4. Many
of those working with the Apostolic See are clerics. Since they live in
celibacy, they have no families to their charge. They deserve remuneration
proportional to the tasks performed and capable of assuring them a decent
manner of living and means to carry out the duties of their state, including
responsibilities which they may have in certain cases toward parents or other
family members dependent on them. Nor should the demands of orderly social
relationships be neglected, particularly and above all their obligation to
assist the needy. This obligation is more impelling for clerics and religious than
for the laity, by reason of their evangelical vocation.
Remuneration of the lay employees of the Apostolic See should also
correspond to the tasks performed, taking into consideration at the same time
their responsibility to support their families. Study should therefore be
devoted, in a spirit of lively concern and justice, to ascertaining their
objective material needs and those of their families, including needs regarding
education of their children and suitable provision for old age, so as to meet those
needs properly. The fundamental guidelines in this sector are to be found in
Catholic teaching on remuneration for work. Immediate indications for the
evaluation of circumstances can be obtained from examining experiences and
programs of the society — in particular, the Italian society — to which almost
all lay employees of the Apostolic See belong and in which they at any rate
live.
A valid collaborative function may be performed by workers’ associations
such as the Association of Vatican Lay Employees, which recently came into
existence, in promoting that spirit of concern and justice, through
representing those working within the Apostolic See. Such associations take on
a specific character within the Apostolic See. They are an initiative in conformity
with the Church’s social teaching, for the Church sees them as one instrument
for better assuring social justice in relations between worker and employer.
However, a lapse of this type of organization into the field of extremist
conflict and class struggle does not correspond to the Church’s social
teaching. Nor should such associations have a political or openly or covertly
serve partisan interests or other interests with quite different goals.
I express confidence that associations such as that now existing and just
mentioned will perform a useful function in the work community, operating in
solid harmony with the Apostolic See, by taking inspiration from the principles
of the Church’s social teaching. I am likewise certain that as they set forward
work problems and develop continuous and constructive dialogue with the
competent organisms they will not fail to take account in every case of the
particular character of the Apostolic See, as pointed out in the initial part
of this letter.
In relation to what has been expounded, Your Eminence will wish to prepare
suitable executive documents for furthering a work community according to the
principles set forth by means of suitable norms and structures.
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