MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE JOHN PAUL II FOR THE
CELEBRATION OF THE WORLD DAY OF PEACE
JANUARY 8, 2005
DO NOT BE OVERCOME BY EVIL BUT OVERCOME EVIL WITH
GOOD
1. At the beginning of the New Year, I once
again address the leaders of nations and all men and women of good will, who
recognize the need to build peace in the world. For the theme of this 2005
World Day of Peace I have chosen Saint Paul's words in the Letter to the
Romans: "Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good"
(12:21). Evil is never defeated by evil; once that road is taken, rather
than defeating evil, one will instead be defeated by evil.
The great Apostle brings out a fundamental
truth: peace is the outcome of a long and demanding battle which is only won
when evil is defeated by good. If we consider the tragic scenario of violent
fratricidal conflicts in different parts of the world, and the untold
sufferings and injustices to which they have given rise, the only truly
constructive choice is, as Saint Paul proposes, to flee what is evil and
hold fast to what is good (cf. Rom 12:9).
Peace is a good to be promoted with good:
it is a good for individuals, for families, for nations and for all humanity;
yet it is one which needs to be maintained and fostered by decisions and
actions inspired by good. We can appreciate the profound truth of another
saying of Saint Paul: "Repay no one evil for evil" (Rom 12:17).
The one way out of the vicious circle of requiting evil for evil is to accept
the Apostle's words: "Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with
good" (Rom 12:21).
Evil, good and love
2. From the beginning, humanity has known the
tragedy of evil and has struggled to grasp its roots and to explain its causes.
Evil is not some impersonal, deterministic force at work in the world. It is
the result of human freedom. Freedom, which distinguishes human beings from
every other creature on earth, is ever present at the heart of the drama of
evil. Evil always has a name and a face: the name and face of those men
and women who freely choose it. Sacred Scripture teaches that at the dawn of
history Adam and Eve rebelled against God, and Abel was killed by Cain, his
brother (cf. Gen 3-4). These were the first wrong choices, which were
succeeded by countless others down the centuries. Each of these choices has
an intrinsic moral dimension, involving specific individual
responsibilities and the fundamental relationship of each person with God, with
others and with all of creation.
At its deepest level, evil is a tragic
rejection of the demands of love(1). Moral good, on the other hand, is born of love, shows itself as
love and is directed towards love. All this is particularly evident to
Christians, who know that their membership in the one mystical Body of Christ
sets them in a particular relationship not only with the Lord but also with
their brothers and sisters. The inner logic of Christian love, which in the
Gospel is the living source of moral goodness, leads even to the love of one's
enemies: "If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him
something to drink" (Rom 12:20).
The "grammar" of the universal moral law
3. If we look to the present state of the world,
we cannot help but note the disturbing spread of various social and
political manifestations of evil: from social disorders to anarchy and war,
from injustice to acts of violence and killing. To steer a path between the
conflicting claims of good and evil, the human family urgently needs to
preserve and esteem that common patrimony of moral values bestowed by
God himself. For this reason, Saint Paul encourages all those determined to
overcome evil with good to be noble and disinterested in fostering
generosity and peace (cf. Rom 12:17-21).
Ten years ago, in addressing the General
Assembly of the United Nations about the need for common commitment to the
service of peace, I made reference to the "grammar" of the universal moral
law(2), to which the Church
appeals in her various pronouncements in this area. By inspiring common values
and principles, this law unites human beings, despite their different cultures,
and is itself unchanging: "it subsists under the flux of ideas and customs and
supports their progress... Even when it is rejected in its very principles, it
cannot be destroyed or removed from the heart of man. It always rises again in
the life of individuals and societies"(3).
4. This common grammar of the moral law
requires ever greater commitment and responsibility in ensuring that the life
of individuals and of peoples is respected and advanced. In this light, the
evils of a social and political nature which afflict the world, particularly
those provoked by outbreaks of violence, are to be vigorously condemned.
I think immediately of the beloved continent of Africa, where conflicts
which have already claimed millions of victims are still continuing. Or the
dangerous situation of Palestine, the Land of Jesus, where the fabric of
mutual understanding, torn by a conflict which is fed daily by acts of violence
and reprisal, cannot yet be mended in justice and truth. And what of the
troubling phenomenon of terrorist violence, which appears to be driving
the whole world towards a future of fear and anguish? Finally, how can we not
think with profound regret of the drama unfolding in Iraq, which has
given rise to tragic situations of uncertainty and insecurity for all?
To attain the good of peace there must be a
clear and conscious acknowledgment that violence is an unacceptable evil and
that it never solves problems. "Violence is a lie, for it goes against the
truth of our faith, the truth of our humanity. Violence destroys what it claims
to defend: the dignity, the life, the freedom of human beings"(4). What is needed is a great effort to
form consciences and to educate the younger generation to goodness by
upholding that integral and fraternal humanism which the Church
proclaims and promotes. This is the foundation for a social, economic and
political order respectful of the dignity, freedom and fundamental rights of
each person.
The good of peace and the common good
5. Fostering peace by overcoming evil with good
requires careful reflection on the common good(5) and on its social and political implications.
When the common good is promoted at every level, peace is promoted. Can an
individual find complete fulfilment without taking account of his social
nature, that is, his being "with" and "for" others? The common good closely
concerns him. It closely concerns every expression of his social nature: the
family, groups, associations, cities, regions, states, the community of peoples
and nations. Each person, in some way, is called to work for the common
good, constantly looking out for the good of others as if it were his own.
This responsibility belongs in a particular way to political authorities at
every level, since they are called to create that sum of social conditions
which permit and foster in human beings the integral development of their
person(6).
The common good therefore demands respect for
and the integral promotion of the person and his fundamental rights, as well as
respect for and the promotion of the rights of nations on the universal plane.
In this regard, the Second Vatican Council observed that "the increasingly
close interdependence gradually encompassing the entire world is leading to an
increasingly universal common good... and this 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 the common good of the
entire human family"(7). The good
of humanity as a whole, including future generations, calls for true
international cooperation, to which every nation must offer its
contribution(8).
Certain reductive visions of humanity tend to
present the common good as a purely socio-economic state of well-being
lacking any transcendent purpose, thus emptying it of its deepest meaning. Yet
the common good has a transcendent dimension, for God is the
ultimate end of all his creatures(9). Christians know that Jesus has shed full light
on how the true common good of humanity is to be achieved. History journeys
towards Christ and in him finds its culmination: because of Christ, through
Christ and for Christ, every human reality can be led to complete fulfilment in
God.
The good of peace and the use of the world's
goods
6. Since the good of peace is closely linked to
the development of all peoples, the ethical requirements for the use of the
earth's goods must always be taken into account. The Second Vatican Council
rightly recalled that "God intended the earth and all it contains for the use
of everyone and of all peoples; so that the good things of creation should be
available equally to all, with justice as guide and charity in
attendance"(10).
As a member of the human family, each person
becomes as it were a citizen of the world, with consequent duties and
rights, since all human beings are united by a common origin and the same
supreme destiny. By the mere fact of being conceived, a child is entitled
to rights and deserving of care and attention; and someone has the duty to
provide these. The condemnation of racism, the protection of minors, the
provision of aid to displaced persons and refugees, and the mobilization of
international solidarity towards all the needy are nothing other than
consistent applications of the principle of world citizenship.
7. The good of peace should be seen today as
closely related to the new goods derived from progress in science and
technology. These too, in application of the principle of the universal
destination of the earth's goods, need to be put at the service of
humanity's basic needs. Appropriate initiatives on the international level
can give full practical implementation to the principle of the universal
destination of goods by guaranteeing to all individuals and nations
the basic conditions for sharing in development. This becomes possible
once the barriers and monopolies that marginalize many peoples are
removed(11).
The good of peace will be better ensured if the
international community takes on greater responsibility for what are commonly
called public goods. These are goods which all citizens automatically
enjoy, without having consciously chosen them or contributed to them in any
way. Such is the case, for example, at the national level, with such goods as
the judiciary system, the defence system and the network of highways and
railways. In our world the phenomenon of increased globalization means that
more and more public goods are taking on a global character, and as a result
common interests are daily increasing. We need but think of the fight
against poverty, the promotion of peace and security, concern for climate
change and disease control. The international community needs to respond to
these interests with a broader network of juridical accords aimed at
regulating the use of public goods and inspired by universal principles
of fairness and solidarity.
8. The principle of the universal destination of
goods can also make possible a more effective approach to the challenge of
poverty, particularly when we consider the extreme poverty in which
millions of people are still living. The international community, at the
beginning of the new millennium, set the priority of halving their number by
the year 2015. The Church supports and encourages this commitment and invites
all who believe in Christ to show, practically and in every sector, a
preferential love for the poor(12).
The tragedy of poverty remains closely linked to
the issue of the foreign debt of poor countries. Despite significant
progress in this area, the problem has not yet been adequately resolved.
Fifteen years ago I called public attention to the fact that the foreign debt
of poor countries "is closely related to a series of other problems such as
foreign investment, the proper functioning of the major international
organizations, the price of raw materials and so forth"(13). Recent moves in favour of debt
reduction, centred mainly on the needs of the poor, have certainly improved the
quality of economic growth. Yet, because of a number of factors, this
growth is still quantitatively insufficient, especially in relation to the
millennium goals. Poor countries remain trapped in a vicious circle: low
income and weak growth limit savings and, in turn, weak investments and an
inefficient use of savings do not favour growth.
9. As Pope Paul VI stated and as I myself have
reaffirmed, the only really effective means of enabling States to deal with the
grave problem of poverty is to provide them with the necessary resources
through foreign financial aid public and private granted
under reasonable conditions, within the framework of international commercial
relations regulated with fairness(14). What is urgently needed is a moral and
economic mobilization, one which respects agreements already made in favour
of poor countries, and is at the same time prepared to review those agreements
which have proved excessively burdensome for some countries. In this regard,
new impulse should be given to Public Aid for Development, and new forms
of financing for development should be explored, whatever the difficulties
entailed(15). Some governments are
already looking carefully at promising mechanisms for this; these significant
initiatives should be carried out in a spirit of authentic sharing, with
respect for the principle of subsidiarity. The management of financial
resources destined to the development of poor countries should also entail
scrupulous adherence, on the part of both donors and recipients, to sound
administrative practices. The Church encourages and contributes to these
efforts. One need only mention the significant contribution made by the many
Catholic agencies dedicated to aid and development.
10. At the end of the Great Jubilee of the year
2000, in my Apostolic Letter Novo
Millennio Ineunte, I spoke of the urgent need for a new
creativity in charity(16), in order to spread the Gospel of hope in the
world. This need is clearly seen when we consider the many difficult
problems standing in the way of development in Africa: numerous armed
conflicts, pandemic diseases aggravated by extreme poverty, and political
instability leading to widespread insecurity. These are tragic situations which
call for a radically new direction for Africa: there is a need to create
new forms of solidarity, at bilateral and multilateral levels, through a
more decisive commitment on the part of all, with complete conviction that the
well-being of the peoples of Africa is an indispensable condition for the
attainment of the universal common good.
May the peoples of Africa become the
protagonists of their own future and their own cultural, civil, social and
economic development! May Africa cease to be a mere recipient of aid, and
become a responsible agent of convinced and productive sharing! Achieving this
goal calls for a new political culture, especially in the area of international
cooperation. Once again I wish to state that failure to honour the repeated
promises of Public Aid for Development, the still unresolved question of
the heavy foreign debt of African countries and the failure to give those
countries special consideration in international commercial relations,
represent grave obstacles to peace which urgently need to be addressed and
resolved. Today more than ever, a decisive condition for bringing peace to the
world is an acknowledgement of the interdependence between wealthy and poor
countries, such that "development either becomes shared in common by every part
of the world or it undergoes a process of regression even in zones marked by
constant progress"(17).
The universality of evil and Christian
hope
11. Faced with the many tragic situations
present in the world, Christians confess with humble trust that God alone can
enable individuals and peoples to overcome evil and achieve good. By his death
and resurrection, Christ has redeemed us and ransomed us "with a price" (1
Cor 6:20; 7:23), gaining salvation for all. With his help, everyone can
defeat evil with good.
Based on the certainty that evil will not
prevail, Christians nourish an invincible hope which sustains their
efforts to promote justice and peace. Despite the personal and social sins
which mark all human activity, hope constantly gives new impulse to the
commitment to justice and peace, as well as firm confidence in the possibility
of building a better world.
Although the "mystery of iniquity" (2 Th
2:7) is present and active in the world, we must not forget that redeemed
humanity is capable of resisting it. Each believer, created in the image of God
and redeemed by Christ, "who in a certain way has united himself to each human
being"(18), can cooperate in the
triumph of good. The work of "the Spirit of the Lord fills the earth" (cf.
Wis 1:7). Christians, especially the lay faithful, "should not, then,
hide their hope in the depth of their hearts, but rather express it through the
structures of their secular lives in continual conversion and in wrestling
against the world rulers of this darkness, against the spiritual forces
of iniquity' (Eph 6:12)"(19).
12. No man or woman of good will can renounce
the struggle to overcome evil with good. This fight can be fought effectively
only with the weapons of love. When good overcomes evil, love prevails and
where love prevails, there peace prevails. This is the teaching of the
Gospel, restated by the Second Vatican Council: "the fundamental law of human
perfection, and consequently of the transformation of the world, is the new
commandment of love"(20).
The same is true in the social and political
spheres. In this regard, Pope LeoXIII wrote that those charged with preserving
peace in relations between peoples should foster in themselves and kindle in
others "charity, the mistress and queen of all the virtues"(21). Christians must be convinced witnesses of this
truth. They should show by their lives that love is the only force capable of
bringing fulfilment to persons and societies, the only force ca- pable of
directing the course of history in the way of goodness and peace.
During this year dedicated to the
Eucharist, may the sons
and daughters of the Church find in the supreme sacrament of love the
wellspring of all communion: communion with Jesus the Redeemer and, in him,
with every human being. By Christ's death and resurrection, made sacramentally
present in each Eucharistic celebration, we are saved from evil and enabled to
do good. Through the new life which Christ has bestowed on us, we can recognize
one another as brothers and sisters, despite every difference of language,
nationality and culture. In a word, by sharing in the one bread and the one
cup, we come to realize that we are "God's family" and that together we can
make our own effective contribution to building a world based on the values of
justice, freedom and peace.
From the Vatican, 8 December 2004.
JOHN PAUL II
NOTES
(1) In this regard,
Saint Augustine observed that "two loves have established two cities: love of
self, carried to contempt for God, has given rise to the earthly city; love of
God, carried to contempt for self, has given rise to the heavenly city" (De
Civitate Dei, XIV:28).
(2) Cf. Address
to the General Assembly of the United Nations for its Fiftieth Anniversary
(5 October 1995), 3: Insegnamenti XVIII/2 (1995), 732.
(3) Catechism of
the Catholic Church, No. 1958.
(4) John Paul II,
Homily at Drogheda, Ireland (29 September 1979), 9: AAS 71
(1979), 1081.
(5) The common
good is widely understood to be "the sum of those conditions of social life
which enable groups and individuals to achieve their fulfilment more completely
and readily". Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution
Gaudium et Spes, 26.
(6) Cf. John XXIII,
Encyclical Letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53 (1961), 417.
(7) Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 26.
(8) Cf. John XXIII,
Encyclical Letter Mater et Magistra: AAS 53 (1961), 421.
(9) Cf. John Paul
II, Encyclical Letter Centesimus Annus, 41: AAS 83 (1991), 844.
(10) Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 69.
(11) Cf. John Paul
II, Encyclical Letter Centesimus Annus, 35: AAS 83 (1991), 837.
(12) Cf. John Paul
II, Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 42: AAS 80
(1988), 572.
(13) Address to
Participants in the Study Week of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences (27
October 1989), 6: Insegnamenti XII/2 (1989), 1050.
(14) Cf. Paul VI,
Encyclical Letter Populorum Progressio, 56-61: AAS 59 (1967),
285-287; John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis,
33-34: AAS 80 (1988), 557-560.
(15) Cf. John Paul
II, Message to the President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and
Peace: L'Osservatore Romano, 10 July 2004, p. 5.
(16) Cf. No. 50:
AAS 93 (2001), 303.
(17) John Paul II,
Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 17: AAS 80 (1988)
532.
(18) Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council, Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 22.
(19) Second Vatican
Ecumenical Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 35.
(20) Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et Spes, 38.
(21) Encyclical
Letter Rerum Novarum: Acta Leonis XIII 11 (1892), 143; cf. Benedict XV,
Encyclical Letter Pacem Dei: AAS 12 (1920), 215. |