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Chapter 7 : 80-99
Current requirements and tasks

CHAPTER VII
CURRENT
REQUIREMENTS
AND TASKS
The indispensable
requirements of the word of God
80. In Sacred Scripture are
found elements, both implicit and explicit, which allow a
vision of the human being and the world which has
exceptional philosophical density. Christians have come
to an ever deeper awareness of the wealth to be found in
the sacred text. It is there that we learn that what we
experience is not absolute: it is neither uncreated nor
self-generating. God alone is the Absolute. From the
Bible there emerges also a vision of man as imago Dei.
This vision offers indications regarding man's life, his
freedom and the immortality of the human spirit. Since
the created world is not self-sufficient, every illusion
of autonomy which would deny the essential dependence on
God of every creaturethe human being
includedleads to dramatic situations which subvert
the rational search for the harmony and the meaning of
human life.
The problem of moral
evilthe most tragic of evil's formsis also
addressed in the Bible, which tells us that such evil
stems not from any material deficiency, but is a wound
inflicted by the disordered exercise of human freedom. In
the end, the word of God poses the problem of the meaning
of life and proffers its response in directing the human
being to Jesus Christ, the Incarnate Word of God, who is
the perfect realization of human existence. A reading of
the sacred text would reveal other aspects of this
problem; but what emerges clearly is the rejection of all
forms of relativism, materialism and pantheism.
The fundamental conviction of
the philosophy found in the Bible is that the
world and human life do have a meaning and look towards
their fulfilment, which comes in Jesus Christ. The
mystery of the Incarnation will always remain the central
point of reference for an understanding of the enigma of
human existence, the created world and God himself. The
challenge of this mystery pushes philosophy to its
limits, as reason is summoned to make its own a logic
which brings down the walls within which it risks being
confined. Yet only at this point does the meaning of life
reach its defining moment. The intimate essence of God
and of the human being become intelligible: in the
mystery of the Incarnate Word, human nature and divine
nature are safeguarded in all their autonomy, and at the
same time the unique bond which sets them together in
mutuality without confusion of any kind is revealed.(97)
81. One of the most significant
aspects of our current situation, it should be noted, is
the crisis of meaning. Perspectives on life
and the world, often of a scientific temper, have so
proliferated that we face an increasing fragmentation of
knowledge. This makes the search for meaning difficult
and often fruitless. Indeed, still more dramatically, in
this maelstrom of data and facts in which we live and
which seem to comprise the very fabric of life, many
people wonder whether it still makes sense to ask about
meaning. The array of theories which vie to give an
answer, and the different ways of viewing and of
interpreting the world and human life, serve only to
aggravate this radical doubt, which can easily lead to
scepticism, indifference or to various forms of nihilism.
In consequence, the human spirit
is often invaded by a kind of ambiguous thinking which
leads it to an ever deepening introversion, locked within
the confines of its own immanence without reference of
any kind to the transcendent. A philosophy which no
longer asks the question of the meaning of life would be
in grave danger of reducing reason to merely accessory
functions, with no real passion for the search for truth.
To be consonant with the word of
God, philosophy needs first of all to recover its sapiential
dimension as a search for the ultimate and
overarching meaning of life. This first requirement is in
fact most helpful in stimulating philosophy to conform to
its proper nature. In doing so, it will be not only the
decisive critical factor which determines the foundations
and limits of the different fields of scientific
learning, but will also take its place as the ultimate
framework of the unity of human knowledge and action,
leading them to converge towards a final goal and
meaning. This sapiential dimension is all the more
necessary today, because the immense expansion of
humanity's technical capability demands a renewed and
sharpened sense of ultimate values. If this technology is
not ordered to something greater than a merely
utilitarian end, then it could soon prove inhuman and
even become potential destroyer of the human race.(98)
The word of God reveals the
final destiny of men and women and provides a unifying
explanation of all that they do in the world. This is why
it invites philosophy to engage in the search for the
natural foundation of this meaning, which corresponds to
the religious impulse innate in every person. A
philosophy denying the possibility of an ultimate and
overarching meaning would be not only ill-adapted to its
task, but false.
82. Yet this sapiential function
could not be performed by a philosophy which was not
itself a true and authentic knowledge, addressed, that
is, not only to particular and subordinate aspects of
realityfunctional, formal or utilitarianbut
to its total and definitive truth, to the very being of
the object which is known. This prompts a second
requirement: that philosophy verify the human capacity to
know the truth, to come to a knowledge which can
reach objective truth by means of that adaequatio rei
et intellectus to which the Scholastic Doctors
referred.(99) This requirement, proper to faith, was
explicitly reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council:
Intelligence is not confined to observable data
alone. It can with genuine certitude attain to reality
itself as knowable, though in consequence of sin that
certitude is partially obscured and weakened. (100)
A radically phenomenalist or
relativist philosophy would be ill-adapted to help in the
deeper exploration of the riches found in the word of
God. Sacred Scripture always assumes that the individual,
even if guilty of duplicity and mendacity, can know and
grasp the clear and simple truth. The Bible, and the New
Testament in particular, contains texts and statements
which have a genuinely ontological content. The inspired
authors intended to formulate true statements, capable,
that is, of expressing objective reality. It cannot be
said that the Catholic tradition erred when it took
certain texts of Saint John and Saint Paul to be
statements about the very being of Christ. In seeking to
understand and explain these statements, theology needs
therefore the contribution of a philosophy which does not
disavow the possibility of a knowledge which is
objectively true, even if not perfect. This applies
equally to the judgements of moral conscience, which
Sacred Scripture considers capable of being objectively
true. (101)
83. The two requirements already
stipulated imply a third: the need for a philosophy of genuinely
metaphysical range, capable, that is, of transcending
empirical data in order to attain something absolute,
ultimate and foundational in its search for truth. This
requirement is implicit in sapiential and analytical
knowledge alike; and in particular it is a requirement
for knowing the moral good, which has its ultimate
foundation in the Supreme Good, God himself. Here I do
not mean to speak of metaphysics in the sense of a
specific school or a particular historical current of
thought. I want only to state that reality and truth do
transcend the factual and the empirical, and to vindicate
the human being's capacity to know this transcendent and
metaphysical dimension in a way that is true and certain,
albeit imperfect and analogical. In this sense,
metaphysics should not be seen as an alternative to
anthropology, since it is metaphysics which makes it
possible to ground the concept of personal dignity in
virtue of their spiritual nature. In a special way, the
person constitutes a privileged locus for the encounter
with being, and hence with metaphysical enquiry.
Wherever men and women discover
a call to the absolute and transcendent, the metaphysical
dimension of reality opens up before them: in truth, in
beauty, in moral values, in other persons, in being
itself, in God. We face a great challenge at the end of
this millennium to move from phenomenon to foundation,
a step as necessary as it is urgent. We cannot stop short
at experience alone; even if experience does reveal the
human being's interiority and spirituality, speculative
thinking must penetrate to the spiritual core and the
ground from which it rises. Therefore, a philosophy which
shuns metaphysics would be radically unsuited to the task
of mediation in the understanding of Revelation.
The word of God refers
constantly to things which transcend human experience and
even human thought; but this mystery could
not be revealed, nor could theology render it in some way
intelligible, (102) were human knowledge limited strictly
to the world of sense experience. Metaphysics thus plays
an essential role of mediation in theological research. A
theology without a metaphysical horizon could not move
beyond an analysis of religious experience, nor would it
allow the intellectus fidei to give a coherent
account of the universal and transcendent value of
revealed truth.
If I insist so strongly on the
metaphysical element, it is because I am convinced that
it is the path to be taken in order to move beyond the
crisis pervading large sectors of philosophy at the
moment, and thus to correct certain mistaken modes of
behaviour now widespread in our society.
84. The importance of
metaphysics becomes still more evident if we consider
current developments in hermeneutics and the analysis of
language. The results of such studies can be very helpful
for the understanding of faith, since they bring to light
the structure of our thought and speech and the meaning
which language bears. However, some scholars working in
these fields tend to stop short at the question of how
reality is understood and expressed, without going
further to see whether reason can discover its essence.
How can we fail to see in such a frame of mind the
confirmation of our present crisis of confidence in the
powers of reason? When, on the basis of preconceived
assumptions, these positions tend to obscure the contents
of faith or to deny their universal validity, then not
only do they abase reason but in so doing they also
disqualify themselves. Faith clearly presupposes that
human language is capable of expressing divine and
transcendent reality in a universal
wayanalogically, it is true, but no less
meaningfully for that. (103) Were this not so, the word
of God, which is always a divine word in human language,
would not be capable of saying anything about God. The
interpretation of this word cannot merely keep referring
us to one interpretation after another, without ever
leading us to a statement which is simply true; otherwise
there would be no Revelation of God, but only the
expression of human notions about God and about what God
presumably thinks of us.
85. I am well aware that these
requirements which the word of God imposes upon
philosophy may seem daunting to many people involved in
philosophical research today. Yet this is why, taking up
what has been taught repeatedly by the Popes for several
generations and reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council
itself, I wish to reaffirm strongly the conviction that
the human being can come to a unified and organic vision
of knowledge. This is one of the tasks which Christian
thought will have to take up through the next millennium
of the Christian era. The segmentation of knowledge, with
its splintered approach to truth and consequent
fragmentation of meaning, keeps people today from coming
to an interior unity. How could the Church not be
concerned by this? It is the Gospel which imposes this
sapiential task directly upon her Pastors, and they
cannot shrink from their duty to undertake it.
I believe that those
philosophers who wish to respond today to the demands
which the word of God makes on human thinking should
develop their thought on the basis of these postulates
and in organic continuity with the great tradition which,
beginning with the ancients, passes through the Fathers
of the Church and the masters of Scholasticism and
includes the fundamental achievements of modern and
contemporary thought. If philosophers can take their
place within this tradition and draw their inspiration
from it, they will certainly not fail to respect
philosophy's demand for autonomy.
In the present situation,
therefore, it is most significant that some philosophers
are promoting a recovery of the determining role of this
tradition for a right approach to knowledge. The appeal
to tradition is not a mere remembrance of the past; it
involves rather the recognition of a cultural heritage
which belongs to all of humanity. Indeed it may be said
that it is we who belong to the tradition and that it is
not ours to dispose of at will. Precisely by being rooted
in the tradition will we be able today to develop for the
future an original, new and constructive mode of
thinking. This same appeal is all the more valid for
theology. Not only because theology has the living
Tradition of the Church as its original source, (104) but
also because, in virtue of this, it must be able to
recover both the profound theological tradition of
earlier times and the enduring tradition of that
philosophy which by dint of its authentic wisdom can
transcend the boundaries of space and time.
86. This insistence on the need
for a close relationship of continuity between
contemporary philosophy and the philosophy developed in
the Christian tradition is intended to avert the danger
which lies hidden in some currents of thought which are
especially prevalent today. It is appropriate, I think,
to review them, however briefly, in order to point out
their errors and the consequent risks for philosophical
work.
The first goes by the name of eclecticism,
by which is meant the approach of those who, in research,
teaching and argumentation, even in theology, tend to use
individual ideas drawn from different philosophies,
without concern for their internal coherence, their place
within a system or their historical context. They
therefore run the risk of being unable to distinguish the
part of truth of a given doctrine from elements of it
which may be erroneous or ill-suited to the task at hand.
An extreme form of eclecticism appears also in the
rhetorical misuse of philosophical terms to which some
theologians are given at times. Such manipulation does
not help the search for truth and does not train
reasonwhether theological or philosophicalto
formulate arguments seriously and scientifically. The
rigorous and far-reaching study of philosophical
doctrines, their particular terminology and the context
in which they arose, helps to overcome the danger of
eclecticism and makes it possible to integrate them into
theological discourse in a way appropriate to the task.
87. Eclecticism is an error of
method, but lying hidden within it can also be the claims
of historicism. To understand a doctrine from the
past correctly, it is necessary to set it within its
proper historical and cultural context. The fundamental
claim of historicism, however, is that the truth of a
philosophy is determined on the basis of its
appropriateness to a certain period and a certain
historical purpose. At least implicitly, therefore, the
enduring validity of truth is denied. What was true in
one period, historicists claim, may not be true in
another. Thus for them the history of thought becomes
little more than an archeological resource useful for
illustrating positions once held, but for the most part
outmoded and meaningless now. On the contrary, it should
not be forgotten that, even if a formulation is bound in
some way by time and culture, the truth or the error
which it expresses can invariably be identified and
evaluated as such despite the distance of space and time.
In theological enquiry,
historicism tends to appear for the most part under the
guise of modernism. Rightly concerned to make
theological discourse relevant and understandable to our
time, some theologians use only the most recent opinions
and philosophical language, ignoring the critical
evaluation which ought to be made of them in the light of
the tradition. By exchanging relevance for truth, this
form of modernism shows itself incapable of satisfying
the demands of truth to which theology is called to
respond.
88. Another threat to be
reckoned with is scientism. This is the
philosophical notion which refuses to admit the validity
of forms of knowledge other than those of the positive
sciences; and it relegates religious, theological,
ethical and aesthetic knowledge to the realm of mere
fantasy. In the past, the same idea emerged in positivism
and neo-positivism, which considered metaphysical
statements to be meaningless. Critical epistemology has
discredited such a claim, but now we see it revived in
the new guise of scientism, which dismisses values as
mere products of the emotions and rejects the notion of
being in order to clear the way for pure and simple
facticity. Science would thus be poised to dominate all
aspects of human life through technological progress. The
undeniable triumphs of scientific research and
contemporary technology have helped to propagate a
scientistic outlook, which now seems boundless, given its
inroads into different cultures and the radical changes
it has brought.
Regrettably, it must be noted,
scientism consigns all that has to do with the question
of the meaning of life to the realm of the irrational or
imaginary. No less disappointing is the way in which it
approaches the other great problems of philosophy which,
if they are not ignored, are subjected to analyses based
on superficial analogies, lacking all rational
foundation. This leads to the impoverishment of human
thought, which no longer addresses the ultimate problems
which the human being, as the animal rationale,
has pondered constantly from the beginning of time. And
since it leaves no space for the critique offered by
ethical judgement, the scientistic mentality has
succeeded in leading many to think that if something is
technically possible it is therefore morally admissible.
89. No less dangerous is pragmatism,
an attitude of mind which, in making its choices,
precludes theoretical considerations or judgements based
on ethical principles. The practical consequences of this
mode of thinking are significant. In particular there is
growing support for a concept of democracy which is not
grounded upon any reference to unchanging values: whether
or not a line of action is admissible is decided by the
vote of a parliamentary majority. (105) The consequences
of this are clear: in practice, the great moral decisions
of humanity are subordinated to decisions taken one after
another by institutional agencies. Moreover, anthropology
itself is severely compromised by a one-dimensional
vision of the human being, a vision which excludes the
great ethical dilemmas and the existential analyses of
the meaning of suffering and sacrifice, of life and
death.
90. The positions we have
examined lead in turn to a more general conception which
appears today as the common framework of many
philosophies which have rejected the meaningfulness of
being. I am referring to the nihilist interpretation,
which is at once the denial of all foundations and the
negation of all objective truth. Quite apart from the
fact that it conflicts with the demands and the content
of the word of God, nihilism is a denial of the
humanity and of the very identity of the human being. It
should never be forgotten that the neglect of being
inevitably leads to losing touch with objective truth and
therefore with the very ground of human dignity. This in
turn makes it possible to erase from the countenance of
man and woman the marks of their likeness to God, and
thus to lead them little by little either to a
destructive will to power or to a solitude without hope.
Once the truth is denied to human beings, it is pure
illusion to try to set them free. Truth and freedom
either go together hand in hand or together they perish
in misery. (106)
91. In discussing these currents
of thought, it has not been my intention to present a
complete picture of the present state of philosophy,
which would, in any case, be difficult to reduce to a
unified vision. And I certainly wish to stress that our
heritage of knowledge and wisdom has indeed been enriched
in different fields. We need only cite logic, the
philosophy of language, epistemology, the philosophy of
nature, anthropology, the more penetrating analysis of
the affective dimensions of knowledge and the existential
approach to the analysis of freedom. Since the last
century, however, the affirmation of the principle of
immanence, central to the rationalist argument, has
provoked a radical requestioning of claims once thought
indisputable. In response, currents of irrationalism
arose, even as the baselessness of the demand that reason
be absolutely self-grounded was being critically
demonstrated.
Our age has been termed by some
thinkers the age of postmodernity. Often used
in very different contexts, the term designates the
emergence of a complex of new factors which, widespread
and powerful as they are, have shown themselves able to
produce important and lasting changes. The term was first
used with reference to aesthetic, social and
technological phenomena. It was then transposed into the
philosophical field, but has remained somewhat ambiguous,
both because judgement on what is called
postmodern is sometimes positive and
sometimes negative, and because there is as yet no
consensus on the delicate question of the demarcation of
the different historical periods. One thing however is
certain: the currents of thought which claim to be
postmodern merit appropriate attention. According to some
of them, the time of certainties is irrevocably past, and
the human being must now learn to live in a horizon of
total absence of meaning, where everything is provisional
and ephemeral. In their destructive critique of every
certitude, several authors have failed to make crucial
distinctions and have called into question the certitudes
of faith.
This nihilism has been justified
in a sense by the terrible experience of evil which has
marked our age. Such a dramatic experience has ensured
the collapse of rationalist optimism, which viewed
history as the triumphant progress of reason, the source
of all happiness and freedom; and now, at the end of this
century, one of our greatest threats is the temptation to
despair.
Even so, it remains true that a
certain positivist cast of mind continues to nurture the
illusion that, thanks to scientific and technical
progress, man and woman may live as a demiurge,
single-handedly and completely taking charge of their
destiny.
Current tasks for theology
92. As an understanding of
Revelation, theology has always had to respond in
different historical moments to the demands of different
cultures, in order then to mediate the content of faith
to those cultures in a coherent and conceptually clear
way. Today, too, theology faces a dual task. On the one
hand, it must be increasingly committed to the task
entrusted to it by the Second Vatican Council, the task
of renewing its specific methods in order to serve
evangelization more effectively. How can we fail to
recall in this regard the words of Pope John XXIII at the
opening of the Council? He said then: In line with
the keen expectation of those who sincerely love the
Christian, Catholic and apostolic religion, this doctrine
must be known more widely and deeply, and souls must be
instructed and formed in it more completely; and this
certain and unchangeable doctrine, always to be
faithfully respected, must be understood more profoundly
and presented in a way which meets the needs of our
time. (107)
On the other hand, theology must
look to the ultimate truth which Revelation entrusts to
it, never content to stop short of that goal. Theologians
should remember that their work corresponds to a
dynamism found in the faith itself and that the
proper object of their enquiry is the Truth which
is the living God and his plan for salvation revealed in
Jesus Christ. (108) This task, which is theology's
prime concern, challenges philosophy as well. The array
of problems which today need to be tackled demands a
joint effortapproached, it is true, with different
methodsso that the truth may once again be known
and expressed. The Truth, which is Christ, imposes itself
as an all-embracing authority which holds out to theology
and philosophy alike the prospect of support, stimulation
and increase (cf. Eph 4:15).
To believe it possible to know a
universally valid truth is in no way to encourage
intolerance; on the contrary, it is the essential
condition for sincere and authentic dialogue between
persons. On this basis alone is it possible to overcome
divisions and to journey together towards full truth,
walking those paths known only to the Spirit of the Risen
Lord. (109) I wish at this point to indicate the specific
form which the call to unity now takes, given the current
tasks of theology.
93. The chief purpose of
theology is to provide an understanding of Revelation
and the content of faith. The very heart of
theological enquiry will thus be the contemplation of the
mystery of the Triune God. The approach to this mystery
begins with reflection upon the mystery of the
Incarnation of the Son of God: his coming as man, his
going to his Passion and Death, a mystery issuing into
his glorious Resurrection and Ascension to the right hand
of the Father, whence he would send the Spirit of truth
to bring his Church to birth and give her growth. From
this vantage-point, the prime commitment of theology is
seen to be the understanding of God's kenosis, a
grand and mysterious truth for the human mind, which
finds it inconceivable that suffering and death can
express a love which gives itself and seeks nothing in
return. In this light, a careful analysis of texts
emerges as a basic and urgent need: first the texts of
Scripture, and then those which express the Church's
living Tradition. On this score, some problems have
emerged in recent times, problems which are only
partially new; and a coherent solution to them will not
be found without philosophy's contribution.
94. An initial problem is that
of the relationship between meaning and truth. Like every
other text, the sources which the theologian interprets
primarily transmit a meaning which needs to be grasped
and explained. This meaning presents itself as the truth
about God which God himself communicates through the
sacred text. Human language thus embodies the language of
God, who communicates his own truth with that wonderful
condescension which mirrors the logic of the
Incarnation. (110) In interpreting the sources of
Revelation, then, the theologian needs to ask what is the
deep and authentic truth which the texts wish to
communicate, even within the limits of language.
The truth of the biblical texts,
and of the Gospels in particular, is certainly not
restricted to the narration of simple historical events
or the statement of neutral facts, as historicist
positivism would claim. (111) Beyond simple historical
occurrence, the truth of the events which these texts
relate lies rather in the meaning they have in and
for the history of salvation. This truth is
elaborated fully in the Church's constant reading of
these texts over the centuries, a reading which preserves
intact their original meaning. There is a pressing need,
therefore, that the relationship between fact and
meaning, a relationship which constitutes the specific
sense of history, be examined also from the philosophical
point of view.
95. The word of God is not
addressed to any one people or to any one period of
history. Similarly, dogmatic statements, while reflecting
at times the culture of the period in which they were
defined, formulate an unchanging and ultimate truth. This
prompts the question of how one can reconcile the
absoluteness and the universality of truth with the
unavoidable historical and cultural conditioning of the
formulas which express that truth. The claims of
historicism, I noted earlier, are untenable; but the use
of a hermeneutic open to the appeal of metaphysics can
show how it is possible to move from the historical and
contingent circumstances in which the texts developed to
the truth which they express, a truth transcending those
circumstances.
Human language may be
conditioned by history and constricted in other ways, but
the human being can still express truths which surpass
the phenomenon of language. Truth can never be confined
to time and culture; in history it is known, but it also
reaches beyond history.
96. To see this is to glimpse
the solution of another problem: the problem of the
enduring validity of the conceptual language used in
Conciliar definitions. This is a question which my
revered predecessor Pius XII addressed in his Encyclical
Letter Humani Generis. (112)
This is a complex theme to ponder, since one must
reckon seriously with the meaning which words assume in
different times and cultures. Nonetheless, the history of
thought shows that across the range of cultures and their
development certain basic concepts retain their universal
epistemological value and thus retain the truth of the
propositions in which they are expressed. (113) Were this
not the case, philosophy and the sciences could not
communicate with each other, nor could they find a place
in cultures different from those in which they were
conceived and developed. The hermeneutical problem
exists, to be sure; but it is not insoluble. Moreover,
the objective value of many concepts does not exclude
that their meaning is often imperfect. This is where
philosophical speculation can be very helpful. We may
hope, then, that philosophy will be especially concerned
to deepen the understanding of the relationship between
conceptual language and truth, and to propose ways which
will lead to a right understanding of that relationship.
97. The interpretation of sources is a vital task for
theology; but another still more delicate and demanding
task is the understanding of revealed truth, or
the articulation of the intellectus fidei. The intellectus
fidei, as I have noted, demands the contribution of a
philosophy of being which first of all would enable dogmatic
theology to perform its functions appropriately. The
dogmatic pragmatism of the early years of this century,
which viewed the truths of faith as nothing more than
rules of conduct, has already been refuted and rejected;
(114) but the temptation always remains of understanding
these truths in purely functional terms. This leads only
to an approach which is inadequate, reductive and
superficial at the level of speculation. A Christology,
for example, which proceeded solely from
below, as is said nowadays, or an ecclesiology
developed solely on the model of civil society, would be
hard pressed to avoid the danger of such reductionism.
If the intellectus fidei wishes to integrate
all the wealth of the theological tradition, it must turn
to the philosophy of being, which should be able to
propose anew the problem of beingand this in
harmony with the demands and insights of the entire
philosophical tradition, including philosophy of more
recent times, without lapsing into sterile repetition of
antiquated formulas. Set within the Christian
metaphysical tradition, the philosophy of being is a
dynamic philosophy which views reality in its
ontological, causal and communicative structures. It is
strong and enduring because it is based upon the very act
of being itself, which allows a full and comprehensive
openness to reality as a whole, surpassing every limit in
order to reach the One who brings all things to
fulfilment. (115) In theology, which draws its principles
from Revelation as a new source of knowledge, this
perspective is confirmed by the intimate relationship
which exists between faith and metaphysical reasoning.
98. These considerations apply equally to moral
theology. It is no less urgent that philosophy be
recovered at the point where the understanding of faith
is linked to the moral life of believers. Faced with
contemporary challenges in the social, economic,
political and scientific fields, the ethical conscience
of people is disoriented. In the Encyclical Letter Veritatis
Splendor, I wrote that many of the problems of the
contemporary world stem from a crisis of truth. I noted
that once the idea of a universal truth about the
good, knowable by human reason, is lost, inevitably the
notion of conscience also changes. Conscience is no
longer considered in its prime reality as an act of a
person's intelligence, the function of which is to apply
the universal knowledge of the good in a specific
situation and thus to express a judgment about the right
conduct to be chosen here and now. Instead, there is a
tendency to grant to the individual conscience the
prerogative of independently determining the criteria of
good and evil and then acting accordingly. Such an
outlook is quite congenial to an individualist ethic,
wherein each individual is faced with his own truth
different from the truth of others. (116)
Throughout the Encyclical I underscored clearly the
fundamental role of truth in the moral field. In the case
of the more pressing ethical problems, this truth demands
of moral theology a careful enquiry rooted unambiguously
in the word of God. In order to fulfil its mission, moral
theology must turn to a philosophical ethics which looks
to the truth of the good, to an ethics which is neither
subjectivist nor utilitarian. Such an ethics implies and
presupposes a philosophical anthropology and a
metaphysics of the good. Drawing on this organic vision,
linked necessarily to Christian holiness and to the
practice of the human and supernatural virtues, moral
theology will be able to tackle the various problems in
its competence, such as peace, social justice, the
family, the defence of life and the natural environment,
in a more appropriate and effective way.
99. Theological work in the Church is first of all at
the service of the proclamation of the faith and of
catechesis. (117) Proclamation or kerygma is a call to
conversion, announcing the truth of Christ, which reaches
its summit in his Paschal Mystery: for only in Christ is
it possible to know the fullness of the truth which saves
(cf. Acts 4:12; 1 Tm 2:4-6).
In this respect, it is easy to see why, in addition to
theology, reference to catechesis is also
important, since catechesis has philosophical
implications which must be explored more deeply in the
light of faith. The teaching imparted in catechesis helps
to form the person. As a mode of linguistic
communication, catechesis must present the Church's
doctrine in its integrity, (118) demonstrating its link
with the life of the faithful. (119) The result is a
unique bond between teaching and living which is
otherwise unattainable, since what is communicated in
catechesis is not a body of conceptual truths, but the
mystery of the living God. (120)
Philosophical enquiry can help greatly to clarify the
relationship between truth and life, between event and
doctrinal truth, and above all between transcendent truth
and humanly comprehensible language. (121) This involves
a reciprocity between the theological disciplines and the
insights drawn from the various strands of philosophy;
and such a reciprocity can prove genuinely fruitful for
the communication and deeper understanding of the faith.

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