3.
Cultural Dialogue
43.
By
its very nature, a University develops culture through its research, helps to
transmit the local culture to each succeeding generation through its teaching,
and assists cultural activities through its educational services. It is open to
all human experience and is ready to dialogue with and learn from any culture. A
Catholic University shares in this, offering the rich experience of the
Church's own culture. In addition, a Catholic University, aware that human
culture is open to Revelation and transcendence, is also a primary and
privileged place for a fruitful dialogue between the Gospel and culture.
44.
Through this dialogue a Catholic University assists the Church, enabling it to
come to a better knowledge of diverse cultures, discern their positive and
negative aspects, to receive their authentically human contributions, and to
develop means by which it can make the faith better understood by the men and
women of a particular culture(36). While it is true that the Gospel
cannot be identified with any particular culture and transcends all cultures,
it is also true that "the Kingdom which the Gospel proclaims is lived by
men and women who are profoundly linked to a culture, and the building up of
the Kingdom cannot avoid borrowing the elements of human culture or
cultures(37). "A faith that places itself on the margin of what is
human, of what is therefore culture, would be a faith unfaithful to the
fullness of what the Word of God manifests and reveals, a decapitated faith,
worse still, a faith in the process of self-annihilation"(38).
45.
A Catholic University must become more attentive to the cultures of the
world of today, and to the various cultural traditions existing within
the Church in a way that will promote a continuous and profitable dialogue
between the Gospel and modern society. Among the criteria that characterize the
values of a culture are above all, the meaning of the human person, his
or her liberty, dignity, sense of responsibility, and openness to the
transcendent. To a respect for persons is joined the preeminent value of the
family, the primary unit of every human culture.
Catholic
Universities will seek to discern and evaluate both the aspirations and the
contradictions of modern culture, in order to make it more suited to the total
development of individuals and peoples. In particular, it is recommended that
by means of appropriate studies, the impact of modern technology and especially
of the mass media on persons, the family, and the institutions and whole of
modem culture be studied deeply. Traditional cultures are to be defended in
their identity, helping them to receive modern values without sacrificing their
own heritage, which is a wealth for the whole of the human family.
Universities, situated within the ambience of these cultures, will seek to
harmonize local cultures with the positive contributions of modern cultures.
46.
An area that particularly interests a Catholic University is the dialogue
between Christian thought and the modern sciences. This task requires
persons particularly well versed in the individual disciplines and who are at
the same time adequately prepared theologically, and who are capable of
confronting epistemological questions at the level of the relationship between
faith and reason. Such dialogue concerns the natural sciences as much as the
human sciences which posit new and complex philosophical and ethical problems.
The Christian researcher should demonstrate the way in which human intelligence
is enriched by the higher truth that comes from the Gospel: "The
intelligence is never diminished, rather, it is stimulated and reinforced by
that interior fount of deep understanding that is the Word of God, and by the
hierarchy of values that results from it... In its unique manner, the Catholic
University helps to manifest the superiority of the spirit, that can never,
without the risk of losing its very self, be placed at the service of something
other than the search for truth"(39).
47.
Besides cultural dialogue, a Catholic University, in accordance vith its
specific ends, and keeping in mind the various religious-cultural contexts,
following the directives promulgated by competent ecclesiastical authority, can
offer a contribution to ecumenical dialogue. It does so to further the search
for unity among all Christians. In inter-religious dialogue it will assist in
discerning the spiritual values that are present in the different religions.
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