Apostolic letter of his holiness Pope Paulus PP. VI to Cardinal Maurice Roy

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Title
Apostolic letter of his holiness Pope Paulus PP. VI to Cardinal Maurice Roy
Language
English
Year
1971
Subject
Papal letters
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In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
Fulltext
APOSTOLIC LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE PAULUS PP. VI TO CARDINAL MAURICE ROY PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL OF THE LAITY AND OF THE PONTIFICAL COMMISSION JUSTICE AND PEACE ON THE OCCASION OF THE EIGHTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ENCYCLICAL “RERUM NOVARUM” 1 1 Osservatore Romano, May 20, 1971. Venerable Brother, 1. The eightieth .anniversary of the publication of the encyclical Rerum Novarum, the message of which continues to inspire action for social justice, prompts us to take up again and to extend the teaching of our predecessors, in response to the new needs of a-changing world. The Church, in fact, tra­ vels forward with humanity and shares its lot in the setting of history. At the same time that she announces to men the Good News of God’s love and of salvation in Christ, she cla­ rifies their activity in the light of the Gospel and in this way helps them to correspond to God’s plan of love and to realize the fullness of their aspirations. 2. It is with confidence that we see the Spirit of the Lord pursuing his work in the hearts of men and in every place gathering together Christian communities conscious of their responsibilities in society. On all the continents, among all races, nations and cultures, and under all conditions the Lord continues to raise up authentic apostles of the Gospel. We have had the opportunity to meet these people, to ad­ mire them and to give them our encouragement in the course of our recent journeys. We have gone into the crowds and have heard their appeals, cries of distress and at the same PAPAL DOCUMENTS - 435 time cries of hope. Under theSe circumstances we have seen in a new perspective the grave problems-of our time. These problems of course are particular to each part of the world, but at the same time they are common to all mankind, which is questioning itself about -its future and about the tendency and the meaning of the-changes taking place. Flagrant in­ equalities exist in the economic, cultural and political develop­ ment of the nations: while some regions are heavily industrialized, others are still at the agricultural stage; while some countries enjoy prosperity, others are struggling against starvation; while some peoples have a high standard of culture, others are still engaged in eliminating illteracy. From all sides there rises a yearning for more justice and a desire for a- better guaranteed peace in mutual respect among individuals and peoples. 3. There is of course a wide diversity among the situa­ tions— in which Christians — willingly or unwillingly — find themselves according to regions, socio-political systems and cultures. In sone places they are reduced to silence, regarded with suspicion and as it were kept on the fringe of society, enclosed without freedom in a totalitarian system. In other places they are a weak minority whose voice makes itself heard with difficulty. In some other nations, where the Church sees her place recognized, sometimes officially so, she too finds herself subjected to the repercussions of the crisis which is unsettling society; some of her members are tempted by radical and violent solutions from which they believe that they can expect a happier outcome. While some people, unaware of present injustices, strive to prolong the existing situations, others allow themselves to be beguiled by revolutionary ideo­ logies which promise them, not without delusion, a definitively better world. 4. In the face of such widely varying situations it is dif­ ficult for us to utter a unified message and to put forward a solution which has universal validity. Such is not our am­ bition, nor it our mission. It is up to the Christian commu­ nities to analyze with objectivity the situation which is proper to their own country, to shed on it the light of the Gospel’s unalterable words and to draw principles of reflection, norms of judgment and directives for action from the social teaching of the Church. This social teaching has been worked out in the course of history and notably, in this industrial era. since the historic date of the message of Pope Leo XIII on “the BOLETIN ECLESIASTICO DE FILIPINAS condition of the workers”, and it is an honour and joy for us to celebrate today the anniversary of that message. It is up to these Christian communities, with the help of the Holy Spirit, in communion with the bishops who hold responsibility and in dialogue with other Christian brethren and all men of goodwill, to discern the options and commitments which are called for in order to bring about the social, political and eco­ nomic changes seen in many cases to be urgently needed. In this search for the changes which should be promoted, Christ­ ians must first of all renew their confidence in the forcefulness and special character of the demands made by the Gospel. The Gospel is not out-of-date because it was proclaimed, written and lived in a different socio-cultural context. Its inspiration, enriched by the living experience of Christian tradition over the centuries, remains ever new for converting men and for advancing the life of society. It is not however to be utilized for the profit of particular temporal options, to the neglect of its universal and eternal message1. 5. Amid the disturbances and uncertainties of the present hour, the Church has a.specific message to proclaim and a support to give to men'in their efforts to take in hand and give direction to their future. Since the period in which the encyclical Rerum Novarum denounced in a forceful and impe­ rative manner the scandal of the condition of the workers in the nascent industrial society, historical evolution has led to an awareness of other dimensions and other applications of social justice. The encyclicals Quadrag esimo Anno- and Mater et Magistra'-1 already noted this fact. The recent Council for its part took care to point them out, in particular in the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes. We ourself have already con­ tinued these lines of thought in our encyclical Populorum Progresions. “Today”, we said”, "the principal fact that we Must all recognize is that the social question has become world­ wide” '. “A renewed consciousness of the demands of the Gospel makes it the Church’s duty to put herself at the service of all, to help them grasp their serious problem in all its dimensions, and to convince them that solidarity in action at this turning point in human history is a matter of urgency"5. 6. It will moreover be for the forthcoming Synod of Bishops itself to study more closely and to examine in greater detail the Church’s mission in the face of grave issues raised today by the question of justice in the world. But the anni­ PAPAL DOCUMENTS 437 versary of Rerum Novarum, venerable brother, gives us the opportunity today to confide our preoccupations and thoughts in the face of this problem to you as President of the Pontifical Commission Justice and Peace and of the Council of Laity. In this way it is also our wish to offer these bodies of the Holy See our encouragement in their ecclesial activity in the service of men. 7. In so doing, our purpose — without however forget­ ting the permanent problems already dealt with by our predecessors — is to draw attention to a number of questions. These are questions which because of their urgency, extent and complexity must in the years to come take first place among the preoccupations of Christians, so that with other men the latter may dedicate themselves to solving the new difficulties which put the very future of man in jeopardy. It is necessary to situate the problems created by the modern economy in the wider context of a new ciivlization. These problems include human conditions of production, fairness in the exchange of goods and in the division of wealth, the significance of the increased needs of consumption and the sharing of responsibi­ lity. In the present changes, which are so profound and so rapid, each day man discovers himself anew, and the questions himself about the meaning of his own being and of his col­ lective survival. Reluctant to gather the lessons of a past that he considers over and done with and too different from the present, man nevertheless needs to have light shed upon his future — a future which he perceives to be as uncertain as it is changing — by permanent eternal truths. These are truths which are certainly greater than man but, if he so wills, he can himself find their traces.11 8. A major phenomenon draws' our attention, as much in the industrialized countries as in those which are developing: urbanization. After long centuries, agrarian civilization is weakening. Is sufficient attention being devoted to the arrangement and improvement of the life of the country people, whose inferior and at times miserable economic situation provokes the flight to the unhappy crowded conditions of the city outskirts, where neither employment nor housing awaits them? This unceasing flight from the land, industrial growth, continual demographic expansion and the attraction of urban BOLETIN ECLESIASTICO DE FILIPINAS centres bring about concentrations of population, the extent of which is difficult to immagine, for people are already speaking in terms of a “megalopolis” grouping together tens of millions of persons. Of course there exist medium-sized towns, the dimension of which ensures a better balance in the population. While being able to offer employment to those that progress in agriculture makes available, they permit an adjustment of the human environment which better avoids the proletarianism and crowding of the great built-up areas. 9. The inordinate growth of these centres accompanies industrial expansion, without being identified with it. Based on technological research and the transformation of nature, in­ dustrialization constantly goes forward, giving proof of inces­ sant creativity. While certain enterprises develop and are concentrated, others die or change their location. Thus new social problems are created: professional or regional unemploy­ ment, redeployment and mobility of persons, permanent adaptation of workers and disparity of conditions in the dif­ ferent branches of industry. Unlimited competition utilizing the modern means of publicity incessantly launches new pro­ ducts and tries to attract the consumer, while earlier industrial installations which are still capable of functioning become use­ less. While very large areas of the population are unable to satisfy their primary needs, superfluous needs are ingeniously created. It can thus rightly be asked if, in spite of all his con­ quests, man is not turning back against himself the results of his activity. Having rationally endeavoured to control nature,7 is he not now becoming the slave of the objects which he makes? 10. Is not the rise of an urban civilization which accom­ panies the advance of industrial civilization a true challenge to the wisdom of man, to his capacity for organization and to his farseeing imagination? With in industrial society urbaniza­ tion upsets both the ways of life and the habitual structures of existence: the family, the neighbourhood, and the very framework of the Christian community. Man is experiencing a new loneliness; it is not in the face of a hostile nature which it has taken him centuries to subdue, but in an anonymous crowd which surrounds him and in which he feels himself a stranger. Urbanization, undoubtedly an irreversible stage in the development of human societies, confronts man with dif­ ficult problems. How is he to master its growth, regulate its PAPAL DOCUMENTS 439 organization, and successfully accomplish its animation for the good of all? In this disordered growth, new proletariats are born. They install themselves in the heart of the cities sometimes abandoned by the rich; they dwell on the outskirts — which become a belt of misery besieging in a still silent protest the luxury which blatantly cries out from centres of consumption and waste. Instead of favouring fraternal encounter and mutual aid. the city fosters discrimination and also indif­ ference. It lends itself to new forms of exploitation and of domination whereby some people in speculating on the needs of others derive inadmissible profits. Behind the facades much misery is hidden, unsuspected even by the closest neighbours; other forms of misery spread where human dignity founders: delinquency, criminality, abuse of drugs and eroticism. 11. It is in fact the weakest who are the victims of dehu­ manizing living conditions, degrading for conscience and harmful for the family institution. The promiscuity of working people’s housing makes a minimum of intimacy impossible; young couples waiting in vain for a decent dwelling at a price they can afford are demoralized and their union can thereby even be endangered; youth escape from a home which is too con­ fined and seek in the streets compensations and companion­ ships which cannot be supervised. It is the grave duty of those responsible to strive to control this process and to give it direction. There is an urgent need to remake at the level of the street, of the neighbourhood or of the great agglomerative dwellings the social fabric whereby man may be able to devel­ op the needs of his personality. Centres of special interest and of culture must be created or developed at the community and parish levels with different forms of associations, recreational centres, and spiritual and community gatherings where the in­ dividual can escape from isolation and form anew fraternal relationships. 12. To build up the city, the place where men and their expanded communities exist, to creat new modes of neighourlincss and relationships, to perceive an original application of social justice and to undertake responsibility for this collective future, which is foreseen as difficult, is a, task in which 440 BOLETIN ECLESIASTICO DE FILIPINAS Christians must share. To those who are heaped up in an urban promiscuity which becomes intolerable it is necessary to bring a message of hope. This can be done by brotherhood which is lived and by concrete justice. Let Christians, cons­ cious of this new responsibility, not lose heart in view of the vast and faceless society; let them recall Jonah who traversed Niniveh, the great city, to proclaim therein the good news of God’s mercy and was upheld in his weakness by the sole strength of the word of Almighty God. In the Bible, the city is in fact often the place of sin and pride — the pride of man who feels secure enough to be able to build his life without God and even to affirm that he is powerful against God. But there is also the example of Jerusalem, the Holy City, the place where God is encountered, the promise of the city which comes from on high 13. Urban life and industrial change bring strongly to light questions which until now were poorly grasped. What place, for example, in this world being brought to birth, should be given to youth? Everywhere dialogue is proving to be dif­ ficult between youth, with its aspirations, renewal and also in­ security for the future, and the adult generations. It is obvious to all that here we have a source of serious conflicts, division and opting out, even within the family, and a questioning of modes of authority, education for freedom and the handing on of values and beliefs, which strikes at the deep roots of society. Similarly, in many countries a charter for women which would put an end to an actual discrimination and would es­ tablish relationships of equality in rights and of respect for their dignity is the object of study and at times of lively de­ mands. We do not have in mindhtat false equality which would deny the distinctions laid down by the Creator himself and which would be in contradiction with woman’s proper role, which is of such capital importance, at the heart of the family as well as within society. Developments in legislation should on the contrary be directed to protecting her proper vocation and at the same time recognizing her independence as a per­ son, and her equal rights to participate in cultural, economic, social and political" life. 14. As the Church solemnly reaffirmed in the recent Coun­ cil, “the beginning, the subject and the goal of all social institu­ PAPAL DOCUMENTS 441 tions is and must be the human person”.0 Every man has the right to work, to a chance to develop his qualities and his per­ sonality in the exercise of his profession, to equitable remunera­ tion which will enable him and his family “to lead a worthy life on the material, social, cultural and spiritual level”1*1 and to assistance in case of need arising from sickness or age. Although for the defence of these rights democratic societies accept today the principle of labour union rights, they are not always open to their exercise. The important role of union organizations must be admitted: their object is the representa­ tion of the various categories of workers, their lawful collabo­ ration in the economic advance of society, and the development of the sense of their responsibility for the realization of the common good. Their activity, however, is not without its diffi­ culties. Here and there the temptation can arise of profiting from a position of force to impose, particularly by strikes—the right to which as a final means of defence remains certainly recognized—conditions which are too burdensome for the over­ all economy and for the social body, or to desire to obtain in this way demands of a directly political nature. When it is a question of public service, required for the life of an entire nation, it is necessary to be able to assess the limit beyond which the harm caused to society become inadmissible. 15. In short, progress has already been made in introdu­ cing, in the area of human relationships, greater justice and greater sharing of responsibilities. l}ut in this immense field much remains to be done. Further reflection, research and experimentation must be actively pursued, unless one is to be late in meeting the legitimate aspirations of the workers—aspi­ rations which are being increasingly asserted according as their education, their consciousness of their dignity and the strength of their organizations increase. Egoism and domination are permanent temptations for men. Likewise an ever finer discernment is needed, in order to strike at the roots of newly arising situations of injustice -142 BOLETIN ECLESIASTICO DE FILIPINAS and to establish progressively a justice which will be less and less imperfect. In industrial change, which demands speedy and constant adaptation, those who will find themselves injured will be more numerous and at a greater disadvantage from the point of view of making their voices heard. The Church directs her attention to those new “poor”—the handicapped and the maladjusted, the old, different groups of those on the fringe of society, and so on—in order to recognize them, help them, defend their place and dignity in a society hardened by competition and the attraction of success. 16. Among the victims of situations of injustice—unfortu­ nately no new phenomenon—must be placed those who are dis­ criminated against, in law or in fact, on account of their race, origin, colour, culture, sex or religion. Racial discrimination possesses at the moment a character of very great relevance by reason of the tension which it stirs up both within countries and on the international level. Men rightly consider unjustifiable and reject as inadmissible the tendency to maintain or introduce legislation or behaviour sys­ tematically inspired by racialist prejudice. The members of mankind share the same basic rights and duties, as well as the same supernatural destiny. Within a country which belongs to each one, all should be equal before the law, find equal admit­ tance to economic, cultural, civic and social life and benefit a fair sharing of the nation’s riches. 17. We are thinking of the precarious situation of a great number number of emigrant workers whose condition as fo­ reigners makes it all the more difficult for them to make any sort of social vindication, in spite of their real participation in the economic effort of the country that receives them. It is urgently necessary for people to go beyond a narrowly nation­ alist attitude in their regard and to give them a charter which will assure them a right to emigrate, favour their integration, facilitate their professional advancement and give them access to decent housing where, if such is the case, their families can join them.11 PAPAL DOCUMENTS 443 Linked to this category are the people who, to find work, or to escape a disaster or a hostile climate, leave their regions and find themselves without roots among other people. It is everyone’s duty, but especially that of Christians,,to work with energy for the establishment of universal brother­ hood, the indispensable basis for authentic justice and the con­ dition for enduring peace: “We cannot in truthfulness call upon that God who is the Father of all if we refuse to act in a bro­ therly way toward certain men, created to God’s image. A man’s relationship with God the Father and his relationship with his brother men are so linked together that Scripture says: ‘He who does not love does not know God’ (1 Jn. 4, 8)”.1:1 18. With demographic growth, which is particularly pro­ nounced in the young nations, the number of those failing to find work and driven to misery or parasitism will grow in the coming years unless the conscience of man rouses itself and gives rise to a general movement of solidarity through an ef­ fective policy of investment and of organization of production and trade, as well as of education. We know the attention given to these problems within international organizations, and it is our lively wish that their members will not delay bringing theii actions into line with their declarations. It is disquieting in this regard to note a kind of fatalism which is gaining a hold even on people in positions of respon­ sibility. This feeling sometimes leads to Malthusian solutions inculcated by active propaganda for contraception and abortion. In this critical situation, it must on the contrary be affirmed that the family, without which no society can stand, has a right to the assistance which will assure it of the conditions for a healthy development. “It is certain”, we said in our encyclical Populoruni Progressio, “that public authorities can intervene, within the limit of their competence, by favouring the availa­ bility of appropriate information and by adopting suitable mea­ sures provided that these be in conformity with the moral law and that they respect the rightful freedom of married couples. 444 BOLETIN ECLESIASTICO DE FILIPINAS Where the inalienable right to marriage and procreation is lack­ ing, human dignity has ceased to exists”.u 19. In no other age has the appeal to the imagination of society been so explicit. To this should be devoted enterprises of invention and capital as important as those invested for ar­ maments or technological achievements. If man lets himself rush ahead without foreseeing in good time the emergence of new social problems, they will become too grave for a peaceful solution to be hoped for. 20. Among the major changes of our times, we do not wish to forget to emphasize the growing role being assumed by the media of social communication and their influence on the trans­ formation of mentalities, of knowledge, of organiations and of society itself. Certainly they have many positive aspects. Thanks to them news from the entire world reaches us practi­ cally in an instant, establishing contacts which supersede distan­ ces and creating elements of unity among all men. A greater spread of education and culture is becoming possible. Never­ theless, by their very action the media of social communication are reaching the point of representing as it were a new power. One cannot but ask about those who really hold this power, the aims that they pursue and the means they use, and finally, about the effect of their activity on the exercise of individual liberty, both in the political and ideological spheres and in social, economic and cultural life.. .The men who hold this power have a grave moral responsibility with respect to the truth of the information that they spread, the needs and the reactions that they generate and the values which they put forward. In the case of television, moreover, what is coming into being is an original mode of knowledge and a new civilization: that of the image. Naturally, the public authorities cannot ignore the growing power and influence of the media of social communication and the advantages and risks which their use involves for the civic community and for its development and real perfecting. PAPAL DOCUMENTS 445 Consequently they are called upon to perform their own positive function for the common good by encouraging every constructive expression, by supporting individual citizens and groups in defending the fundamental values of the person and of human society, and also by taking suitable steps to prevent the spread of what would harm the common heritage of values on which orderly civil progress is based.,!i (To be continued) FOOTNOTES 1 Guudium et Spes, 10: MS 58 (1966), p. 1033. -AAS 23 (1931), p. 209 ff. 3 4/1S 53 (1961), p. 429. •3: 4/1S 59 (1967), p. 258. ■•Ibidem, 1: p. 257. «Cf. 2 Cor. 4:17. 1 Popidorum Propressio, 25: /1/1S 59 (1967), pp. 269-270. 8 Cf. Rev. 3:12; 21:2. 0 Gaudium et Spes, 25: MS 58 (1966), p. 1045. u> Ibidem, 67: p. 1089. n Popidorum Pror/ressio, 69: MS 59 (1967), pp. 290-291. >2 Cf. Mt. 25:35. wyjostra Aetate, 5: .4 4 .S' 58 (1966), p. 743. »37: .4.4.S 59 (1967), p. 276. Inter Mirifiea, 12: 4.4 .S' 56 (1966), p. 149.