Deus Caritas Est – God Is Love
Pope Benedict XVI’s first encyclical released
By JOHN THAVIS
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – In his first encyclical, Pope Benedict XVI
called for a deeper understanding of love as a gift from God to be
shared in a self-sacrificial way, both at a personal and social
level.
The Pope said love between couples, often reduced today to selfish
sexual pleasure, needs to be purified to include “concern and care
for the other.” (See complete encyclical Pages S1 – S12.)
Love is also charity, he said, and the Church has an obligation to
help the needy wherever they are found, but its primary motives must
always be spiritual, never political or ideological.
The nearly 16,000-word encyclical, titled Deus Caritas Est (God Is
Love), was issued Jan. 25 in seven languages. Addressed to all
Catholics, it was divided into two sections, one on the meaning of
love in salvation history, the other on the practice of love by the
Church.
The Pope said his aim was to “speak of the love which God lavishes
upon us and which we in return must share with others.” The two
aspects, personal love and the practice of charity, are profoundly
interconnected, he said.
The encyclical begins with a phrase from the First Letter of John:
“God is love, and he who abides in love abides in God, and God
abides in him.” The Pope said the line expresses the heart of the
Christian faith, which understands the Creator as a loving God and
which sees Christ’s death as the ultimate sign of God’s love for
man.
In today’s world, however, the term “love” is frequently used and
misused, he said. Most commonly, it is understood as representing “eros,”
the erotic love between a man and a woman. The Church, from its
earliest days, proposed a new vision of self-sacrificial love
expressed in the word “agape,” he said.
At times, the Pope said, the Church, with all its commandments and
prohibitions, has been accused of poisoning eros or of being ready
to “blow the whistle” just when the joy of erotic love presented
itself, but in modern society it has become clear that eros itself
has been exalted and the human body debased.
“Eros, reduced to pure ‘sex,’ has become a commodity, a mere ‘thing’
to be bought and sold, or rather, man himself becomes a commodity.
This is hardly man’s great ‘yes’ to the body. On the contrary, he
now considers his body and his sexuality as the purely material part
of himself, to be used and exploited at will,” he said.
Properly understood, he said, eros leads a man and woman to
marriage, a bond that is exclusive, and therefore monogamous, as
well as permanent.
While it is true that the happiness of eros can give people a
“foretaste of the divine,” eros needs to be disciplined and purified
if it is to provide more than fleeting pleasure, the Pope said.
The solution is to rediscover a balance between the ecstasy of eros
and the unselfish love of agape, he said.
The key to regaining this balance, he said, lies in a personal
relationship with God and an understanding of the sacrificial love
of Jesus Christ. He said Christ gives the ultimate lesson in “love
of neighbour,” which means: “I love even the person whom I do not
like or even know.”
The Pope said there was an essential interplay between love of God
and love of neighbour.
“If I have no contact whatsoever with God in my life, then I cannot
see in the other anything more than the other, and I am incapable of
seeing in him the image of God,” he said, “but if in my life I fail
completely to heed others, solely out of a desire to be ‘devout’ and
to perform my ‘religious duties,’ then my relationship with God will
also grow arid.”
The second half of the encyclical makes two main points:
As a community, the Church must practise love through works of
charity, and attend to people’s sufferings and needs, including
material needs.
The Church’s action stems from its spiritual mission and must never
be undertaken as part of a political or ideological agenda.
The Pope said there was a connection between the commitment to
justice and the ministry of charity, but also important
distinctions. Building a just social and civil order is an essential
political task to which the Church contributes through its social
doctrine, but it “cannot be the Church’s immediate responsibility,”
he said.
“A just society must be the achievement of politics, not of the
Church,” he added.
“The Church cannot and must not take upon herself the political
battle to bring about the most just society possible. She cannot and
must not replace the state,” the Pope said.
“Yet at the same time she cannot and must not remain on the
sidelines in the fight for justice,” he said. The Church’s role is
to make the rational arguments for justice and awaken the spiritual
energy needed for the sacrifices that justice requires.
“Christian charitable activity must be independent of parties and
ideologies. It is not a means of changing the world ideologically,
and it is not at the service of worldly stratagems, but it is a way
of making present here and now the love which man always needs,” he
said.
The Pope examined and rejected the Marxist arguments that the poor
“do not need charity but justice,” and that charity is merely a
means of preserving a status quo of economic injustice. He said the
Church must help the needy wherever they are found, and he cited
Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta as an example of love in action.
“One does not make the world more human by refusing to act humanely
here and now,” he said, and charity will always be necessary, even
in the most just society.
In any case, he said, it is an illusion to think that the state can
provide for all needs and fully resolve every problem.
“We do not need a state which regulates and controls everything,”
but a state that supports initiatives arising from different social
forces. The Church is one of those forces, he said.
The Pope said that those working for Catholic charitable
organizations need to be witnesses of the faith as well as
professionally competent in humanitarian affairs.
The Church’s charitable activities, he said, should not be seen as
opportunities for proselytism, in the sense of imposing the Church’s
faith on others, “but this does not mean that charitable activity
must somehow leave God and Christ aside.”
Without proposing specific guidelines, he added: “A Christian knows
when it is time to speak of God and when it is better to say nothing
and to let love speak alone.”
The Pope said that prayer should not be forgotten as the Church
tries to alleviate the immense needs around the world.
“People who pray are not wasting their time, even though the
situation appears desperate and seems to call for action alone.
Piety does not undermine the struggle against the poverty of our
neighbours, however extreme,” he said.
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