JUSTICE
IN THE WORLD
Names action for justice as a constituent part of being a Christian. Calls the church to model the justice she preaches |
Issues 1. Injustices are building a network of domination, oppression and abuse around the world. 2. The influence of the new industrial and technological order favors the concentration of wealth, power and decision-making in the hands of a small public or private group. 3. The arms race threatens humanity's greatest good which is life. 4. The richer nations' consumption rates increase. 5. More people are being marginalized by rapid population growth, lack of agrarian reform, migration to the cities without employment and services. 6. The situation of injustice calls the church to speak out. 7. Natural resources and the treasures of air and water belong to all mankind [sic] and are not infinite. |
Responses 1. Support ratification of and adherence to the UN Declaration of Human Rights by all nations. 2. Recognize that the right to development includes both economic growth and economic and political participation by the people. 3. Support international bodies to restrain the arms race and trade and to settle conflicts. 4. Proclaim, educate and witness to justice at all levels and recognize individual and social sin. 5. Foster the work of UN agencies and other multilateral entities. 6. Model justice in church policies and lifestyle so as to be credible in preaching justice. 7. Rich nations are bound to accept a less material way of life, with less waste, in order to avoid the destruction of the heritage which they are obliged by absolute justice to share with all other members of the human race. |
JUSTICE
IN THE WORLD
Introduction
1. Gathered from the whole world, in communion with all who believe
in Christ and with the entire human family, and opening our hearts
to the Spirit who is the whole of creation new, we have questioned
ourselves about the mission of the People of God to further justice
in the world.
2. Scrutinizing the "signs of the times" and seeking
to detect the meaning of emerging history, while at the same time
sharing the aspirations and questionings of all those who want
to build a more human world, we have listened to the Word of God
that we might be converted to the fulfilling of the divine plan
for the salvation of the world.
3. Even though it is not for us to elaborate a very profound analysis
of the situation of the world, we have nevertheless been able
to perceive the serious injustices which are building around the
human world a network of domination, oppression and abuses which
stifle freedom and which keep the greater part of humanity from
sharing in the building up and enjoyment of a more just and more
loving world.
4. At the same time we have noted the inmost stirring moving the
world in its depths. There are facts constituting a contribution
to the furthering of justice. In associations of people and among
peoples themselves there is arising a new awareness which shakes
them out of any fatalistic resignation and which spurs them on
to liberate themselves and to be responsible for their own destiny.
Movements among people are seen which express hope in a better
world and a will to change whatever has become intolerable.
5. Listening to the cry of those who suffer violence and are oppressed
by unjust systems and structures, and hearing the appeal of a
world that by its perversity contradicts the plan of its Creator,
we have shared our awareness of the Church's vocation to be present
in the heart of the world by proclaiming the Good News to the
poor, freedom to the oppressed, and joy to the afflicted. The
hopes and forces which are moving the world in its very foundations
are not foreign to the dynamism of the Gospel, which through the
power of the Holy Spirit frees people from personal sin and from
its consequences in social life.
6. The uncertainty of history and the painful convergences in
the ascending path of the human community direct us to sacred
history; there God has revealed himself to us, and made known
to us, as it is brought progressively to realization, his plan
of liberation and salvation which is once and for all fulfilled
in the Paschal Mystery of Christ. Action on behalf of justice
and participation in the transformation of the world fully appear
to us as a constitutive dimension of the preaching of the Gospel,
or, in other words, of the Church's mission for the redemption
of the human race and its liberation from every oppressive situation.
Justice and World Society
7. The world in which the Church lives and acts is held captive
by a tremendous paradox. Never before have the forces working
for bringing about a unified world society appeared so powerful
and dynamic; they are rooted in the awareness of the full basic
equality as well as of the human dignity of all. Since people
are members of the same human family, they are indissolubly linked
with one another in the one destiny of the whole world, in the
responsibility for which they all share.
8. The new technological possibilities are based upon the unity
of science, on the global and simultaneous character of communications
and on the birth of an absolutely interdependent economic world.
Moreover, people are beginning to grasp a new and more radical
dimension of unity; for they perceive that their resources, as
well as the precious treasures of air and water--without which
there cannot be life-- and the small delicate biosphere of the
whole complex of all life on earth, are not infinite, but on the
contrary must be saved and preserved as a unique patrimony belonging
to all human beings.
9. The paradox lies in the fact that within this perspective of
unity the forces of division and antagonism seem today to be increasing
in strength. Ancient divisions between nations and empires, between
races and classes, today possess new technological instruments
of destruction. The arms race is a threat to our highest good,
which is life; it makes poor peoples and individuals yet more
miserable, while making richer those already powerful; it creates
a continuous danger of conflagration, and in the case of nuclear
arms, it threatens to destroy all life from the face of the earth.
At the same time new divisions are being born to separate people
from their neighbors. Unless combated and overcome by social and
political action, the influence of the new industrial and technological
order favors the concentration of wealth, power and decision-making
in the hands of a small public or private controlling group. Economic
injustice and lack of social participation keep people from attaining
their basic human ant civil rights.
10. In the last twenty-five years a hope has spread through the
human race that economic growth would bring about such a quantity
of goods that it would be possible to feed the hungry at least
with the crumbs falling from the table, but this has proved a
vain hope in underdeveloped areas and in pockets of poverty in
wealthier areas, because of the rapid growth of population and
of the labor force, because of rural stagnation and the lack of
agrarian reform, and because of the massive migratory flow to
the cities, where the industries, even though endowed with huge
sums of money, nevertheless provide so few jobs that not infrequently
one worker in four is left unemployed. These stifling oppressions
constantly give rise to great numbers of "marginal"
persons, ill-fed, inhumanly housed, illiterate and deprived of
political power as well as of the suitable means of acquiring
responsibility and moral dignity.
11. Furthermore, such is the demand for resources and energy by
the richer nations, whether capitalist or socialist, and such
are the effects of dumping by them in the atmosphere and the sea
that irreparable damage would be done to the essential elements
of life on earth, such as air and water, if their high rates of
consumption and pollution, which are constantly on the increase,
were extended to the whole of humanity.
12. The strong drive towards global unity, the unequal distribution
which places decisions concerning three quarters of income, investment
and trade in the hands of one third of the human race, namely
the more highly developed part, the insufficiency of a merely
economic progress, and the new recognition of the material limits
of the biosphere--all this makes us aware of the fact that in
today's world new modes of understanding human dignity are arising.
13. In the face of international systems of domination, the bringing
about of justice depends more and more on the determined will
for development.
14. In the developing nations and in the so-called socialist world,
that determined will asserts itself especially in a struggle for
forms of claiming one's rights and self-expression, a struggle
caused by the evolution of the economic system itself.
15. This aspiring to justice asserts itself in advancing beyond
the threshold at which begins a consciousness of enhancement of
personal worth (cf. Populorum Progressio 15; A.A.S. 59, 1967,
p. 265) with regard both to the whole person and the whole of
humanity. This is expressed in an awareness of the right to development.
The right to development must be seen as a dynamic interpenetration
of all those fundamental human rights upon which the aspirations
of individuals and nations are based.
16. This desire however will not satisfy the expectations of our
time if it ignores the objective obstacles which social structures
place in the way of conversion of hearts, or even of the realization
of the ideal of charity. It demands on the contrary that the general
condition of being marginal in society be overcome, so that an
end will be put to the systematic barriers and vicious circles
which oppose the collective advance towards enjoyment of adequate
remuneration of the factors of production, and which strengthen
the situation of discrimination with regard to access to opportunities
and collective services from which a great part of the people
are now excluded. If the developing nations and regions do not
attain liberation through development, there is a real danger
that the conditions of life created especially by colonial domination
may evolve into a new form of colonialism in which the developing
nations will be the victims of the interplay of international
economic forces. That right to development is above all a right
to hope according to the concrete measure of contemporary humanity.
To respond to such a hope, the concept of evolution must be purified
of those myths and false convictions which have up to now gone
with a thought-pattern subject to a kind of deterministic and
automatic notion of progress.
17. By taking their future into their own hands through a determined
will for progress, the developing peoples--even if they do not
achieve the final goal--will authentically manifest their own
personalization. And in order that they may cope with the unequal
relationships within the present world complex, a certain responsible
nationalism gives them the impetus needed to acquire an identity
of their own. From this basic self-determination can come attempts
at putting together new political groupings allowing full development
to these peoples; there can also come measures necessary for overcoming
the inertia which could render fruitless such an effort--as in
some cases population pressure; there can also come new sacrifices
which the growth of planning demands of a generation which wants
to build its own future.
18. On the other hand, it is impossible to conceive true progress
without recognizing the necessity--within the political system
chosen--of a development composed both of economic growth and
participation; and the necessity too of an increase in wealth
implying as well social progress by the entire community as it
overcomes regional imbalance and islands of prosperity. Participation
constitutes a right which is to be applied both in the economic
and in the social and political field.
19. While we again affirm the right of people to keep their own
identity, we see ever more clearly that the fight against a modernization
destructive of the proper characteristics of nations remains quite
ineffective as long as it appeals only to sacred historical customs
and venerable ways of life. If modernization is accepted with
the intention that it serve the good of the nation, people will
be able to create a culture which will constitute a true heritage
of their own in the manner of a true social memory, one which
is active and formative of authentic creative personality in the
assembly of nations.
20. We see in the world a set of injustices which constitute the
nucleus of today's problems and whose solution requires the undertaking
of tasks and functions in every sector of society, and even on
the level of the global society towards which we are speeding
in this last quarter of the twentieth century. Therefore we must
be prepared to take on new functions and new duties in every sector
of human activity and especially in the sector of world society,
if justice is really to be put into practice. Our action is to
be directed above all at those people and nations which because
of various forms of oppression and because of the present character
of our society are silent, indeed voiceless, victims of injustice.
21. Take, for example, the case of migrants. They are often forced
to leave their own country to find work, but frequently find the
doors closed in their faces because of discriminatory attitudes,
or, if they can enter, they are often obliged to lead an insecure
life or are treated in an inhuman manner. The same is true of
groups that are less well off on the social ladder such as workers
and especially farm workers who play a very great part in the
process of development.
22. To be especially lamented is the condition of so many millions
of refugees, and of every group or people suffering persecution--sometimes
in institutionalized form--for racial or ethnic origin or on tribal
grounds. This persecution on tribal grounds can at times take
on the characteristics of genocide.
23. In many areas justice is seriously injured with regard to
people who are suffering persecution for their faith, or who are
in many ways being ceaselessly subjected by political parties
and public authorities to an action of oppressive atheization,
or who are deprived of religious liberty either by being kept
from honoring God in public worship, or by being prevented from
publicly teaching and spreading their faith, or by being prohibited
from conducting their temporal affairs according to the principles
of their religion.
24. Justice is also being violated by forms of oppression, both
old and new, springing from restriction of the rights of individuals.
This is occurring both in the form of repression by the political
power and of violence on the part of private reaction, and can
reach the extreme of affecting the basic conditions of personal
integrity. There are well known cases of torture, especially of
political prisoners, who besides are frequently denied due process
or who are subjected to arbitrary procedures in their trial. Nor
can we pass over the prisoners of war who even after the Geneva
Convention are being treated in an inhuman manner.
25. The fight against legalized abortion and against the imposition
of contraceptives and the pressures exerted against war are significant
forms of defending the right to life.
26. Furthermore, contemporary consciousness demands truth in the
communications systems, including the right to the image offered
by the media and the opportunity to correct its manipulation.
It must be stressed that the right, especially that of children
and the young, to education and to morally correct conditions
of life and communications media is once again being threatened
in our days. The activity of families in social life is rarely
and insufficiently recognized by State institutions. Nor should
we forget the growing number of persons who are often abandoned
by their families and by the community: the old, orphans, the
sick and all kinds of people who are rejected.
27. To obtain true unity of purpose, as is demanded by the world
society of human beings, a mediatory role is essential to overcome
day by day the opposition, obstacles and ingrained privileges
which are to be met with in the advance towards a more human society.
28. But effective mediation involves the creation of a lasting
atmosphere of dialogue. A contribution to the progressive realization
of this can be made by people unhampered by geopolitical, ideological
or socioeconomic conditions or by the generation gap. To restore
the meaning of life by adherence to authentic values, the participation
and witness of the rising generation of youth is as necessary
as communication among peoples.
The Gospel Message and the Mission of the Church
29. In the face of the present-day situation of the world, marked
as it is by the grave sin of injustice, we recognize both our
responsibility and our inability to overcome it by our own strength.
Such a situation urges us to listen with a humble and open heart
to the word of God, as he shows us new paths towards action in
the cause of justice in the world.
30. In the Old Testament God reveals himself to us as the liberator
of the oppressed and the defender of the poor, demanding from
people faith in him and justice towards one's neighbor. It is
only in the observance of the duties of justice that God is truly
recognized as the liberator of the oppressed.
31. By his action and teaching Christ united in an indivisible
way the relationship of people to God and the relationship of
people to each other. Christ lived his life in the world as a
total giving of himself to God for the salvation and liberation
of people. In his preaching he proclaimed the fatherhood of God
towards all people and the intervention of God's justice on behalf
of the needy and the oppressed (Lk 6: 21-23). In this way he identified
himself with his "least ones," as he stated: "As
you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my
family, you did it to me" (Mt 25:40).
32. From the beginning the Church has lived and understood the
Death and Resurrection of Christ as a call by God to conversion
in the faith of Christ and in love of one another, perfected in
mutual help even to the point of a voluntary sharing of material
goods.
33. Faith in Christ, the Son of God and the Redeemer, and love
of neighbor constitute a fundamental theme of the writers of the
New Testament. According to St. Paul, the whole of the Christian
life is summed up in faith effecting that love and service of
neighbor which involve the fulfilment of the demands of justice.
The Christian lives under the interior law of liberty, which is
a permanent call to us to turn away from self-sufficiency to confidence
in God and from concern for self to a sincere love of neighbor.
Thus takes place his genuine liberation and the gift of himself
for the freedom of others.
34. According to the Christian message, therefore, out relationship
to our neighbor is bound up with our relationship to God; our
response to the love of God, saving us through Christ, is shown
to be effective in his love and service of people. Christian love
of neighbor and justice cannot be separated. For love implies
an absolute demand for justice, namely a recognition of the dignity
and rights of one's neighbor. Justice attains its inner fullness
only in love. Because every person is truly a visible image of
the invisible God and a sibling of Christ, the Christian finds
in every person God himself and God's absolute demand for justice
and love.
35. The present situation of the world, seen in the light of faith,
calls us back to the very essence of the Christian message, creating
in us a deep awareness of its true meaning and of its urgent demands.
The mission of preaching the Gospel dictates at the present time
that we should dedicate ourselves to the liberation of people
even in their present existence in this world. For unless the
Christian message of love and justice shows its effectiveness
through action in the cause of justice in the world, it will only
with difficulty gain credibility with the people of our times.
36. The Church has received from Christ the mission of preaching
the Gospel message, which contains a call to people to turn away
from sin to the love of the Father, universal kinship and a consequent
demand for justice in the world. This is the reason why the Church
has the right, indeed the duty, to proclaim justice on the social,
national and international level, and to denounce instances of
injustice, when the fundamental rights of people and their very
salvation demand it. The Church, indeed, is not alone responsible
for justice in the world; however, she has a proper and specific
responsibility which is identified with her mission of giving
witness before the world of the need for love and justice contained
in the Gospel message, a witness to be carried out in Church institutions
themselves and in the lives of Christians.
37. Of itself it does not belong to the Church, insofar as she
is a religious and hierarchical community, to offer concrete solutions
in the social, economic and political spheres for justice in the
world. Her mission involves defending and promoting the dignity
and fundamental rights of the human person.
38. The members of the Church, as members of society, have the
same right and duty to promote the common good as do other citizens.
Christians ought to fulfil their temporal obligations with fidelity
and competence. They should act as a leaven in the world, in their
family, professional, social, cultural and political life. They
must accept their responsibilities in this entire area under the
influence of the Gospel and the teaching of the Church. In this
way they testify to the power of the Holy Spirit through their
action in the service of people in those things which are decisive
for the existence and the future of humanity. While in such activities
they generally act on their own initiative without involving the
responsibility of the ecclesiastical hierarchy, in a sense they
do involve the responsibility of the Church whose members they
are.
The Practice of Justice
39. Many Christians are drawn to give authentic witness on behalf
of justice by various modes of action for justice, action inspired
by love in accordance with the grace which they have received
from God. For some of them, this action finds its place in the
sphere of social and political conflicts in which Christians bear
witness to the Gospel by pointing out that in history there are
sources of progress other than conflict, namely love and right.
This priority of love in history draws other Christians to prefer
the way of non-violent action and work in the area of public opinion.
40. While the Church is bound to give witness to justice, she
recognizes that anyone who ventures to speak to people about justice
must first be just in their eyes. Hence we must undertake an examination
of the modes of acting and of the possessions and life style found
within the Church herself.
41. Within the Church rights must be preserved. No one should
be deprived of his ordinary rights because he is associated with
the Church in one way or another. Those who serve the Church by
their labor, including priests and religious, should receive a
sufficient livelihood and enjoy that social security which is
customary in their region. Lay people should be given fair wages
and a system for promotion. We reiterate the recommendations that
lay people should exercise more important functions with regard
to Church property and should share in its administration.
42. We also urge that women should have their own share of responsibility
and participation in the community life of society and likewise
of the Church.
43. We propose that this matter be subjected to a serious study
employing adequate means: for instance, a mixed commission of
men and women, religious and lay people, of differing situations
and competence.
44. The Church recognizes everyone's right to suitable freedom
of expression and thought. This includes the right of everyone
to be heard in a spirit of dialogue which preserves a legitimate
diversity within the Church.
45. The form of judicial procedure should give the accused the
right to know his accusers and also the right to a proper defense.
To be complete, justice should include speed in its procedure.
This is especially necessary in marriage cases.
46. Finally, the members of the Church should have some share
in the drawing up of decisions, in accordance with the rules given
by the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council and the Holy See, for
instance with regard to the setting up of councils at all levels.
47. In regard to temporal possessions, whatever be their use,
it must never happen that the evangelical witness which the Church
is required to give becomes ambiguous. The preservation of certain
positions of privilege must constantly be submitted to the test
of this principle. Although in general it is difficult to draw
a line between what is needed for right use and what is demanded
by prophetic witness, we must certainly keep firmly to this principle:
our faith demands of us a certain sparingness in use, and the
Church is obliged to live and administer its own goods in such
a way that the Gospel is proclaimed to the poor. If instead the
Church appears to be among the rich and the powerful of this world
its credibility is diminished.
48. Our examination of conscience now comes to the life style
of all: bishops, priests, religious and lay people. In the case
of needy peoples it must be asked whether belonging to the Church
places people on a rich island within an ambient of poverty. In
societies enjoying a higher level of consumer spending, it must
be asked whether our life style exemplifies that sparingness with
regard to consumption which we preach to others as necessary in
order that so many millions of hungry people throughout the world
may be fed.
49. Christians' specific contribution to justice is the day-to-day
life of individual believers acting like the leaven of the Gospel
in their family, their school, their work and their social and
civic life. Included with this are the perspectives and meaning
which the faithful can give to human effort. Accordingly, educational
method must be such as to teach people to live their lives in
its entire reality and in accord with the evangelical principles
of personal and social morality which are expressed in the vital
Christian witness of one's life.
50. The obstacles to the progress which we wish for ourselves
and for humankind are obvious. The method of education very frequently
still in use today encourages narrow individualism. Part of the
human family lives immersed in a mentality which exalts possessions.
The school and the communications media, which are often obstructed
by the established order, allow the formation only of people desired
by that order, that is to say, people in its image, not new people
but a copy of people as they are.
51. But education demands a renewal of heart, a renewal based
on the recognition of sin in its individual and social manifestations.
It will also inculcate a truly and entirely human way of life
in justice, love and simplicity. It will likewise awaken a critical
sense, which will lead us to reflect on the society in which we
live and on its values; it will make people ready to renounce
these values when they cease to promote justice for all people.
In the developing countries, the principal aim of this education
for justice consists in an attempt to awaken consciences to a
knowledge of the concrete situation and in a call to secure a
total improvement; by these means the transformation of the world
has already begun.
52. Since this education makes people decidedly more human, it
will help them to be no longer the object of manipulation by communications
media or political forces. It will instead enable them to take
in hand their own destinies and bring about communities which
are truly human.
53. Accordingly, this education is deservedly called a continuing
education, for it concerns every person and every age. It is also
a practical education: it comes through action, participation
and vital contact with the reality of injustice.
54. Education for justice is imparted first in the family. We
are well aware that not only Church institutions but also other
schools, trade unions and political parties are collaborating
in this.
55. The content of this education necessarily involves respect
for the person and for his or her dignity. Since it is world justice
which is in question here, the unity of the human family within
which, according to God's plan, a human being is born must first
of all be seriously affirmed. Christians find a sign of this solidarity
in the fact that all human beings are destined to become in Christ
sharers in the divine nature.
56. The basic principles whereby the influence of the Gospel has
made itself felt in contemporary social life are to be found in
the body of teaching set out in a gradual and timely way from
the encyclical Rerum Novarum to the letter Octogesima Adveniens.
As never before, the Church has, through the Second Vatican Council's
constitution Gaudium et Spes, better understood the situation
in the modern world, in which Christian works out their salvation
by deeds of justice. Pacem in Terris gave us an authentic charter
of human rights. In Mater et Magistra international justice begins
to take first place; it finds more elaborate expression in Populorum
Progressio, in the form of a true and suitable treatise on the
right to development, and in Octogesima Adveniens is found a summary
of guidelines for political action.
57. Like the apostle Paul, we insist, welcome or unwelcome, that
the Word of God should be present in the center of human situations.
Our interventions are intended to be an expression of that faith
which is today binding on our lives and on the lives of the faithful.
We all desire that these interventions should always be in conformity
with circumstances of place and time. Our mission demands that
we should courageously denounce injustice, with charity, prudence
and firmness, in sincere dialogue with all parties concerned.
We know that our denunciations can secure assent to the extent
that they are an expression of our lives and are manifested in
continuous action.
58. The liturgy, which we preside over and which is the heart
of the Church's life, can greatly serve education for justice.
For it is a thanksgiving to the Father in Christ, which through
its communitarian form places before our eyes the bonds of our
brotherhood and again and again reminds us of the Church's mission.
The liturgy of the word, catechesis and the celebration of the
sacraments have the power to help us to discover the teaching
of the prophets, the Lord and the Apostles on the subject of justice.
The preparation for baptism is the beginning of the formation
of the Christian conscience. The practice of penance should emphasize
the social dimension of sin and of the sacrament. Finally, the
Eucharist forms the community and places it at the service of
people.
59. That the Church may really be the sign of that solidarity
which the family of nations desires, it should show in its own
life greater cooperation between the Churches of rich and poor
regions through spiritual communion and division of human and
material resources. The present generous arrangements for assistance
between Churches could be made more effective by real coordination
(Sacred Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples and the
Pontifical Council "Cor Unum"), through their overall
view in regard to the common administration of the gifts of God,
and through social solidarity, which would always encourage autonomy
and responsibility on the part of the beneficiaries in the determination
of criteria and the choice of concrete programs and their realization.
60. This planning must in no way be restricted to economic programs;
it should instead stimulate activities capable of developing that
human and spiritual formation which will serve as the leaven needed
for the integral development of the human being.
61. Well aware of what has already been done in this field, together
with the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council we very highly commend
cooperation with our separated Christian brethren for the promotion
of justice in the world, for bringing about development of peoples
and for establishing peace. This cooperation concerns first and
foremost activities for securing human dignity and people's fundamental
rights, especially the right to religious liberty. This is the
source of our common efforts against discrimination on the grounds
of differences of religion, race and color, culture and the like.
Collaboration extends also to the study of the teaching of the
Gospel insofar as it is the source of inspiration for all Christian
activity. Let the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity and
the Pontifical Commission Justice and Peace devote themselves
in common counsel to developing effectively this ecumenical collaboration.
62. In the same spirit we likewise commend collaboration with
all believers in God in the fostering of social justice, peace
and freedom; indeed we commend collaboration also with those who,
even though they do not recognize the Author of the world, nevertheless,
in their esteem for human values, seek justice sincerely and by
honorable means.
63. Since the Synod is of a universal character, it is dealing
with those questions of justice which directly concern the entire
human family. Hence, recognizing the importance of international
cooperation for social and economic development, we praise above
all else the inestimable work which has been done among the poorer
peoples by the local Churches, the missionaries and the organizations
supporting them; and we intend to foster those initiatives and
institutions which are working for peace, international justice
and the development of people. We therefore urge Catholics to
consider well the following propositions:64. (1) Let recognition
be given to the fact that international order is rooted in the
inalienable rights and dignity of the human being. Let the United
Nations Declaration of Human Rights be ratified by all Governments
who have not yet adhered to it, and let it be fully observed by
all.
65. (2) Let the United Nations -- which because of its unique
purpose should promote participation by all nations -- and international
organizations be supported insofar as they are the beginning of
a system capable of restraining the armaments race, discouraging
trade in weapons, securing disarmament and settling conflicts
by peaceful methods of legal action, arbitration and international
police action. It is absolutely necessary that international conflicts
should not be settled by war, but that other methods better befitting
human nature should be found. Let a strategy of non-violence be
fostered also, and let conscientious objection be recognized and
regulated by law in each nation.
66. (3) Let the aims of the Second Development Decade be fostered.
These include the transfer of a precise percentage of the annual
income of the richer countries to the developing nations, fairer
prices for raw materials, the opening of the markets of the richer
nations and, in some fields, preferential treatment for exports
of manufactured goods from the developing nations. These aims
represent first guidelines for a graduated taxation of income
as well as for an economic and social plan for the entire world.
We grieve whenever richer nations turn their backs on this ideal
goal of worldwide sharing and responsibility. We hope that no
such weakening of international solidarity will take away their
force from the trade discussions being prepared by the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
67. (4) The concentration of power which consists in almost total
domination of economics, research, investment, freight charges,
sea transport and securities should be progressively balanced
by institutional arrangements for strengthening power and opportunities
with regard to responsible decision by the developing nations
and by full and equal participation in international organizations
concerned with development. Their recent de facto exclusion from
discussions on world trade and also the monetary arrangements
which vitally affect their destiny are an example of lack of power
which is inadmissible in a just and responsible world order.
68. (5) Although we recognize that international agencies can
be perfected and strengthened, as can any human instrument, we
stress also the importance of the specialized agencies of the
United Nations, in particular those directly concerned with the
immediate and more acute questions of world poverty in the field
of agrarian reform and agricultural development, health, education,
employment, housing, and rapidly increasing urbanization. We feel
we must point out in a special way the need for some fund to provide
sufficient food and protein for the real mental and physical development
of children. In the face of the population explosion we repeat
the words by which Pope Paul VI defined the functions of public
authority in his encyclical Populorum Progressio: "There
is no doubt that public authorities can intervene, within the
limit of their competence, by favoring the availability of appropriate
information and by adopting suitable measures, provided that these
be in conformity with the moral law and that they absolutely respect
the rightful freedom of married couples" (37; A.A.S. 59,
1967, p. 276).
69. (6) Let governments continue with their individual contributions
to a development fund, but let them also look for a way whereby
most of their endeavors may follow multilateral channels, fully
preserving the responsibility of the developing nations, which
must be associated in decision-making concerning priorities and
investments.
70. (7) We consider that we must also stress the new worldwide
preoccupation which will be dealt with for the first time in the
conference on the human environment to be held in Stockholm in
June 1972. It is impossible to see what right the richer nations
have to keep up their claim to increase their own material demands,
if the consequence is either that others remain in misery or that
the danger of destroying the very physical foundations of life
on earth is precipitated. Those who are already rich are bound
to accept a less material way of life, with less waste, in order
to avoid the destruction of the heritage which they are obliged
by absolute justice to share with all other members of the human
race.
71. (8) In order that the right to development may be fulfilled
by action:
(a) people should not be hindered from attaining development in
accordance with their own culture;
(b) through mutual cooperation, all peoples should be able to
become the principal architects of their own economic and social
development;
(c) every people, as active and responsible members of human society,
should be able to cooperate for the attainment of the common good
on an equal footing with other peoples.
72. The examination of conscience which we have made together,
regarding the Church's involvement in action for justice, will
remain ineffective if it is not given flesh in the life of our
local Churches at all their levels. We also ask the episcopal
conferences to continue to pursue the perspectives which we have
had in view during the days of this meeting and to put our recommendations
into practice, for instance by setting up centers of social and
theological research.
73. We also ask that there be recommended to the Pontifical Commission
Justice and Peace, the Council of the Secretariat of the Synod
and to competent authorities, the description, consideration and
deeper study of the wishes and desires of our assembly, and that
these bodies should bring to a successful conclusion what we have
begun.
A Word of Hope
74. The power of the Spirit, who raised Christ from the dead,
is continuously at work in the world. Through the generous sons
and daughters of the Church likewise, the People of God is present
in the midst of the poor and of those who suffer oppression and
persecution; it lives in its own flesh and its own heart the Passion
of Christ and bears witness to his resurrection.
75. The entire creation has been groaning till now in an act of
giving birth, as it waits for the glory of the children of God
to be revealed (cf. Rom 8:22). Let Christians therefore be convinced
that they will yet find the fruits of their own nature and effort
cleansed of all impurities in the new earth which God is now preparing
for them, and in which there will be the kingdom of justice and
love, a kingdom which will be fully perfected when the Lord will
come himself.
76. Hope in the coming kingdom is already beginning to take root
in the hearts of people. The radical transformation of the world
in the Paschal Mystery of the Lord gives full meaning to the efforts
of people, and in particular of the young, to lessen injustice,
violence and hatred and to advance all together in justice, freedom,
kinship and love.
77. At the same time as it proclaims the Gospel of the Lord, its
Redeemer and Savior, the Church calls on all, especially the poor,
the oppressed and the afflicted, to cooperate with God to bring
about liberation from every sin and to build a world which will
reach the fullness of creation only when it becomes the work of
people for people.