Art and leisure
17. In a world which seems increasingly obsessed with instant gratification,
the lure of gain, the pursuit of profit and the overriding importance of possessions,
it is striking also to acknowledge a persistent, even growing, fascination with
beauty. It may take different forms, but these all seem to indicate an
aspiration for Asomething intangible», which can show us the magic and mystery
in things and even far beyond them. Intuitively, the Church was aware of this
from its origins and centuries of Christian art magnificently illustrate this.
Every true work of art is potentially a way into religious experience.
Recognizing the importance of art in the inculturation of the Gospel means
recognizing that human genius and sensitivity are akin to the truth and beauty
of the divine mystery. The Church shows profound respect to all artists,
irrespective of their religious convictions, since works of art bear an imprint
of the invisible, as it were Art, like every other human activity, looks beyond
itself for its absolute goal: its nobility comes from being directed to the
ultimate goal of the human person.
In Christian artists, the Church finds extraordinary potential for the
expression of new formulas and for the definition of new symbols or metaphors
through the brilliance of liturgical genius in all its creative force, steeped
in centuries of Catholic imagery with its ability to express the omnipresence
of grace. Every continent has had its Christian artists, whose Christian
inspiration can attract people - of any faith or of none - to beauty and truth.
Support and encouragement for Christian artists is an excellent way of reaching
a whole host of people who may have no other contact with the message of
Christ.
At the same time, the Catholic Church's rich cultural heritage, in the form
of its cultural assets, bears witness to a fruitful symbiosis of culture and
faith. It constitutes an inexhaustible source of beauty and a permanent
resource for a cultural education which is also a genuine catechesis, one which
unites the truth of faith to the genuine beauty of art (cf. Sacrosanctum
Concilium, 122-127). As the fruits of a community which has lived its faith
intensely, and continues to do so, the cultic and cultural treasures of the
Church should not be seen in exclusively cultural terms, or their meaning will
be lost. They could be a real inspiration for humanity at the dawn of the third
millennium.
18. The world of leisure and sport, travel and tourism, is undeniably
an important element in modern culture, along with that of labour, in
which the Church has long been present, and so is becoming another new forum of
evangelization. The concept of «work» is changing profoundly, which undeniably
affects leisure and cultural activities. From the perennial need to earn one's
daily bread (cf. Laborem Exercens 1), work is one of the means of
responding to the ever more insistent desire for self-fulfilment, on a par with
cultural activities. Elsewhere, new ways of organizing labour, which are part
of a process of technological and economic development, go hand in hand with an
increase in unemployment at every level of society. This not only gives rise to
material impoverishment, but sows in those cultures the seeds of doubt,
dissatisfaction, humiliation and even crime. The precariousness of such living
conditions and the need to see to the necessities of life frequently lead
people to consider the artistic and literary elements of culture as superfluous
and reserved for a privileged élite.
Having become almost universal, sport undoubtedly has its place in
the Christian vision of culture and can promote both physical health and
interpersonal relationships. However, sport can be taken over by commercial
interests or become a vehicle for expressing tribal, national or racial
rivalries, and give rise to occasional explosions of violence which reveal the
tensions and contradictions which are part of contemporary society, and thus
become an anti culture. So it is an important area for a modern pastoral
approach. Despite their variety and complexity and the clutter of symbols and
commercialism, leisure pursuits and sport create not just an atmosphere but a
whole culture, a way of life and a value system. Well-adapted pastoral policy
will find there all the genuine educational values and a springboard for
celebrating everything in human nature which is rich, in the image of God and,
like the apostle Paul, announces salvation in Jesus Christ (cf. I Cor. 9:24-27).
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