V. ELEMENTS FOR A SPIRITUALITY OF WORK
24. A Particular Task for the Church
It is right to devote the
last part of these reflections about human work, on the occasion of the
ninetieth anniversary of the Encyclical Rerum
Novarum, to the spirituality of work in the
Christian sense. Since work in its subjective aspect is always a personal
action, an actus personae,
it follows that the whole person, body and spirit, participates in
it, whether it is manual or intellectual work. It is also to the whole person
that the word of the living God is directed, the evangelical message of
salvation, in which we find many points which concern human work and which
throw particular light on it. These points need to be properly assimilated: an
inner effort on the part of the human spirit, guided by faith, hope and
charity, is needed in order that through these points the work of the
individual human being may be given the meaning which it has in the eyes of
God and by means of which work enters into the salvation process on a par
with the other ordinary yet particularly important components of its texture.
The Church considers it her
duty to speak out on work from the viewpoint of its human value and of the
moral order to which it belongs, and she sees this as one of her important
tasks within the service that she renders to the evangelical message as a
whole. At the same time she sees it as her particular duty to form a
spirituality of work which will help all people to come closer, through
work, to God, the Creator and Redeemer, to participate in his salvific plan for man and the world and to deepen their
friendship with Christ in their lives by accepting, through faith, a living
participation in his threefold mission as Priest, Prophet and King, as the
Second Vatican Council so eloquently teaches.
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