Pope at Catholic University of
Chile: Full text
The Pontifical Catholic University of Chilr. |
Pope Francis on Wednesday visited the Pontifical Catholic
University of Chile in Santiago where he greeted students and addressed some
1.200 Chilean academics. Here is the full text of his discourse:
APOSTOLIC VISIT OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
TO CHILE
Address at the Pontifical Catholic University
Santiago
Wednesday, 17 January 2018
Grand Chancellor, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati,
My Brothers Bishops,
President Dr Ignacio Sánchez,
Distinguished University Authorities,
Dear Professors and Administrators,
Dear Students,
I am happy
to be here with you at this House of Studies, which in its 130 years of life
has rendered a priceless service to the country. I thank the President
for his words of welcome on behalf of all present.
The history of this university is in a some sense woven into
the history of Chile. Thousands of men and women who were educated here
have made significant contributions to the development of the nation. I
would like especially to mention Saint Albert Hurtado, who began his studies
here a century ago. His life is a clear testimony to how intelligence,
academic excellence and professionalism, when joined to faith, justice and
charity, far from weakening, attain a prophetic power capable of opening
horizons and pointing the way, especially for those on the margins of
society.
In this regard, I would like to take up your words, dear
President, when you said: “We have important challenges for our country that
have to do with peaceful coexistence as a nation and the
ability to progress as a community”.
Peaceful coexistence as a nation
To speak of challenges is to acknowledge that situations
have reached the point where they need to be rethought. What was hitherto
an element of unity and cohesion now calls for new responses. The
accelerated pace and a sense of disorientation before new processes and changes
in our societies call for a serene but urgent reflection that is neither naïve
nor utopian, much less arbitrary. This has nothing to do with curbing the
growth of knowledge, but rather with making the University a privileged space
for “putting into practice the grammar of dialogue, which shapes
encounter”.[1] For “true wisdom [is] the fruit of reflection, dialogue
and generous encounter between persons”.[2]
Peaceful coexistence as a nation is possible, not least to
the extent that we can generate educational processes that are also
transformative, inclusive and meant to favour such coexistence. Educating
for peaceful coexistence does not mean simply attaching values to the work of
education, but rather establishing a dynamic of coexistence internal to the
very system of education itself. It is not so much a question of content
but of teaching how to think and reason in an integrated way. What was
traditionally called forma mentis.
To achieve this, it is necessary to develop what might be
called an “integrating literacy” capable of encompassing the processes of
change now taking place in our societies.
This literacy process requires working simultaneously to
integrate the different languages that constitute us as persons. That is
to say, an education (literacy) that integrates and harmonizes intellect (the
head), affections (the heart) and activity (the hands). This will offer
students a growth that is harmonious not only at the personal level, but also
at the level of society. We urgently need to create spaces where
fragmentation is not the guiding principle, even for thinking. To do
this, it is necessary to teach how to reflect on what we are feeling and doing;
to feel what we are thinking and doing; to do what we are thinking and
feeling. An interplay of capacities at the service of the person and
society.
Literacy, based on the integration of the distinct languages
that shape us, will engage students in their own educational process, a process
that will prepare them to face the challenges of the immediate future.
The “divorce” of fields of learning from languages, and illiteracy with regard
to integrating the distinct dimensions of life, bring only fragmentation and
social breakdown.
In this “liquid” society[3] or “society of lightness”,[4] as
various thinkers have termed it, those points of reference that people use to
build themselves individually and socially are disappearing. It seems
that the new meeting place of today is the “cloud”, which is characterized by
instability since everything evaporates and thus loses consistency.
This lack of consistency may be one of the reasons for the
loss of a consciousness of the importance of public life, which requires a
minimum ability to transcend private interests (living longer and better) in
order to build upon foundations that reveal that crucial dimension of our life
which is “us”. Without that consciousness, but especially without that
feeling and consequently without that experience, it is very difficult to build
the nation. As a result, the only thing that appears to be important and
valid is what pertains to the individual, and all else becomes
irrelevant. A culture of this sort has lost its memory, lost the bonds
that support it and make its life possible. Without the “us” of a people,
of a family and of a nation, but also the “us” of the future, of our children
and of tomorrow, without the “us” of a city that transcends “me” and is richer
than individual interests, life will be not only increasingly fragmented, but
also more conflictual and violent.
The university, in this context, is challenged to generate
within its own precincts new processes that can overcome every fragmentation of
knowledge and stimulate a true universitas.
Progressing as a community
Hence, the second key element for this House of Studies: the
ability to progress as a community.
I was pleased to learn of the evangelizing outreach and the
joyful vitality of your university chaplaincy, which is a sign of a young,
lively Church that “goes forth”. The missions that take place each year
in different parts of the country are an impressive and enriching
reality. With these, you are able to broaden your outlook and encounter
different situations that, along with regular events, keep you on the
move. “Missionaries” are never equal to the mission; they learn to be
sensitive to God’s pace through their encounter with all sorts of people.
Such experiences cannot remain isolated from the life of the
university. The classic methods of research are experiencing certain
limits, more so when it is a question of a culture such as ours, which
stimulates direct and immediate participation by all. Present-day culture
demands new forms that are more inclusive of all those who make up social and
hence educational realities. We see, then, the importance of broadening
the concept of the educating community.
The challenge for this community is to not isolate itself
from modes of knowledge, or, for that matter, to develop a body of knowledge
with minimal concern about those for whom it is intended. It is vital
that the acquisition of knowledge lead to an interplay between the university
classroom and the wisdom of the peoples who make up this richly blessed
land. That wisdom is full of intuitions and perceptions that cannot be
overlooked when we think of Chile. An enriching synergy will thus come
about between scientific rigour and popular insight; the close interplay of
these two parts will prevent a divorce between reason and action, between
thinking and feeling, between knowing and living, between profession and
service. Knowledge must always sense that it is at the service of life,
and must confront it directly in order to keep progressing. Hence, the
educational community cannot be reduced to classrooms and libraries but must be
continually challenged to participation. This dialogue can only take
place on the basis of an episteme capable of “thinking in the
plural”, that is, conscious of the interdisciplinary and interdependent nature
of learning. “In this sense, it is essential to show special care for
indigenous communities and their cultural traditions. They are not merely one
minority among others, but should be the principal dialogue partners,
especially when large projects affecting their land are proposed”.[5]
The educational community can enjoy an endless number of
possibilities and potentialities if it allows itself to be enriched and
challenged by all who are part of the educational enterprise. This
requires an increased concern for quality and integration. The service
that the university offers must always aim for quality and excellence in the
service of national coexistence. In this way, we could say that the
university becomes a laboratory for the future of the country, insofar as it
succeeds in embodying the life and progress of the people, and can overcome
every antagonistic and elitist approach to learning.
An ancient cabalistic tradition says that evil originates in
the rift produced in the human being by eating from the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil. Knowledge thus gained the upper hand over creation,
subjecting it to its own designs and desires.[6] This will always be a
subtle temptation in every academic setting: to reduce creation to certain
interpretative models that deprive it of the very Mystery that has moved whole
generations to seek what is just, good, beautiful and true. Whenever a
“professor”, by virtue of his wisdom, becomes a “teacher”, he is then capable
of awakening wonderment in our students. Wonderment at the world and at
an entire universe waiting to be discovered!
In our day, the mission entrusted to you is prophetic.
You are challenged to generate processes that enlighten contemporary culture by
proposing a renewed humanism that eschews every form of reductionism.
This prophetic role demanded of us prompts us to seek out ever new spaces for
dialogue rather than confrontation, spaces of encounter rather than division,
paths of friendly disagreement that allow for respectful differences between
persons joined in a sincere effort to advance as a community towards a renewed
national coexistence.
If you ask for this, I have no doubt that the Holy Spirit
will guide your steps, so that this House will continue to bear fruit for the
good of the Chilean people and for the glory of God.
I thank you once again for this meeting, and I ask you to
remember to pray for me.
[1] Address to the Plenary of the Congregation for
Catholic Education (9 February 2017).
[2] Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’, 47.
[3] Cf. ZYGMUNT BAUMAN, Modernidad líquida,
1999.
[4] Cf. GILLES LIPOVETSKY, De la ligereza, 2016.
[5] Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’, 146.
[6] Cf. GERSHOM SCHOLEM, La mystique juive,
Paris, 1985, 86.
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