Pope: Meeting with government and religious leaders (full text)
(Vatican Radio) Pope Benedict XVI met with with members of the government, institutions
of the Republic, the diplomatic corps, religious leaders and representatives of the
world of culture in the Baabda Presidential Palace on the second day of his three-day
Apostolic Visit to Lebanon.
Below the full text of the Holy Father's
Address:
Mr President, Representatives of the Parliamentary, Governmental,
Institutional and Political Authorities of Lebanon, Chiefs of Diplomatic Missions,
Your Beatitudes, Religious Leaders, Brother Bishops, Ladies and Gentlemen,
Dear Friends,
سَلامي أُعطيكُم [My peace I give to you] (Jn 14:27)! With
these words of Christ Jesus, I greet you and I thank you for your presence and your
warm welcome. Mr President, I am grateful to you not only for your cordial words
of welcome but also for having allowed this meeting to take place. With you, I have
just planted a cedar of Lebanon, the symbol of your beautiful country. In looking
at this sapling, and thinking of the care which it will need in order to grow and
stretch forth its majestic branches, I think of this country and its future, the Lebanese
people and their hopes, and all the people of this region which seems to endure interminable
birth pangs. I have asked God to bless you, to bless Lebanon and all who dwell in
these lands which saw the birth of great religions and noble cultures. Why did God
choose these lands? Why is their life so turbulent? God chose these lands, I think,
to be an example, to bear witness before the world that every man and woman has the
possibility of concretely realizing his or her longing for peace and reconciliation!
This aspiration is part of God’s eternal plan and he has impressed it deep within
the human heart. So I would like to speak to you about peace, echoing Jesus’ invocation:
سَلامي أُعطيكُم [My peace I give to you]. The wealth of any country is found primarily
in its inhabitants. The country’s future depends on them, individually and collectively,
as does its capacity to work for peace. A commitment to peace is possible only in
a unified society. Unity, on the other hand, is not the same as uniformity. Social
cohesion requires unstinting respect for the dignity of each person and the responsible
participation of all in contributing the best of their talents and abilities. The
energy needed to build and consolidate peace also demands that we constantly return
to the wellsprings of our humanity. Our human dignity is inseparable from the sacredness
of life as the gift of the Creator. In God’s plan, each person is unique and irreplaceable.
A person comes into this world in a family, which is the first locus of humanization,
and above all the first school of peace. To build peace, we need to look to the family,
supporting it and facilitating its task, and in this way promoting an overall culture
of life. The effectiveness of our commitment to peace depends on our understanding
of human life. If we want peace, let us defend life! This approach leads us to reject
not only war and terrorism, but every assault on innocent human life, on men and women
as creatures willed by God. Wherever the truth of human nature is ignored or denied,
it becomes impossible to respect that grammar which is the natural law inscribed in
the human heart (cf. Message for the 2007 World Day of Peace, 3). The grandeur and
the raison d’être of each person are found in God alone. The unconditional acknowledgement
of the dignity of every human being, of each one of us, and of the sacredness of human
life, is linked to the responsibility which we all have before God. We must combine
our efforts, then, to develop a sound vision of man, respectful of the unity and integrity
of the human person. Without this, it is impossible to build true peace. While
more evident in countries which are experiencing armed conflict – those wars so full
of futility and horror – there are assaults on the integrity and the lives of individuals
taking place in other countries too. Unemployment, poverty, corruption, a variety
of addictions, exploitation, different forms of trafficking, and terrorism not only
cause unacceptable suffering to their victims but also a great impoverishment of human
potential. We run the risk of being enslaved by an economic and financial mindset
which would subordinate “being” to “having”! The destruction of a single human life
is a loss for humanity as a whole. Mankind is one great family for which all of us
are responsible. By questioning, directly or indirectly, or even before the law,
the inalienable value of each person and the natural foundation of the family, some
ideologies undermine the foundations of society. We need to be conscious of these
attacks on our efforts to build harmonious coexistence. Only effective solidarity
can act as an antidote, solidarity that rejects whatever obstructs respect for each
human being, solidarity that supports policies and initiatives aimed at bringing peoples
together in an honest and just manner. It is heartening to see examples of cooperation
and authentic dialogue bearing fruit in new forms of coexistence. A better quality
of life and integral development are only possible when wealth and competences are
shared in a spirit of respect for the identity of each individual. But this kind
of cooperative, serene and animated way of life is impossible without trust in others,
whoever they may be. Nowadays, our cultural, social and religious differences should
lead us to a new kind of fraternity wherein what rightly unites us is a shared sense
of the greatness of each person and the gift which others are to themselves, to those
around them and to all humanity. This is the path to peace! This is the commitment
demanded of us! This is the approach which ought to guide political and economic
decisions at every level and on a global scale! In order to make possible a future
of peace for coming generations, our first task is to educate for peace in order to
build a culture of peace. Education, whether it takes place in the family or at school,
must be primarily an education in those spiritual values which give the wisdom and
traditions of each culture their ultimate meaning and power. The human spirit has
an innate yearning for beauty, goodness and truth. This is a reflection of the divine,
God’s mark on each person! This common aspiration is the basis for a sound and correct
notion of morality, which is always centred on the person. Yet men and women can
turn towards goodness only of their own free will, for “human dignity requires them
to act out of a conscious and free choice, as moved in a personal way from within,
and not by their own blind impulses or by exterior constraint” (Gaudium et Spes, 17).
The goal of education is to guide and support the development of the freedom to make
right decisions, which may run counter to widespread opinions, the fashions of the
moment, or forms of political and religious ideology. This is the price of building
a culture of peace! Evidently, verbal and physical violence must be rejected, for
these are always an assault on human dignity, both of the perpetrator and the victim.
Emphasizing peacemaking and its positive effect for the common good also creates interest
in peace. As history shows, peaceful actions have a significant effect on local,
national and international life. Education for peace will form men and women who
are generous and upright, attentive to all, especially those most in need. Thoughts
of peace, words of peace and acts of peace create an atmosphere of respect, honesty
and cordiality, where faults and offences can be truthfully acknowledged as a means
of advancing together on the path of reconciliation. May political and religious
leaders reflect on this! We need to be very conscious that evil is not some nameless,
impersonal and deterministic force at work in the world. Evil, the devil, works in
and through human freedom, through the use of our freedom. It seeks an ally in man.
Evil needs man in order to act. Having broken the first commandment, love of God,
it then goes on to distort the second, love of neighbour. Love of neighbour disappears,
yielding to falsehood, envy, hatred and death. But it is possible for us not to be
overcome by evil but to overcome evil with good (cf. Rom 12:21). It is to this conversion
of heart that we are called. Without it, all our coveted human “liberations” prove
disappointing, for they are curtailed by our human narrowness, harshness, intolerance,
favouritism and desire for revenge. A profound transformation of mind and heart is
needed to recover a degree of clarity of vision and impartiality, and the profound
meaning of the concepts of justice and the common good. A new and freer way of looking
at these realities will enable us to evaluate and challenge those human systems which
lead to impasses, and to move forward with due care not to repeat past mistakes with
their devastating consequences. The conversion demanded of us can also be exhilarating,
since it creates possibilities by appealing to the countless resources present in
the hearts of all those men and women who desire to live in peace and are prepared
to work for peace. True, it is quite demanding: it involves rejecting revenge, acknowledging
one’s faults, accepting apologies without demanding them, and, not least, forgiveness.
Only forgiveness, given and received, can lay lasting foundations for reconciliation
and universal peace (cf. Rom 12:16b, 18). Only in this way can there be growth
in understanding and harmony between cultures and religions, and in genuine mutual
esteem and respect for the rights of all. In Lebanon, Christianity and Islam have
lived side by side for centuries. It is not uncommon to see the two religions within
the same family. If this is possible within the same family, why should it not be
possible at the level of the whole of society? The particular character of the Middle
East consists in the centuries-old mix of diverse elements. Admittedly, they have
fought one another, sadly that is also true. A pluralistic society can only exist
on the basis of mutual respect, the desire to know the other, and continuous dialogue.
Such dialogue is only possible when the parties are conscious of the existence of
values which are common to all great cultures because they are rooted in the nature
of the human person. This substratum of values expresses man’s true humanity. These
values are inseparable from the rights of each and every human being. By upholding
their existence, the different religions make a decisive contribution. It cannot
be forgotten that religious freedom is the basic right on which many other rights
depend. The freedom to profess and practise one’s religion without danger to life
and liberty must be possible to everyone. The loss or attenuation of this freedom
deprives the person of his or her sacred right to a spiritually integrated life.
What nowadays passes for tolerance does not eliminate cases of discrimination, and
at times it even reinforces them. Without openness to transcendence, which makes
it possible to find answers to their deepest questions about the meaning of life and
morally upright conduct, men and women become incapable of acting justly and working
for peace. Religious freedom has a social and political dimension which is indispensable
for peace! It promotes a harmonious life for individuals and communities by a shared
commitment to noble causes and by the pursuit of truth, which does not impose itself
by violence but rather “by the force of its own truth” (Dignitatis Humanae, 1): the
Truth which is in God. A lived faith leads invariably to love. Authentic faith does
not lead to death. The peacemaker is humble and just. Thus believers today have
an essential role, that of bearing witness to the peace which comes from God and is
a gift bestowed on all of us in our personal, family, social, political and economic
life (cf. Mt 5:9; Heb 12:14). The failure of upright men and women to act must not
permit evil to triumph. It is worse still to do nothing. These few reflections
on peace, society, the dignity of the person, the values of family life, dialogue
and solidarity, must not remain a simple statement of ideals. They can and must be
lived out. We are in Lebanon, and it is here that they must be lived out. Lebanon
is called, now more than ever, to be an example. And so I invite you, politicians,
diplomats, religious leaders, men and women of the world of culture, to testify with
courage, in season and out of season, wherever you find yourselves, that God wants
peace, that God entrusts peace to us. سَلامي أُعطيكُم [My peace I give to you] (Jn
14:27) says Christ! May God bless you! Thank you!