1.
Service to Church and Society
31.
Through teaching and research, a Catholic University offers an indispensable
contribution to the Church. In fact, it prepares men and women who, inspired by
Christian principles and helped to live their Christian vocation in a mature
and responsible manner, will be able to assume positions of responsibility in
the Church. Moreover, by offering the results of its scientific research, a
Catholic University will be able to help the Church respond to the problems and
needs of this age.
32.
A Catholic University, as any University, is immersed in human society; as an
extension of its service to the Church, and always within its proper
competence, it is called on to become an ever more effective instrument of
cultural progress for individuals as well as for society. Induded among its
research activities, therefore, will be a study of serious contemporary
problems in areas such as the dignity of human life, the promotion of
justice for all, the quality of personal and family life, the protection of
nature, the search for peace and political stability, a more just sharing in
the world's resources, and a new economic and political order that will better
serve the human community at a national and international level. University
research will seek to discover the roots and causes of the serious problems of
our time, paying special attention to their ethical and religious dimensions.
If need
be, a Catholic University must have the courage to speak uncomfortable truths
which do not please public opinion, but which are necessary to safeguard the
authentic good of society.
33.
A specific priority is the need to examine and evaluate the predominant values
and norms of modern society and culture in a Christian perspective, and the
responsibility to try to communicate to society those ethical and religious
principles which give full meaning to human life. In this way a University
can contribute further to the development of a true Christian anthropology,
founded on the person of Christ, which will bring the dynamism of the creation
and redemption to bear on reality and on the correct solution to the problems
of life.
34.
The Christian spirit of service to others for the promotion of social
justice is of particular importance for each Catholic University, to be
shared by its teachers and developed in its students. The Church is firmly
committed to the integral growth of all men and women(32). The Gospel,
interpreted in the social teachings of the Church, is an urgent call to promote
"the development of those peoples who are striving to escape from hunger,
misery, endemic diseases and ignorance; of those who are looking for a wider
share in the benefits of civilization and a more active improvement of their
human qualities; of those who are aiming purposefully at their complete
fulfilment"(33). Every Catholic University feels responsible to
contribute concretely to the progress of the society within which it works: for
example it will be capable of searching for ways to make university education
accessible to all those who are able to benefit from it, especially the poor or
members of minority groups who customarily have been deprived of it. A Catholic
University also has the responsibility, to the degree that it is able, to help
to promote the development of the emerging nations.
35.
In its attempts to resolve these complex issues that touch on so many different
dimensions of human life and of society, a Catholic University will insist on
cooperation among the different academic disciplines, each offering its
distinct contribution in the search for solutions; moreover, since the economic
and personal resources of a single Institution are limited, cooperation in common
research projects among Catholic Universities, as well as with other
private and governmental institutions, is imperative. In this regard, and also
in what pertains to the other fields of the specific activity of a Catholic
University, the role played by various national and international associations
of Catholic Universities is to be emphasized. Among these associations the
mission of The International Federation of Catholic Universities, founded
by the Holy See(34), is particularly to be remembered. The Holy See
anticipates further fruitful collaboration with this Federation.
36.
Through programmes of continuing education offered to the wider
community, by making its scholars available for consulting services, by taking
advantage of modern means of communication, and in a variety of other ways, a
Catholic University can assist in making the growing body of human knowledge
and a developing understanding of the faith available to a wider public, thus
expanding university services beyond its own academic community.
37.
In its service to society, a Catholic University will relate especially to
the academic, cultural and scientific world of the region in which it is
located. Original forms of dialogue and collaboration are to be encouraged
between the Catholic Universities and the other Universities of a nation on
behalf of development, of understanding between cultures, and of the defence of
nature in accordance with an awareness of the international ecological
situation.
Catholic
Universities join other private and public Institutions in serving the public
interest through higher education and research; they are one among the variety
of different types of institution that are necessary for the free expression of
cultural diversity, and they are committed to the promotion of solidarity and
its meaning in society and in the world. Therefore they have the full right to
expect that civil society and public authorities will recognize and defend
their institutional autonomy and academic freedom; moreover, they have the
right to the financial support that is necessary for their continued existence
and development.
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