In his first annual message for the World Day of Peace, Pope Francis has written that peace and social justice are impossible without a spirit of fraternity based on recognition that all men and women are children of God.
The nearly 5,000-word message, entitled “Fraternity, the Foundation and Pathway to Peace,” was released by the Vatican today in preparation for the World Day of Peace on January 1, 2014.
“Without fraternity it is impossible to build a just society and a solid and lasting peace,” the Pope writes. “At the same time, it appears clear that contemporary ethical systems remain incapable of producing authentic bonds of fraternity, since a fraternity devoid of reference to a common Father as its ultimate foundation is unable to endure. True brotherhood among peoples presupposes and demands a transcendent Fatherhood.”
The Pope adds that, “in a particular way, human fraternity is regenerated in and by Jesus Christ through his death and resurrection. The cross is the definitive foundational locus of that fraternity which human beings are not capable of generating themselves.”
Pope Francis surveys contemporary attacks on human dignity – including war, economic exploitation, crime, environmental pollution and violations of religious freedom – he says require awareness and practice of humanity’s brotherhood and sisterhood in Christ.
He decries a widespread “poverty of relationships as a result of the lack of solid family and community relationships,” and writes that “fraternity is generally first learned in the family, thanks above all to the responsible and complementary roles of each of its members, particularly the father and the mother.”
With regard to economic justice, the Pope calls for “effective policies” to reduce income inequality and guarantee “access to capital and services, educational resources, healthcare and technology so that every person has the opportunity to express and realize his or her life project and can develop fully as a person.”
He also calls on ordinary Christians to embrace a “sober and essential lifestyle” and share their wealth, calling such practice of “detachment” a “form of promoting fraternity – and thus defeating poverty – which must be the basis of all the others.”
The current economic crisis, Pope Francis writes, offers a “fruitful opportunity to rediscover the virtues of prudence, temperance, justice and strength” that are “necessary for building and preserving a society in accord with human dignity.”
He repeats his own calls and those of previous popes for the “nonproliferation of arms and for the disarmament of all parties, beginning with nuclear and chemical weapons,” and appeals directly to “all those who sow violence and death by force of arms” to see every enemy instead as “your brother or sister, and hold back your hand!”
“Human beings can experience conversion,” the Pope writes. “I wish this to be a message of hope and confidence for all, even for those who have committed brutal crimes, for God does not wish the death of the sinner, but that he converts and lives.”
Pope Francis denounces organised crime for its role in the drug trade, environmental damage, “illicit money trafficking and financial speculation,” prostitution, human trafficking, slavery and the exploitation of migrants.
Criminal organisations of all sizes “gravely offend God, they hurt others and they harm creation, all the more so when they have religious overtones,” the Pope writes.
He deplores the “inhumane conditions in so many prisons, where those in custody are often reduced to a subhuman status in violation of their human dignity and stunted in their hope and desire for rehabilitation.”
Calling for responsible and equitable use of natural resources, Pope Francis focuses on agriculture. “It is well known that present (food) production is sufficient, and yet millions of persons continue to suffer and die from hunger, and this is a real scandal,” he writes.
Underscoring the critique of globalisation that has become a major theme of his teaching as Pope, he observes that the “ever-increasing number of interconnections and communications in today’s world makes us powerfully aware of the unity and common destiny of the nations.”
But this unity, he writes, is “still frequently denied and ignored in a world marked by a ‘globalisation of indifference’ which makes us slowly inured to the suffering of others and closed in on ourselves.”
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