Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et Spes)
Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et Spes) promulgated by His holiness Pope Paul VI on December 7, 1965
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 o 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 or 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 IFOSTERING 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 o
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.
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