IV. AUTHENTIC HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
27. The examination which the Encyclical invites us to
make of the contemporary world leads us to note in the first place that
development is not a straightforward process, as it were automatic and in
itself limitless, as though, given certain conditions, the human race were able
to progress rapidly towards an undefined perfection of some kind.49
Such an idea - linked to a notion of "progress" with
philosophical connotations deriving from the Enlightenment, rather than to the
notion of "development"50 which is used in a specifically
economic and social sense - now seems to be seriously called into doubt,
particularly since the tragic experience of the two world wars, the planned and
partly achieved destruction of whole peoples, and the looming atomic peril. A
naive mechanistic optimism has been replaced by a well founded anxiety for the
fate of humanity.
28. At the same time, however, the
"economic" concept itself, linked to the word development, has
entered into crisis. In fact there is a better understanding today that the mere
accumulation of goods and services, even for the benefit of the majority, is
not enough for the realization of human happiness. Nor, in consequence, does
the availability of the many real benefits provided in recent times by science
and technology, including the computer sciences, bring freedom from every form
of slavery. On the contrary, the experience of recent years shows that unless
all the considerable body of resources and potential at man's disposal is
guided by a moral understanding and by an orientation towards the true good of
the human race, it easily turns against man to oppress him.
A disconcerting conclusion about the most recent period should serve to
enlighten us: side-by-side with the miseries of underdevelopment, themselves
unacceptable, we find ourselves up against a form of superdevelopment, equally
inadmissible. because like the former it is contrary to what is good and to
true happiness. This superdevelopment, which consists in an excessive
availability of every kind of material goods for the benefit of certain social
groups, easily makes people slaves of "possession" and of immediate
gratification, with no other horizon than the multiplication or continual
replacement of the things already owned with others still better. This is the so-called
civilization of "consumption" or " consumerism ," which
involves so much "throwing-away" and "waste." An object
already owned but now superseded by something better is discarded, with no
thought of its possible lasting value in itself, nor of some other human being
who is poorer.
All of us experience firsthand the sad effects of this blind submission
to pure consumerism: in the first place a crass materialism, and at the same
time a radical dissatisfaction, because one quickly learns - unless one is
shielded from the flood of publicity and the ceaseless and tempting offers of
products - that the more one possesses the more one wants, while deeper
aspirations remain unsatisfied and perhaps even stifled.
The Encyclical of Pope Paul VI pointed out the difference, so often
emphasized today, between "having" and "being,"51
which had been expressed earlier in precise words by the Second Vatican
Council.52 To "have" objects and goods does not in itself
perfect the human subject, unless it contributes to the maturing and enrichment
of that subject's "being," that is to say unless it contributes to
the realization of the human vocation as such.
Of course, the difference between "being" and
"having," the danger inherent in a mere multiplication or replacement
of things possessed compared to the value of "being," need not turn
into a contradiction. One of the greatest injustices in the contemporary world
consists precisely in this: that the ones who possess much are relatively few
and those who possess almost nothing are many. It is the injustice of the poor
distribution of the goods and services originally intended for all.
This then is the picture: there are some people - the few who possess
much - who do not really succeed in "being" because, through a
reversal of the hierarchy of values, they are hindered by the cult of
"having"; and there are others - the many who have little or nothing
- who do not succeed in realizing their basic human vocation because they are
deprived of essential goods.
The evil does not consist in "having" as such, but in
possessing without regard for the quality and the ordered hierarchy of the
goods one has. Quality and hierarchy arise from the subordination of goods and
their availability to man's "being" and his true vocation.
This shows that although development has a necessary economic dimension,
since it must supply the greatest possible number of the world's inhabitants
with an availability of goods essential for them "to be," it is not
limited to that dimension. If it is limited to this, then it turns against
those whom it is meant to benefit.
The characteristics of full development, one which is "more
human" and able to sustain itself at the level of the true vocation of men
and women without denying economic requirements, were described by Paul
VI.53
29. Development which is not only economic must be
measured and oriented according to the reality and vocation of man seen in his
totality, namely, according to his interior dimension. There is no doubt that
he needs created goods and the products of industry, which is constantly being
enriched by scientific and technological progress. And the ever greater
availability of material goods not only meets needs but also opens new
horizons. The danger of the misuse of material goods and the appearance of
artificial needs should in no way hinder the regard we have for the new goods
and resources placed at our disposal and the use we make of them. On the
contrary, we must see them as a gift from God and as a response to the human
vocation, which is fully realized in Christ.
However, in trying to achieve true development we must never lose sight
of that dimension which is in the specific nature of man, who has been created
by God in his image and likeness (cf. Gen 1:26). It
is a bodily and a spiritual nature, symbolized in the second creation account
by the two elements: the earth, from which God forms man's body, and the breath
of life which he breathes into man's nostrils (cf. Gen
2:7).
Thus man comes to have a certain affinity with other creatures: he is
called to use them, and to be involved with them. As the Genesis account says
(cf. Gen 2:15), he is placed in the garden with the
duty of cultivating and watching over it, being superior to the other creatures
placed by God under his dominion (cf. Gen
1:25-26). But at the same time man must remain subject to the will
of God, who imposes limits upon his use and dominion over things (cf.
Gen 2:16-17), just as he promises his
mortality (cf. Gen 2:9;
Wis 2:23). Thus man, being
the image of God, has a true affinity with him too. On the basis of this
teaching, development cannot consist only in the use, dominion over and
indiscriminate possession of created things and the products of human industry,
but rather in subordinating the possession, dominion and use to man's divine
likeness and to his vocation to immortality. This is the transcendent reality
of the human being, a reality which is seen to be shared from the beginning by
a couple, a man and a woman (cf. Gen
1:27), and is therefore fundamentally social.
30. According to Sacred Scripture therefore, the
notion of development is not only "lay" or "profane," but
it is also seen to be, while having a socio-economic dimension of its own, the
modern expression of an essential dimension of man's vocation.
The fact is that man was not created, so to speak, immobile and static.
The first portrayal of him, as given in the Bible, certainly presents him as a
creature and image, defined in his deepest reality by the origin and affinity
that constitute him. But all this plants within the human being - man and woman
- the seed and the requirement of a special task to be accomplished by each
individually and by them as a couple. The task is "to have dominion"
over the other created beings, "to cultivate the garden." This is to
be accomplished within the framework of obedience to the divine law and
therefore with respect for the image received, the image which is the clear
foundation of the power of dominion recognized as belonging to man as the means
to his perfection (cf. Gen 1:26-30;
2:15-16; Wis
9:2-3).
When man disobeys God and refuses to submit to his rule, nature rebels
against him and no longer recognizes him as its "master," for he has
tarnished the divine image in himself. The claim to ownership and use of
created things remains still valid, but after sin its exercise becomes
difficult and full of suffering (cf. Gen
3:17-19).
In fact, the following chapter of Genesis shows us that the descendants
of Cain build "a city," engage in sheep farming, practice the arts (music)
and technical skills (metallurgy); while at the same time people began to
"call upon the name of the Lord" (cf. Gen
4:17-26).
The story of the human race described by Sacred Scripture is, even after
the fall into sin, a story of constant achievements, which, although always
called into question and threatened by sin, are nonetheless repeated, increased
and extended in response to the divine vocation given from the beginning to man
and to woman (cf. Gen
1:26-28) and inscribed in the image which they received.
It is logical to conclude, at least on the part of those who believe in
the word of God, that today's "development" is to be seen as a moment
in the story which began at creation, a story which is constantly endangered by
reason of infidelity to the Creator's will, and especially by the temptation to
idolatry. But this "development" fundamentally corresponds to the
first premises. Anyone wishing to renounce the difficult yet noble task of
improving the lot of man in his totality, and of all people, with the excuse
that the struggle is difficult and that constant effort is required, or simply
because of the experience of defeat and the need to begin again, that person
would be betraying the will of God the Creator. In this regard, in the
Encyclical Laborem Exercens I referred to man's vocation to work, in
order to emphasize the idea that it is always man who is the protagonist of
development.54
Indeed, the Lord Jesus himself, in the parable of the talents,
emphasizes the severe treatment given to the man who dared to hide the gift
received: "You wicked slothful servant! You knew that I reap where I have
not sowed and gather where I have not winnowed? ...So take the talent from him,
and give it to him who has the ten talents" (Mt
25:26-28). It falls to us, who receive the gifts of God in order to
make them fruitful, to "sow" and "reap." If we do not, even
what we have will be taken away from us.
A deeper study of these harsh words will make us commit ourselves more
resolutely to the duty, which is urgent for everyone today, to work together
for the full development of others: "development of the whole human being
and of all people."55
31. Faith in Christ the Redeemer, while it illuminates
from within the nature of development, also guides us in the task of
collaboration. In the Letter of St. Paul to the Colossians, we read that Christ
is "the first-born of all creation," and that "all things were
created through him" and for him (1:15-16).
In fact, "all things hold together in him," since "in him all
the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself
all things" (20).
A part of this divine plan, which begins from eternity in Christ, the
perfect "image" of the Father, and which culminates in him, "the
firstborn from the dead" (Col.1.18
), is our own history, marked by our personal and collective effort
to raise up the human condition and to overcome the obstacles which are
continually arising along our way. It thus prepares us to share in the fullness
which "dwells in the Lord" and which he communicates "to his
body, which is the Church" (
Col.1.18 ; cf. Eph 1:22-23). At the same time sin, which
is always attempting to trap us and which jeopardizes our human achievements,
is conquered and redeemed by the "reconciliation" accomplished by
Christ (cf. Col 1:20).
Here the perspectives widen. The dream of "unlimited progress"
reappears, radically transformed by the new outlook created by Christian faith,
assuring us that progress is possible only because God the Father has decided
from the beginning to make man a sharer of his glory in Jesus Christ risen from
the dead, in whom "we have redemption through his blood...the forgiveness
of our trespasses" (Eph 1:7). In him God wished to conquer sin and make it
serve our greater good,56 which infinitely surpasses what progress
could achieve.
We can say therefore - as we struggle amidst the obscurities and
deficiencies of underdevelopment and superdevelopment - that one day this
corruptible body will put on incorruptibility, this mortal body immortality
(cf. 1 Cor 15:54), when the Lord
"delivers the Kingdom to God the Father" (1 Cor. 15: 24 ) and all the works
and actions that are worthy of man will be redeemed.
Furthermore, the concept of faith makes quite clear the reasons which
impel the Church to concern herself with the problems of development, to
consider them a duty of her pastoral ministry, and to urge all to think about
the nature and characteristics of authentic human development. Through her
commitment she desires, on the one hand, to place herself at the service of the
divine plan which is meant to order all things to the fullness which dwells in
Christ (cf. Col 1:19) and which he
communicated to his body; and on the other hand she desires to respond to her
fundamental vocation of being a "sacrament," that is to say "a
sign and instrument of intimate union with God and of the unity of the whole
human race."57
Some Fathers of the Church were inspired by this idea to develop in
original ways a concept of the meaning of history and of human work, directed
towards a goal which surpasses this meaning and which is always defined by its
relationship to the work of Christ. In other words, one can find in the
teaching of the Fathers an optimistic vision of history and work, that is to
say of the perennial value of authentic human achievements, inasmuch as they
are redeemed by Christ and destined for the promised Kingdom.58
Thus, part of the teaching and most ancient practice of the Church is
her conviction that she is obliged by her vocation - she herself, her ministers
and each of her members - to relieve the misery of the suffering, both far and
near, not only out of her "abundance" but also out of her
"necessities." Faced by cases of need, one cannot ignore them in
favor of superfluous church ornaments and costly furnishings for divine
worship; on the contrary it could be obligatory to sell these goods in order to
provide food, drink, clothing and shelter for those who lack these
things.59 As has been already noted, here we are shown a "hierarchy
of values" - in the framework of the right to property -
between"having" and "being," especially when the
"having" of a few can be to the detriment of the "being" of
many others.
In his Encyclical Pope Paul VI stands in the line of this teaching, taking
his inspiration from the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes.60
For my own part, I wish to insist once more on the seriousness and urgency of
that teaching, and I ask the Lord to give all Christians the strength to put it
faithfully into practice.
32. The obligation to commit oneself to the
development of peoples is not just an individual duty, and still less an
individualistic one, as if it were possible to achieve this development through
the isolated efforts of each individual. It is an imperative which obliges each
and every man and woman, as well as societies and nations. In particular, it
obliges the Catholic Church and the other Churches and Ecclesial Communities,
with which we are completely willing to collaborate in this field. In this
sense, just as we Catholics invite our Christian brethren to share in our
initiatives, so too we declare that we are ready to collaborate in theirs, and
we welcome the invitations presented to us. In this pursuit of integral human
development we can also do much with the members of other religions, as in fact
is being done in various places.
Collaboration in the development of the whole person and of every human
being is in fact a duty of all towards all, and must be shared by the four parts
of the world: East and West, North and South; or, as we say today, by the
different "worlds." If, on the contrary, people try to achieve it in
only one part, or in only one world, they do so at the expense of the others;
and, precisely because the others are ignored, their own development becomes
exaggerated and misdirected.
Peoples or nations too have a right to their own full development, which
while including - as already said - the economic and social aspects, should
also include individual cultural identity and openness to the transcendent. Not
even the need for development can be used as an excuse for imposing on others
one's own way of life or own religious belief.
33. Nor would a type of development which did not
respect and promote human rights - personal and social, economic and political,
including the rights of nations and of peoples - be really worthy of man.
Today, perhaps more than in the past, the intrinsic contradiction of a
development limited only to its economic element is seen more clearly. Such
development easily subjects the human person and his deepest needs to the
demands of economic planning and selfish profit.
The intrinsic connection between authentic development and respect for
human rights once again reveals the moral character of development: the true
elevation of man, in conformity with the natural and historical vocation of
each individual, is not attained only by exploiting the abundance of goods and
services, or by having available perfect infrastructures.
When individuals and communities do not see a rigorous respect for the
moral, cultural and spiritual requirements, based on the dignity of the person
and on the proper identity of each community, beginning with the family and
religious societies, then all the rest - availability of goods, abundance of
technical resources applied to daily life, a certain level of material
well-being - will prove unsatisfying and in the end contemptible. The Lord
clearly says this in the Gospel, when he calls the attention of all to the true
hierarchy of values: "For what will it profit a man, if he gains the whole
world and forfeits his life?" (Mt
16:26)
True development, in keeping with the specific needs of the human being
- man or woman, child, adult or old person - implies, especially for those who
actively share in this process and are responsible for it, a lively awareness
of the value of the rights of all and of each person. It likewise implies a
lively awareness of the need to respect the right of every individual to the
full use of the benefits offered by science and technology.
On the internal level of every nation, respect for all rights takes on
great importance, especially: the right to life at every stage of its
existence; the rights of the family, as the basic social community, or
"cell of society"; justice in employment relationships; the rights
inherent in the life of the political community as such; the rights based on
the transcendent vocation of the human being, beginning with the right of
freedom to profess and practice one's own religious belief.
On the international level, that is, the level of relations between
States or, in present-day usage, between the different "worlds,"
there must be complete respect for the identity of each people, with its own
historical and cultural characteristics. It is likewise essential, as the
Encyclical Populorum Progressio already asked, to recognize each
people's equal right "to be seated at the table of the common
banquet,"61 instead of lying outside the door like Lazarus, while
"the dogs come and lick his sores" (cf. Lk
16:21). Both peoples and individual must enjoy the fundamental
equality62 which is the basis, for example, of the Charter of the
United Nations Organization: the equality which is the basis of the right of
all to share in the process of full development.
In order to be genuine, development must be achieved within the
framework of solidarity and freedom, without ever sacrificing either of them
under whatever pretext. The moral character of development and its necessary
promotion are emphasized when the most rigorous respect is given to all the
demands deriving from the order of truth and good proper to the human person.
Furthermore the Christian who is taught to see that man is the image of God,
called to share in the truth and the good which is God himself, does not
understand a commitment to development and its application which excludes
regard and respect for the unique dignity of this "image." In other
words, true development must be based on the love of God and neighbor, and must
help to promote the relationships between individuals and society. This is the
"civilization of love" of which Paul VI often spoke.
34. Nor can the moral character of development exclude
respect for the beings which constitute the natural world, which the ancient
Greeks - alluding precisely to the order which distinguishes it - called the
"cosmos." Such realities also demand respect, by virtue of a
threefold consideration which it is useful to reflect upon carefully.
The first consideration is the appropriateness of acquiring a growing
awareness of the fact that one cannot use with impunity the different
categories of beings, whether living or inanimate - animals, plants, the
natural elements - simply as one wishes, according to one s own economic needs.
On the contrary, one must take into account the nature of each being and of its
mutual connection in an ordered system, which is precisely the cosmos."
The second consideration is based on the realization - which is perhaps
more urgent - that natural resources are limited; some are not, as it is said,
renewable. Using them as if they were inexhaustible, with absolute dominion,
seriously endangers their availability not only for the present generation but
above all for generations to come.
The third consideration refers directly to the consequences of a certain
type of development on the quality of life in the industrialized zones. We all
know that the direct or indirect result of industrialization is, ever more
frequently, the pollution of the environment, with serious consequences for the
health of the population.
Once again it is evident that development, the planning which governs
it, and the way in which resources are used must include respect for moral
demands. One of the latter undoubtedly imposes limits on the use of the natural
world. The dominion granted to man by the Creator is not an absolute power, nor
can one speak of a freedom to "use and misuse," or to dispose of
things as one pleases. The limitation imposed from the beginning by the Creator
himself and expressed symbolically by the prohibition not to "eat of the
fruit of the tree" (cf. Gen
2:16-17) shows clearly enough that, when it comes to the natural
world, we are subject not only to biological laws but also to moral ones, which
cannot be violated with impunity.
A true concept of development cannot ignore the use of the elements of
nature, the renewability of resources and the consequences of haphazard
industrialization - three considerations which alert our consciences to the
moral dimension of development.63
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