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IV. Man as a Transcendent
Unit, Tending Towards God
29. This
latter aspect of man brings up three questions which We would not wish to
overlook.
30. First
of all, scientific research is drawing attention to a dynamism which, rooted in
the depths of the psychic being, would push man towards the infinite which is
beyond him, not by making him know it, but through an ascending gravitation
issuing directly from the ontological substratum. This dynamism is regarded as
an independent force, the most fundamental and the most elementary of the soul,
an affective impulse carrying man immediately to the Divine, just as a flower
opens up to light and sunshine without knowing it, or as a child breathes
unconsciously as soon as it is born.
31. This
assertion immediately calls forth an observation. If it is stated that this
dynamism is at the origin of all religions, that it manifests the element
common to all, We know on the contrary that religions, the natural and
supernatural knowledge of God and worship of Him, do not proceed from the
unconscious or the subconscious, nor from an impulse of the affections, but
from the clear and certain knowledge of God by means of His natural and
positive revelation. This is the doctrine and the belief of the Church,
beginning with the word of God in the Book of Wisdom and the Epistle to the
Romans, down to the Encyclical Pascendi Dominici Gregis [On Modernism]
of Our Predecessor, Blessed Pius X.
32.
Having laid down this principle, there still remains the question of this
mysterious dynamism. On this subject one might make the following remarks. We
should certainly not find fault with depth psychology if it deals with the
psychic aspect of religious phenomena and endeavors to analyze and reduce it to
a scientific system, even if this research is new and if its terminology is not
found in the past. We mention this point, because misunderstandings can easily
arise when psychology attributes new meanings to already accepted expressions.
Prudence and reserve are needed on both sides in order to avoid false
interpretations and to make it possible to reach a reciprocal understanding.
33. It
pertains to the technique of your science to clarify the questions of the
existence, the structure and the mode of action of this dynamism. If its
outcome proves to be positive, it should not be declared irreconcilable with
reason or faith. This would only show that, even in its deepest roots, esse
ab alio [to be from another], also implies an esse ad alium [to be
for another], and that St. Augustine's words: "Thou hast made us for
thyself, O Lord. and our heart shall not rest until it rests in thee" (Confessions,
Book 1, chapter 1, N.1), find a new confirmation in the very depths of man's
psychic being. Even if there were question of a dynamism involving all men,
peoples, epochs, and cultures, what an invaluable help this would be for the
search after God and the affirmation of His existence!
34. To
the transcendent relations of the psychic being there belongs also the sense of
guilt, the consciousness of having violated a higher law, by which,
nevertheless, one recognizes himself as being bound, a consciousness which can
find expression in suffering and in psychic disorder.
35.
Psychotherapy here approaches a phenomenon which is not within its own
exclusive field of competence, for this phenomenon is also, if not principally,
of a religious nature. No one will deny that there can exist -- and not
infrequently-an irrational and even morbid sense of guilt. But a person may
also be aware of a real fault which has not been wiped away.
36.
Neither psychology nor ethics possesses an infallible criterion for cases of
this kind, since the workings of conscience which beget this sense of guilt
have too personal and subtle a structure. But in any case, it is certain that
no purely psychological treatment will cure a genuine sense of guilt. Even if
psychotherapists, perhaps even in good faith, question its existence, it still
perdures. Even if the sense of guilt be eliminated by medical intervention,
autosuggestion or outside persuasion, the fault remains, and psychotherapy
would both deceive itself and deceive others if, in order to do away with the
sense of guilt, it pretended that the fault no longer exists.
37. The
means of eliminating the fault does not belong to the purely psychological
order. As every Christian knows, it consists in contrition and sacramental
absolution by the priest. Here, it is the root of the evil, it is the fault
itself, which is extirpated, even though remorse may continue to make itself
felt. Nowadays, in certain pathological cases, it is not rare for the priest to
send his penitent to a doctor. In the present case, the doctor should rather
direct his patient towards God and to those who have the power to remit the
fault itself in the name of God.
38. A final
remark on the transcendent orientation of the psychic being towards God.
Respect for God and His holiness must always be reflected in man's conscious
acts. When, even without subjective fault on the part of the person involved,
these acts are in contrast to the divine model, they still run counter to the
ultimate finality of his being. That is why what is called "material
sin" is something which should not exist, and which constitutes in the
moral order a reality which is not indifferent.
39. From
this a conclusion follows for psychotherapy. In the presence of material sin it
cannot remain neutral. It can, for the moment, tolerate what remains
inevitable. But it must know that God cannot justify such an action. With still
less reason can psychotherapy counsel a patient to commit material sin on the
ground that it will be without subjective guilt. Such a counsel would also be
erroneous if this action were regarded as necessary for the psychic easing of
the patient and thus as being part of the treatment. One may never counsel a
conscious action which would be a deformation, and not an image of the divine
perfection.
40. That
is what We feel obliged to say to you. In addition, be assured that the Church
follows your research and your medical practice with Her warm interest and Her
best wishes. You labor on a terrain that is very difficult. But your activity
is capable of achieving precious results for medicine, for the knowledge of the
soul in general, for the religious dispositions of man and for their development.
41. May
Providence and divine grace enlighten your path! In pledge thereof We impart to
you with paternal benevolence Our Apostolic Benediction.
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