I
FAITH AND CULTURE: SOME
GUIDELINES
2. The Church is the messenger of Christ, the Redeemer of man. She keeps
in mind the cultural dimension of the person and of human communities. The
Second Vatican Council, particularly the Pastoral Constitution on the Church in
the Modern World and the Decree on the Church's Missionary Activity, the Synods
of Bishops on the evangelization of the modern world and catechesis in our
times, extended by the Apostolic Exhortations Evangelii Nuntiandi by
Paul VI and Catechesi Tradendae by John Paul II, offer precious
teachings in this respect, further specified by subsequent special Assemblies,
continent by continent, of the Synod of Bishops and the Holy Father's
Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortations. The inculturation of the faith was the
object of a detailed reflexion on the part of the Pontifical Biblical Commission(4)
and the International Theological Commission.(5) The Extraordinary
Synod of 1985 for the Twentieth Anniversary of the Conclusion of the Second
Vatican Council, cited by John Paul II in the Encyclical Redemptoris Missio,
presents it as «the intimate transformation of authentic cultural values
through their integration in Christianity and the insertion of Christianity in
the various human cultures» (52). In many addresses during his apostolic trips,
like those to the General Conferences of Latin American Bishops in Puebla and
Santo Domingo,(6) Pope John Paul II has updated and specified this new
dimension of the Church's pastoral work in our times, for it to reach human
beings in their culture.
The careful examination of the different fields of culture proposed in this
document show the breadth of what is meant by culture, this particular
way in which persons and peoples cultivate their relationship with nature and
their brothers and sisters, with themselves and with God, so as to attain a
fully human existence (Cf. Gaudium et Spes, 53). Culture only exists
through man, by man and for man. It is the whole of human activity, human
intelligence and emotions, the human quest for meaning, human customs and
ethics. Culture is so natural to man that human nature can only be revealed
through culture. In a pastoral approach to culture, what is at stake is for
human beings to be restored in fullness to having been created «in the image
and likeness of God» (Gn 1:26), tearing them away from the anthropocentric
temptation of considering themselves independent from the Creator. Therefore,
and this observation is crucial to a pastoral approach to culture, «it must
certainly be admitted that man always exists in a particular culture, but it
must also be admitted that man is not exhaustively defined by that same
culture. Moreover, the very progress of cultures demonstrates that there is
something in man which transcends those cultures. This 'something' is precisely
human nature: this nature is itself the measure of culture and the condition of
ensuring that man does not become prisoner of any of his cultures, but asserts
his personal dignity by living in accordance with with the profound truth of
his being» (Veritatis Splendor, 53).
In its essential relation to truth and good, culture cannot only spring from
the experience of needs, centres of interest or basic requirements. «The first
and fundamental dimension of culture», as John Paul II stressed to UNESCO, Ais
healthy morality, moral culture».(7)« A When they are deeply rooted in
experience, cultures show forth the human being's characteristic openness to
the universal and the transcendent» (Fides et Ratio, 70). Marked as they
are by the very tensions aimed at achieving their fulfilment and the human
dynamics of their history (Cf. Ibid. 71), cultures share also in sin
and, by this very fact, require the necessary discernment of Christians. When
the Word of God takes on human nature in all things but sin (Heb 4:15),
he purifies it and brings it to fulfilment in the Holy Spirit. Revealing
himself in this way, God opens his heart to mankind «by deeds and words, which
are intrinsically bound up with each other» and lets men discover in human
terms the mysteries of his love Ain order to invite and receive them into his
own company» (Dei Verbum, 2).
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