1. "Hear, O Israel!" (Deuteronomy 6:3-4)
The word of God, in a solemn yet loving way, has just invited us
to "hear." To hear "today," "now," and
to do so not as individuals or in private but together: "Hear,
O Israel!"
This summons is directed this morning in a particular way to you,
the government leaders, members of parliament, politicians and
public administrators who have come to Rome to celebrate your
Jubilee. I greet all of you cordially, with a special thought for
the heads of state present among us.
In the celebration of the liturgy, the event of our covenant with
God becomes present, here and now. What response does God expect
from us? The command which we have just received in the proclamation
of the biblical text is peremptory: We need first and foremost to
listen. Not a passive and uninvolved listening. The Israelites
understood very well that God expected from them an active and
responsible answer. That is why they promised Moses: "Speak to
us all that the Lord our God will speak to you, and we will hear and
do it" (Deuteronomy 5:27).
In taking on this responsibility, they knew they were dealing
with a God whom they could trust. God loved his people and he
desired their happiness. In exchange, he asked for love. In the
"Shema Israel," which we heard in the First Reading,
together with the demand for faith in the one God, there is
expressed the fundamental commandment of love for him: "You
shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your
soul, and with all your might" (Deuteronomy 6:5).
2. Man's relationship with God is not one of fear, of slavery or
oppression; rather, it is a relationship of serene trust born of a
free choice motivated by love. The love which God expects from his
people is their response to that faithful and solicitous love which
he first made known in all the various stages of salvation history.
For this very reason the Commandments, before being a legal code
and a set of juridic regulations, were understood by the Chosen
People as an event of grace, as a sign of their being privileged to
belong to the Lord. It is significant that Israel never speaks of
the law as a burden, but rather as a gift and a grace: "Happy
are we, O Israel," exclaims the prophet, "for we know what
is pleasing to God" (Baruch 4:4).
The people knew that the Decalogue involves a binding commitment,
but they also knew that it is the condition for life: Behold, says
the Lord, I am setting before you life and death, good and evil; and
I command you to observe my commands, that you may have life (cf. Deuteronomy
30:15). By his Law God does not intend to coerce man's will, but
rather to set it free it from everything that could compromise its
authentic dignity and its full realization.
3. Distinguished government leaders, members of parliament and
politicians: I have been reflecting on the meaning and the value of
the divine law, because this is a subject which very closely affects
you. Does not your daily work consist of creating just laws and
seeking to have them accepted and applied? In doing this you are
convinced that you are rendering an important service to man, to
society and to freedom itself. And rightly so. Human law, in fact,
if just, is never against, but in the service of freedom. This was
already perceived by the ancient sage who said: "Legum servi
sumus, ut liberi esse possimus" —"We
are servants to the law, so that we might be free" (Cicero, De
Legibus, II:13).
The freedom to which Cicero referred, however, is found chiefly
on the level of outward relationships between citizens. As such, it
can risk being reduced to a commensurate balancing of respective
interests, and even of counterbalancing selfish interests. But the
freedom of which the word of God speaks is one rooted in the human
heart, a heart which God can liberate from selfishness and open up
to a selfless love.
It is not by chance that, in the Gospel we have just heard, Jesus
answers the scribe who asks him what is the first of all the
commandments by quoting the "Shema": "You shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and
with all your mind, and with all your strength" (Mark
12:30). The emphasis is placed on the "all": The love of
God can only be "totalitarian." But God alone is able to
purify the human heart from selfishness and to "free it"
for its full capacity to love.
People whose hearts have thus been "reclaimed" are able
to open themselves to their brothers and sisters and take
responsibility for them with the same care with which they are
concerned for themselves. That is why Jesus goes on to say:
"The second (commandment) is this: 'You shall love your
neighbor as yourself'" (Mark 12:31). Anyone who loves
God with all his heart and acknowledges him as the "one
God," and thus as the Father of all, cannot fail to look upon
everyone whom he meets on the way as a brother or a sister.
4. Love your neighbor as yourself. This saying surely strikes a
chord in your hearts, dear government leaders, members of
parliament, politicians and public administrators. To each of you,
today, on the occasion of your Jubilee, it poses a fundamental
question: How, in your delicate and demanding service to the state
and to its citizens, can you carry out this commandment? The answer
is clear: by living your involvement in politics as a service to
others. An approach as magnificent as it is demanding! It cannot in
fact be reduced to some generic restatement of principles or a
declaration of good intentions. Political service is lived in a
precise and daily commitment which calls for great competence in the
fulfillment of one's duties and unswerving morality in the selfless
and accountable exercise of power.
On the other hand, the personal integrity of the politician also
needs to find expression in a correct conception of the social and
political life which he or she is called to serve. From this
standpoint, Christian politicians need to make constant reference to
those principles which the Church's social doctrine has developed in
the course of time. These principles, as we know, do not constitute
an "ideology" and even less a "political
program"; rather, they offer a fundamental approach to
understanding the human person and society in the light of the
universal ethical law present in the heart of every human being, a
law which is clarified by the revelation of the Gospel (cf. Sollicitudo
Rei Socialis, 41). You, dear brothers and sisters engaged in
political life, must be eloquent and effective proponents of these
principles.
Certainly, the application of these principles to the
complexities of political life will often and inevitably meet up
with situations, problems and circumstances which can legitimately
give rise to diverse concrete judgments. Yet at the same time there
is no justification for a pragmatism which, even with regard to
essential and fundamental values of social life, would reduce
politics to the mere balancing of interests or, worse yet, to a
matter of demagogy or of winning votes. If legislation cannot and
must not be coextensive with the whole of the moral law, neither can
it run "counter" to the moral law.
5. All of this takes on particular importance in the present
situation of profound change which has seen the emergence of a new
dimension of politics. The decline of ideologies has been
accompanied by a crisis of partisan alliances, which in turn calls
for a new way of understanding political representation and the role
of institutions. There is a need to rediscover the true meaning of
participation and to involve more citizens in seeking suitable ways
of advancing toward an ever more satisfactory attainment of the
common good.
In this undertaking, Christians must guard against yielding to
the temptation to violent conflicts, which often cause great
suffering to the community. Dialogue remains the irreplaceable
instrument for every constructive confrontation, both within states
and in international relations. And who could better take on the
"burden" of this dialogue than a Christian politician, who
every day must measure up to what Christ has called "the
first" of the commandments, the commandment of love?
6. Distinguished government leaders, members of parliament,
politicians, public administrators: at the beginning of the new
century and the new millennium, those responsible for public life
are faced with many demanding responsibilities. It is precisely with
this in mind that, in the context of the Great Jubilee, I have
wished, as you know, to offer you the support of a special patron:
the martyr St. Thomas More.
Thomas More's life is truly an example for all who are called to
serve humanity and society in the civic and political sphere. The
eloquent testimony which he bore is as timely as ever at a
historical moment which presents crucial challenges to the
consciences of everyone involved in the field of governance. As a
statesman, he always placed himself at the service of the person,
especially the weak and the poor. Honor and wealth held no sway over
him, guided as he was by an outstanding sense of fairness. Above
all, he never compromised his conscience, even to the point of
making the supreme sacrifice so as not to disregard its voice.
Invoke him, follow him, imitate him! His intercession will not fail—
even in the most difficult of situations—to
bring you strength, good-naturedness, patience and perseverance.
This is the hope which we now wish to strengthen with the power
of the eucharistic sacrifice, in which Christ once more becomes
nourishment and direction for our lives. May the Lord help you to
become politicians after his own heart, emulators of St. Thomas
More, courageous witnesses of Christ and conscientious servants of
the state.
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