Vatican Secretary of State Reflects on Caritas in Veritate
August 26, 2009 by O'Meara Ferguson
Filed under economic crisis
ROME, AUG. 22, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of a speech Benedict XVI’s secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, gave to the Italian Senate last month. The July 28 discourse was a reflection on the Pope’s third encyclical, “Caritas in Veritate.”
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Benedict XVI begins his Encyclical with a deep, comprehensive introduction in which he reflects on and analyzes the words of the title which closely link “caritas” and “veritas”: love and truth. This is not only a sort of “explicatio terminorum”, an initial explanation which seeks to point out the fundamental principles and perspectives of his entire teaching. Indeed, like the musical theme of a symphony, the theme of truth and charity then recurs throughout the document precisely because, as the Pope writes, in it is “the principal driving force behind the authentic development of every person and of all humanity”.
But, we ask ourselves, which truth and which love are meant? There is no doubt that today these very concepts give rise to suspicion especially the term “truth” or are the object of misunderstanding, and this is especially the case with the term “love”. This is why it is important to make clear which truth and which love the Pope is addressing in his new Encyclical. The Holy Father explains that these two fundamental realities are neither extrinsic to man nor even imposed upon him in the name of any kind of ideological vision; rather, they are deeply rooted within the person. Indeed, “love and truth”, the Pope says, “are the vocation planted by God in the heart and mind of every human person”, the person who, according to Sacred Scripture, has been created precisely “as an image of the Creator”, in other words of the “God of the Bible, who is both “Agápe” and “Lógos”: Charity and Truth, Love and Word.
This reality is testified to us not only by biblical Revelation but can be grasped by every person of good will who uses right reason in reflecting on himself. In this regard, several passages of an important and meaningful Document that came out just before Caritas in veritate seem to illustrate this view clearly. The International Theological Commission in recent months has given us a text entitled “The Search for Universal Ethics: A New Look at Natural Law”. It addresses topics of great importance which I wish to point out and to recommend especially in this context of the Senate, that is, an institution whose main function is legislative. Indeed, as the Holy Father said to the United Nations Assembly in New York during his Visit last year to their headquarters, sometimes called the “glass palace”, speaking about the foundation of human rights: These rights “are based on the natural law inscribed on human hearts and present in different cultures and civilizations. Removing human rights from this context would mean restricting their range and yielding to a relativistic conception, according to which the meaning and interpretation of rights could vary and their universality would be denied in the name of different cultural, political, social and even religious outlooks”. These reflections do not apply solely to human rights. They apply to every intervention by the legitimate authority called to regulate the life of the community in accordance with true justice by means of legislation that is not the result of a mere conventional agreement but aims at the authentic good of the person and of society and hence refers to this natural law.
Now, expounding on the reality of natural law, the International Theological Commission describes precisely how truth and love are essential requirements of every person and are deeply rooted in his being. “In his search for moral good, the human person should recognize what he is and be aware of the fundamental inclinations of his nature”, which orient him toward the goods necessary for his moral fulfillment. As is well known, “a distinction has traditionally been made between three important forms of natural dynamism…. The first, in common with every essential being, is comprised of the fundamental instinct to preserve and develop one’s own existence. The second, which is shared by all living beings, includes the inclination to reproduce in order to perpetuate the species. The third, which is proper to man as a rational being, constitutes the inclination to know the truth about God and to live in society”. Examining in depth this third form of dynamism which is found in every individual, the International Theological Commission declares that it is “specific to the human being as a spiritual being, endowed with reason, capable of knowing the truth, of entering into dialogue with others and of forming social relationships…. His integral well-being is thus closely linked to community life, which is organized in a political society by virtue of a natural inclination and not a mere convention. The person’s relational character is also expressed in his tendency to live in communion with God or the Absolute…

