; in freedom it
should grow every day toward a more humane balance.(7) An improvement
in attitudes and abundant changes in society will have to take
place if these objectives are to be gained.
God's Spirit, Who with a marvelous providence directs the unfolding
of time and renews the face of the earth, is not absent from this
development. The ferment of the Gospel too has aroused and continues
to arouse in man's heart the irresistible requirements of his
dignity.
27. Coming down to practical and particularly urgent consequences,
this council lays stress on reverence for man; everyone must consider
his every neighbor without exception as another self, taking into
account first of all His life and the means necessary to living
it with dignity,(8) so as not to imitate the rich man who had
no concern for the poor man Lazarus.(9)
In our times a special obligation binds us to make ourselves the
neighbor of every person without exception. and of actively helping
him when he comes across our path, whether he be an old person
abandoned by all, a foreign laborer unjustly looked down upon,
a refugee, a child born of an unlawful union and wrongly suffering
for a sin he did not commit, or a hungry person who disturbs our
conscience by recalling the voice of the Lord, "As long as
you did it for one of these the least of my brethren, you did
it for me" (Matt. 25:40).
Furthermore, whatever is opposed to life itself, such as any type
of murder, genocide, abortion, euthanasia or wilful self-destruction,
whatever violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation,
torments inflicted on body or mind, attempts to coerce the will
itself; whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living
conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution,
the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working
conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather
than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others
of their like are infamies indeed. They poison human society,
but they do more harm to those who practice them than those who
suffer from the injury. Moreover, they are supreme dishonor to
the Creator.
28. Respect and love ought to be extended also to those who think
or act differently than we do in social, political and even religious
matters. In fact, the more deeply we come to understand their
ways of thinking through such courtesy and love, the more easily
will we be able to enter into dialogue with them.
This love and good will, to be sure, must in no way render us
indifferent to truth and goodness. Indeed love itself impels the
disciples of Christ to speak the saving truth to all men. But
it is necessary to distinguish between error, which always merits
repudiation, and the person in error, who never loses the dignity
of being a person even when he is flawed by false or inadequate
religious notions.(10) God alone is the judge and searcher of
hearts, for that reason He forbids us to make judgments about
the internal guilt of anyone.(11)
The teaching of Christ even requires that we forgive injuries,(12)
and extends the law of love to include every enemy, according
to the command of the New Law: "You have heard that it was
said: Thou shalt love thy neighbor and hate thy enemy. But I say
to you: love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, and
pray for those who persecute and calumniate you" (Matt. S:43-44).
29. Since all men possess a rational soul and are created in God's
likeness, since they have the same nature and origin, have been
redeemed by Christ and enjoy the same divine calling and destiny,
the basic equality of all must receive increasingly greater recognition.
True, all men are not alike from the point of view of varying
physical power and the diversity of intellectual and moral resources.
Nevertheless, with respect to the fundamental rights of the person,
every type of discrimination, whether social or cultural, whether
based on sex, race, color, social condition, language or religion,
is to be overcome and eradicated as contrary to God's intent.
For in truth it must still be regretted that fundamental personal
rights are still not being universally honored. Such is the case
of a woman who is denied the right to choose a husband freely,
to embrace a state of life or to acquire an education or cultural
benefits equal to those recognized for men.
Therefore, although rightful differences exist between men, the
equal dignity of persons demands that a more humane and just condition
of life be brought about. For excessive economic and social differences
between the members of the one human family or population groups
cause scandal, and militate against social justice, equity, the
dignity of the human person, as well as social and international
peace.
Human institutions, both private and public, must labor to minister
to the dignity and purpose of man. At the same time let them put
up a stubborn fight against any kind of slavery, whether social
or political, and safeguard the basic rights of man under every
political system. Indeed human institutions themselves must be
accommodated by degrees to the highest of all realities, spiritual
ones, even though meanwhile, a long enough time will be required
before they arrive at the desired goal.
30. Profound and rapid changes make it more necessary that no
one ignoring the trend of events or drugged by laziness, content
himself with a merely individualistic morality. It grows increasingly
true that the obligations of justice and love are fulfilled only
if each person, contributing to the common good, according to
his own abilities and the needs of others, also promotes and assists
the public and private institutions dedicated to bettering the
conditions of human life. Yet there are those who, while possessing
grand and rather noble sentiments, nevertheless in reality live
always as if they cared nothing for the needs of society. Many
in various places even make light of social laws and precepts,
and do not hesitate to resort to various frauds and deceptions
in avoiding just taxes or other debts due to society. Others think
little of certain norms of social life, for example those designed
for the protection of health, or laws establishing speed limits;
they do not even avert to the fact that by such indifference they
imperil their own life and that of others.
Let everyone consider it his sacred obligation to esteem and observe
social necessities as belonging ta the primary duties of modern
man. For the more unified the world becomes, the more plainly
do the offices of men extend beyond particular groups and spread
by degrees to the whole world. But this development cannot occur
unless individual men and their associations cultivate in themselves
the moral and social virtues, and promote them in society; thus,
with the needed help of divine grace men who are truly new and
artisans of a new humanity can be forthcoming
31. In order for individual men to discharge with greater exactness
the obligations of their conscience toward themselves and the
various group to which they belong, they must be carefully educated
to a higher degree of culture through the use of the immense resources
available today to the human race. Above all the education of
youth from every social background has to be undertaken, so that
there can be produced not only men and women of refined talents,
but those great-souled persons who are so desperately required
by our times.
Now a man can scarcely arrive at the needed sense of responsibility,
unless his living conditions allow him to become conscious of
his dignity, and to rise to.(15) destiny by spending himself for
God and for others. But human freedom is often crippled when a
man encounters extreme poverty just as it withers when he indulges
in too many of life's comforts and imprisons himself in a kind
of splendid isolation. Freedom acquires new strength, by contrast,
when a man consents to the unavoidable requirements of social
life, takes on the manifold demands of human partnership, and
commits himself to the service of the human community.
Hence, the will to play one's role in common endeavors should
be everywhere encouraged. Praise is due to those national procedures
which allow the largest possible number of citizens to participate
in public affairs with genuine freedom. Account must be taken,
to be sure, of the actual conditions of each people and the decisiveness
required by public authority. If every citizen is to feel inclined
to take part in the activities of the various groups which make
up the social body, these must offer advantages which will attract
members and dispose them to serve others. We can justly consider
that the future of humanity lies in the hands of those who are
strong enough to provide coming generations with reasons for living
and hoping.
32. As God did not create man for life in isolation, but for the
formation of social unity, so also "it has pleased God to
make men holy and save them not merely as individuals, without
bond or link between them, but by making them into a single people,
a people which acknowledges Him in truth and serves Him in holiness."(13)
So from the beginning of salvation history He has chosen men not
just as individuals but as members of a certain community. Revealing
His mind to them, God called these chosen ones "His people"
(Ex. 3:7-12), and even made a covenant with them on Sinai.(14)
This communitarian character is developed and consummated in the
work of Jesus Christ. For the very Word made flesh willed to share
in the human fellowship. He was present at the wedding of Cana,
visited the house of Zacchaeus, ate with publicans and sinners.
He revealed the love of the Father and the sublime vocation of
man in terms of the most common of social realities and by making
use of the speech and the imagery of plain everyday life. Willingly
obeying' the laws of his country He sanctified those human ties,
especially family ones, which are the source of social structures.
He chose to lead the life proper to an artisan of His time and
place.
In His preaching He clearly taught the sons of God to treat one
another as brothers. In His prayers He pleaded that all His disciples
might be "one." Indeed as the redeemer of all, He offered
Himself for all even to point of death. "Greater love than
this no one has, that one lay down his life for his friends"
(John 15:13). He commanded His Apostles to preach to all peoples
the Gospel's message that the human race was to become the Family
of God, in which the fullness of the Law would be love.
As the firstborn of many brethren and by the giving of His Spirit,
He founded after His death and resurrection a new brotherly community
composed of all those who receive Him in faith and in love. This
He did through His Body. which is the Church. There everyone,
as members one of the other. would render mutual service according
to the different gifts bestowed on each.
This solidarity must be constantly increased until that day on
which it will be brought to perfection. Then, saved by grace,
men will offer flawless glory to God as a family beloved of God
and of Christ their Brother.
CHAPTER III
MAN'S ACTIVITY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
33.
Through his labors and his native endowments man has ceaselessly
striven to better his life. Today, however, especially with the
help of science and technology, he has extended his mastery over
nearly the whole of nature and continues to do so. Thanks to increased
opportunities for many kinds of social contact among nations,
a human family is gradually recognizing that it comprises a single
world community and is making itself so. Hence many benefits once
looked for, especially from heavenly powers, man has now enterprisingly
procured for himself
In the face of these immense efforts which already preoccupy the
whole human race, men agitate numerous questions among themselves.
What is the meaning and value of this feverish activity? How should
all these things be used? To the achievement of what goal are
the strivings of individuals and societies heading? The Church
guards the heritage of God's word and draws from it moral and
religious principles without always having at hand the solution
to particular problems. As such she desires to add the light of
revealed truth to mankind's store of experience. so that the path
which humanity has taken in recent times will not be a dark one.
34. Throughout the course of the centuries, men have labored to
better the circumstances of their lives through a monumental amount
of individual and collective effort. To believers, this point
is settled: considered in itself, this human activity accords
with God's will. For man, created to God's image, received a mandate
to subject to himself the earth and all it contains, and to govern
the world with justice and holiness;(1) a mandate to relate himself
and the totality of things to Him Who was to be acknowledged as
the Lord and Creator of all. Thus, by the subjection of all things
to man, the name of God would be wonderful in all the earth.(2)
This mandate concerns the whole of everyday activity as well.
For while providing the substance of life for themselves and their
families, men and women are performing their activities in a way
which appropriately benefits society. They can justly consider
that by their labor they are unfolding the Creator's work, consulting
the advantages of their brother men, and are contributing by their
personal industry to the realization history of the divine plan.(3)
Thus, far from thinking that works produced by man's own talent
and energy are in opposition to God's power, and that the rational
creature exists as a kind of rival to the Creator, Christians
are convinced that the triumphs of the human race are a sign of
God's grace and the flowering of His own mysterious design. For
the greater man's power becomes, the farther his individual and
community responsibility extends. Hence it is clear that men are
not deterred by the Christian message from building up the world,
or impelled to neglect the welfare of their fellows, but that
they are rather more stringently bound to do these very things.(4)
35. Human activity, to be sure, takes its significance from its
relationship to man. Just as it proceeds from man, so it is ordered
toward man. For when a man works he not only alters things and
society, he develops himself as well. He learns much, he cultivates
his resources, he goes outside of himself and beyond himself.
Rightly understood this kind of growth is of greater value than
any external riches which can be garnered. A man is more precious
for what he is than for what he has.(5) Similarly, all that men
do to obtain greater justice, wider brotherhood, a more humane
disposition of social relationships has greater worth than technical
advances. For these advances can supply the material for human
progress, but of themselves alone they can never actually bring
it about.
Hence, the norm of human activity is this: that in accord with
the divine plan and will, it harmonize with the genuine good of
the human race, and that it allow men as individuals and as members
of society to pursue their total vocation and fulfill it.
36. Now many of our contemporaries seem to fear that a closer
bond between human activity and religion will work against the
independence of men, of societies, or of the sciences.
If by the autonomy of earthly affairs we mean that created things
and societies themselves enjoy their own laws and values which
must be gradually deciphered, put to use, and regulated by men,
then it is entirely right to demand that autonomy. Such is not
merely required by modern man, but harmonizes also with the will
of the Creator. For by the very circumstance of their having been
created, all things are endowed with their own stability, truth,
goodness, proper laws and order. Man must respect these as he
isolates them by the appropriate methods of the individual sciences
or arts. Therefore if methodical investigation within every branch
of learning is carried out in a genuinely scientific manner and
in accord with moral norms, it never truly conflicts with faith,
for earthly matters and the concerns of faith derive from the
same God. (6) Indeed whoever labors to penetrate the secrets of
reality with a humble and steady mind, even though he is unaware
of the fact, is nevertheless being led by the hand of God, who
holds all things in existence, and gives them their identity.
Consequently, we cannot but deplore certain habits of mind, which
are sometimes found too among Christians, which do not sufficiently
attend to the rightful independence of science and which, from
the arguments and controversies they spark, lead many minds to
conclude that faith and science are mutually opposed.(7)
But if the expression, the independence of temporal affairs, is
taken to mean that created things do not depend on God, and that
man can use them without any reference to their Creator, anyone
who acknowledges God will see how false such a meaning is. For
without the Creator the creature would disappear. For their part,
however, all believers of whatever religion always hear His revealing
voice in the discourse of creatures. When God is forgotten, however,
the creature itself grows unintelligible.
37. Sacred Scripture teaches the human family what the experience
of the ages confirms: that while human progress is a great advantage
to man, it brings with it a strong temptation. For when the order
of values is jumbled and bad is mixed with the good, individuals
and groups pay heed solely to their own interests, and not to
those of others. Thus it happens that the world ceases to be a
place of true brotherhood. In our own day, the magnified power
of humanity threatens to destroy the race itself.
For a monumental struggle against the powers of darkness pervades
the whole history of man. The battle was joined from the very
origins of the world and will continue until the last day, as
the Lord has attested.(8) Caught in this conflict, man is obliged
to wrestle constantly if he is to cling to what is good, nor can
he achieve his own integrity without great efforts and the help
of God's grace.
That is why Christ's Church, trusting in the design of the Creator,
acknowledges that human progress can serve man's true happiness,
yet she cannot help echoing the Apostle's warning: "Be not
conformed to this world" (Rom. 12:2). Here by the world is
meant that spirit of vanity and malice which transforms into an
instrument of sin those human energies intended for the service
of God and man.
Hence if anyone wants to know how this unhappy situation can be
overcome, Christians will tell him that all human activity, constantly
imperiled by man's pride and deranged self-love, must be purified
and perfected by the power of Christ's cross and resurrection.
For redeemed by Christ and made a new creature in the Holy Spirit,
man is able to love the things themselves created by God, and
ought to do so. He can receive them from God and respect and reverence
them as flowing constantly from the hand of God. Grateful to his
Benefactor for these creatures, using and enjoying them in detachment
and liberty of spirit, man is led forward into a true possession
of them, as having nothing, yet possessing all things.(9) "All
are yours, and you are Christ's, and Christ is God's" (1
Cor. 3:22-23).
38. For God's Word, through Whom all things were made, was Himself
made flesh and dwelt on the earth of men.(10) Thus He entered
the world's history as a perfect man, taking that history up into
Himself and summarizing it.(11) He Himself revealed to us that
"God is love" (1 John 4:8) and at the same time taught
us that the new command of love was the basic law of human perfection
and hence of to worlds transformation.
To those, therefore, who believe in divine love, He gives assurance
that the way of love lies open to men and that the effort to establish
a universal brotherhood is not a hopeless one. He cautions them
at the same time that this charity is not something to be reserved
for important matters, but must be pursued chiefly in the ordinary
circumstances of life. Undergoing death itself for all of us sinners,(12)
He taught us by example that we too must shoulder that cross which
the world and the flesh inflict upon those who search after peace
and justice. Appointed Lord by His resurrection and given plenary
power in heaven and on earth,(13) Christ is now at work in the
hearts of men through the energy of His Holy Spirit, arousing
not only a desire for the age to come, but by that very fact animating,
purifying and strengthening those noble longings too by which
the human family makes its life more human and strives to render
the whole earth submissive to this goal.
Now, the gifts of the Spirit are diverse: while He calls some
to give clear witness to the desire for a heavenly home and to
keep that desire green among the human family, He summons others
to dedicate themselves to the earthly service of men and to make
ready the material of the celestial realm by this ministry of
theirs. Yet He frees all of them so that by putting aside love
of self and bringing all earthly resources into the service of
human life they can devote themselves to that future when humanity
itself will become an offering accepted by God.(14)
The Lord left behind a pledge of this hope and strength for life's
journey in that sacrament of faith where natural elements refined
by man are gloriously changed into His Body and Blood, providing
a meal of brotherly solidarity and a foretaste of the heavenly
banquet.
39. We do not know the time for the consummation of the earth
and of humanity,(15) nor do we know how all things will be transformed.
As deformed by sin, the shape of this world will pass away;(16)
but we are taught that God is preparing a new dwelling place and
a new earth where justice will abide,(17) and whose blessedness
will answer and surpass all the longings for peace which spring
up in the human heart.(18) Then, with death overcome, the sons
of God will be raised up in Christ, and what was sown in weakness
and corruption will be invested with incorruptibility.(19) Enduring
with charity and its fruits,(20) all that creation(21) which God
made on man's account will be unchained from the bondage of vanity.
Therefore, while we are warned that it profits a man nothing if
he gain the whole world and lose himself,(22) 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.
Hence, while earthly progress must be carefully distinguished
from the growth of Christ's kingdom, to the extent that the former
can contribute to the better ordering of human society, it is
of vital concern to the Kingdom of God.(23)
For after we have obeyed the Lord, and in His Spirit nurtured
on earth the values of human dignity, brotherhood and freedom,
and indeed all the good fruits of our nature and enterprise, we
will find them again, but freed of stain, burnished and transfigured,
when Christ hands over to the Father: "a kingdom eternal
and universal, a kingdom of truth and life, of holiness and grace,
of justice, love and peace."(24) On this earth that Kingdom
is already present in mystery. When the Lord returns it will be
brought into full flower.
CHAPTER IV
THE ROLE OF THE CHURCH IN THE MODERN WORLD
40.
Everything we have said about the dignity of the human person,
and about the human community and the profound meaning of human
activity, lays the foundation for the relationship between the
Church and the world, and provides the basis for dialogue between
them.(1) In this chapter, presupposing everything which has already
been said by this council concerning the mystery of the Church,
we must now consider this same Church inasmuch as she exists in
the world, living and acting with it.
Coming forth from the eternal Father's love,(2) founded in time
by Christ the Redeemer and made one in the Holy Spirit,(3) the
Church has a saving and an eschatological purpose which can be
fully attained only in the future world. But she is already present
in this world, and is composed of men, that is, of members of
the earthly city who have a call to form the family of God's children
during the present history of the human race, and to keep increasing
it until the Lord returns. United on behalf of heavenly values
and enriched by them, this family has been "constituted and
structured as a society in this world"(4) by Christ, and
is equipped "by appropriate means for visible and social
union."(5) Thus the Church, at once "a visible association
and a spiritual community,"(6) goes forward together with
humanity and experiences the same earthly lot which the world
does. She serves as a leaven and as a kind of soul for human society(7)
as it is to be renewed in Christ and transformed into God's family.
That the earthly and the heavenly city penetrate each other is
a fact accessible to faith alone; it remains a mystery of human
history, which sin will keep in great disarray until the splendor
of God's sons, is fully revealed. Pursuing the saving purpose
which is proper to her, the Church does not only communicate divine
life to men but in some way casts the reflected light of that
life over the entire earth, most of all by its healing and elevating
impact on the dignity of the person, by the way in which it strengthens
the seams of human society and imbues the everyday activity of
men with a deeper meaning and importance. Thus through her individual
matters and her whole community, the Church believes she can contribute
greatly toward making the family of man and its history more human.
In addition, the Catholic Church gladly holds in high esteem the
things which other Christian Churches and ecclesial communities
have done or are doing cooperatively by way of achieving the same
goal. At the same time, she is convinced that she can be abundantly
and variously helped by the world in the matter of preparing the
ground for the Gospel. This help she gains from the talents and
industry of individuals and from human society as a whole. The
council now sets forth certain general principles for the proper
fostering of this mutual exchange and assistance in concerns which
are in some way common to the world and the Church.
41. Modern man is on the road to a more thorough development of
his own personality, and to a growing discovery and vindication
of his own rights. Since it has been entrusted to the Church to
reveal the mystery of God, Who is the ultimate goal of man, she
opens up to man at the same time the meaning of his own existence,
that is, the innermost truth about himself. The Church truly knows
that only God, Whom she serves, meets the deepest longings of
the human heart, which is never fully satisfied by what this world
has to offer.
She also knows that man is constantly worked upon by God's spirit,
and hence can never be altogether indifferent to the problems
of religion. The experience of past ages proves this, as do numerous
indications in our own times. For man will always yearn to know,
at least in an obscure way, what is the meaning of his life, of
his activity, of his death. The very presence of the Church recalls
these problems to his mind. But only God, Who created man to His
own image and ransomed him from sin, provides the most adequate
answer to the questions, and this Ho does through what He has
revealed in Christ His Son, Who became man. Whoever follows after
Christ, the perfect man, becomes himself more of a man. For by
His incarnation the Father's Word assumed, and sanctified through
His cross and resurrection, the whole of man, body and soul, and
through that totality the whole of nature created by God for man's
use.
Thanks to this belief, the Church can anchor the dignity of human
nature against all tides of opinion, for example those welch undervalue
the human body or idolize it. By no human law can the personal
dignity and liberty of man be so aptly safeguarded as by the Gospel
of Christ which has been entrusted to the Church. For this Gospel
announces and proclaims the freedom of the sons of God, and repudiates
all the bondage which ultimately results from sin.(8) (cf. Rom.
8:14-17); it has a sacred reverence for the dignity of conscience
and its freedom of choice, constantly advises that all human talents
be employed in God's service and men's, and, finally, commends
all to the charity of all (cf. Matt. 22:39).(9)
This agrees with the basic law of the Christian dispensation.
For though the same God is Savior and Creator, Lord of human history
as well as of salvation history, in the divine arrangement itself,
the rightful autonomy of the creature, and particularly of man
is not withdrawn, but is rather re-established in its own dignity
and strengthened in it.
The Church, therefore, by virtue of the Gospel committed to her,
proclaims the rights of man; she acknowledges and greatly esteems
the dynamic movements of today by which these rights are everywhere
fostered. Yet these movements must be penetrated by the spirit
of the Gospel and protected against any kind of false autonomy.
For we are tempted to think that our personal rights are fully
ensured only when we are exempt from every requirement of divine
law. But this way lies not the maintenance of the dignity of the
human person, but its annihilation.
42. The union of the human family is greatly fortified and fulfilled
by the unity, founded on Christ,(10) of the family of God's sons.
Christ, to be sure, gave His Church no proper mission in the political,
economic or social order. The purpose which He set before her
is a religious one.(11) But out of this religious mission itself
come a function, a light and an energy which can serve to structure
and consolidate the human community according to the divine law.
As a matter of fact, when circumstances of time and place produce
the need, she can and indeed should initiate activities on behalf
of all men, especially those designed for the needy, such as the
works of mercy and similar undertakings.
The Church recognizes that worthy elements are found in today's
social movements, especially an evolution toward unity, a process
of wholesome socialization and of association in civic and economic
realms. The promotion of unity belongs to the innermost nature
of the Church, for she is, "thanks to her relationship with
Christ, a sacramental sign and an instrument of intimate union
with God, and of the unity of the whole human race."(12)
Thus she shows the world that an authentic union, social and external,
results from a union of minds and hearts, namely from that faith
and charity by which her own unity is unbreakably rooted in the
Holy Spirit. For the force which the Church can inject into the
modern society of man consists in that faith and charity put into
vital practice, not in any external dominion exercised by merely
human means.
Moreover, since in virtue of her mission and nature she is bound
to no particular form of human culture, nor to any political,
economic or social system, the Church by her very universality
can be a very close bond between diverse human communities and
nations, provided these trust her and truly acknowledge her right
to true freedom in fulfilling her mission. For this reason, the
Church admonishes her own sons, but also humanity as a whole,
to overcome all strife between nations and race in this family
spirit of God's children, an in the same way, to give internal
strength to human associations which are just.
With great respect, therefore, this council regards all the true,
good and just elements inherent in the very wide variety of institutions
which the human race has established for itself and constantly
continues to establish. The council affirms, moreover, that the
Church is willing to assist and promote all these institutions
to the extent that such a service depends on her and can be associated
with her mission. She has no fiercer desire than that in pursuit
of the welfare of all she may be able to develop herself freely
under any kind of government which grants recognition to the basic
rights of person and family, to the demands of the common good
and to the free exercise of her own mission.
43. This council exhorts Christians, as citizens of two cities,
to strive to discharge their earthly duties conscientiously and
in response he Gospel spirit. They are mistaken who, knowing that
we have here no abiding city but seek one which is to come,(13)
think that they may therefore shirk their earthly responsibilities.
For they are forgetting that by the faith itself they are more
obliged than ever to measure up to these duties, each according
to his proper vocation.(14) Nor, on the contrary, are they any
less wide of the mark who think that religion consists in acts
of worship alone and in the discharge of certain moral obligations,
and who imagine they can plunge themselves into earthly affairs
in such a way as to imply that these are altogether divorced from
the religious life. This split between the faith which many profess
and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious
errors of our age. Long since, the Prophets of the Old Testament
fought vehemently against this scandal(15) and even more so did
Jesus Christ Himself in the New Testament threaten it with grave
punishments.(16) Therefore, let there be no false opposition between
professional and social activities on the one part, and religious
life on the other. The Christian who neglects his temporal duties,
neglects his duties toward his neighbor and even God, and jeopardizes
his eternal salvation. Christians should rather rejoice that,
following the example of Christ Who worked as an artisan, they
are free to give proper exercise to all their earthly activities
and to their humane, domestic, professional, social and technical
enterprises by gathering them into one vital synthesis with religious
values, under whose supreme direction all things are harmonized
unto God's glory.
Secular duties and activities belong properly although not exclusively
to laymen. Therefore acting as citizens in the world, whether
individually or socially, they will keep the laws proper to each
discipline, and labor to equip themselves with a genuine expertise
in their various fields. They will gladly work with men seeking
the same goals. Acknowledging the demands of faith and endowed
with its force, they will unhesitatingly devise new enterprises,
where they are appropriate, and put them into action. Laymen should
also know that it is generally the function of their well-formed
Christian conscience to see that the divine law is inscribed in
the life of the earthly city; from priests they may look for spiritual
light and nourishment. Let the layman not imagine that his pastors
are always such experts, that to every problem which arises, however
complicated, they can readily give him a concrete solution, or
even that such is their mission. Rather, enlightened by Christian
wisdom and giving close attention to the teaching authority of
the Church,(17) let the layman take on his own distinctive role.
Often enough the Christian view of things will itself suggest
some specific solution in certain circumstances. Yet it happens
rather frequently, and legitimately so, that with equal sincerity
some of the faithful will disagree with others on a given matter.
Even against the intentions of their proponents, however, solutions
proposed on one side or another may be easily confused by many
people with the Gospel message. Hence it is necessary for people
to remember that no one is allowed in the aforementioned situations
to appropriate the Church's authority for his opinion. They should
always try to enlighten one another through honest discussion,
preserving mutual charity and caring above all for the common
good.
Since they have an active role to play in the whole life of the
Church, laymen are not only bound to penetrate the world with
a Christian spirit, but are also called to be witnesses to Christ
in all things in the midst of human society.
Bishops, to whom is assigned the task of ruling the Church of
God, should, together with their priests, so preach the news of
Christ that all the earthly activities of the faithful will be
bathed in the light of the Gospel. All pastors should remember
too that by their daily conduct and concern(18) they are revealing
the face of the Church to the world, and men will judge the power
and truth of the Christian message thereby. By their lives and
speech, in union with Religious and their faithful, may they demonstrate
that even now the Church by her presence alone and by all the
gifts which she contains, is an unspent fountain of those virtues
which the modern world needs the most.
By unremitting study they should fit themselves to do their part
in establishing dialogue with the world and with men of all shades
of opinion. Above all let them take to heart the words which this
council has spoken: "Since humanity today increasingly moves
toward civil, economic and social unity, it is more than ever
necessary that priests, with joint concern and energy, and under
the guidance of the bishops and the supreme pontiff, erase every
cause of division, so that the whole human race may be led to
the unity of God's family."(19)
Although by the power of the Holy Spirit the Church will remain
the faithful spouse of her Lord and will never cease to be the
sign of salvation on earth, still she is very well aware that
among her members,(20) both clerical and lay, some have been unfaithful
to the Spirit of God during the course of many centuries; in the
present age, too, it does not escape the Church how great a distance
lies between the message she offers and the human failings of
those to whom the Gospel is entrusted. Whatever be the judgement
of history on these defects, we ought to be conscious of them,
and struggle against them energetically, lest they inflict harm
on spread of the Gospel. The Church also realizes that in working
out her relationship with the world she always has great need
of the ripening which comes with the experience of the centuries.
Led by the Holy Spirit, Mother Church unceasingly exhorts her
sons "to purify and renew themselves so that the sign of
Christ can shine more brightly on the face
44. Just as it is in the world's interest to acknowledge the Church
as an historical reality, and to recognize her good influence,
so the Church herself knows how richly she has profited by the
history and development of humanity.
The experience of past ages, the progress of the sciences, and
the treasures hidden in the various forms of human culture, by
all of which the nature of man himself is more clearly revealed
and new roads to truth are opened, these profit the Church, too.
For, from the beginning of her history she has learned to express
the message of Christ with the help of the ideas and terminology
of various philosophers, and and has tried to clarify it with
their wisdom, too. Her purpose has been to adapt the Gospel to
the grasp of all as well as to the needs of the learned, insofar
as such was appropriate. Indeed this accommodated preaching of
the revealed word ought to remain the law of all evangelization.
For thus the ability to express Christ's message in its own way
is developed in each nation, and at the same time there is fostered
a living exchange between the Church and' the diverse cultures
of people.(22) To promote such exchange, especially in our days,
the Church requires the special help of those who live in the
world, are versed in different institutions and specialties, and
grasp their innermost significance in the eyes of both believers
and unbelievers. With the help of the Holy Spirit, it is the task
of the entire People of God, especially pastors and theologians,
to hear, distinguish and interpret the many voices of our age,
and to judge them in the light of the divine word, so that revealed
truth can always be more deeply penetrated, better understood
and set forth to greater advantage.
Since the Church has a visible and social structure as a sign
of her unity in Christ, she can and ought to be enriched by the
development of human social life, not that there is any lack in
the constitution given her by Christ, but that she can understand
it more penetratingly, express it better, and adjust it more successfully
to our times. Moreover, she gratefully understands that in her
community life no less than in her individual sons, she receives
a variety of helps from men of every rank and condition, for whoever
promotes the human community at the family level, culturally,
in its economic, social and political dimensions, both nationally
and internationally, such a one, according to God's design, is
contributing greatly to the Church as well, to the extent that
she depends on things outside herself. Indeed, the Church admits
that she has greatly profited and still profits from the antagonism
of those who oppose or who persecute her.(23)
45. While helping the world and receiving many benefits from it,
the Church has a single intention: that God's kingdom may come,
and that the salvation of the whole human race may come to pass.
For every benefit which the People of God during its earthly pilgrimage
can offer to the human family stems from the fact that the Church
is "the universal sacrament of salvation",(24) simultaneously
manifesting and a rising the mystery of God's love.
For God's Word, by whom all things were made, was Himself made
flesh so that as perfect man He might save all men and sum up
all things in Himself. The Lord is the goal of human history,
the focal point of the longings of history and of civilization,
the center of the human race, the joy of every heart and the answer
to all its yearnings.(25) He it is Whom the Father raised from
the dead, lifted on high and stationed at His right hand, making
Him judge of the living and the dead. Enlivened and united in
His Spirit, we journey toward the consummation of human history,
one which fully accords with the counsel of God's love: "To
reestablish all things in Christ, both those in the heavens and
those on the earth" (Eph. 11:10).
The Lord Himself speaks: "Behold I come quickly And my reward
is with me, to render to each one according to his works. I am
the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, tho beginning
and the end (Act;. 22;12-13).
PART II
SOME PROBLEMS OF SPECIAL URGENCY
46. This council has set forth the dignity of the human person,
and the work which men have been destined to undertake throughout
the world both as individuals and as members of society. There
are a number of particularly urgent needs characterizing the present
age, needs which go to the roots of the human race. To a consideration
of these in the light of the Gospel and of human experience, the
council would now direct the attention of all.
Of the many subjects arousing universal concern today, it may
be helpful to concentrate on these: marriage and the family, human
progress, life in its economic, social and political dimensions,
the bonds between the family of nations, and peace. On each of
these may there shine the radiant ideals proclaimed by Christ.
By these ideals may Christians be led, and all mankind enlightened,
as they search for answers to questions of such complexity.
CHAPTER I
FOSTERING THE NOBILITY OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY
47.
The well-being of the individual person and of human and Christian
society is intimately linked with the healthy condition of that
community produced by marriage and family. Hence Christians and
all men who hold this community in high esteem sincerely rejoice
in the various ways by which men today find help in fostering
this community of love and perfecting its life, and by which parents
are assisted in their lofty calling. Those who rejoice in such
aids look for additional benefits from them and labor to bring
them about.
Yet the excellence of this institution is not everywhere reflected
with equal brilliance, since polygamy, the plague of divorce,
so-called free love and other disfigurements have an obscuring
effect. In addition, married love is too often profaned by excessive
self-love, the worship of pleasure and illicit practices against
human generation. Moreover, serious disturbances are caused in
families by modern economic conditions, by influences at once
social and psychological, and by the demands of civil society.
Finally, in certain parts of the world problems resulting from
population growth are generating concern.
All these situations have produced anxiety of consciences. Yet,
the power and strength of the institution of marriage and family
can also be seen in the fact that time and again, despite the
difficulties produced, the profound changes in modern society
reveal the true character of this institution in one way or another.
Therefore, by presenting certain key points of Church doctrine
in a clearer light, this sacred synod wishes to offer guidance
and support to those Christians and other men who are trying to
preserve the holiness and to foster the natural dignity of the
married state and its superlative value.
48. The intimate partnership of married life and love has been
established by the Creator and qualified by His laws, and is rooted
in the jugal covenant of irrevocable personal consent. Hence by
that human act whereby spouses mutually bestow and accept each
other a relationship arises which by divine will and in the eyes
of society too is a lasting one. For the good of the spouses and
their off-springs as well as of society, the existence of the
sacred bond no longer depends on human decisions alone. For, God
Himself is the author of matrimony, endowed as it is with various
benefits and purposes.(1) All of these have a very decisive bearing
on the continuation of the human race, on the personal development
and eternal destiny of the individual members of a family, and
on the dignity, stability, peace and prosperity of the family
itself and of human society as a whole. By their very nature,
the institution of matrimony itself and conjugal love are ordained
for the procreation and education of children, and find in them
their ultimate crown. Thus a man and a woman, who by their compact
of conjugal love "are no longer two, but one flesh"
(Matt. 19:ff), render mutual help and service to each other through
an intimate union of their persons and of their actions. Through
this union they experience the meaning of their oneness and attain
to it with growing perfection day by day. As a mutual gift of
two persons, this intimate union and the good of the children
impose total fidelity on the spouses and argue for an unbreakable
oneness between them.(2)
Christ the Lord abundantly blessed this many-faceted love, welling
up as it does from the fountain of divine love and structured
as it is on the model of His union with His Church. For as God
of old made Himself present(3) to His people through a covenant
of love and fidelity, so now the Savior of men and the Spouse(4)
of the Church comes into the lives of married Christians through
the sacrament of matrimony. He abides with them thereafter so
that just as He loved the Church and handed Himself over on her
behalf,(6) the spouses may love each other with perpetual fidelity
through mutual self-bestowal.
Authentic married love is caught up into divine love and is governed
and enriched by Christ's redeeming power and the saving activity
of the Church, so that this love may lead the spouses to God with
powerful effect and may aid and strengthen them in sublime office
of being a father or a mother.(6) For this reason Christian spouses
have a special sacrament by which they are fortified and receive
a kind of consecration in the duties and dignity of their state.(7)
By virtue of this sacrament, as spouses fulfil their conjugal
and family obligation, they are penetrated with the spirit of
Christ, which suffuses their whole lives with faith, hope and
charity. Thus they increasingly advance the perfection of their
own personalities, as well as their mutual sanctification, and
hence contribute jointly to the glory of God.
As a result, with their parents leading the way by example and
family Prayer, children and indeed everyone gathered around the
family hearth will find a readier path to human maturity, salvation
and holiness. Graced with the dignity and office of fatherhood
and motherhood, parents will energetically acquit themselves of
a duty which devolves primarily on them, namely education and
especially religious education.
As living members of the family, children contribute in their
own way to making their parents holy. For they will respond to
the kindness of their parents with sentiments of gratitude, with
love and trust. They will stand by them as children should when
hardships overtake their parents and old age brings its loneliness.
Widowhood, accepted bravely as a continuation of the marriage
vocation, should be esteemed by all.(8) Families too will share
their spiritual riches generously with other families. Thus the
Christian family, which springs from marriage as a reflection
of the loving covenant uniting Christ with the Church,(9) and
as a participation in that covenant, will manifest to all men
Christ's living presence in the world, and the genuine nature
of the Church. This the family will do by the mutual love of the
spouses, by their generous fruitfulness, their solidarity and
faithfulness, and by the loving way in which all members of the
family assist one another.
49. The biblical Word of God several times urges the betrothed
and the married to nourish and develop their wedlock by pure conjugal
love and undivided affection.(10) Many men of our own age also
highly regard true love between husband and wife as it manifests
itself in a variety of ways depending on the worthy customs of
various peoples and times.
This love is an eminently human one since it is directed from
one person to another through an affection of the will; it involves
the good of the whole person, and therefore can enrich the expressions
of body and mind with a unique dignity, ennobling these expressions
as special ingredients and signs of the friendship distinctive
of marriage. This love God has judged worthy of special gifts,
healing, perfecting and exalting gifts of grace and of charity.
Such love, merging the human with the divine, leads the spouses
to a free and mutual gift of themselves, a gift providing itself
by gentle affection and by deed, such love pervades the whole
of their lives:(11) indeed by its busy generosity it grows better
and grows greater. Therefore it far excels mere erotic inclination,
which, selfishly pursued, soon enough fades wretchedly away.
This love is uniquely expressed and perfected through the appropriate
enterprise of matrimony. The actions within marriage by which
the couple are united intimately and chastely are noble and worthy
ones. Expressed in a manner which is truly human, these actions
promote that mutual self-giving by which spouses enrich each other
with a joyful and a ready will. Sealed by mutual faithfulness
and be allowed above all by Christs sacrament, this love remains
steadfastly true in body and in mind, in bright days or dark.
It will never be profaned by adultery or divorce. Firmly established
by the Lord, the unity of marriage will radiate from the equal
personal dignity of wife and husband, a dignity acknowledged by
mutual and total love. The constant fulfillment of the duties
of this Christian vocation demands notable virtue. For this reason,
strengthened by grace for holiness of life, the couple will painstakingly
cultivate and pray for steadiness of love, large heartedness and
the spirit of sacrifice.
Authentic conjugal love will be more highly prized, and wholesome
public opinion created about it if Christian couples give outstanding
witness to faithfulness and harmony in their love, and to their
concern for educating their children also, if they do their part
in bringing about the needed cultural, psychological and social
renewal on behalf of marriage and the family. Especially in the
heart of their own families, young people should be aptly and
seasonably instructed in the dignity, duty and work of married
love. Trained thus in the cultivation of chastity, they will be
able at a suitable age to enter a marriage of their own after
an honorable courtship.
50. Marriage and conjugal love are by their nature ordained toward
the begetting and educating of children. Children are really the
supreme gift of marriage and contribute very substantially to
the welfare of their parents. The God Himself Who said, "it
is not good for man to be alone" (Gen. 2:18) and "Who
made man from the beginning male and female" (Matt. 19:4),
wishing to share with man a certain special participation in His
own creative work, blessed male and female, saying: "Increase
and multiply" (Gen. 1:28). Hence, while not making the other
purposes of matrimony of less account, the true practice of conjugal
love, and the whole meaning of the family life which results from
it, have this aim: that the couple be ready with stout hearts
to cooperate with the love of the Creator and the Savior. Who
through them will enlarge and enrich His own family day by day.
Parents should regard as their proper mission the task of transmitting
human life and educating those to whom it has been transmitted.
They should realize that they are thereby cooperators with the
love of God the Creator, and are, so to speak, the interpreters
of that love. Thus they will fulfil their task with human and
Christian responsibility, and, with docile reverence toward God,
will make decisions by common counsel and effort. Let them thoughtfully
take into account both their own welfare and that of their children,
those already born and those which the future may bring. For this
accounting they need to reckon with both the material and the
spiritual conditions of the times as well as of their state in
life. Finally, they should consult the interests of the family
group, of temporal society, and of the Church herself. The parents
themselves and no one else should ultimately make this judgment
in the sight of God. But in their manner of acting, spouses should
be aware that they cannot proceed arbitrarily, but must always
be governed according to a conscience dutifully conformed to the
divine law itself, and should be submissive toward the Church's
teaching office, which authentically interprets that law in the
light of the Gospel. That divine law reveals and protects the
integral meaning of conjugal love, and impels it toward a truly
human fulfillment. Thus, trusting in divine Providence and refining
the spirit of sacrifice,(12) married Christians glorify the Creator
and strive toward fulfillment in Christ when with a generous human
and Christian sense of responsibility they acquit themselves of
the duty to procreate. Among the couples who fulfil their God-given
task in this way, those merit special mention who with a gallant
heart and with wise and common deliberation, undertake to bring
up suitably even a relatively large family.(13)
Marriage to be sure is not instituted solely for procreation;
rather, its very nature as an unbreakable compact between persons,
and the welfare of the children, both demand that the mutual love
of the spouses be embodied in a rightly ordered manner, that it
grow and ripen. Therefore, marriage persists as a whole manner
and communion of life, and maintains its value and indissolubility,
even when despite the often intense desire of the couple, offspring
are lacking.
51. This council realizes that certain modern conditions often
keep couples from arranging their married lives harmoniously,
and that they find themselves in circumstances where at least
temporarily the size of their families should not be increased.
As a result, the faithful exercise of love and the full intimacy
of their lives is hard to maintain. But where the intimacy of
married life is broken off, its faithfulness can sometimes be
imperiled and its quality of fruitfulness ruined, for then the
upbringing of the children and the courage to accept new ones
are both endangered.
To these problems there are those who presume to offer dishonorable
solutions indeed; they do not recoil even from the taking of life.
But the Church issues the reminder that a true contradiction cannot
exist between the divine laws pertaining to the transmission of
life and those pertaining to authentic conjugal love.
For God, the Lord of life, has conferred on men the surpassing
ministry of safeguarding life in a manner which is worthy of man.
Therefore from the moment of its conception life must be guarded
with the greatest care while abortion and infanticide are unspeakable
crimes. The sexual characteristics of man and the human faculty
of reproduction wonderfully exceed the dispositions of lower forms
of life. Hence the acts themselves which are proper to conjugal
love and which are exercised in accord with genuine human dignity
must be honored with great reverence. Hence when there is question
of harmonizing conjugal love with the responsible transmission
of life, the moral aspects of any procedure does not depend solely
on sincere intentions or on an evaluation of motives, but must
be determined by objective standards. These, based on the nature
of the human person and his acts, preserve the full sense of mutual
self-giving and human procreation in the context of true love.
Such a goal cannot be achieved unless the virtue of conjugal chastity
is sincerely practiced. Relying on these principles, sons of the
Church may not undertake methods of birth control which are found
blameworthy by the teaching authority of the Church in its unfolding
of the divine law.(14)
All should be persuaded that human life and the task of transmitting
it are not realities bound up with this world alone. Hence they
cannot be measured or perceived only in terms of it, but always
have a bearing on the eternal destiny of men.
52. The family is a kind of school of deeper humanity. But if
it is to achieve the full flowering of its life and mission, it
needs the kindly communion of minds and the joint deliberation
of spouses, as well as the painstaking cooperation of parents
in the education of their children. The active presence of the
father is highly beneficial to their formation. The children,
especially the younger among them, need the care of their mother
at home. This domestic role of hers must be safely preserved,
though the legitimate social progress of women should not be underrated
on that account.
Children should be so educated that as adults they can follow
their vocation, including a religious one, with a mature sense
of responsibility and can choose their state of life; if they
marry, they can thereby establish their family in favorable moral,
social and economic conditions. Parents or guardians should by
prudent advice provide guidance to their young with respect to
founding a family, and the young ought to listen gladly. At the
same time no pressure, direct or indirect, should be put on the
young to make them enter marriage or choose a specific partner.
Thus the family, in which the various generations come together
and help one another grow wiser and harmonize personal rights
with the other requirements of social life, is the foundation
of society. All those, therefore, who exercise influence over
communities and social groups should work efficiently for the
welfare of marriage and the family. Public authority should regard
it as a sacred duty to recognize, protect and promote their authentic
nature, to shield public morality and to favor the prosperity
of home life. The right of parents to beget and educate their
children in the bosom of the family must be safeguarded. Children
too who unhappily lack the blessing of a family should be protected
by prudent legislation and various undertakings and assisted by
the help they need.
Christians, redeeming the present time(13) and distinguishing
eternal realities from their changing expressions, should actively
promote the values of marriage and the family, both by the examples
of their own lives and by cooperation with other men of good will.
Thus when difficulties arise, Christians will provide, on behalf
of family life, those necessities and helps which are suitably
modern. To this end, the Christian instincts of the faithful,
the upright moral consciences of men, and the wisdom and experience
of persons versed in the sacred sciences will have much to contribute.
Those too who are skilled in other sciences, notably the medical,
biological, social and psychological, can considerably advance
the welfare of marriage and the family along with peace of conscience
if by pooling their efforts they labor to explain more thoroughly
the various conditions favoring a proper regulation of births.
It devolves on priests duly trained about family matters to nurture
the vocation of spouses by a variety of pastoral means, by preaching
God's word, by liturgical worship, and by other spiritual aids
to conjugal and family life; to sustain them sympathetically and
patiently in difficulties, and to make them courageous through
love, so that families which are truly illustrious can be formed.
Various organizations, especially family associations, should
try by their programs of instruction and action to strengthen
young people and spouses themselves, particularly those recently
wed, and to train them for family, social and apostolic life.
Finally, let the spouses themselves, made to the image of the
living God and enjoying the authentic dignity of persons, be joined
to one another(16) in equal affection, harmony of mind and the
work of mutual sanctification. Thus, following Christ who is the
principle of life,(17) by the sacrifices and joys of their vocation
and through their faithful love, married people can become witnesses
of the mystery of love which the Lord revealed to the world by
His dying and His rising up to life again.(18)
CHAPTER II
THE PROPER DEVELOPMENT OF CULTURE
53.
Man comes to a true and full humanity only through culture, that
is through the cultivation of the goods and values of nature.
Wherever human life is involved, therefore, nature and culture
are quite intimately connected one with the other.
The word "culture" in its general sense indicates everything
whereby man develops and perfects his many bodily and spiritual
qualities; he strives by his knowledge and his labor, to bring
the world itself under his control. He renders social life more
human both in the family and the civic community, through improvement
of customs and institutions. Throughout the course of time he
expresses, communicates and conserves in his works, great spiritual
experiences and desires, that they might be of advantage to the
progress of many, even of the whole human family.
Thence it follows that human culture has necessarily a historical
and social aspect and the word "culture" also often
assumes a sociological and ethnological sense. According to this
sense we speak of a plurality of cultures. Different styles of
life and multiple scales of values arise from the diverse manner
of using things, of laboring, of expressing oneself, of practicing
religion, of forming customs, of establishing laws and juridic
institutions of cultivating the sciences, the arts and beauty.
Thus the customs handed down to it form the patrimony proper to
each human community. It is also in this way that there is formed
the definite, historical milieu which enfolds the man oœ
every nation and age and from which he draws the values which
permit him to promote civilization.
SECTION 1
The Circumstances of Culture in the World Today
54. The circumstances of the life of modern man have been so profoundly
changed in their social and cultural aspects, that we can speak
of a new age of human history.(1) New ways are open, therefore,
for the perfection and the further extension of culture. These
ways have been prepared by the enormous growth of natural, human
and social sciences, by technical progress, and advances in developing
and organizing means whereby men can communicate with one another.
Hence the culture of today possesses particular characteristics:
sciences which are called exact greatly develop critical judgment;
the more recent psychological studies more profoundly explain
human activity; historical studies make it much easier to see
things in their mutable and evolutionary aspects, customs and
usages are becoming more and more uniform; industrialization,
urbanization, and other causes which promote community living
create a mass-culture from which are born new ways of thinking,
acting and making use of leisure. The increase of commerce between
the various nations and human groups opens more widely to all
the treasures of different civilizations and thus little by little,
there develops a more universal form of human culture, which better
promotes and expresses the unity of the human race to the degree
that it preserves the particular aspects of the different civilizations.
55. From day to day, in every group or nation, there is an increase
in the number of men and women who are conscious that they themselves
are the authors and the artisans of the culture of their community.
Throughout the whole world there is a mounting increase in the
sense of autonomy as well as of responsibility. This is of paramount
importance for the spiritual and moral maturity of the human race.
This becomes more clear if we consider the unification of the
world and the duty which is imposed upon us, that we build a better
world based upon truth and justice. Thus we are witnesses of the
birth of a new humanism, one in which man is defined first of
all by this responsibility to his brothers and to history.
56. In these conditions, it is no cause of wonder that man, who
senses his responsibility for the progress of culture, nourishes
a high hope but also looks with anxiety upon many contradictory
things which he must resolve:
What is to be done to prevent the increased exchanges between
cultures, which should lead to a true and fruitful dialogue between
groups and nations, from disturbing the life of communities, from
destroying the wisdom received from ancestors, or from placing
in danger the character proper to each people?
How is the dynamism and expansion of a new culture to be fostered
without losing a living fidelity to the heritage of tradition.
This question is of particular urgency when a culture which arises
from the enormous progress of science and technology must be harmonized
with a culture nourished by classical studies according to various
traditions.
How can we quickly and progressively harmonize the proliferation
of particular branches of study with the necessity of forming
a synthesis of them, and of preserving among men the faculties
of contemplation and observation which lead to wisdom?
What can be done to make all men partakers of cultural values
in the world, when the human culture of those who are more competent
is constantly becoming more refined and more complex?
Finally how is the autonomy which culture claims for itself to
be recognized as legitimate without generating a notion of humanism
which is merely terrestrial, and even contrary to religion itself.
In the midst of these conflicting requirements, human culture
must evolve today in such a way that it can both develop the whole
human person and aid man in those duties to whose fulfillment
all are called, especially Christians fraternally united in one
human family.
SECTION 2
Some Principles for the Proper Development of Culture
57. Christians, on pilgrimage toward the heavenly city, should
seek and think of these things which are above(2) This duty in
no way decreases, rather it increases, the importance of their
obligation to work with all men in the building of a more human
world. Indeed, the mystery of the Christian faith furnishes them
with an excellent stimulant and aid to fulfill this duty more
courageously and especially to uncover the full meaning of this
activity, one which gives to human culture its eminent place in
the integral vocation of man.
When man develops the earth by the work of his hands or with the
aid of technology, in order that it might bear fruit and become
a dwelling worthy of the whole human family and when he consciously
takes part in the life of social groups, he carries out the design
of God manifested at the beginning of time, that he should subdue
the earth, perfect creation and develop himself. At the same time
he obeys the commandment of Christ that he place himself at the
service of his brethren.
Furthermore, when man gives himself to the various disciplines
of philosophy, history and of mathematical and natural science,
and when he cultivates the arts, he can do very much to elevate
the human family to a more sublime understanding of truth, goodness,
and beauty, and to the formation of considered opinions which
have universal value. Thus mankind may be more clearly enlightened
by that marvelous Wisdom which was with God from all eternity,
composing all things with him, rejoicing in the earth, delighting
in the sons of men.(4)
In this way, the human spirit, being less subjected to material
things, can be more easily drawn to the worship and contemplation
of the Creator. Moreover, by the impulse of grace, he is disposed
to acknowledge the Word of God, Who before He became flesh in
order to save all and to sum up all in Himself was already "in
the world" as "the true light which enlightens every
man" (John 1:9-10).(5)
Indeed today's progress in science and technology can foster a
certain exclusive emphasis on observable data, and an agnosticism
about everything else. For the methods of investigation which
these sciences use can be wrongly considered as the supreme rule
of seeking the whole truth. By virtue of their methods these sciences
cannot penetrate to the intimate notion of things. Indeed the
danger is present that man, confiding too much in the discoveries
of today, may think that he is sufficient unto himself and no
longer seek the higher things.
Those unfortunate results, however, do not necessarily follow
from the culture of today, nor should they lead us into the temptation
of not acknowledging its positive values. Among these values are
included: scientific study and fidelity toward truth in scientific
inquiries, the necessity of working together with others in technical
groups, a sense of international solidarity, a clearer awareness
of the responsibility of experts to aid and even to protect men,
the desire to make the conditions of life more favorable for all,
especially for those who are poor in culture or who are deprived
of the opportunity to exercise responsibility. All of these provide
some preparation for the acceptance of the message of the Gospel
a preparation which can be animated by divine charity through
Him Who has come to save the world.
58. There are many ties between the message of salvation and human
culture. For God, revealing Himself to His people to the extent
of a full manifestation of Himself in His Incarnate Son, has spoken
according to the culture proper to each epoch.
Likewise the Church, living in various circumstances in the course
of time, has used the discoveries of different cultures so that
in her preaching she might spread and explain the message of Christ
to all nations, that she might examine it and more deeply understand
it, that she might give it better expression in liturgical celebration
and in the varied life of the community of the faithful.
But at the same time, the Church, sent to all peoples of every
time and place, is not bound exclusively and indissolubly to any
race or nation, any particular way of life or any customary way
of life recent or ancient. Faithful to her own tradition and at
the same time conscious of her universal mission, she can enter
into communion with the various civilizations, to their enrichment
and the enrichment of the Church herself.
The Gospel of Christ constantly renews the life and culture of
fallen man, it combats and removes the errors and evils resulting
from the permanent allurement of sin. It never eases to purify
and elevate the morality of peoples. By riches coming from above,
it makes fruitful, as it were from within, the spiritual qualities
and traditions of every people md of every age. It strengthens,
perfects and restores(6) them in Christ. Thus the Church, in the
very fulfillment of her own function,(7) stimulates and advances
human and civic culture; by her action, also by her liturgy, she
leads them toward interior liberty.
59. For the above reasons, the Church recalls to the mind of all
that culture is to be subordinated to the integral perfection
of the human person, to the good of the community and of the whole
society. Therefore it is necessary to develop the human faculties
in such a way that there results a growth of the faculty of admiration,
of intuition, of contemplation, of making personal judgment, of
developing a religious, moral and social sense.
Culture, because it flows immediately from the spiritual and social
character of man, has constant need of a just liberty in order
to develop; it needs also the legitimate possibility of exercising
its autonomy according to its own principles. It therefore rightly
demands respect and enjoys a certain inviolability within the
limits of the common good, as long, of course, as it preserves
the rights of the individual and the community, whether particular
or universal.
This Sacred Synod, therefore, recalling the teaching of the first
Vatican Council, declares that there are "two orders of knowledge"
which are distinct, namely faith and reason; and that the Church
does not forbid that "the human arts and disciplines use
their own principles and their proper method, each in its own
domain"; therefore "acknowledging this just liberty,"
this Sacred Synod affirms the legitimate autonomy of human culture
and especially of the sciences.(8)
All this supposes that, within the limits of morality and the
common utility, man can freely search for the truth, express his
opinion and publish it; that he can practice any art he chooses:
that finally, he can avail himself of true information concerning
events of a public nature.(9)
As for public authority, it is not its function to determine the
character of the civilization, but rather to establish the conditions
and to use the means which are capable of fostering the life of
culture among an even within the minorities of a nation.(10) It
is necessary to do everything possible to prevent culture from
being turned away from its proper end and made to serve as an
instrument of political or economic power.
SECTION 3
Some More Urgent Duties of Christians in Regard to Culture
60. It is now possible to free most of humanity from the misery
of ignorance. Therefore the duty most consonant with our times,
especially for Christians, is that of working diligently for fundamental
decisions to be taken in economic and political affairs, both
on the national and international level which will everywhere
recognize and satisfy the right of all to a human and social culture
in conformity with the dignity of the human person without any
discrimination of race, sex, nation, religion or social condition.
Therefore it is necessary to provide all with a sufficient quantity
of cultural benefits, especially of those which constitute the
so-called fundamental culture lest very many be prevented from
cooperating in the promotion of the common good in a truly human
manner because of illiteracy and a lack of responsible activity.
We must strive to provide for those men who are gifted the possibility
of pursuing higher studies; and in such a way that, as far as
possible, they may occupy in society those duties, offices and
services which are in harmony with their natural aptitude and
the competence they have acquired.(11) Thus each man and the social
groups of every people will be able to attain the full development
of their culture in conformity with their qualities and traditions.
Everything must be done to make everyone conscious of the right
to culture and the duty he has of developing him self culturally
and of helping others. Sometimes there exist conditions of life
and of work which impede the cultural striving of men and destroy
in them the eagerness for culture. This is especially true of
farmers and workers. It is necessary to provide for them those
working conditions which will not impede their human culture but
rather favor it. Women now work in almost all spheres. It is fitting
that they are able to assume their proper role in accordance with
their own nature. It will belong to all to acknowledge and favor
the proper and necessary participation of women in the cultural
life.
61. Today it is more difficult to form a synthesis of the various
disciplines of knowledge and the arts than it was formerly. For
while the mass and the diversity of cultural factors are increasing,
there is a decrease in each man's faculty of perceiving and unifying
these things, so that the image of "universal man" is
being lost sight of more and more. Nevertheless it remains each
man's duty to retain an understanding of the whole human person
in which the values of intellect, will, conscience and fraternity
are preeminent. These values are all rooted in God the Creator
and have been wonderfully restored and elevated in Christ.
The family is, as it were, the primary mother and nurse of this
education. There, the children, in an atmosphere of love, more
easily learn the correct order of things, while proper forms of
human culture impress themselves in an almost unconscious manner
upon the mind of the developing adolescent.
Opportunities for the same education are to be found also in the
societies of today, due especially to the increased circulation
of books and to the new means of cultural and social communication
which can foster a universal culture. With the more or less generalized
reduction of working hours, the leisure time of most men has increased.
May this leisure be used properly to relax, to fortify the health
of soul and body through spontaneous study and activity, through
tourism which refines man's character and enriches him with understanding
of others, through sports activity which helps to preserve equilibrium
of spirit even in the community, and to establish fraternal relations
among men of all conditions, nations and races. Let Christians
cooperate so that the cultural manifestations and collective activity
characteristic of our time may be imbued with a human and a Christian
spirit.
All these leisure activities however are not able to bring man
to a full cultural development unless there is at the same time
a profound inquiry into the meaning of culture and science for
the human person.
62. Although the Church has contributed much to the development
of culture, experience shows that, for circumstantial reasons,
it is sometimes difficult to harmonize culture with Christian
teaching. These difficulties do not necessarily harm the life
of faith, rather they can stimulate the mind to a deeper and more
accurate understanding of the faith. The recent studies and findings
of science, history and philosophy raise new questions which effect
life and which demand new theological investigations. Furthermore,
theologians, within the requirements and methods proper to theology,
are invited to seek continually for more suitable ways of communicating
doctrine to the men of their times; for the deposit of Faith or
the truths are one thing and the manner in which they are enunciated,
in the same meaning and understanding, is another.(12) In pastoral
care, sufficient use must be made not only of theological principles,
but also of the findings of the secular sciences, especially of
psychology and sociology, so that the faithful may be brought
to a more adequate and mature life of faith.
Literature and the arts are also, in their own way, of great importance
to the life of the Church. They strive to make known the proper
nature of man, his problems and his experiences in trying to know
and perfect both himself and the world. They have much to do with
revealing mans place in history and in the world; with illustrating
the miseries and joys, the needs and strengths of man and with
foreshadowing 1 better life for him. The they are able to elevate
human life, expressed in multifold forms according to various
times and regions.
Efforts must be made so that those who foster these arts feel
that the Church recognizes their activity and so that, enjoying
orderly liberty, they may initiate more friendly relations with
the Christian community. The Church acknowledges also new forms
of art which are adapted to our age and are in keeping with the
characteristics of various nations and regions. They may be brought
into the sanctuary since they raise the mind to God, once the
manner of expression is adapted and they are conformed to liturgical
requirements(13)
Thus the knowledge of God is better manifested and the preaching
of the Gospel becomes clearer to human intelligence and shows
itself to be relevant to man's actual conditions of life.
May the faithful, therefore, live in very close union with the
other men of their time and may they strive to understand perfectly
their way of thinking and judging, as expressed in their culture.
Let them blend new sciences and theories and the understanding
of the most recent discoveries with Christian morality and the
teaching of Christian doctrine, so that their religious culture
and morality may keep pace with scientific knowledge and with
the constantly progressing technology. Thus they will be able
to interpret and evaluate all things in a truly Christian spirit.
Let those who teach theology in seminaries and universities strive
to collaborate with men versed in the other sciences through a
sharing of their resources and points of view. Theological inquiry
should pursue a profound understanding of revealed truth; at the
same time it should not neglect close contact with its own time
that it may be able to help these men skilled in various disciplines
to attain to a better understanding of the faith. This common
effort will greatly aid the formation of priests, who will be
able to present to our contemporaries the doctrine of the Church
concerning God, man and the world, in a manner more adapted to
them so that they may receive it more willingly.(14) Furthermore,
it is to be hoped that many of the laity will receive a sufficient
formation in the sacred sciences and that some will dedicate themselves
professionally to these studies, developing and deepening them
by their own labors. In order that they may fulfill their function,
let it be recognized that all the faithful, whether clerics or
laity, possess a lawful freedom of inquiry, freedom of thought
and of expressing their mind with humility and fortitude in those
matters on which they enjoy competence.(16)
CHAPTER III
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL LIFE
63.
In the economic and social realms, too, the dignity and complete
vocation of the human person and the welfare of society as a whole
are to be respected and promoted. For man is the source, the center,
and the purpose of all economic and social life.
Like other areas of social life, the economy of today is marked
by man's increasing domination over nature, by closer and more
intense relationships between citizens, groups, and countries
and their mutual dependence, and by the increased intervention
of the state. At the same time progress in the methods of production
and in the exchange of goods and services has made the economy
an instrument capable of better meeting the intensified needs
of the human family.
Reasons for anxiety, however, are not lacking. Many people, especially
in economically advanced areas, seem, as it were, to be ruled
by economics, so that almost their entire personal and social
life is pennated with a certain economic way of thinking. Such
is true both of nations that favor a collective economy and of
others. At the very time when the development of economic life
could mitigate social inequalities (provided that it be guided
and coordinated in a reasonable and human way), it is often made
to embitter them; or, in some places, it even results in a decline
of the social status of the underprivileged and in contempt for
the poor. While an immense number of people still lack the absolute
necessities of life, some, even in less advanced areas, live in
luxury or squander wealth. Extravagance and wretchedness exist
side by side. While a few enjoy very great power of choice, the
majority are deprived of almost all possibility of acting on their
own initiative and responsibility, and often subsist in living
and working conditions unworthy of the human person.
A similar lack of economic and social balance is to be noticed
between agriculture, industry, and the services, and also between
different parts of one and the same country. The contrast between
the economically more advanced countries and other countries is
becoming more serious day by day, and the very peace of the world
can be jeopardized thereby.
Our contemporaries are coming to feel these inequalities with
an ever sharper awareness, since they are thoroughly convinced
that the ampler technical and economic possibilities which the
world of today enjoys can and should correct this unhappy state
of affairs. Hence, many reforms in the socioeconomic realm and
a change of mentality and attitude are required of all. For this
reason the Church down through the centuries and in the light
of the Gospel has worked out the principles of justice and equity
demanded by right reason both for individual and social life and
for international life, and she has proclaimed them especially
in recent times. This sacred council intends to strengthen these
principles according to the circumstances of this age and to set
forth certain guidelines, especially with regard to the requirements
of economic development.(1)
SECTION 1
Economic Development
64. Today more than ever before attention is rightly given to
the increase of the production of agricultural and industrial
goods and of the rendering of services, for the purpose of making
provision for the growth of population and of satisfying the increasing
desires of the human race. Therefore, technical progress, an inventive
spirit, an eagerness to create and to expand enterprises, the
application of methods of production, and the strenuous efforts
of all who engage in production-in a word, all the elements making
for such development-must be promoted. The fundamental finality
of this production is not the mere increase of products nor profit
or control but rather the service of man, and indeed of the whole
man with regard for the full range of his material needs and the
demands of his intellectual, moral, spiritual, and religious life;
this applies to every man whatsoever and to every group of men,
of every race and of every part of the world. Consequently, economic
activity is to be carried on according to its own methods and
laws within the limits of the moral order," so that God's
plan for mankind may be realized.(3)
65. Economic development must remain under man's determination
and must not be left to the judgment of a few men or groups possessing
too much economic power or of the political community alone or
of certain more powerful nations. It is necessary, on the contrary,
that at every level the largest possible number of people and,
when it is a question of international relations, all nations
have an active share in directing that development. There is need
as well of the coordination and fitting and harmonious combination
of the spontaneous efforts of individuals and of free groups with
the undertakings oœ public authorities.
Growth is not to be left solely to a kind of mechanical course
of the economic activity of individuals, nor to the authority
of government. For this reason, doctrines which obstruct the necessary
reforms under the guise of a false liberty, and those which subordinate
the basic rights of individual persons and groups to the collective
organization of production must be shown to be erroneous.(4)
Citizens, on the other hand, should remember that it is their
right and duty, which is also to be recognized by the civil authority,
to contribute to the true progress of their own community according
to their ability. Especially in underdeveloped areas, where all
resources must urgently be employed, those who hold back their
unproductive resources or who deprive their community of the material
or spiritual aid that it needs-saving the personal right of migration-gravely
endanger the common good.
66. To satisfy the demands of justice and equity, strenuous efforts
must be made, without disregarding the rights of persons or the
natural qualities of each country, to remove as quickly as possible
the immense economic inequalities, which now exist and in many
cases are growing and which are connected with individual and
social discrimination. Likewise, in many areas, in view of the
special difficulties of agriculture relative to the raising and
selling of produce, country people must be helped both to increase
and to market what they produce, and to introduce the necessary
development and renewal and also obtain a fair income. Otherwise,
as too often happens, they will remain in the condition of lower-class
citizens. Let farmers themselves, especially young ones, apply
themselves to perfecting their professional skill, for without
it, there can be no agricultural advance.(5)
Justice and equity likewise require that the mobility, which is
necessary in a developing economy, be regulated in such a way
as to keep the life of individuals and their families from becoming
insecure and precarious. When workers come from another country
or district and contribute to the economic advancement of a nation
or region by their labor, all discrimination as regards wages
and working conditions must be carefully avoided. All the people,
moreover, above all the public authorities, must treat them not
as mere tools of production but as persons, and must help them
to bring their families to live with them and to provide themselves
with a decent dwelling; they must also see to it that these workers
are incorporated into the social life of the country or region
that receives them. Employment opportunities, however, should
be created in their own areas as far as possible.
In economic affairs which today are subject to change, as in the
new forms of industrial society in which automation, for example,
is advancing, care must be taken that sufficient and suitable
work and the possibility of the appropriate technical and professional
formation are furnished. The livelihood and the human dignity
especially of those who are in very difficult conditions because
of illness or old age must be guaranteed.
SECTION 2
Certain Principles Governing Socio-Economic Life as a Whole
67. Human labor which is expended in the production and exchange
of goods or in the performance of economic services is superior
to the other elements of economic life, for the latter have only
the nature of tools.
This labor, whether it is engaged in independently or hired by
someone else, comes immediately from the person, who as it were
stamps the things of nature with his seal and subdues them to
his will. By his labor a man ordinarily supports himself and his
family, is joined to his fellow men and serves them, and can exercise
genuine charity and be a partner in the work of bringing divine
creation to perfection. Indeed, we hold that through labor offered
to God man is associated with the redemptive work of Jesus Christ,
Who conferred an eminent dignity on labor when at Nazareth He
worked with His own hands. From this there follows for every man
the duty of working faithfully and also the right to work. It
is the duty of society, moreover, according to the circumstances
prevailing in it, and in keeping with its role, to help the citizens
to find sufficient employment. Finally, remuneration for labor
is to be such that man may be furnished the means to cultivate
worthily his own material, social, cultural, and spiritual life
and that of his dependents, in view of the function and productiveness
of each one, the conditions of the factory or workshop, and the
common good.(6)
Since economic activity for the most part implies the associated
work of human beings, any way of organizing and directing it which
may be detrimental to any working men and women would be wrong
and inhuman. It happens too often, however, even in our days,
that workers are reduced to the level of being slaves to their
own work. This is by no means justified by the so-called economic
laws. The entire process of productive work, therefore, must be
adapted to the needs of the person and to his way of life, above
all to his domestic life, especially in respect to mothers of
families, always with due regard for sex and age. The opportunity,
moreover, should be granted to workers to unfold their own abilities
and personality through the performance of their work. Applying
their time and strength to their employment with a due sense of
responsibility, they should also all enjoy sufficient rest and
leisure to cultivate their familial, cultural, social and religious
life. They should also have the opportunity freely to develop
the energies and potentialities which perhaps they cannot bring
to much fruition in their professional work.
68. In economic enterprises it is persons who are joined together,
that is, free and independent human beings created lo the image
of God. Therefore, with attention to the functions of each-owners
or employers, management or labor-and without doing harm to the
necessary unity of management, the active sharing of all in the
administration and profits of these enterprises in ways to be
properly determined is to be promoted.(7) Since more often, however,
decisions concerning economic and social conditions, on which
the future lot of the workers and of their children depends, are
made not within the business itself but by institutions on a higher
level, the workers themselves should have a share also in determining
these conditions-in person or through freely elected delegates.
Among the basic rights of the human person is to be numbered the
right of freely founding unions for working people. These should
be able truly to represent them and to contribute to the organizing
of economic life in the right way. Included is the right of freely
taking part in the activity of these unions without risk of reprisal.
Through this orderly participation joined to progressive economic
and social formation, all will grow day by day in the awareness
of their own function and responsibility, and thus they will be
brought to feel that they are comrades in the whole task of economic
development and in the attainment of the universal common good
according to their capacities and aptitudes.
When, however, socio-economic disputes arise, efforts must be
made to come to a peaceful settlement. Although recourse must
always be had first to a sincere dialogue between the parties,
a strike, nevertheless, can remain even in presentday circumstances
a necessary, though ultimate, aid for the defense of the workers'
own rights and the fulfillment of their just desires. As soon
as possible, however, ways should be sought to resume negotiation
and the discussion of reconciliation.
69. God intended the earth with everything contained in it for
the use of all human beings and peoples. Thus, under the leadership
of justice and in the company of charity, created goods should
be in abundance for all in like manner.(8) Whatever the forms
of property may be, as adapted to the legitimate institutions
of peoples, according to diverse and changeable circumstances,
attention must always be paid to this universal destination of
earthly goods. In using them, therefore, man should regard the
external things that he legitimately possesses not only as his
own but also as common in the sense that they should be able to
benefit not only him but also others.(9) On the other hand, the
right of having a share of earthly goods sufficient for oneself
and one's family belongs to everyone. The Fathers and Doctors
of the Church held this opinion, teaching that men are obliged
to come to the relief of the poor and to do so not merely out
of their superfluous goods.(10) If one is in extreme necessity,
he has the right to procure for himself what he needs out of the
riches of others.(11) Since there are so many people prostrate
with hunger in the world, this sacred council urges all, both
individuals and governments, to remember the aphorism of the Fathers,
"Feed the man dying of hunger, because if you have not fed
him, you have killed him,"(12) and really to share and employ
their earthly goods, according to the ability of each, especially
by supporting individuals or peoples with the aid by which they
may be able to help and develop themselves.
In economically less advanced societies the common destination
of earthly goods is partly satisfied by means of the customs and
traditions proper to the community, by which the absolutely necessary
things are furnished to each member. An effort must be made, however,
to avoid regarding certain customs as altogether unchangeable,
if they no longer answer the new needs of this age. On the other
hand, imprudent action should not be taken against respectable
customs which, provided they are suitably adapted to present-day
circumstances, do not cease to be very useful. Similarly, in highly
developed nations a body of social institutions dealing with protection
and security can, for its own part, bring to reality the common
destination of earthly goods. Family and social services, especially
those that provide for culture and education, should be further
promoted. When all these things are being organized, vigilance
is necessary to present the citizens from being led into a certain
inactivity vis-a-vis society or from rejecting the burden of taking
up office or from refusing to serve.
70. Investments, for their part, must be directed toward procuring
employment and sufficient income for the people both now and in
the future. Whoever makes decisions concerning these investments
and the planning of the economy-whether they be individuals or
groups of public authorities-are bound to keep these objectives
in mind and to recognize their serious obligation of watching,
on the one hand, that provision be made for the necessities required
for a decent life both of individuals and of the whole community
and, on the other, of looking out for the future and of establishing
a right balance between the needs of present-day consumption,
both individual and collective, and the demands of investing for
the generation to come. They should also always bear in mind the
urgent needs of underdeveloped countries or regions. In monetary
matters they should beware of hurting the welfare of their own
country or of other countries. Care should also be taken lest
the economically weak countries unjustly suffer any loss from
a change in the value of money.
71. Since property and other forms of private ownership of external
goods contribute to the expression of the personality, and since,
moreover, they furnish one an occasion to exercise his function
in society and in the economy, it is very important that the access
of both individuals and communities to some ownership of external
goods be fostered
Private property or some ownership of external goods confers on
everyone a sphere wholly necessary for the autonomy of the person
and the family, and it should be regarded as an extension of human
freedom. Lastly, since it adds incentives for carrying on one's
function and charge, it constitutes one of the conditions for
civil liberties.(13)
The forms of such ownership or property are varied today and are
becoming increasingly diversified. They all remain, however, a
cause of security not to be underestimated, in spite of social
funds, rights, and services provided by society. This is true
not only of material property but also of immaterial things such
as professional capacities.
The right of private ownership, however, is not opposed to the
right inherent in various forms of public property. Goods can
be transferred to the public domain only by the competent authority,
according to the demands and within the limits of the common good,
and with fair compensation. Furthermore, it is the right of public
authority to prevent anyone from abusing his private property
to the detriment of the common good.(14)
By its very nature private property has a social quality which
is based on the law of the common destination of earthly goods.(15)
If this social quality is overlooked, property often becomes an
occasion of passionate desires for wealth and serious disturbances,
so that a pretext is given to the attackers for calling the right
itself into question.
In many underdeveloped regions there are large or even extensive
rural estates which are only slightly cultivated or lie completely
idle for the sake of profit, while the majority of the people
either are without land or have only very small fields, and, on
the other hand, it is evidently urgent to increase the productivity
of the fields. Not infrequently those who are hired to work for
the landowners or who till a portion of the land as tenants receive
a wage or income unworthy of a human being, lack decent housing
and are exploited by middlemen. Deprived of all security, they
live under such personal servitude that almost every opportunity
of acting on their own initiative and responsibility is denied
to them and all advancement in human culture and all sharing in
social and political life is forbidden to them. According to the
different cases, therefore, reforms are necessary: that income
may grow, working conditions should be improved, security in employment
increased, and an incentive to working on one's own initiative
given. Indeed, insufficiently cultivated estates should be distributed
to those who can make these lands fruitful; in this case, the
necessary things and means, especially educational aids and the
right facilities for cooperative organization, must be supplied.
Whenever, nevertheless, the common good requires expropriation,
compensation must be reckoned in equity after all the circumstances
have been weighed.
72. Christians who take an active part in present-day socio-economic
development and fight for justice and charity should be convinced
that they can make a great contribution to the prosperity of mankind
and to the peace of the world. In these activities let them, either
as individuals or as members of groups, give a shining example.
Having acquired the absolutely necessary skill and experience,
they should observe the right order in their earthly activities
in faithfulness to Christ and His Gospel. Thus their whole life,
both individual and social, will be permeated with the spirit
of the beatitudes, notably with a spirit of poverty.
Whoever in obedience to Christ seeks first the Kingdom of God,
takes therefrom a stronger and purer love for helping all his
brethren and for perfecting the work of justice under the inspiration
of charity.(16)
CHAPTER IV
THE LIFE OF THE POLITICAL COMMUNITY
73.
In our day, profound changes are apparent also in the structure
and institutions of peoples. These result from their cultural,
economic and social evolution. Such changes have a great influence
on the life of the political community, especially regarding the
rights and duties of all in the exercise of civil freedom and
in the attainment of the common good, and in organizing the relations
of citizens among themselves and with respect to public authority.
The present keener sense of human dignity has given rise in many
parts of the world to attempts to bring about a politico-juridical
order which will give better protection to the rights of the person
in public life. These include the right freely to meet and form
associations, the right to express one's own opinion and to profess
one's religion both publicly and privately. The protection of
the rights of a person is indeed a necessary condition so that
citizens, individually or collectively, can take an active part
in the life and government of the state.
Along with cultural, economic and social development, there is
a growing desire among many people to play a greater part in organizing
the life of the political community. In the conscience of many
arises an increasing concern that the rights of minorities be
recognized, without any neglect for their duties toward the political
community. In addition, there is a steadily growing respect for
men of other opinions or other religions. At the same time, there
is wider cooperation to guarantee the actual exercise of personal
rights to all citizens, and not only to a few privileged individuals.
However, those political systems, prevailing in some parts of
the world are to be reproved which hamper civic or religious freedom,
victimize large numbers through avarice and political crimes,
and divert the exercise of authority from the service of the common
good to the interests of one or another faction or of the rulers
themselves.
There is no better way to establish political life on a truly
human basis than by fostering an inward sense of justice and kindliness,
and of service to the common good, and by strengthening basic
convictions as to the true nature of the political community and
the aim, right exercise, and sphere of action of public authority.
74. Men, families and the various groups which make up the civil
community are aware that they cannot achieve a truly human life
by their own unaided efforts. They see the need for a wider community,
within which each one makes his specific contribution every day
toward an ever broader realization of the common good.(1) For
this purpose they set up a political community according to various
forms. The political community exists, consequently, for the sake
of the common good, in which it finds its full justification and
significance, and the source of its inherent legitimacy. Indeed,
the common good embraces the sum of those conditions of the social
life whereby men, families and associations more adequately and
readily may attain their own perfection.(2)
Yet the people who come together in the political community are
many and diverse, and they have every right to prefer divergent
solutions. If the political community is not to be torn apart
while everyone follows his own opinion, there must be an authority
to direct the energies of all citizens toward the common good,
not in a mechanical or despotic fashion, but by acting above all
as a moral force which appeals to each one's freedom and sense
of responsibility.
It is clear, therefore, that the political community and public
authority are founded on human nature and hence belong to the
order designed by God, even though the choice of a political regime
and the appointment of rulers are left to the free will of citizens.(3)
It follows also that political authority, both in the community
as such and in the representative bodies of the state, must always
be exercised within the limits of the moral order and directed
toward the common good-with a dynamic concept of that good-according
to the juridical order legitimately established or due to be established.
When authority is so exercised, citizens are bound in conscience
to obey.(4) Accordingly, the responsibility, dignity and importance
of leaders are indeed clear.
But where citizens are oppressed by a public authority overstepping
its competence, they should not protest against those things which
are objectively required for the common good; but it is legitimate
for them to defend their own rights and the rights of their fellow
citizens against the abuse of this authority, while keeping within
those limits drawn by the natural law and the Gospels.
According to the character of different peoples and their historic
development, the political community can, however, adopt a variety
of concrete solutions in its structures and the organization of
public authority. For the benefit of the whole human family, these
solutions must always contribute to the formation of a type of
man who will be cultivated, peace-loving and well-disposed towards
all his fellow men.
75. It is in full conformity with human nature that there should
be juridico-political structures providing all citizens in an
ever better fashion and without and discrimination the practical
possibility of freely and actively taking part in the establishment
of the juridical foundations of the political community and in
the direction of public affairs, in fixing the terms of reference
of the various public bodies and in the election of political
leaders.(5) All citizens, therefore, should be mindful of the
right and also the duty to use their free vote to further the
common good. The Church praises and esteems the work of those
who for the good of men devote themselves to the service of the
state and take on the burdens of this office.
If the citizens' responsible cooperation is to produce the good
results which may be expected in the normal course of political
life, there must be a statute of positive law providing for a
suitable division of the functions and bodies of authority and
an efficient and independent system for the protection of rights.
The rights of all persons, families and groups, and their practical
application, must be recognized, respected and furthered, together
with the duties binding on all citizen.(6) Among the latter, it
will be well to recall the duty of rendering the political community
such material and personal service as are required by the common
good. Rulers must be careful not to hamper the development of
family, social or cultural groups, nor that of intermediate bodies
or organizations, and not to deprive them of opportunities for
legitimate and constructive activity; they should willingly seek
rather to promote the orderly pursuit of such activity. Citizens,
for their part, either individually or collectively, must be careful
not to attribute excessive power to public authority, not to make
exaggerated and untimely demands upon it in their own interests,
lessening in this way the responsible role of persons, families
and social groups.
The complex circumstances of our day make it necessary for public
authority to intervene more often in social, economic and cultural
matters in order to bring about favorable conditions which will
give more effective help to citizens and groups in their free
pursuit of man's total well-being. The relations, however, between
socialization and the autonomy and development of the person can
be understood in different ways according to various regions and
the evolution of peoples. But when the exercise of rights is restricted
temporarily for the common good, freedom should be restored immediately
upon change of circumstances. Moreover, it is inhuman for public
authority to fall back on dictatonal systems or totalitarian methods
which violate the rights of the person or social groups.
Citizens must cultivate a generous and loyal spirit of patriotism,
but without being narrow-minded. This means that they will always
direct their attention to the good of the whole human family,
united by the different ties which bind together races, people
and nations.
All Christians must be aware of their own specific vocation within
the political community. It is for them to give an example by
their sense of responsibility and their service of the common
good. In this way they are to demonstrate concretely how authority
can be compatible with freedom, personal initiative with the solidarity
of the whole social organism, and the advantages of unity with
fruitful diversity. They must recognize the legitimacy of different
opinions with regard to temporal solutions, and respect citizens,
who, even as a group, defend their points of view by honest methods.
Political parties, for their part, must promote those things which
in their judgement are required for the common good; it is never
allowable to give their interests priority over the common good.
Great care must be taken about civic and political formation,
which is of the utmost necessity today for the population as a
whole, and especially for youth, so that all citizens can play
their part in the life of the political community. Those who are
suited or can become suited should prepare themselves for the
difficult, but at the same time, the very noble art of politics,(8)
and should seek to practice this art without regard for their
own interests or for material advantages. With integrity and wisdom,
they must take action against any form of injustice and tyranny,
against arbitrary domination by an individual or a political party
and any intolerance. They should dedicate themselves to the service
of all with sincerity and fairness, indeed, with the charity and
fortitude demanded by political life.
76. It is very important, especially where a pluralistic society
prevails, that there be a correct notion of the relationship between
the political community and the Church, and a clear distinction
between the tasks which Christians undertake, individually or
as a group, on their own responsibility as citizens guided by
the dictates of a Christian conscience, and the activities which,
in union with their pastors, they carry out in the name of the
Church.
The Church, by reason of her role and competence, is not identified
in any way with the political community nor bound to any political
system. She is at once a sign and a safeguard of the transcendent
character of the human person.
The Church and the political community in their own fields are
autonomous and independent from each other. Yet both, under different
titles, are devoted to the personal and social vocation of the
same men. The more that both foster sounder cooperation between
themselves with due consideration for the circumstances of time
and place, the more effective will their service be exercised
for the good of all. For man's horizons are not limited only to
the temporal order; while living in the context of human history,
he preserves intact his eternal vocation. The Church, for her
part, founded on the love of the Redeemer, contributes toward
the reign of justice and charity within the borders of a nation
and between nations. By preaching the truths of the Gospel, and
bringing to bear on all fields of human endeavor the light of
her doctrine and of a Christian witness, she respects and fosters
the political freedom and responsibility of citizens.
The Apostles, their successors and those who cooperate with them,
are sent to announce to mankind Christ, the Savior. Their apostolate
is based on the power of God, Who very often shows forth the strength
of the Gospel on the weakness of its witnesses. All those dedicated
to the ministry of God's Word must use the ways and means proper
to the Gospel which in a great many respects differ from the means
proper to the earthly city.
There are, indeed, close links between earthly things and those
elements of man's condition which transcend the world. The Church
herself makes use of temporal things insofar as her own mission
requires it. She, for her part, does not place her trust in the
privileges offered by civil authority. She will even give up the
exercise of certain rights which have been legitimately acquired,
if it becomes clear that their use will cast doubt on the sincerity
of her witness or that new ways of life demand new methods. It
is only right, however, that at all times and in all places, the
Church should have true freedom to preach the faith, to teach
her social doctrine, to exercise her role freely among men, and
also to pass moral judgment in those matters which regard public
order when the fundamental rights of a person or the salvation
of souls require it. In this, she should make use of all the means-but
only those-which accord with the Gospel and which correspond to
the general good according to the diversity oœ times and
circumstances.
While faithfully adhering to the Gospel and fulfilling her mission
to the world, the Church, whose duty it is to foster and elevate(9)
all that is found to be true, good and beautiful in the human
community, strengthens peace among men for the glory of God.(10)
CHAPTER V
THE FOSTERING OF PEACE AND THE PROMOTION OF A COMMUNITY OF NATIONS
77.
In our generation when men continue to be afflicted by acute hardships
and anxieties arising from the ravages of war or the threat of
it, the whole human family faces an hour of supreme crisis in
its advance toward maturity. Moving gradually together and everywhere
more conscious already of its unity, this family cannot accomplish
its task of constructing for all men everywhere a world more genuinely
human unless each person devotes himself to the cause of peace
with renewed vigor. Thus it happens that the Gospel message, which
is in harmony with the loftier strivings and aspirations of the
human race, takes on a new luster in our day as it declares that
the artisans of peace are blessed "because they will be called
the sons of God" (Matt. 5:9).
Consequently, as it points out the authentic and noble meaning
of peace and condemns the frightfulness of war, the Council wishes
passionately to summon Christians to cooperate, under the help
of Christ the author of peace, with all men in securing among
themselves a peace based on justice and love and in setting up
the instruments of peace.
78. Peace is not merely the absence of war; nor can it be reduced
solely to the maintenance of a balance of power between enemies;
nor is it brought about by dictatorship Instead, it is rightly
and appropriately called an enterprise of justice. Peace results
from that order structured into human society by its divine Founder,
and actualized by men as they thirst after ever greater justice.
The common good of humanity finds its ultimate meaning in the
eternal law. But since the concrete demands of this common good
are constantly changing as time goes on, peace is never attained
once and for all, but must be built up ceaselessly. Moreover,
since the human will is unsteady and wounded by sin, the achievement
of peace requires a constant mastering of passions and the vigilance
of lawful authority.
But this is not enough. This peace on earth cannot be obtained
unless personal well-being is safeguarded and men freely and trustingly
share with one another the riches of their inner spirits and their
talents. A firm determination to respect other men and peoples
and their dignity, as well as the studied practice of brotherhood
are absolutely necessary for the establishment of peace. Hence
peace is likewise the fruit of love, which goes beyond what justice
can provide.
That earthly peace which arises from love of neighbor symbolizes
and results from the peace of Christ which radiates from God the
Father. For by the cross the incarnate Son, the prince of peace
reconciled all men with God. By thus restoring all men to the
unity of one people and one body, He slew hatred in His own flesh;
and, after being lifted on high by His resurrection, He poured
forth the spirit of love into the hearts of men.
For this reason, all Christians are urgently summoned to do in
love what the truth requires, and to join with all true peacemakers
in pleading for peace and bringing it about.
Motivated by this same spirit, we cannot fail to praise those
who renounce the use of violence in the vindication of their rights
and who resort to methods of defense which are otherwise available
to weaker parties too, provided this can be done without injury
to the rights and duties of others or of the community itself.
Insofar as men are sinful, the threat of war hangs over them,
and hang over them it will until the return of Christ. But insofar
as men vanquish sin by a union of love, they will vanquish violence
as well and make these words come true: "They shall turn
their swords into plough-shares, and their spears into sickles.
Nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they
learn war any more" (Isaias 2:4).
SECTION 1
The Avoidance of War
79. Even though recent wars have wrought physical and moral havoc
on our world, the devastation of battle still goes on day by day
in some part of the world. Indeed, now that every kind of weapon
produced by modern science is used in war, the fierce character
of warfare threatens to lead the combatants to a savagery far
surpassing that of the past. Furthermore, the complexity of the
modern world and the intricacy of international relations allow
guerrilla warfare to be drawn out by new methods of deceit and
subversion. In many causes the use of terrorism is regarded as
a new way to wage war.
Contemplating this melancholy state of humanity, the council wishes,
above all things else, to recall the permanent binding force of
universal natural law and its all-embracing principles. Man's
conscience itself gives ever more emphatic voice to these principles.
Therefore, actions which deliberately conflict with these same
principles, as well as orders commanding such actions are criminal,
and blind obedience cannot excuse those who yield to them. The
most infamous among these are actions designed for the methodical
extermination of an entire people, nation or ethnic minority.
Such actions must be vehemently condemned as horrendous crimes.
The courage of those who fearlessly and openly resist those who
issue such commands merits supreme commendation.
On the subject of war, quite a large number of nations have subscribed
to international agreements aimed at making military activity
and its consequences less inhuman. Their stipulations deal with
such matters as the treatment of wounded soldiers and prisoners.
Agreements of this sort must be honored. Indeed they should be
improved upon so that the frightfulness of war can be better and
more workably held in check. All men, especially government officials
and experts in these matters, are bound to do everything they
can to effect these improvements. Moreover, it seems right that
laws make humane provisions for the case of those who for reasons
of conscience refuse to bear arms, provided however, that they
agree to serve the human community in some other way.
Certainly, war has not been rooted out of human affairs. As long
as the danger of war remains and there is no competent and sufficiently
powerful authority at the international level, governments cannot
be denied the right to legitimate defense once every means of
peaceful settlement has been exhausted. State authorities and
others who share public responsibility have the duty to conduct
such grave matters soberly and to protect the welfare of the people
entrusted to their care. But it is one thing to undertake military
action for the just defense of the people, and something else
again to seek the subjugation of other nations. Nor, by the same
token, does the mere fact that war has unhappily begun mean that
all is fair between the warring parties.
Those too who devote themselves to the military service of their
country should regard themselves as the agents of security and
freedom of peoples. As long as they fulfill this role properly,
they are making a genuine contribution to the establishment of
peace.
80. The horror and perversity of war is immensely magnified by
the addition of scientific weapons. For acts of war involving
these weapons can inflict massive and indiscriminate destruction,
thus going far beyond the bounds of legitimate defense. Indeed,
if the kind of instruments which can now be found in the armories
of the great nations were to be employed to their fullest, an
almost total and altogether reciprocal slaughter of each side
by the other would follow, not to mention the widespread deviation
that would take place in the world and the deadly after effects
that would be spawned by the use of weapons of this kind.
All these considerations compel us to undertake an evaluation
of war with an entirely new attitude.(1) The men of our time must
realize that they will have to give a somber reckoning of their
deeds of war for the course of the future will depend greatly
on the decisions they make today.
With these truths in mind, this most holy synod makes its own
the condemnations of total war already pronounced by recent popes,(2)
and issues the following declaration.
Any act of war aimed indiscriminately at the destruction of entire
cities of extensive areas along with their population is a crime
against God and man himself. It merits unequivocal and unhesitating
condemnation.
The unique hazard of modern warfare consists in this: it provides
those who possess modem scientific weapons with a kind of occasion
for perpetrating just such abominations; moreover, through a certain
inexorable chain of events, it can catapult men into the most
atrocious decisions. That such may never truly happen in the future,
the bishops of the whole world gathered together, beg all men,
especially government officials and military leaders, to give
unremitting thought to their gigantic responsibility before God
and the entire human race.
81. To be sure, scientific weapons are not amassed solely for
use in war. Since the defensive strength of any nation is considered
to be dependent upon its capacity for immediate retaliation, this
accumulation of arms, which increases each year, likewise serves,
in a way heretofore unknown, as deterrent to possible enemy attack.
Many regard this procedure as the most effective way by which
peace of a sort can be maintained between nations at the present
time.
Whatever be the facts about this method of deterrence, men should
be convinced that the arms race in which an already considerable
number of countries are engaged is not a safe way to preserve
a steady peace, nor is the so-called balance resulting from this
race a sure and authentic peace. Rather than being eliminated
thereby, the causes of war are in danger of being gradually aggravated.
While extravagant sums are being spent for the furnishing of ever
new weapons, an adequate remedy cannot be provided for the multiple
miseries afflicting the whole modern world. Disagreements between
nations are not really and radically healed; on the contrary,
they spread the infection to other parts of the earth. New approaches
based on reformed attitudes must be taken to remove this trap
and to emancipate the world from its crushing anxiety through
the restoration of genuine peace.
Therefore, we say it again: the arms race is an utterly treacherous
trap for humanity, and one which ensnares the poor to an intolerable
degree. It is much to be feared that if this race persists, it
will eventually spawn all the lethal ruin whose path it is now
making ready. Warned by the calamities which the human race has
made possible, let us make use of the interlude granted us from
above and for which we are thankful to become more conscious of
our own responsibility and to find means for resolving our disputes
in a manner more worthy of man. Divine Providence urgently demands
of us that we free ourselves from the age-old slavery of war.
If we refuse to make this effort, we do not know where we will
be led by the evil road we have set upon.
It is our clear duty, therefore, to strain every muscle in working
for the time when all war can be completely outlawed by international
consent. This goal undoubtedly requires the establishment of some
universal public authority acknowledged as such by all and endowed
with the power to safeguard on the behalf of all, security, regard
for justice, and respect for rights. But before this hoped for
authority can be set up, the highest existing international centers
must devote themselves vigorously to the pursuit of better means
for obtaining common security. Since peace must be born of mutual
trust between nations and not be imposed on them through a fear
of the available weapons, everyone must labor to put an end at
last to the arms race, and to make a true beginning of disarmament,
not unilaterally indeed, but proceeding at an equal pace according
to agreement, and backed up by true and workable safeguards.(3)
82. In the meantime, efforts which have already been made and
are still underway to eliminate the danger of war are not to be
underrated. On the contrary, support should be given to the good
will of the very many leaders who work hard to do away with war,
which they abominate. These men, although burdened by the extremely
weighty preoccupations of their high office, are nonetheless moved
by the very grave peacemaking task to which they are bound, even
if they cannot ignore the complexity of matters as they stand.
We should fervently ask God to give these men the strength to
go forward perseveringly and to follow through courageously on
this work of building peace with vigor. It is a work of supreme
love for mankind. Today it certainly demands that they extend
their thoughts and their spirit beyond the confines of their own
nation, that they put aside national selfishness and ambition
to dominate other nations, and that they nourish a profound reverence
for the whole of humanity, which is already making its way so
laboriously toward greater unity.
The problems of peace and of disarmament have already been the
subject of extensive, strenuous and constant examination. Together
with international meetings dealing with these problems, such
studies should be regarded as the first steps toward solving these
serious questions, and should be promoted with even greater urgency
by way of yielding concrete results in the future.
Nevertheless, men should take heed not to entrust themselves only
to the efforts of some, while not caring about their own attitudes.
For government officials who must at one and the same time guarantee
the good of their own people and promote the universal good are
very greatly dependent on public opinion and feeling. It does
them no good to work for peace as long as feelings of hostility,
contempt and distrust, as well as racial hatred and unbending
ideologies, continue to divide men and place them in opposing
camps. Consequently there is above all a pressing need for a renewed
education of attitudes and for new inspiration in public opinion.
Those who are dedicated to the work of education, particularly
of the young, or who mold public opinion, should consider it their
most weighty task to instruct all in fresh sentiments of peace.
Indeed, we all need a change of heart as we regard the entire
world and those tasks which we can perform in unison for the betterment
of our race.
But we should not let false hope deceive us. For unless enmities
and hatred are put away and firm, honest agreements concerning
world peace are reached in the future, humanity, which already
is in the middle of a grave crisis, even though it is endowed
with remarkable knowledge, will perhaps be brought to that dismal
hour in which it will experience no peace other than the dreadful
peace of death. But, while we say this, the Church of Christ,
present in the midst of the anxiety of this age, does not cease
to hope most firmly. She intends to propose to our age over and
over again, in season and out of season, this apostolic message:
"Behold, now is the acceptable time for a change of heart;
behold! now is the day of salvation."(4)
SECTION II
Setting Up An International Community
83. In order to build up peace above all the causes of discord
among men, especially injustice, which foment wars must be rooted
out. Not a few of these causes come from excessive economic inequalities
and from putting off the steps needed to remedy them. Other causes
of discord, however, have their source in the desire to dominate
and in a contempt for persons. And, if we look for deeper causes,
we find them in human envy, distrust, pride, and other egotistical
passions. Man cannot bear so many ruptures in the harmony of things.
Consequently, the world is constantly beset by strife and violence
between men, even when no war is being waged. Besides, since these
same evils are present in the relations between various nations
as well, in order to overcome or forestall them and to keep violence
once unleashed within limits it is absolutely necessary for countries
to cooperate more advantageously and more closely together and
to organize together international bodies and to work tirelessly
for the creation of organizations which will foster peace.
84. In view of the increasingly close ties of mutual dependence
today between all the inhabitants and peoples of the earth, the
apt pursuit and efficacious attainment of the universal common
good now require of the community of nations that it organize
itself in a manner suited to its present responsibilities, especially
toward the many parts of the world which are still suffering from
unbearable want.
To reach this goal, organizations of the international community,
for their part, must make provision for men's different needs,
both in the fields of social life-such as food supplies, health,
education, labor and also in certain special circumstances which
can crop up here and there, e.g., the need to promote the general
improvement of developing countries, or to alleviate the distressing
conditions in which refugees dispersed throughout the world find
themselves, or also to assist migrants and their families.
Already existing international and regional organizations are
certainly well-deserving of the human race. These are the first
efforts at laying the foundations on an international level for
a community of all men to work for the solution to the serious
problems of our times, to encourage progress everywhere, and to
obviate wars of whatever kind. In all of these activities the
Church takes joy in the spirit of true brotherhood flourishing
between Christians and non-Christians as it strives to make ever
more strenuous efforts to relieve abundant misery.
85. The present solidarity of mankind also calls for a revival
of greater international cooperation in the economic field. Although
nearly all peoples have become autonomous, they are far from being
free of every form of undue dependence, and far from escaping
all danger of serious internal difficulties.
The development of a nation depends on human and financial aids.
The citizens of each country must be prepared by education and
professional training to discharge the various tasks of economic
and social life. But this in turn requires the aid of foreign
specialists who, when they give aid, will not act as overlords,
but as helpers and fellow-workers. Developing nations will not
be able to procure material assistance unless radical changes
are made in the established procedures of modern world commerce.
Other aid should be provided as well by advanced nations in the
form of gifts, loans or financial investments. Such help should
be accorded with generosity and without greed on the one side,
and received with complete honesty on the other side.
If an authentic economic order is to be established on a world-wide
basis, an end will have to be put to profiteering, to national
ambitions, to the appetite for political supremacy, to militaristic
calculations, and to machinations for the sake of spreading and
imposing ideologies.
86. The following norms seem useful for such cooperation:
a) Developing nations should take great pains to seek as the object
for progress to express and secure the total human fulfillment
of their citizens. They should bear in mind that progress arises
and grows above all out of the labor and genius of the nations
themselves because it has to be based, not only on foreign aid,
but especially on the full utilization of their own resources,
and on the development of their own culture and traditions. Those
who exert the greatest influence on others should be outstanding
in this respect.
b) On the other hand, it is a very important duty of the advanced
nations to help the developing nations in discharging their above-mentioned
responsibilities. They should therefore gladly carry out on their
own home front those spiritual and material readjustments that
are required for the realization of this universal cooperation.
Consequently, in business dealings with weaker and poorer nations,
they should be careful to respect their profit, for these countries
need the income they receive on the sale of their homemade products
to support themselves.
c) It is the role of the international community to coordinate
and promote development, but in such a way that the resources
earmarked for this purpose will be allocated as effectively as
possible, and with complete equity. It is likewise this community's
duty, with due regard for the principle of subsidiarity, so to
regulate economic relations throughout the world that these will
be carried out in accordance with the norms of justice.
Suitable organizations should be set up to foster and regulate
international business affairs, particularly with the underdeveloped
countries, and to compensate for losses resulting from an excessive
inequality of power among the various nations. This type of organization,
in unison with technical cultural and financial aid, should provide
the help which developing nations need so that they can advantageously
pursue their own economic advancement.
d) In many cases there is an urgent need to revamp economic and
social structures. But one must guard against proposals of technical
solutions that are untimely. This is particularly true of those
solutions providing man with material conveniences, but nevertheless
contrary to man's spiritual nature and advancement. For "not
by bread alone does man live, but by every word which proceeds
from the mouth of God" (Matt. 4:4). Every sector of the family
of man carries within itself and in its best traditions some portion
of the spiritual treasure entrusted by God to humanity, even though
many may not be aware of the source from which it comes.
87. International cooperation is needed today especially for those
peoples who, besides facing so many other difficulties, likewise
undergo pressures due to a rapid increase in population. There
is an urgent need to explore, with the full and intense cooperation
of all, and especially of the wealthier nations, ways whereby
the human necessities of food and a suitable education can be
furnished and shared with the entire human community. But some
peoples could greatly improve upon the conditions of their life
if they would change over from antiquated methods of farming to
the new technical methods, applying them with needed prudence
according to their own circumstances. Their life would likewise
be improved by the establishment of a better social order and
by a fairer system for the distribution of land ownership.
Governments undoubtedly have rights and duties, within the limits
of their proper competency, regarding the population problem in
their respective countries, for instance, in the line of social
and family life legislation, or regarding the migration of country-dwellers
to the cities, or with respect to information concerning the condition
and needs of the country. Since men today are giving thought to
this problem and are so greatly disturbed over it, it is desirable
in addition that Catholic specialists, especially in the universities,
skillfully pursue and develop studies and projects on all these
matters.
But there are many today who maintain that the increase in world
population, or at least the population increase in some countries,
must be radically curbed by every means possible and by any kind
of intervention on the part of public authority. In view of this
contention, the council urges everyone to guard against solutions,
whether publicly or privately supported, or at times even imposed,
which are contrary to the moral law. For in keeping with man's
inalienable right to marry and generate children, a decision concerning
the number of children they will have depends on the right judgment
of the parents and it cannot in any way be left to the judgment
of public authority. But since the judgment of the parents presupposes
a rightly formed conscience, it is of the utmost importance that
the way be open for everyone to develop a correct and genuinely
human responsibility which respects the divine law and takes into
consideration the circumstances of the situation and the time.
But sometimes this requires an improvement in educational and
social conditions, and, above all, formation in religion or at
least a complete moral training. Men should discreetly be informed,
furthermore, of scientific advances in exploring methods whereby
spouses can be helped in regulating the number of their children
and whose safeness has been well proven and whose harmony with
the moral order has been ascertained.
88. Christians should cooperate willingly and wholeheartedly in
establishing an international order that includes a genuine respect
for all freedoms and amicable brotherhood between all. This is
all the more pressing since the greater part of the world is still
suffering from so much poverty that it is as if Christ Himself
were crying out in these poor to beg the charity of the disciples.
Do not let men, then, be scandalized because some countries with
a majority of citizens who are counted as Christians have an abundance
of wealth, whereas others are deprived of the necessities of life
and are tormented with hunger, disease, and every kind of misery.
The spirit of poverty and charity are the glory and witness of
the Church of Christ.
Those Christians are to be praised and supported, therefore, who
volunteer their services to help other men and nations. Indeed,
it is the duty of the whole People of God, following the word
and example of the bishops, to alleviate as far as they are able
the sufferings of the modern age. They should do this too, as
was the ancient custom in the Church, out of the substance of
their goods, and not only out of what is superfluous.
The procedure of collecting and distributing aids, without being
inflexible and completely uniform, should nevertheless be carried
on in an orderly fashion in dioceses, nations, and throughout
the entire world. Wherever it seems convenient, this activity
of Catholics should be carried on in unison with other Christian
brothers. For the spirit of charity does not forbid, but on the
contrary commands that charitable activity be carried out in a
careful and orderly manner. Therefore, it is essential for those
who intend to dedicate themselves to the services of the developing
nations to be properly trained in appropriate institutes,
89. Since, in virtue of her mission received from God, the Church
preaches the Gospel to all men and dispenses the treasures of
grace, she contributes to the ensuring of peace everywhere on
earth and to the placing of the fraternal exchange between men
on solid ground by imparting knowledge of the divine and natural
law. Therefore, to encourage and stimulate cooperation among men,
the Church must be clearly present in the midst of the community
of nations both through her official channels and through the
full and sincere collaboration of all Christians-a collaboration
motivated solely by the desire to be of service to all.
This will come about more effectively if the faithful themselves,
conscious of their responsibility as men and as Christians will
exert their influence in their own milieu to arouse a ready willingness
to cooperate with the international community. Special care must
be given, in both religious and civil education, to the formation
of youth in this regard.
90. An outstanding form of international activity on the part
of Christians is found in the joint efforts which, both as individuals
and in groups, they contribute to institutes already established
or to be established for the encouragement of cooperation among
nations. There are also various Catholic associations on an international
level which can contribute in many ways to the building up of
a peaceful and fraternal community of nations. These should be
strengthened by augmenting in them the number of well qualified
collaborators, by increasing needed resources, and by advantageously
fortifying the coordination of their energies. For today both
effective action and the need for dialogue demand joint projects.
Moreover, such associations contribute much to the development
of a universal outlook-something certainly appropriate for Catholics.
They also help to form an awareness of genuine universal solidarity
and responsibility.
Finally, it is very much to be desired that Catholics, in order
to fulfill their role properly in the international community,
will seek to cooperate actively and in a positive manner both
with their separated brothers who together with them profess the
Gospel of charity and with all men thirsting for true peace.
The council, considering the immensity of the hardships which
still afflict the greater part of mankind today, regards it as
most opportune that an organism of the universal Church be set
up in order that both the justice and love of Christ toward the
poor might be developed everywhere. The role of such an organism
would be to stimulate the Catholic community to promote progress
in needy regions and international social justice.
91. Drawn from the treasures of Church teaching, the proposals
of this sacred synod look to the assistance of every man of our
time, whether he believes in God, or does not explicitly recognize
Him. If adopted, they will promote among men a sharper insight
into their full destiny, and thereby lead them to fashion the
world more to man's surpassing dignity, to search for a brotherhood
which is universal and more deeply rooted, and to meet the urgencies
of our ages with a gallant and unified effort born of love.
Undeniably this conciliar program is but a general one in several
of its parts; and deliberately so, given the immense variety of
situations and forms of human culture in the world. Indeed while
it presents teaching already accepted in the Church, the program
will have to be followed up and amplified since it sometimes deals
with matters in a constant state of development. Still, we have
relied on the word of God and the spirit of the Gospel. Hence
we entertain the hope that many of our proposals will prove to
be of substantial benefit to everyone, especially after they have
been adapted to individual nations and mentalities by the faithful,
under the guidance of their pastors.
92. By virtue of her mission to shed on the whole world the radiance
of the Gospel message, and to unify under one Spirit all men of
whatever nation, race or culture, the Church stands forth as a
sign of that brotherhood which allows honest dialogue and gives
it vigor.
Such a mission requires in the first place that we foster within
the Church herself mutual esteem, reverence and harmony, through
the full recognition of lawful diversity. Thus all those who compose
the one People of God, both pastors and the general faithful,
can engage in dialogue with ever abounding fruitfulness. For the
bonds which unite the faithful are mightier than anything dividing
them. Hence, let there be unity in what is necessary; freedom
in what is unsettled, and charity in any case.
Our hearts embrace also those brothers and communities not yet
living with us in full communion; to them we are linked nonetheless
by our profession of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit,
and by the bond of charity. We do not forget that the unity of
Christians is today awaited and desired by many, too, who do not
believe in Christ; for the farther it advances toward truth and
love under the powerful impulse of the Holy Spirit, the more this
unity will be a harbinger of unity and peace for the world at
large. Therefore, by common effort and in ways which are today
increasingly appropriate for seeking this splendid goal effectively,
let us take pains to pattern ourselves after the Gospel more exactly
every day, and thus work as brothers in rendering service to the
human family. For, in Christ Jesus this family is called to the
family of the sons of God.
We think cordially too of all who acknowledge God, and who preserve
in their traditions precious elements of religion and humanity.
We want frank conversation to compel us all to receive the impulses
of the Spirit faithfully and to act on them energetically.
For our part, the desire for such dialogue, which can lead to
truth through love alone, excludes no one, though an appropriate
measure of prudence must undoubtedly be exercised. We include
those who cultivate outstanding qualities of the human spirit,
but do not yet acknowledge the Source of these qualities. We include
those who oppress the Church and harass her in manifold ways.
Since God the Father is the origin and purpose of all men, we
are all called to be brothers. Therefore, if we have been summoned
to the same destiny, human and divine, we can and we should work
together without violence and deceit in order to build up the
world in genuine peace.
93. Mindful of the Lord's saying: "by this will all men know
that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another"
(John 13:35), Christians cannot yearn for anything more ardently
than to serve the men of the modern world with mounting generosity
and success. Therefore, by holding faithfully to the Gospel and
benefiting from its resources, by joining with every man who loves
and practices justice, Christians have shouldered a gigantic task
for fulfillment in this world, a task concerning which they must
give a reckoning to to Him who will judge every man on the last
of days.
Not everyone who cries, "Lord, Lord," will enter into
the kingdom of heaven, but those who do the Father's will by taking
a strong grip on the work at hand. Now, the Father wills that
in all men we recognize Christ our brother and love Him effectively,
in word and in deed. By thus giving witness to the truth, we will
share with others the mystery of the heavenly Father's love. As
a consequence, men throughout the world will be aroused to a lively
hope-the gift of the Holy Spirit-that some day at last they will
be caught up in peace and utter happiness in that fatherland radiant
with the glory of the Lord.
Now to Him who is able to accomplish all things in a measure far
beyond what we ask or conceive, in keeping with the power that
is at work in us-to Him be glory in the Church and in Christ Jesus,
down through all the ages of time without end. Amen. (Eph. 3:20-21).
NOTES
Preface
1. The Pastoral Constitution "De Ecclesia in Mundo Huius
Temporis" is made up of two parts; yet it constitutes an
organic unity. By way of explanation: the constitution is called
"pastoral" because, while resting on doctrinal principles,
it seeks to express the relation of the Church to the world and
modern mankind. The result is that, on the one hand, a pastoral
slant is present in the first part, and, on the other hand, a
doctrinal slant is present in the second part. In the first part,
the Church develops her teaching on man, on the world which is
the enveloping context of man's existence, and on man's relations
to his fellow men. In part two, the Church gives closer consideration
to various aspects of modern life and human society; special consideration
is given to those questions and problems which, in this general
area, seem to have a greater urgency in our day. As a result in
part two the subject matter which is viewed in the light of doctrinal
principles is made up of diverse elements. Some elements have
a permanent value; others, only a transitory one. Consequently,
the constitution must be interpreted according to the general
norms of theological interpretation. Interpreters must bear in
mind-especially in part two-the changeable circumstances which
the subject matter, by its very nature, involves.
2. Cf. John 18:37; Matt. 20:28; Mark 10:45.
Introduction
1. Cf. Rom. 7:14 ff.
2. Cf. 2 Cor. 5:15.
3. Cf. Acts 4:12.
4. Cf. Heb. 13:8.
5. Cf. Col. 1:15.
PART I
Chapter I
1. Cf. Gen. 1:26, Wis. 2;23.
2. Cf. Sir. 17:3-10.
3. Cf. Rom. 1:21-25.
4. Cf. John 8:34.
5. Cf. Dan. 3:57-90.
6. Cf. 1 Cor. 6:13-20.
7. Cf. 1 Kings 16:7; Jer. 17:10.
8. Cf. Sir. 17:7-8.
9. Cf. Rom. 2:15-16.
10. Cf. Pius XII, radio address on the correct formation of a
Christian conscience in the young, March 23, 1952: AAS (1952),
p. 271.
11. Cf. Matt. 22:37-40; Gal. 5:14.
12. Cf. Sir. 15:14.
13 Cf. 2 Cor. 5:10.
14 Cf. Wis. 1:13; 2:23-24; Rom. 5:21; 6:23; Jas. 1:15.
15. Cf. 1 Cor. 15:56-57.
16. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Divini Redemptoris, March 19,
1937: AAS 29 (1937), pp. 65-106; Pius XII, encyclical letter Ad
Apostolorum Principis, June 29, 1958: AAS 50 (1958) pp. 601-614;
John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra May 15, 1961:
AAS 53 (1961), pp. 451-453; Paul VI, encyclical Ecclesiam Suam,
Aug. 6, 1964: AAS 56 (1964), pp. 651-653.
17. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Chapter I, n. 8: AAS 57 (1965), p. 12.
18 Cf. Phil. 1:27.
19. St. Augustine, Confessions I, 1: PL 32, 661.
20. Cf. Rom. 5: 14. Cf. Tertullian, De carnis resurrectione 6:
"The shape that the slime of the earth was given was intended
with a view to Christ, the future man.": P. 2, 282; CSEL
47, p. 33, 1. 12-13.
21. Cf. 2 Cor. 4:4.
22. Cf. Second Council of Constantinople, canon 7: "The divine
Word was not changed into a human nature, nor was a human nature
absorbed by the Word." Denzinger 219 (428); Cf. also Third
Council of Constantinople: "For just as His most holy and
immaculate human nature, though deified, was not destroyed (theotheisa
ouk anerethe), but rather remained in its proper state and mode
of being": Denzinger 291 (556); Cf. Council of Chalce, don:"
to be acknowledged in two natures, without confusion change, division,
or separation." Denzinger 148 (302).
23. Cf. Third Council of Constantinople: "and so His human
will, though deified, is not destroyed": Denzinger 291 (556).
24. Cf. Heb. 4:15.
25. Cf. 2 Cor. 5:18-19; Col. 1:2O-22.
26. Cf. 1 Pet. 2:21; Matt. 16:24; Luke 14:27.
27. Cf. Rom. 8:29; Col. 3:10-14.
28. Cf. Rom. 8:1-11.
29. Cf. 2 Cor. 4:14.
30. Cf. Phil. 3:19; Rom. 8:17.
31. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Chapter 2, n. 16: AAS 57 (1965), p. 20.
32. Cf. Rom. 8:32.
33. Cf. The Byzantine Easter Liturgy.
34. Cf. Rom. 8:15 and Gal. 4:6; cf. also John 1:22 and John 3:1-2.
Chapter 2
1. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter, Mater et Magistra, May 15,
1961: AAS 53 (1961), pp. 401-464, and encyclical letter Pacem
in Terris, April 11, 1963: AAS 55 (1963), pp. 257-304; Paul VI
encyclical letter Ecclesiam Suam, Aug. 6, 1964: AAS 54 (1864)
pp. 609-659.
2. Cf. Luke 17:33.
3. Cf. St. Thomas, 1 Ethica Lect. 1.
4. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961), p. 418. Cf. also Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo
Anno: AAS 23 (1931), p. 222 ff.
5. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961) .
6. Cf. Mark 2:27.
7. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55 (1963),
p. 266.
8. Cf. Jas. 2, 15-16.
9. Cf. Luke 16:18-31.
10. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55
(1963), p. 299 and 300.
11. Cf. Luke 6:37-38; Matt. 7:1-2; Rom. 2:1-11; 14:10 14: 10-12.
12. Cf. Matt. 5:43-47.
13. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter II, n. 9:
AAS 57 (1965). pp. 12-13.
14. Cf. Exodus 24:1-8.
Chapter 3
1. Cf. Gen. 1:26-27; 9:3; Wis. 9:3.
2. Cf. Ps. 8:7 and 10.
3. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55 (1963),
p. 297.
4. Cf. message to all mankind sent by the Fathers at the beginning
of the Second Vatican Council, Oct. 20, 1962: AAS 54 (1962), p.
823.
5. Cf. Paul VI, address to the diplomatic corps Jan 7 1965: AAS
57 (1965), p. 232.
6. Cf. First Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic
Faith, Chapter III: Denz. 1785-1186 (3004-3005).
7. Cf. Msgr. Pio Paschini, Vita e opere di Galileo Galilei, 2
volumes, Vatican Press (1964).
8. Cf. Matt. 24:13; 13:24-30 and 36-43.
9. Cf. 2 Cor. 6:10.
10. Cf. John 1:3 and 14.
11. Cf. Eph. 1:10.
12. Cf. John 3:16; Rom. 5:8.
13. Cf. Acts 2:36; Matt. 28:18.
14. Cf. Rom. 15:16.
15. Cf. Acts 1:7.
16. Cf. 1 Cor. 7:31; St. Irenaeus, Adversus haereses, V, 36, PG,
VIII, 1221.
17. Cf. 2 Cor. 5:2; 2 Pet. 3:13.
18. Cf. 1 Cor. 2:9; Apoc. 21:4-5.
19. Cf. 1 Cor. 15:42 and 53.
20. Cf. 1 Cor. 13:8; 3:14.
21. Cf. Rom. 8:19-21.
22. Cf. Luke 9:25.
23. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931),
p. 207.
24. Preface of the Feast of Christ the King.
Chapter 4
1. Cf. Paul VI, encyclical letter Ecclesiam suam, III: AAS 56
(1964), pp. 637-659.
2. Cf. Titus 3:4: "love of mankind."
3. Cf. Eph. 1:3; 5:6; 13-14, 23.
4. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
Chapter I, n. 8: AAS 57 (1965), p. 12.
5. Ibid., Chapter II, no. 9: AAS 57 (1965), p. 14; Cf. n. 8: AAS
loc. cit., p. 11.
6. Ibid., Chapter I, n. 8: AAS 57 (1965), p. 11.
7. Cf. ibid., Chapter IV, n. 38: AAS 57 (1965), p. 43, with note
120.
8. Cf. Rom. 8:14-17.
9. Cf. Matt. 22:39.
10. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter II, n. 9: AAS
57 (1965), pp. 12-14.
11. Cf. Pius XII, Address to the International Union of Institutes
of Archeology, History and History of Art, March 9, 1956: AAS
48 (1965), p. 212: "Its divine Founder, Jesus Christ, has
not given it any mandate or fixed any end of the cultural order.
The goal which Christ assigns to it is strictly religious. . .
The Church must lead men to God, in order that they may be given
over to him without reserve.... The Church can never lose sight
of the strictly religious, supernatural goal. The meaning of all
its activities, down to the last canon of its Code, can only cooperate
directly or indirectly in this goal."
12. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter I, n. 1: AAS
57 (1965), p. 5.
13. Cf. Heb. 13:14.
14. Cf. 2 Thess. 3:6-13; Eph. 4:28.
15 Cf. Is. 58: 1-12.
16 Cf. Matt. 23:3-23; Mark 7: 10-13.
17. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra, IV: AAS
53 (1961), pp. 456-457; cf. I: AAS loc. cit., pp. 407, 410-411.
18. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter III, n. 28:
AAS 57 (1965), p. 35.
19. Ibid., n. 28: AAS loc. cit. pp. 35-36.
20. Cf. St. Ambrose, De virginitate, Chapter VIII, n. 48: ML 16,
278.
21. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter II, n. 15:
AAS 57 (1965) p. 20.
22. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter II, n. 13:
AAS 57 (1965), p. 17.
23. Cf. Justin, Dialogus cum Tryphene, Chapter 110; MG 6, 729
(ed. Otto), 1897, pp. 391-393: ". . .but the greater the
number of persecutions which are inflicted upon us, so much the
greater the number of other men who become devout believers through
the name of Jesus." Cf. Tertullian, Apologeticus, Chapter
L, 13: "Every time you mow us down like grass, we increase
in number: the blood of Christians is a seed!" Cf. Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church, Chapter II, no. 9: AAS 57 (1965),
p. 14.
24. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter II n. 15:
AAS 57 (1965), p. 20.
25. Cf. Paul VI, address given on Feb. 3, 1965.
PART II
Chapter 1
1. Cf. St. Augustine, De Bene coniugali PL 40, 375-376 and 394,
St. Thomas, Summa Theologica, Suppl. Quaest. 49, art. 3 ad 1,
Decretum pro Armenis: Denz.-Schoen. 1327; Pius XI, encyclical
letter Casti Connubii: AAS 22 (1930, pp. 547-548; Denz.-Schoen.
3703-3714.
2. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Casti Connubii: AAS 22 (1930),
pp. 546-547; Denz.-Schoen. 3706.
3. Cf. Osee 2; Jer. 3:6-13; Ezech. 16 and 23; Is. 54.
4. Cf. Matt. 9: 15; Mark 2: 19-20; Luke 5:34-35; John 3:29; Cf.
also 2 Cor. 11:2; Eph. 5:27; Apoc. 19:7-8; 21:2 and 9.
5. Cf. Eph. 5:25.
6. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church:
AAS 57 (1965), pp. 15-16; 40-41; 47.
7. Pius XI, encyclical letter Casti Connubii: AAS 22 (1930), p.
583.
8. Cf. 1 Tim. 5:3.
9. Cf. Eph. 5:32.
10. Cf. Gen. 2:22-24, Prov. 5:15-20; 31:10-31; Tob. 8:4-8; Cant.
1:2-3; 1:16; 4:16-5, 1; 7:8-14; 1 Cor. 7:3-6; Eph 5:25-33.
11. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Casti Connubii: AAS 22 (1930),
p. 547 and 548; Denz.-Schoen. 3707.
12. Cf. 1 Cor. 7:5.
13. Cf. Pius XII, Address Tra le visite, Jan. 20, 1958: AAS 50
(1958), p. 91.
14. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Casti Connubii: AAS 22 (1930):
Denz.-Schoen. 3716-3718, Pius XII, Allocutio Conventui Unionis
Italicae inter Obstetrices, Oct. 29, 1951: AAS 43 (1951), pp.
835-854, Paul VI, address to a group of cardinals, June 23 1964:
AAS 56 (1964), pp. 581-589. Certain questions which need further
and more careful investigation have been handed over, at the command
of the Supreme Pontiff, to a commission for the study of population,
family, and births, in order that, after it fulfills its function,
the Supreme Pontiff may pass judgment. With the doctrine of the
magisterium in this state, this holy synod does not intend to
propose immediately concrete solutions.
15. Cf. Eph. 5:16; Col. 4:5.
16. Cf. Sacramentarium Gregorianum: PL 78, 262.
17. Cf. Rom. 5:15 and 18; 6:5-11; Gal. 2:20.
18. Cf. Eph. 5:25-27.
Chapter 2
1. Cf. Introductory statement of this constitution, n. 4 ff.
2. Cf. Col. 3:2.
3. Cf. Gen. 1:28.
4. Cf. Prov. 8:30-31.
5. Cf. St. Irenaeus, Adversus haereses. III, 11, 8 (ed. Sagnard
p. 200; cf. ibid., 16, 6: pp. 290-292; 21, 10-22: pp. 370-372;
22 3: p. 378; etc.)
6. Cf. Eph. 1:10.
7. Cf. the words of Pius XI to Father M. D. Roland-Gosselin "It
is necessary never to lose sight of the fact that the objective
of the Church is to evangelize, not to civilize. If it civilizes,
it is for the sake of evangelization." (Semaines sociales
de France, Versailles, 1936, pp. 461-462).
8. First Vatican Council, Constitution on the Catholic Faith:
Denzinger 1795, 1799 (3015, 3019). Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter
Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931), p. 190.
9. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55 (1963),
p. 260.
10. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55
(1963), p. 283; Pius XII, radio address, Dec. 24, 1941: AAS 34
(1942), pp. 16-17.
11. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55 (1963),
p. 260.
12. Cf. John XXIII, prayer delivered on Oct. 11, 1962, at the
beginning of the council: AAS 54 (1962), p. 792.
13. Cf. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, n. 123: AAS 56 (1964),
p. 131; Paul VI, discourse to the artists of Rome: AAS 56 (1964),
pp. 439-442.
14. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree on Priestly Training and
Declaration on Christian Education.
15. Cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter IV, n. 37:
AAS 57 (1965), pp. 42-43.
Chapter 3
1. Cf. Pius XII, address on March 23, 1952: AAS 44 (1953), p.
273; John XXIII, allocution to the Catholic Association of Italian
Workers, May 1, 1959: AAS 51 (1959), p. 358.
2. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931),
p. 190 ff; Pius XII, address of March 23, 1952: AAS 44 (1952),
p. 276 ff; John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS
53 (19ffl), p. 450; Vatican Council II, Decree on the Media of
Social Communication, Chapter I, n. 6 AAS 56 (1964), p. 147.
3. Cf. Matt. 16:26, Luke 16:1-31, Col. 3:17.
4. Cf. Leo XIII, encyclical letter Libertas, in Acta Leonis XIII,
t. VIII, p. 220 ff; Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno:
AAS 23 (1931), p. 191 ff; Pius XI, encyclical letter Divini Redemptoris:
AAS 39 (1937), p. 65 ff; Pius XII, Nuntius natalicius 1941: AAS
34 (1942), p. 10 ff: John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra:
AAS 53 (1961), pp. 401-464.
5. In reference to agricultural problems cf. especially John XXIII,
encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53 (1961),
6. Cf. Leo XIII, encyclical letter Rerum Novarum: AAS 23 (1890-91),
p. 649, p. 662; Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno:
AAS 23 (193-1), pp. 200-201; Pius XI, encyclical letter Divini
Redemptoris: AAS 29 (1937), p. 92; Pius XII, radio address on
Christmas Eve 1942: AAS 35 (1943) p. 20; Pius XII, allocution
of June 13, 1943: AAS 35 (1943), p. 172; Pius XII, radio address
to the workers of Spain, March 11, 1951: AAS 43 (1951), p. 215;
John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53 (1961),
p. 419.
7. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961), pp. 408, 424, 427; however, the word "curatione"
has been taken from the Latin text of the encyclical letter Quadragesimo
Anno: AAS 23 (1931) p. 199. Under the aspect of the evolution
of the question cf. also: Pius XII, allocution of June 3, 1950:
AAS 42 (1950) pp. 485-488; Paul VI, allocution of June 8, 1964:
AAS 56 (1964), pp. 573-579.
8. Cf. Pius XII, encyclical Sertum Laetitiae: AAS 31 (1939), p.
642, John XXIII, consistorial allocution: AAS 52 (1960), pp. 5-11;
John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53 (1961),
p. 411.
9. Cf. St. Thomas, Summa Theologica: II-II, q. 32, a. 5 ad 2;
Ibid. q. 66, a. 2: cf. explanation in Leo XIII, encyclical letter
Rerum Novarum: AAS 23 (1890-91) p. 651; cf. also Pius XII allocution
of June 1, 1941: AAS 33 (1941), p. 199; Pius XII, birthday radio
address 1954: AAS 47 (1955), p. 27.
10. Cf. St. Basil, Hom. in illud Lucae "Destruam horrea mea,"
n. 2 (PG 31, 263); Lactantius, Divinarum institutionum, lib. V.
on justice (PL 6, 565 B); St. Augustine, In Ioann. Ev. tr. 50,
n. 6 (PL 35, 1760); St. Augustine, Enarratio in Ps. CXLVII, 12
(PL 37, 192); St. Gregory the Great, Homiliae in Ev., hom. 20
(PL 76, 1165); St. Gregory the Great, Regulae Pastoralis liber,
pars III c. 21 (PL 77 87); St. Bonaventure, In III Sent. d. 33,
dub. 1 (ed Quacracchi, III, 728); St. Bonaventure, In IV Sent.
d. 15, p. II, a. a q. 1 (ed. cit. IV, 371 b ); q. de superfluo
(ms. Assisi Bibl. Comun. 186, ff. 112a-113a); St. Albert the Great,
In III Sent., d. 33, a.3, sol. 1 (ed. Borgnet XXVIII, 611); Id.
In IV Sent. d. 15, a. 1 (ed. cit. XXIX, 494-497). As for the determination
of what is superfluous in our day and age, cf. John XXIII, radio-television
message of Sept. 11, 1962: AAS 54 (1962) p. 682: "The obligation
of every man, the urgent obligation of the Christian man, is to
reckon what is superfluous by the measure of the needs of others,
and to see to it that the administration and the distribution
of created goods serve the common good."
11. In that case, the old principle holds true: "In extreme
necessity all goods are common, that is, all goods are to be shared."
On the other hand, for the order, extension, and manner by which
the principle is appplied in the proposed text, besides the modern
authors: cf. St. Thomas, Summa Theologica II-II, q. 66, a. 7.
obviously, for the correct application of the principle, all the
conditions that are morally required must be met.
12. Cf. Gratiam, Decretum, C. 21, dist. LXXXVI (ed. Friedberg
I, 302). This axiom is also found already in PL 54, 591 A (cf.
in Antonianum 27 (1952) 349-366)i.
13. Cf. Leo XIII, encyclical letter Rerum Novarum: AAS 23 (1890-91)
pp. 643-646, Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno: AAS
23 (1931) p. 191; Pius XII, radio message of June 1, 1941: AAS
33 (1941), p. 199; Pius XII, radio message on Christmas Eve 1942:
AAS 35 (1943), p. 17; Pius XII, radio message of Sept. 1, 1944:
AAS 36 (1944) p. 253; John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra:
AAS 53 (1961) pp. 428-429.
14. Cf. Pius XI, encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno: AAS 23 (1931)
p. 214; John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961), p. 429.
15. Cf. Pius XII, radio message of Pentecost 1941: AAS 44 (1941)
p. 199, John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961) p. 430.
16. For the right use of goods according to the doctrine of the
New Testament, cf. Luke 3:11, 10:30 ff; 11:41; 1 Pet. 5:3, Mark
8:36; 12:39-41; Jas. 5:1-6; 1 Tim. 6:8; Eph. 1:28; a Cor. 8:13;
1 John 3:17 ff.
Chapter 4
1. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961), p. 417.
2. Cf. John XXIII, ibid.
3. Cf. Rom. 13:1-5.
4. Cf. Rom. 13:5.
5. Cf. Pius XII, radio message, Dec. 24, 1942: AAS 35 (1943) pp.
9-24; Dec. 24, 1944: AAS 37 (1945), pp. 11-17; John XXIII encyclical
letter Pacem In Terris: AAS 55 (1963), pp. 263, 271 277 and 278.
6. Cf. Pius XII, radio message of June 7, 1941: AAS 33 (1941)
p. 200: John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem In Terris: 1.c., p.
273 and 274.
7. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53
(1961), p. 416.
8. Pius XI, allocution "Ai dirigenti della Federazione Universitaria
Cattolica". Discorsi di Pio XI (ed. Bertetto), Turin, vol.
1 (1960), p. 743.
9. Cf. Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church,
n. 13: AAS 57 (1965), p. 17.
10. Cf. Luke 2:14.
Chapter 5
1. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris, April 11,
1963: AAS 55 (1963), p. 291; "Therefore in this age of ours
which prides itself on its atomic power, it is irrational to believe
that war is still an apt means of vindicating violated rights."
2. Cf. Pius XII, allocution of Sept. 30, 1954: AAS 46 (1954) p.
589; radio message of Dec. 24, 1954: AAS 47 (1955), pp. 15 ff,
John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris: AAS 55 (1963),
pp. 286-291; Paul VI, allocution to the United Nations, Oct. 4,
1965.
3. Cf. John XXIII, encyclical letter Pacem in Terris, where reduction
of arms is mentioned: AAS 55 (1963), p. 287.
4. Cf. 2 Cor. 2:6.