Seeking
True Solutions
We are fully aware of the difficulties
confronting the public authorities in this matter, especially in the developing
countries. In fact, We had in mind the justifiable anxieties which weigh upon
them when We published Our encyclical letter Populorum Progressio. But
now We join Our voice to that of Our predecessor John XXIII of venerable
memory, and We make Our own his words: "No statement of the problem and no
solution to it is acceptable which does violence to man's essential dignity;
those who propose such solutions base them on an utterly materialistic
conception of man himself and his life. The only possible solution to this
question is one which envisages the social and economic progress both of
individuals and of the whole of human society, and which respects and promotes
true human values." 26 No one can, without being grossly unfair,
make divine Providence responsible for what clearly seems to be the result of
misguided governmental policies, of an insufficient sense of social justice, of
a selfish accumulation of material goods, and finally of a culpable failure to
undertake those initiatives and responsibilities which would raise the standard
of living of peoples and their children. 27 If only all governments
which were able would do what some are already doing so nobly, and bestir
themselves to renew their efforts and their undertakings! There must be no
relaxation in the programs of mutual aid between all the branches of the great
human family. Here We believe an almost limitless field lies open for the
activities of the great international institutions.
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