Pope to Catholic Universities:
Educate students to social, relational responsibility
Pope Francis addresses students at the Pontifical Lateran University on 31 October 2019 (ANSA) |
Pope Francis receives members of the International
Federation of Catholic Universities, and reminds them that the fruits of study
must have a relational and social purpose.
By Vatican News
“New Frontiers for University Leaders: The Future of Health
and the University Ecosystem”. This is the theme of a forum being held in Rome,
dedicated to the topics and challenges currently driving university
transformation.
University challenges
Pope Francis outlined some of those challenges in his
discourse. They include preparing new generations to become qualified
professionals, but also “proponents of the common good, creative and
responsible leaders in social and civil life, with a proper vision of the
person and the world”, he said.
Universities today “need to consider what contribution they
can and must make to the integral health of the person and to an inclusive
ecology”, said the Pope.
Catholic universities, in particular, need to become places
“where solutions for civil and cultural progress for individual persons and for
humanity, marked by solidarity, are pursued with perseverance and
professionalism”, he said.
Techoscience
The Pope noted how the development of “technoscience”, or
the way humanity interacts with technology, is “destined increasingly to
influence people’s physical and psychological health”.
We need to remember that all teaching “entails asking
ourselves about the why”, he said. “It requires a reflection on the
foundations and purposes of every discipline”. Abstracting knowledge from its
ethical dimension would mean abandoning the task of teaching, said the Pope.
Epistemology
Facing the questions of “why” involves the “typically
epistemological character of education which concerns the whole span of
knowledge”, continued Pope Francis. “The link between knowledge and purpose
refers to the theme of intentionality and to the role of the subject in every
cognitive process”. Completely impersonal experiences do not exist, he said.
In this light, universities have “an intellectual and moral
energy whose responsibility goes beyond the person to be educated and extends
to the needs of all humanity”, added the Pope.
University ecosystems
The moral imperative of the International Federation of
Catholic Universities, said Pope Francis, is to achieve “a more united
international academic community”, in order to develop “a universal spirit
aimed at increasing the quality of the cultural life of persons and of
peoples”.
University ecosystems develop, said the Pope, “when every member
of the university, by focusing on the whole person, cultivates a particular
awareness of the context in which people live and grow, and of all that
contributes to their advancement”.
Mind and Heart
The formation of leaders achieves its goal, continued Pope
Francis, when it imbues the academic years with developing both “the mind and
the heart, conscience, together with students’ practical abilities”. The fruits
of study must always have “a relational and social purpose”, stressed the
Pope.
Saint John Henry Newman
Pope Francis concluded with a quote from Cardinal John Henry
Newman, patron of the Federation of Catholic Universities.
The Church, wrote Newman, “fears no knowledge, but she
purifies all; she represses no element of our nature, but cultivates the
whole”.
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