Highlights of Veritatis gaudium
Pope Francis (file photo), on Monday, the Vatican released the Holy Father's new Apostolic Constitution, "Veritatis Gaudium".- AFP |
In his new Apostolic Constitution on Ecclesiastical Universities
and Faculties, Pope Francis promotes the renewal of Catholic higher studies.
By Vatican News
“The joy of truth expresses the restlessness of the human
heart until it encounters and dwells within God’s Light, and shares that Light
with all people.” With that thought, Pope Francis begins his new Apostolic
Constitution Veritatis
gaudium, “On Ecclesiastical Universities and Faculties.” The Holy
Father emphasizes that “truth is not an abstract idea, but is Jesus himself,
the Word of God in whom is the Life that is the Light of man”; and this, he
says, “is the joy that the Church is impelled by Jesus to bear witness to and
to proclaim in her mission, unceasingly and with ever renewed vigour.”
A courageous renewal of ecclesiastical studies
In “the changed social-cultural context worldwide,”
characterized by “a wide-ranging ‘anthropological’ and ‘environmental crisis’,”
Pope Francis says there is need of a “wise and courageous renewal” of
ecclesiastical studies “for a more effective mission in this moment of
history,” as laid out in his programmatic Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii
gaudium.
Catholic universities for a missionary Church
Starting from the “primary need today” for a “missionary
transformation of a Church that ‘goes forth’,” and which involves the whole
People of God, Pope Francis says that ecclesiastical studies are called not
only “to offer opportunities and processes for the suitable formation of
priests, consecrated men and women, and committed lay people” but constitute “a
sort of providential cultural laboratory in which the Church carries out the
performative interpretation of the reality brought about by the Christ event
and nourished by the gifts of wisdom and knowledge by which the Holy Spirit
enriches the People of God in manifold ways – from the sensus fidei
fidelium to the magisterium of the bishops, and from the charism of
the prophets to that of the doctors and theologians.”
A cultural revolution in the light of tradition
This, the Pope said, requires “a radical paradigm shift, or
rather… ‘a bold cultural revolution’” in which “the worldwide network of
ecclesiastical universities and faculties is called to offer the decisive
contribution of leaven, salt and light of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the
living Tradition of the Church, which is ever open to new situations and
ideas.” Today, he continued,
it is becoming increasingly evident that ‘there is need of a
true evangelical hermeneutic for better understanding life, the world and
humanity, not of a synthesis but of a spiritual atmosphere of research and
certainty based on the truths of reason and of faith. Philosophy and theology
permit one to acquire the convictions that structure and strengthen the
intelligence and illuminate the will... but this is fruitful only if it is done
with an open mind and on one’s knees. The theologian who is satisfied with his
complete and conclusive thought is mediocre. The good theologian and
philosopher has an open, that is, an incomplete, thought, always open to
the maius of God and of the truth, always in development’.
Discovering God in every human person
Pope Francis points out four “fundamental criteria” for the
renewal and revival of the contribution ecclesiastical studies can make for a
missionary Church: “First, the most urgent and enduring criterion is that of
contemplation and the presentation of a spiritual, intellectual and existential
introduction to the heart of the kerygma, namely the ever fresh and attractive
good news of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, which continues to take flesh in the
life of the Church and of humanity.” From this arises that universal fraternity
“which is ‘capable of seeing the sacred grandeur of our neighbour, of finding
God in every human being, of tolerating the nuisances of life in common by
clinging to the love of God, of opening the heart to divine love and seeking
the happiness of others just as their heavenly Father does’.” This leads to
“the imperative to allow our hearts and minds to heed the cry of the earth’s
poor and to give concrete expression to the social dimension of evangelization,
which is an integral part of the Church’s mission. For ‘God, in Christ, redeems
not only the individual person but also the social relations existing between
men’.”
Dialogue with believers and non-believers
A “second guiding criterion” is “that of wide-ranging
dialogue” with believers and non-believers; “not as a mere tactical approach,”
but rather as an authentic culture of dialogue “between all the authentic and
vital cultures, thanks to a reciprocal exchange of the gifts of each in that
luminous space opened up by God’s love for all his creatures.”
Unity of knowledge in the face of an uncertain and
fragmented pluralism
The third fundamental criterion proposed by Pope Francis is
“inter-disciplinary and cross-disciplinary approaches carried out with wisdom
and creativity in the light of Revelation,” according to “the vital
intellectual principle of the unity in difference of knowledge”; and this also
“in relation to the fragmented and often disintegrated panorama of contemporary
university studies and to the pluralism – uncertain, conflicting and
relativistic – of current beliefs and cultural options.” The Holy Father cites
Benedict XVI, writing in Caritas in veritate: today “there is a
lack of wisdom and reflection, a lack of thinking capable of formulating a
guiding synthesis.” This, Pope Francis says, “is where the specific mission
entrusted to the programme of ecclesiastical studies comes into play,” so that
they might have “real cultural and humanizing importance.”
Networking
Finally, the fourth fundamental criterion concerns “concerns
the urgent need for ‘networking’ between those institutions worldwide that
cultivate and promote ecclesiastical studies, in order to set up suitable
channels of cooperation also with academic institutions in the different
countries and with those inspired by different cultural and religious
traditions. At the same time, specialized centres of research need to be
established in order to study the epochal issues affecting humanity today and
to offer appropriate and realistic paths for their resolution.”
Reviving research
Pope Francis says “the revival of ecclesiastical studies
entails the pressing need to give new impulse to the scientific research
conducted in our ecclesiastical universities and faculties.” Ecclesiastical
studies, he says, “cannot be limited to passing on knowledge, professional
competence and experience to the men and women of our time who desire to grow
as Christians, but must also take up the urgent task of developing intellectual
tools that can serve as paradigms for action and thought, useful for preaching
in a world marked by ethical and religious pluralism.”
Theology lives on the frontiers
“Theology and Christian culture have lived up to their
mission whenever they were ready to take risks and remain faithful on the
borderline,” Pope Francis says. Today, he concluded, we face “a great cultural,
spiritual and educational challenge, and it will demand that we set out on the
long path of renewal” – a path of renewal that is also demanded of
ecclesiastical universities and faculties.
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