July 28 - Cardinal Bertone: Encyclical Not Just for Catholics
Article: One World Religion
ROME, JULY 28, 2009 (Zenit.org).- "Caritas in Veritate" is directed to believers and nonbelievers alike, since it is based on natural law, the Pope's secretary of state affirmed today to the Italian Senate.
The secretary of state explained in this regard that the proposals the Pope makes in his encyclical are based on natural law, which, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church affirms, "expresses the original moral sense which enables man to discern by reason the good and the evil, the truth and the lie."
Human rights, he said on that occasion, "are based on the natural law inscribed on human hearts and present in different cultures and civilizations."
"In his search for the moral good," he added, "the human person harkens to what he is and becomes aware of the fundamental inclinations of his nature, which move the person toward the goods necessary for his moral fulfillment."
Man, the cardinal continued, is therefore made to know "the truth in all of its fullness, that is, he is not limited to acquiring technical know-how so as to dominate material reality, but rather open to encounter the Transcendent and to fully live the interpersonal dimension of love, the principle not only of micro-relationships -- relationships of friendship, family and groups -- but also of macro-relationships -- social, economic and political relations."
"Precisely 'veritas' and 'caritas' indicate to us the demands of natural law that Benedict XVI presents as the fundamental criteria for reflection of a moral order on the current social-economic reality," Cardinal Bertone affirmed. Thus, the "proposal of the encyclical is neither of an ideological character nor reserved for those who share faith in divine Revelation, but rather based on fundamental anthropological realities, as are, precisely, truth and charity."
The secretary of state explained in this regard that the proposals the Pope makes in his encyclical are based on natural law, which, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church affirms, "expresses the original moral sense which enables man to discern by reason the good and the evil, the truth and the lie."
Human rights, he said on that occasion, "are based on the natural law inscribed on human hearts and present in different cultures and civilizations."
"In his search for the moral good," he added, "the human person harkens to what he is and becomes aware of the fundamental inclinations of his nature, which move the person toward the goods necessary for his moral fulfillment."
Man, the cardinal continued, is therefore made to know "the truth in all of its fullness, that is, he is not limited to acquiring technical know-how so as to dominate material reality, but rather open to encounter the Transcendent and to fully live the interpersonal dimension of love, the principle not only of micro-relationships -- relationships of friendship, family and groups -- but also of macro-relationships -- social, economic and political relations."
"Precisely 'veritas' and 'caritas' indicate to us the demands of natural law that Benedict XVI presents as the fundamental criteria for reflection of a moral order on the current social-economic reality," Cardinal Bertone affirmed. Thus, the "proposal of the encyclical is neither of an ideological character nor reserved for those who share faith in divine Revelation, but rather based on fundamental anthropological realities, as are, precisely, truth and charity."