52. Clearly, all this must be done
in a specifically Christian way: the laity especially must be present in
these areas in fulfilment of their lay vocation, without ever yielding to the
temptation to turn Christian communities into mere social agencies. In
particular, the Church's relationship with civil society should respect the
latter's autonomy and areas of competence, in accordance with the teachings of
the Church's social doctrine.
Well known are the efforts made by the Church's teaching authority,
especially in the twentieth century, to interpret social realities in the light
of the Gospel and to offer in a timely and systematic way its contribution to
the social question, which has now assumed a global dimension.
The ethical and social aspect of the question is an essential element of
Christian witness: we must reject the temptation to offer a privatized and
individualistic spirituality which ill accords with the demands of charity, to
say nothing of the implications of the Incarnation and, in the last analysis,
of Christianity's eschatological tension. While that tension makes us aware of
the relative character of history, it in no way implies that we withdraw from
"building" history. Here the teaching of the Second Vatican Council
is more timely than ever: "The Christian message does not inhibit men and
women from building up the world, or make them disinterested in the welfare of
their fellow human beings: on the contrary it obliges them more fully to do
these very things".36
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