Dives in misericordia
Ioannes Paulus PP. II
November 30, 1980
Blessing
Venerable Brothers and dear sons and daughters,
greetings and the apostolic blessing.
I. HE WHO SEES ME SEES THE FATHER (cf. John 14:9)
1. The Revelation of Mercy
It is "God, who is rich in mercy" 1 whom Jesus Christ has
revealed to us as Father: it is His very Son who, in Himself, has manifested
Him and made Him known to us.2 Memorable in this regard is the moment
when Philip, one of the twelve Apostles, turned to Christ and said: "Lord,
show us the Father, and we shall be satisfied"; and Jesus replied: "Have
I been with you so long, and yet you do not know me...? He who has seen
me has seen the Father."3 These words were spoken during the farewell
discourse at the end of the paschal supper, which was followed by the
events of those holy days during which confirmation was to be given once
and for all of the fact that "God, who is rich in mercy, out of
the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead through
our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ."4
Following the teaching of the Second Vatican Council and paying close
attention to the special needs of our times, I devoted the encyclical
Redemptor hominis to the truth about man, a truth that is revealed to
us in its fullness and depth in Christ. A no less important need in these
critical and difficult times impels me to draw attention once again in
Christ to the countenance of the "Father of mercies and God of all
comfort."5 We read in the Constitution Gaudium et spes: "Christ
the new Adam...fully reveals man to himself and brings to light his lofty
calling," and does it "in the very revelation of the mystery
of the Father and of his love."6 The words that I have quoted are
clear testimony to the fact that man cannot be manifested in the full
dignity of his nature without reference - not only on the level of concepts
but also in an integrally existential way - to God. Man and man's lofty
calling are revealed in Christ through the revelation of the mystery
of the Father and His love.
For this reason it is now fitting to reflect on this mystery. It is
called for by the varied experiences of the Church and of contemporary
man. It is also demanded by the pleas of many human hearts, their sufferings
and hopes, their anxieties and expectations. While it is true that every
individual human being is, as I said in my encyclical Redemptor hominis,
the way for the Church, at the same time the Gospel and the whole of
Tradition constantly show us that we must travel this day with every
individual just as Christ traced it out by revealing in Himself the Father
and His love.7 In Jesus Christ, every path to man, as it has been assigned
once and for all to the Church in the changing context of the times,
is simultaneously an approach to the Father and His love. The Second
Vatican Council has confirmed this truth for our time.
The more the Church's mission is centered upon man-the more it is, so
to speak, anthropocentric-the more it must be confirmed and actualized
theocentrically, that is to say, be directed in Jesus Christ to the Father.
While the various currents of human thought both in the past and at the
present have tended and still tend to separate theocentrism and anthropocentrism,
and even to set them in opposition to each other, the Church, following
Christ, seeks to link them up in human history, in a deep and organic
way. And this is also one of the basic principles, perhaps the most important
one, of the teaching of the last Council. Since, therefore, in the present
phase of the Church's history we put before ourselves as our primary
task the implementation of the doctrine of the great Council, we must
act upon this principle with faith, with an open mind and with all our
heart. In the encyclical already referred to, I have tried to show that
the deepening and the many-faceted enrichment of the Church's consciousness
resulting from the Council must open our minds and our hearts more widely
to Christ. Today I wish to say that openness to Christ, who as the Redeemer
of the world fully reveals man himself," can only be achieved through
an ever more mature reference to the Father and His love.
2. The Incarnation of Mercy
Although God "dwells in unapproachable light,"8 He speaks
to man he means of the whole of the universe: "ever since the creation
of the world his invisible nature, namely, his eternal power and deity,
has been clearly perceived in the things that have been made."9
This indirect and imperfect knowledge, achieved by the intellect seeking
God by means of creatures through the visible world, falls short of "vision
of the Father." "No one has ever seen God," writes St.
John, in order to stress the truth that "the only Son, who is in
the bosom of the Father, he has made him known."10 This "making
known" reveals God in the most profound mystery of His being, one
and three, surrounded by "unapproachable light."11 Nevertheless,
through this "making known" by Christ we know God above all
in His relationship of love for man: in His "philanthropy."12
It is precisely here that "His invisible nature" becomes in
a special way "visible," incomparably more visible than through
all the other "things that have been made": it becomes visible
in Christ and through Christ, through His actions and His words, and
finally through His death on the cross and His resurrection.
In this way, in Christ and through Christ, God also becomes especially
visible in His mercy; that is to say, there is emphasized that attribute
of the divinity which the Old Testament, using various concepts and terms,
already defined as "mercy." Christ confers on the whole of
the Old Testament tradition about God's mercy a definitive meaning. Not
only does He speak of it and explain it by the use of comparisons and
parables, but above all He Himself makes it incarnate and personifies
it. He Himself, in a certain sense, is mercy. To the person who sees
it in Him - and finds it in Him - God becomes "visible" in
a particular way as the Father who is rich in mercy."13
The present-day mentality, more perhaps than that of people in the past,
seems opposed to a God of mercy, and in fact tends to exclude from life
and to remove from the human heart the very idea of mercy. The word and
the concept of "mercy" seem to cause uneasiness in man, who,
thanks to the enormous development of science and technology, never before
known in history, has become the master of the earth and has subdued
and dominated it.14 This dominion over the earth, sometimes understood
in a one - sided and superficial way, seems to have no room for mercy.
However, in this regard we can profitably refer to the picture of "man's
situation in the world today" as described at the beginning of the
Constitution Gaudium et spes. Here we read the following sentences: "In
the light of the foregoing factors there appears the dichotomy of a world
that is at once powerful and weak, capable of doing what is noble and
what is base, disposed to freedom and slavery, progress and decline,
brotherhood and hatred. Man is growing conscious that the forces he has
unleashed are in his own hands and that it is up to him to control them
or be enslaved by them."15
The situation of the world today not only displays transformations that
give grounds for hope in a better future for man on earth, but also reveals
a multitude of threats, far surpassing those known up till now. Without
ceasing to point out these threats on various occasions (as in addresses
at UNO, to UNESCO, to FAO and elsewhere), the Church must at the same
time examine them in the light of the truth received from God.
The truth, revealed in Christ, about God the "Father of mercies,"16
enables us to "see" Him as particularly close to man especially
when man is suffering, when he is under threat at the very heart of his
existence and dignity. And this is why, in the situation of the Church
and the world today, many individuals and groups guided by a lively sense
of faith are turning, I would say almost spontaneously, to the mercy
of God. They are certainly being moved to do this by Christ Himself,
who through His Spirit works within human hearts. For the mystery of
God the "Father of mercies" revealed by Christ becomes, in
the context of today's threats to man, as it were a unique appeal addressed
to the Church.
In the present encyclical wish to accept this appeal; I wish to draw
from the eternal and at the same time-for its simplicity and depth- incomparable
language of revelation and faith, in order through this same language
to express once more before God and before humanity the major anxieties
of our time.
In fact, revelation and faith teach us not only to meditate in the abstract
upon the mystery of God as "Father of mercies," but also to
have recourse to that mercy in the name of Christ and in union with Him.
Did not Christ say that our Father, who "sees in secret,"17
is always waiting for us to have recourse to Him in every need and always
waiting for us to study His mystery: the mystery of the Father and His
love?18
I therefore wish these considerations to bring this mystery closer to
everyone. At the same time I wish them to be a heartfelt appeal by the
Church to mercy, which humanity and the modern world need so much. And
they need mercy even though they often do not realize it.
II. THE MESSIANIC MESSAGE
3. When Christ Began To Do and To Teach
Before His own townspeople, in Nazareth, Christ refers to the words
of the prophet Isaiah: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because
he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to
proclaim release to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable
year of the Lord."19 These phrases, according to Luke, are His first
messianic declaration. They are followed by the actions and words known
through the Gospel. By these actions and words Christ makes the Father
present among men. It is very significant that the people in question
are especially the poor, those without means of subsistence, those deprived
of their freedom, the blind who cannot see the beauty of creation, those
living with broken hearts, or suffering from social injustice, and finally
sinners. It is especially for these last that the Messiah becomes a particularly
clear sign of God who is love, a sign of the Father. In this visible
sign the people of our own time, just like the people then, can see the
Father.
It is significant that, when the messengers sent by John the Baptist
came to Jesus to ask Him: "Are you he who is to come, or shall we
look for another?",20 He answered by referring to the same testimony
with which He had begun His teaching at Nazareth: "Go and tell John
what it is that you have seen and heard: the blind receive their sight,
the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised
up, the poor have good news preached to them." He then ended with
the words: "And blessed is he who takes no offense at me".21
Especially through His lifestyle and through His actions, Jesus revealed
that love is present in the world in which we live - an effective love,
a love that addresses itself to man and embraces everything that makes
up his humanity. This love makes itself particularly noticed in contact
with suffering, injustice and poverty - in contact with the whole historical "human
condition," which in various ways manifests man's limitation and
frailty, both physical and moral. It is precisely the mode and sphere
in which love manifests itself that in biblical language is called "mercy."
Christ, then, reveals God who is Father, who is "love," as
St. John will express it in his first letter22; Christ reveals God as "rich
in mercy," as we read in St. Paul.23 This truth is not just the
subject of a teaching; it is a reality made present to us by Christ.
Making the Father present as love and mercy is, in Christ's own consciousness,
the fundamental touchstone of His mission as the Messiah; this is confirmed
by the words that He uttered first in the synagogue at Nazareth and later
in the presence of His disciples and of John the Baptist's messengers.
On the basis of this way of manifesting the presence of God who is Father,
love and mercy, Jesus makes mercy one of the principal themes of His
preaching. As is His custom, He first teaches "in parables," since
these express better the very essence of things. It is sufficient to
recall the parable of the prodigal son,24 or the parable of the Good
Samaritan,25 but also - by contrast - the parable of the merciless servant.26
There are many passages in the teaching of Christ that manifest love-mercy
under some ever-fresh aspect. We need only consider the Good Shepherd
who goes in search of the lost sheep, 27 or the woman who sweeps the
house in search of the lost coin.28 The Gospel writer who particularly
treats of these themes in Christ's teaching is Luke, whose Gospel has
earned the title of "the Gospel of mercy."
When one speaks of preaching, one encounters a problem of major importance
with reference to the meaning of terms and the content of concepts, especially
the content of the concept of "mercy" (in relationship to the
concept of "love"). A grasp of the content of these concepts
is the key to understanding the very reality of mercy. And this is what
is most important for us. However, before devoting a further part of
our considerations to this subject, that is to say, to establishing the
meaning of the vocabulary and the content proper to the concept of mercy," we
must note that Christ, in revealing the love - mercy of God, at the same
time demanded from people that they also should be guided in their lives
by love and mercy. This requirement forms part of the very essence of
the messianic message, and constitutes the heart of the Gospel ethos.
The Teacher expresses this both through the medium of the commandment
which He describes as "the greatest,"29 and also in the form
of a blessing, when in the Sermon on the Mount He proclaims: "Blessed
are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy."30
In this way, the messianic message about mercy preserves a particular
divine-human dimension. Christ - the very fulfillment of the messianic
prophecy - by becoming the incarnation of the love that is manifested
with particular force with regard to the suffering, the unfortunate and
sinners, makes present and thus more fully reveals the Father, who is
God "rich in mercy." At the same time, by becoming for people
a model of merciful love for others, Christ proclaims by His actions
even more than by His words that call to mercy which is one of the essential
elements of the Gospel ethos. In this instance it is not just a case
of fulfilling a commandment or an obligation of an ethical nature; it
is also a case of satisfying a condition of major importance for God
to reveal Himself in His mercy to man: "The merciful...shall obtain
mercy."
III. THE OLD TESTAMENT
4. The Concept of "Mercy" in the Old Testament
The concept of "mercy" in the Old Testament has a long and
rich history. We have to refer back to it in order that the mercy revealed
by Christ may shine forth more clearly. By revealing that mercy both
through His actions and through His teaching, Christ addressed Himself
to people who not only knew the concept of mercy, but who also, as the
People of God of the Old Covenant, had drawn from their age - long history
a special experience of the mercy of God. This experience was social
and communal, as well as individual and interior.
Israel was, in fact, the people of the covenant with God, a covenant
that it broke many times. Whenever it became aware of its infidelity
- and in the history of Israel there was no lack of prophets and others
who awakened this awareness-it appealed to mercy. In this regard, the
books of the Old Testament give us very many examples. Among the events
and texts of greater importance one may recall: the beginning of the
history of the Judges,31 the prayer of Solomon at the inauguration of
the Temple,32 part of the prophetic work of Micah,33 the consoling assurances
given by Isaiah,34 the cry of the Jews in exile,35 and the renewal of
the covenant after the return from exile.36
It is significant that in their preaching the prophets link mercy, which
they often refer to because of the people's sins, with the incisive image
of love on God's part. The Lord loves Israel with the love of a special
choosing, much like the love of a spouse,37 and for this reason He pardons
its sins and even its infidelities and betrayals. When He finds repentance
and true conversion, He brings His people back to grace.38 In the preaching
of the prophets, mercy signifies a special power of love, which prevails
over the sin and infidelity of the chosen people.
In this broad "social" context, mercy appears as a correlative
to the interior experience of individuals languishing in a state of guilt
or enduring every kind of suffering and misfortune. Both physical evil
and moral evil, namely sin, cause the sons and daughters of Israel to
turn to the Lord and beseech His mercy. In this way David turns to Him,
conscious of the seriousness of his guilt39; Job too, after his rebellion,
turns to Him in his tremendous misfortune40; so also does Esther, knowing
the mortal threat to her own people.41 And we find still other examples
in the books of the Old Testament.42
At the root of this many-sided conviction, which is both communal and
personal, and which is demonstrated by the whole of the Old Testament
down the centuries, is the basic experience of the chosen people at the
Exodus: the Lord saw the affliction of His people reduced to slavery,
heard their cry, knew their sufferings and decided to deliver them.43
In this act of salvation by the Lord, the prophet perceived his love
and compassion.44 This is precisely the grounds upon which the people
and each of its members based their certainty of the mercy of God, which
can be invoked whenever tragedy strikes.
Added to this is the fact that sin too constitutes man's misery. The
people of the Old Covenant experienced this misery from the time of the
Exodus, when they set up the golden calf. The Lord Himself triumphed
over this act of breaking the covenant when He solemnly declared to Moses
that He was a "God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding
in steadfast love and faithfulness."45 It is in this central revelation
that the chosen people, and each of its members, will find, every time
that they have sinned, the strength and the motive for turning to the
Lord to remind Him of what He had exactly revealed about Himself46 and
to beseech His forgiveness.
Thus, in deeds and in words, the Lord revealed His mercy from the very
beginnings of the people which He chose for Himself; and, in the course
of its history, this people continually entrusted itself, both when stricken
with misfortune and when it became aware of its sin, to the God of mercies.
All the subtleties of love become manifest in the Lord's mercy towards
those who are His own: He is their Father,47 for Israel is His firstborn
son48; the Lord is also the bridegroom of her whose new name the prophet
proclaims: Ruhamah, "Beloved" or "she has obtained pity."49
Even when the Lord is exasperated by the infidelity of His people and
thinks of finishing with it, it is still His tenderness and generous
love for those who are His own which overcomes His anger.50 Thus it is
easy to understand why the psalmists, when they desire to sing the highest
praises of the Lord, break forth into hymns to the God of love, tenderness,
mercy and fidelity.51
From all this it follows that mercy does not pertain only to the notion
of God, but it is something that characterizes the life of the whole
people of Israel and each of its sons and daughters: mercy is the content
of intimacy with their Lord, the content of their dialogue with Him.
Under precisely this aspect, mercy is presented in the individual books
of the Old Testament with a great richness of expression. It may be difficult
to find in these books a purely theoretical answer to the question of
what mercy is in itself. Nevertheless, the terminology that is used is
in itself able to tell us much about this subject.52
The Old Testament proclaims the mercy of the Lord by the use of many
terms with related meanings; they are differentiated by their particular
content, but it could be said that they all converge from different directions
on one single fundamental content, to express its surpassing richness
and at the same time to bring it close to man under different aspects.
The Old Testament encourages people suffering from misfortune, especially
those weighed down by sin - as also the whole of Israel, which had entered
into the covenant with God - to appeal for mercy, and enables them to
count upon it: it reminds them of His mercy in times of failure and loss
of trust. Subsequently, the Old Testament gives thanks and glory for
mercy every time that mercy is made manifest in the life of the people
or in the lives of individuals.
In this way, mercy is in a certain sense contrasted with God's justice,
and in many cases is shown to be not only more powerful than that justice
but also more profound. Even the Old Testament teaches that, although
justice is an authentic virtue in man, and in God signifies transcendent
perfection nevertheless love is "greater" than justice: greater
in the sense that it is primary and fundamental. Love, so to speak, conditions
justice and, in the final analysis, justice serves love. The primacy
and superiority of love vis-a-vis justice - this is a mark of the whole
of revelation - are revealed precisely through mercy. This seemed so
obvious to the psalmists and prophets that the very term justice ended
up by meaning the salvation accomplished by the Lord and His mercy.53
Mercy differs from justice, but is not in opposition to it, if we admit
in the history of man - as the Old Testament precisely does-the presence
of God, who already as Creator has linked Himself to His creature with
a particular love. Love, by its very nature, excludes hatred and ill
- will towards the one to whom He once gave the gift of Himself: Nihil
odisti eorum quae fecisti, "you hold nothing of what you have made
in abhorrence."54 These words indicate the profound basis of the
relationship between justice and mercy in God, in His relations with
man and the world. They tell us that we must seek the life-giving roots
and intimate reasons for this relationship by going back to "the
beginning," in the very mystery of creation. They foreshadow in
the context of the Old Covenant the full revelation of God, who is "love."55
Connected with the mystery of creation is the mystery of the election,
which in a special way shaped the history of the people whose spiritual
father is Abraham by virtue of his faith. Nevertheless, through this
people which journeys forward through the history both of the Old Covenant
and of the New, that mystery of election refers to every man and woman,
to the whole great human family. "I have loved you with an everlasting
love, therefore I have continued my faithfulness to you."56 "For
the mountains may depart...my steadfast love shall not depart from you,
and my covenant of peace shall not be removed."57 This truth, once
proclaimed to Israel, involves a perspective of the whole history of
man, a perspective both temporal and eschatological.58 Christ reveals
the Father within the framework of the same perspective and on ground
already prepared, as many pages of the Old Testament writings demonstrate.
At the end of this revelation, on the night before He dies, He says to
the apostle Philip these memorable words: "Have I been with you
so long, and yet you do not know me...? He who has seen me has seen the
Father."59
IV. THE PARABLE OF THE PRODIGAL SON
5. An Analogy
At the very beginning of the New Testament, two voices resound in St.
Luke's Gospel in unique harmony concerning the mercy of God, a harmony
which forcefully echoes the whole Old Testament tradition. They express
the semantic elements linked to the differentiated terminology of the
ancient books. Mary, entering the house of Zechariah, magnifies the Lord
with all her soul for "his mercy," which "from generation
to generation" is bestowed on those who fear Him. A little later,
as she recalls the election of Israel, she proclaims the mercy which
He who has chosen her holds "in remembrance" from all time.60
Afterwards, in the same house, when John the Baptist is born, his father
Zechariah blesses the God of Israel and glorifies Him for performing
the mercy promised to our fathers and for remembering His holy covenant.61
In the teaching of Christ Himself, this image inherited from the Old
Testament becomes at the same time simpler and more profound. This is
perhaps most evident in the parable of the prodigal son.62 Although the
word "mercy" does not appear, it nevertheless expresses the
essence of the divine mercy in a particularly clear way. This is due
not so much to the terminology, as in the Old Testament books, as to
the analogy that enables us to understand more fully the very mystery
of mercy, as a profound drama played out between the father's love and
the prodigality and sin of the son.
That son, who receives from the father the portion of the inheritance
that is due to him and leaves home to squander it in a far country "in
loose living," in a certain sense is the man of every period, beginning
with the one who was the first to lose the inheritance of grace and original
justice. The analogy at this point is very wide- ranging. The parable
indirectly touches upon every breach of the covenant of love, every loss
of grace, every sin. In this analogy there is less emphasis than in the
prophetic tradition on the unfaithfulness of the whole people of Israel,
although the analogy of the prodigal son may extend to this also. "When
he had spent everything," the son "began to be in need," especially
as "a great famine arose in that country" to which he had gone
after leaving his father's house. And in this situation "he would
gladly have fed on" anything, even "the pods that the swine
ate," the swine that he herded for "one of the citizens of
that country." But even this was refused him.
The analogy turns clearly towards man's interior. The inheritance that
the son had received from his father was a quantity of material goods,
but more important than these goods was his dignity as a son in his father's
house. The situation in which he found himself when he lost the material
goods should have made him aware of the loss of that dignity. He had
not thought about it previously, when he had asked his father to give
him the part of the inheritance that was due to him, in order to go away.
He seems not to be conscious of it even now, when he says to himself: "How
many of my father's hired servants have bread enough and to spare, but
I perish here with hunger." He measures himself by the standard
of the goods that he has lost, that he no longer "possesses," while
the hired servants of his father's house "possess" them. These
words express above all his attitude to material goods; nevertheless
under their surface is concealed the tragedy of lost dignity, the awareness
of squandered sonship.
It is at this point that he makes the decision: "I will arise and
go to my father, and I will say to him, 'Father, I have sinned against
heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son. Treat
me as one of your hired servants.'"63 These are words that reveal
more deeply the essential problem. Through the complex material situation
in which the prodigal son found himself because of his folly, because
of sin, the sense of lost dignity had matured. When he decides to return
to his father's house, to ask his father to be received-no longer by
virtue of his right as a son, but as an employee-at first sight he seems
to be acting by reason of the hunger and poverty that he had fallen into;
this motive, however, is permeated by an awareness of a deeper loss:
to be a hired servant in his own father's house is certainly a great
humiliation and source of shame. Nevertheless, the prodigal son is ready
to undergo that humiliation and shame. He realizes that he no longer
has any right except to be an employee in his father's house. His decision
is taken in full consciousness of what he has deserved and of what he
can still have a right to in accordance with the norms of justice. Precisely
this reasoning demonstrates that, at the center of the prodigal son's
consciousness, the sense of lost dignity is emerging, the sense of that
dignity that springs from the relationship of the son with the father.
And it is with this decision that he sets out.
In the parable of the prodigal son, the term "justice" is
not used even once; just as in the original text the term "mercy" is
not used either. Nevertheless, the relationship between justice and love,
that is manifested as mercy, is inscribed with great exactness in the
content of the Gospel parable. It becomes more evident that love is transformed
into mercy when it is necessary to go beyond the precise norm of justice-precise
and often too narrow. The prodigal son, having wasted the property he
received from his father, deserves - after his return - to earn his living
by working in his father's house as a hired servant and possibly, little
by little, to build up a certain provision of material goods, though
perhaps never as much as the amount he had squandered. This would be
demanded by the order of justice, especially as the son had not only
squandered the part of the inheritance belonging to him but had also
hurt and offended his father by his whole conduct. Since this conduct
had in his own eyes deprived him of his dignity as a son, it could not
be a matter of indifference to his father. It was bound to make him suffer.
It was also bound to implicate him in some way. And yet, after all, it
was his own son who was involved, and such a relationship could never
be altered or destroyed by any sort of behavior. The prodigal son is
aware of this and it is precisely this awareness that shows him clearly
the dignity which he has lost and which makes him honestly evaluate the
position that he could still expect in his father's house.
6. Particular Concentration on Human Dignity
This exact picture of the prodigal son's state of mind enables us to
understand exactly what the mercy of God consists in. There is no doubt
that in this simple but penetrating analogy the figure of the father
reveals to us God as Father. The conduct of the father in the parable
and his whole behavior, which manifests his internal attitude, enables
us to rediscover the individual threads of the Old Testament vision of
mercy in a synthesis which is totally new, full of simplicity and depth.
The father of the prodigal son is faithful to his fatherhood, faithful
to the love that he had always lavished on his son. This fidelity is
expressed in the parable not only by his immediate readiness to welcome
him home when he returns after having squandered his inheritance; it
is expressed even more fully by that joy, that merrymaking for the squanderer
after his return, merrymaking which is so generous that it provokes the
opposition and hatred of the elder brother, who had never gone far away
from his father and had never abandoned the home.
The father's fidelity to himself - a trait already known by the Old
Testament term hesed - is at the same time expressed in a manner particularly
charged with affection. We read, in fact, that when the father saw the
prodigal son returning home "he had compassion, ran to meet him,
threw his arms around his neck and kissed him."64 He certainly does
this under the influence of a deep affection, and this also explains
his generosity towards his son, that generosity which so angers the elder
son. Nevertheless, the causes of this emotion are to be sought at a deeper
level. Notice, the father is aware that a fundamental good has been saved:
the good of his son's humanity. Although the son has squandered the inheritance,
nevertheless his humanity is saved. Indeed, it has been, in a way, found
again. The father's words to the elder son reveal this: "It was
fitting to make merry and be glad, for this your brother was dead and
is alive; he was lost and is found."65 In the same chapter fifteen
of Luke's Gospel, we read the parable of the sheep that was found66 and
then the parable of the coin that was found.67 Each time there is an
emphasis on the same joy that is present in the case of the prodigal
son. The father's fidelity to himself is totally concentrated upon the
humanity of the lost son, upon his dignity. This explains above all his
joyous emotion at the moment of the son's return home.
Going on, one can therefore say that the love for the son the love that
springs from the very essence of fatherhood, in a way obliges the father
to be concerned about his son's dignity. This concern is the measure
of his love, the love of which Saint Paul was to write: "Love is
patient and kind.. .love does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable
or resentful...but rejoices in the right...hopes all things, endures
all things" and "love never ends."68 Mercy - as Christ
has presented it in the parable of the prodigal son - has the interior
form of the love that in the New Testament is called agape. This love
is able to reach down to every prodigal son, to every human misery, and
above all to every form of moral misery, to sin. When this happens, the
person who is the object of mercy does not feel humiliated, but rather
found again and "restored to value." The father first and foremost
expresses to him his joy that he has been "found again" and
that he has "returned to life. This joy indicates a good that has
remained intact: even if he is a prodigal, a son does not cease to be
truly his father's son; it also indicates a good that has been found
again, which in the case of the prodigal son was his return to the truth
about himself.
What took place in the relationship between the father and the son in
Christ's parable is not to be evaluated "from the outside." Our
prejudices about mercy are mostly the result of appraising them only
from the outside. At times it happens that by following this method of
evaluation we see in mercy above all a relationship of inequality between
the one offering it and the one receiving it. And, in consequence, we
are quick to deduce that mercy belittles the receiver, that it offends
the dignity of man. The parable of the prodigal son shows that the reality
is different: the relationship of mercy is based on the common experience
of that good which is man, on the common experience of the dignity that
is proper to him. This common experience makes the prodigal son begin
to see himself and his actions in their full truth (this vision in truth
is a genuine form of humility); on the other hand, for this very reason
he becomes a particular good for his father: the father sees so clearly
the good which has been achieved thanks to a mysterious radiation of
truth and love, that he seems to forget all the evil which the son had
committed.
The parable of the prodigal son expresses in a simple but profound way
the reality of conversion. Conversion is the most concrete expression
of the working of love and of the presence of mercy in the human world.
The true and proper meaning of mercy does not consist only in looking,
however penetratingly and compassionately, at moral, physical or material
evil: mercy is manifested in its true and proper aspect when it restores
to value, promotes and draws good from all the forms of evil existing
in the world and in man. Understood in this way, mercy constitutes the
fundamental content of the messianic message of Christ and the constitutive
power of His mission. His disciples and followers understood and practiced
mercy in the same way. Mercy never ceased to reveal itself, in their
hearts and in their actions, as an especially creative proof of the love
which does not allow itself to be "conquered by evil," but
overcomes "evil with good."69 The genuine face of mercy has
to be ever revealed anew. In spite of many prejudices, mercy seems particularly
necessary for our times.
V. THE PASCHAL MYSTERY
7. Mercy Revealed in the Cross and Resurrection
The messianic message of Christ and His activity among people end with
the cross and resurrection. We have to penetrate deeply into this final
event-which especially in the language of the Council is defined as the
Mysterium Paschale - if we wish to express in depth the truth about mercy,
as it has been revealed in depth in the history of our salvation. At
this point of our considerations, we shall have to draw closer still
to the content of the encyclical Redemptor hominis. If, in fact, the
reality of the Redemption, in its human dimension, reveals the unheard
- of greatness of man, qui talem ac tantum meruit habere Redemptorem,70
at the same time the divine dimension of the redemption enables us, I
would say, in the most empirical and "historical" way, to uncover
the depth of that love which does not recoil before the extraordinary
sacrifice of the Son, in order to satisfy the fidelity of the Creator
and Father towards human beings, created in His image and chosen from "the
beginning," in this Son, for grace and glory.
The events of Good Friday and, even before that, in prayer in Gethsemane,
introduce a fundamental change into the whole course of the revelation
of love and mercy in the messianic mission of Christ. The one who "went
about doing good and healing"71 and "curing every sickness
and disease"72 now Himself seems to merit the greatest mercy and
to appeal for mercy, when He is arrested, abused, condemned, scourged,
crowned with thorns, when He is nailed to the cross and dies amidst agonizing
torments.73 It is then that He particularly deserves mercy from the people
to whom He has done good, and He does not receive it. Even those who
are closest to Him cannot protect Him and snatch Him from the hands of
His oppressors. At this final stage of His messianic activity the words
which the prophets, especially Isaiah, uttered concerning the Servant
of Yahweh are fulfilled in Christ: "Through his stripes we are healed."74
Christ, as the man who suffers really and in a terrible way in the Garden
of Olives and on Calvary, addresses Himself to the Father- that Father
whose love He has preached to people, to whose mercy He has borne witness
through all of His activity. But He is not spared - not even He-the terrible
suffering of death on the cross: For our sake God made him to be sin
who knew no sin,"75 St. Paul will write, summing up in a few words
the whole depth of the cross and at the same time the divine dimension
of the reality of the Redemption. Indeed this Redemption is the ultimate
and definitive revelation of the holiness of God, who is the absolute
fullness of perfection: fullness of justice and of love, since justice
is based on love, flows from it and tends towards it. In the passion
and death of Christ-in the fact that the Father did not spare His own
Son, but "for our sake made him sin"76 - absolute justice is
expressed, for Christ undergoes the passion and cross because of the
sins of humanity. This constitutes even a "superabundance" of
justice, for the sins of man are "compensated for" by the sacrifice
of the Man-God. Nevertheless, this justice, which is properly justice "to
God's measure," springs completely from love: from the love of the
Father and of the Son, and completely bears fruit in love. Precisely
for this reason the divine justice revealed in the cross of Christ is "to
God's measure," because it springs from love and is accomplished
in love, producing fruits of salvation. The divine dimension of redemption
is put into effect not only by bringing justice to bear upon sin, but
also by restoring to love that creative power in man thanks also which
he once more has access to the fullness of life and holiness that come
from God. In this way, redemption involves the revelation of mercy in
its fullness.
The Paschal Mystery is the culmination of this revealing and effecting
of mercy, which is able to justify man, to restore justice in the sense
of that salvific order which God willed from the beginning in man and,
through man, in the world. The suffering Christ speaks in a special way
to man, and not only to the believer. The non-believer also will be able
to discover in Him the eloquence of solidarity with the human lot, as
also the harmonious fullness of a disinterested dedication to the cause
of man, to truth and to love. And yet the divine dimension of the Paschal
Mystery goes still deeper. The cross on Calvary, the cross upon which
Christ conducts His final dialogue with the Father, emerges from the
very heart of the love that man, created in the image and likeness of
God, has been given as a gift, according to God's eternal plan. God,
as Christ has revealed Him, does not merely remain closely linked with
the world as the Creator and the ultimate source of existence. He is
also Father: He is linked to man, whom He called to existence in the
visible world, by a bond still more intimate than that of creation. It
is love which not only creates the good but also grants participation
in the very life of God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For he who loves
desires to give himself.
The cross of Christ on Calvary stands beside the path of that admirable
commercium, of that wonderful self-communication of God to man, which
also includes the call to man to share in the divine life by giving himself,
and with himself the whole visible world, to God, and like an adopted
son to become a sharer in the truth and love which is in God and proceeds
from God. It is precisely beside the path of man's eternal election to
the dignity of being an adopted child of God that there stands in history
the cross of Christ, the only - begotten Son, who, as "light from
light, true God from true God,"77 came to give the final witness
to the wonderful covenant of God with humanity, of God with man - every
human being This covenant, as old as man - it goes back to the very mystery
of creation - and afterwards many times renewed with one single chosen
people, is equally the new and definitive covenant, which was established
there on Calvary, and is not limited to a single people, to Israel, but
is open to each and every individual.
What else, then, does the cross of Christ say to us, the cross that
in a sense is the final word of His messianic message and mission? And
yet this is not yet the word of the God of the covenant: that will be
pronounced at the dawn when first the women and then the Apostles come
to the tomb of the crucified Christ, see the tomb empty and for the first
time hear the message: "He is risen." They will repeat this
message to the others and will be witnesses to the risen Christ. Yet,
even in this glorification of the Son of God, the cross remains, that
cross which-through all the messianic testimony of the Man the Son, who
suffered death upon it - speaks and never ceases to speak of God the
Father, who is absolutely faithful to His eternal love for man, since
He "so loved the world" - therefore man in the world-that "he
gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but
have eternal life."78 Believing in the crucified Son means "seeing
the Father,"79 means believing that love is present in the world
and that this love is more powerful than any kind of evil in which individuals,
humanity, or the world are involved. Believing in this love means believing
in mercy. For mercy is an indispensable dimension of love; it is as it
were love's second name and, at the same time, the specific manner in
which love is revealed and effected vis-a-vis the reality of the evil
that is in the world, affecting and besieging man, insinuating itself
even into his heart and capable of causing him to "perish in Gehenna."80
8. Love More Powerful Than Death, More Powerful Than Sin
The cross of Christ on Calvary is also a witness to the strength of
evil against the very Son of God, against the one who, alone among all
the sons of men, was by His nature absolutely innocent and free from
sin, and whose coming into the world was untainted by the disobedience
of Adam and the inheritance of original sin. And here, precisely in Him,
in Christ, justice is done to sin at the price of His sacrifice, of His
obedience "even to death."81 He who was without sin, "God
made him sin for our sake."82 Justice is also brought to bear upon
death, which from the beginning of man's history had been allied to sin.
Death has justice done to it at the price of the death of the one who
was without sin and who alone was able-by means of his own death-to inflict
death upon death.83 In this way the cross of Christ, on which the Son,
consubstantial with the Father, renders full justice to God, is also
a radical revelation of mercy, or rather of the love that goes against
what constitutes the very root of evil in the history of man: against
sin and death.
The cross is the most profound condescension of God to man and to what
man-especially in difficult and painful moments-looks on as his unhappy
destiny. The cross is like a touch of eternal love upon the most painful
wounds of man's earthly existence; it is the total fulfillment of the
messianic program that Christ once formulated in the synagogue at Nazareth
84 and then repeated to the messengers sent by John the Baptist.85 According
to the words once written in the prophecy of Isaiah,86 this program consisted
in the revelation of merciful love for the poor, the suffering and prisoners,
for the blind, the oppressed and sinners. In the paschal mystery the
limits of the many sided evil in which man becomes a sharer during his
earthly existence are surpassed: the cross of Christ, in fact, makes
us understand the deepest roots of evil, which are fixed in sin and death;
thus the cross becomes an eschatological sign. Only in the eschatological
fulfillment and definitive renewal of the world will love conquer, in
all the elect, the deepest sources of evil, bringing as its fully mature
fruit the kingdom of life and holiness and glorious immortality. The
foundation of this eschatological fulfillment is already contained in
the cross of Christ and in His death. The fact that Christ "was
raised the third day"87 constitutes the final sign of the messianic
mission, a sign that perfects the entire revelation of merciful love
in a world that is subject to evil. At the same time it constitutes the
sign that foretells "a new heaven and a new earth,"88 when
God "will wipe away every tear from their eyes, there will be no
more death, or mourning no crying, nor pain, for the former things have
passed away."89
In the eschatological fulfillment mercy will be revealed as love, while
in the temporal phase, in human history, which is at the same time the
history of sin and death, love must be revealed above all as mercy and
must also be actualized as mercy. Christ's messianic program, the program
of mercy, becomes the program of His people, the program of the Church.
At its very center there is always the cross, for it is in the cross
that the revelation of merciful love attains its culmination. Until "the
former things pass away,"90 the cross will remain the point of reference
for other words too of the Revelation of John: "Behold, I stand
at the door and knock; if anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I
will come in and eat with him and he with me."91 In a special way,
God also reveals His mercy when He invites man to have "mercy" on
His only Son, the crucified one.
Christ, precisely as the crucified one, is the Word that does not pass
away,92 and He is the one who stands at the door and knocks at the heart
of every man,93 without restricting his freedom, but instead seeking
to draw from this very freedom love, which is not only an act of solidarity
with the suffering Son of man, but also a kind of "mercy" shown
by each one of us to the Son of the eternal Father. In the whole of this
messianic program of Christ, in the whole revelation of mercy through
the cross, could man's dignity be more highly respected and ennobled,
for, in obtaining mercy, He is in a sense the one who at the same time "shows
mercy"? In a word, is not this the position of Christ with regard
to man when He says: "As you did it to one of the least of these...you
did it to me"?94 Do not the words of the Sermon on the Mount: "Blessed
are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy,"95 constitute, in
a certain sense, a synthesis of the whole of the Good News, of the whole
of the "wonderful exchange" (admirable commercium) contained
therein? This exchange is a law of the very plan of salvation, a law
which is simple, strong and at the same time "easy." Demonstrating
from the very start what the "human heart" is capable of ("to
be merciful"), do not these words from the Sermon on the Mount reveal
in the same perspective the deep mystery of God: that inscrutable unity
of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, in which love, containing justice, sets
in motion mercy, which in its turn reveals the perfection of justice?
The Paschal Mystery is Christ at the summit of the revelation of the
inscrutable mystery of God. It is precisely then that the words pronounced
in the Upper Room are completely fulfilled: "He who has seen me
has seen the Father."96 In fact, Christ, whom the Father "did
not spare"97 for the sake of man and who in His passion and in the
torment of the cross did not obtain human mercy, has revealed in His
resurrection the fullness of the love that the Father has for Him and,
in Him, for all people. "He is not God of the dead, but of the living."98
In His resurrection Christ has revealed the God of merciful love, precisely
because He accepted the cross as the way to the resurrection. And it
is for this reason that-when we recall the cross of Christ, His passion
and death-our faith and hope are centered on the Risen One: on that Christ
who "on the evening of that day, the first day of the week, . .
.stood among them" in the upper Room, "where the disciples
were, ...breathed on them, and said to them: 'Receive the Holy Spirit.
If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the
sins of any, they are retained.'"99
Here is the Son of God, who in His resurrection experienced in a radical
way mercy shown to Himself, that is to say the love of the Father which
is more powerful than death. And it is also the same Christ, the Son
of God, who at the end of His messianic mission - and, in a certain sense,
even beyond the end - reveals Himself as the inexhaustible source of
mercy, of the same love that, in a subsequent perspective of the history
of salvation in the Church, is to be everlastingly confirmed as more
powerful than sin. The paschal Christ is the definitive incarnation of
mercy, its living sign in salvation history and in eschatology. In the
same spirit, the liturgy of Eastertide places on our lips the words of
the Psalm: Misericordias Domini in aeternum cantabo.100
9. Mother of Mercy
These words of the Church at Easter re-echo in the fullness of their
prophetic content the words that Mary uttered during her visit to Elizabeth,
the wife of Zechariah: "His mercy is...from generation to generation."101
At the very moment of the Incarnation, these words open up a new perspective
of salvation history. After the resurrection of Christ, this perspective
is new on both the historical and the eschatological level. From that
time onwards there is a succession of new generations of individuals
in the immense human family, in ever-increasing dimensions; there is
also a succession of new generations of the People of God, marked with
the Sign of the Cross and of the resurrection and "sealed"102
with the sign of the Paschal Mystery of Christ, the absolute revelation
of the mercy that Mary proclaimed on the threshold of her kinswoman's
house: "His mercy is...from generation to generation."103
Mary is also the one who obtained mercy in a particular and exceptional
way, as no other person has. At the same time, still in an exceptional
way, she made possible with the sacrifice of her heart her own sharing
in revealing God's mercy. This sacrifice is intimately linked with the
cross of her Son, at the foot of which she was to stand on Calvary. Her
sacrifice is a unique sharing in the revelation of mercy, that is, a
sharing in the absolute fidelity of God to His own love, to the covenant
that He willed from eternity and that He entered into in time with man,
with the people, with humanity; it is a sharing in that revelation that
was definitively fulfilled through the cross. No one has experienced,
to the same degree as the Mother of the crucified One, the mystery of
the cross, the overwhelming encounter of divine transcendent justice
with love: that "kiss" given by mercy to justice.104 No one
has received into his heart, as much as Mary did, that mystery, that
truly divine dimension of the redemption effected on Calvary by means
of the death of the Son, together with the sacrifice of her maternal
heart, together with her definitive "fiat."
Mary, then, is the one who has the deepest knowledge of the mystery
of God's mercy. She knows its price, she knows how great it is. In this
sense, we call her the Mother of mercy: our Lady of mercy, or Mother
of divine mercy; in each one of these titles there is a deep theological
meaning, for they express the special preparation of her soul, of her
whole personality, so that she was able to perceive, through the complex
events, first of Israel, then of every individual and of the whole of
humanity, that mercy of which "from generation to generation"105
people become sharers according to the eternal design of the most Holy
Trinity.
The above titles which we attribute to the Mother of God speak of her
principally, however, as the Mother of the crucified and risen One; as
the One who, having obtained mercy in an exceptional way, in an equally
exceptional way "merits" that mercy throughout her earthly
life and, particularly, at the foot of the cross of her Son; and finally
as the one who, through her hidden and at the same time incomparable
sharing in the messianic mission of her Son, was called in a special
way to bring close to people that love which He had come to reveal: the
love that finds its most concrete expression vis-a-vis the suffering,
the poor, those deprived of their own freedom, the blind, the oppressed
and sinners, just as Christ spoke of them in the words of the prophecy
of Isaiah, first in the synagogue at Nazareth106 and then in response
to the question of the messengers of John the Baptist.107
It was precisely this "merciful" love, which is manifested
above all in contact with moral and physical evil, that the heart of
her who was the Mother of the crucified and risen One shared in singularly
and exceptionally - that Mary shared in. In her and through her, this
love continues to be revealed in the history of the Church and of humanity.
This revelation is especially fruitful because in the Mother of God it
is based upon the unique tact of her maternal heart, on her particular
sensitivity, on her particular fitness to reach all those who most easily
accept the merciful love of a mother. This is one of the great life-giving
mysteries of Christianity, a mystery intimately connected with the mystery
of the Incarnation.
"The motherhood of Mary in the order of grace," as the Second
Vatican Council explains, "lasts without interruption from the consent
which she faithfully gave at the annunciation and which she sustained
without hesitation under the cross, until the eternal fulfillment of
all the elect. In fact, being assumed into heaven she has not laid aside
this office of salvation but by her manifold intercession she continues
to obtain for us the graces of eternal salvation. By her maternal charity,
she takes care of the brethren of her Son who still journey on earth
surrounded by dangers and difficulties, until they are led into their
blessed home."108
VI. "MERCY...FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION"
10. An Image of Our Generation
We have every right to believe that our generation too was included
in the words of the Mother of God when she glorified that mercy shared
in "from generation to generation" by those who allow themselves
to be guided by the fear of God. The words of Mary's Magnificat have
a prophetic content that concerns not only the past of Israel but also
the whole future of the People of God on earth. In fact, all of us now
living on earth are the generation that is aware of the approach of the
third millennium and that profoundly feels the change that is occurring
in history.
The present generation knows that it is in a privileged position: progress
provides it with countless possibilities that only a few decades ago
were undreamed of. Man's creative activity, his intelligence and his
work, have brought about profound changes both in the field of science
and technology and in that of social and cultural life. Man has extended
his power over nature and has acquired deeper knowledge of the laws of
social behavior. He has seen the obstacles and distances between individuals
and nations dissolve or shrink through an increased sense of what is
universal, through a clearer awareness of the unity of the human race,
through the acceptance of mutual dependence in authentic solidarity,
and through the desire and possibility of making contact with one's brothers
and sisters beyond artificial geographical divisions and national or
racial limits. Today's young people, especially, know that the progress
of science and technology can produce not only new material goods but
also a wider sharing in knowledge. The extraordinary progress made in
the field of information and data processing, for instance, will increase
man's creative capacity and provide access to the intellectual and cultural
riches of other peoples. New communications techniques will encourage
greater participation in events and a wider exchange of ideas. The achievements
of biological, psychological and social science will help man to understand
better the riches of his own being. It is true that too often this progress
is still the privilege of the industrialized countries, but it cannot
be denied that the prospect of enabling every people and every country
to benefit from it has long ceased to be a mere utopia when there is
a real political desire for it.
But side by side with all this, or rather as part of it, there are also
the difficulties that appear whenever there is growth. There is unease
and a sense of powerlessness regarding the profound response that man
knows that he must give. The picture of the world today also contains
shadows and imbalances that are not always merely superficial. The Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et spes of the Second Vatican Council is certainly
not the only document that deals with the life of this generation, but
it is a document of particular importance. "The dichotomy affecting
the modern world," we read in it, "is,,in fact, a symptom of
a deeper dichotomy that is in man himself. He is the meeting point of
many conflicting forces. In his condition as a created being he is subject
to a thousand shortcomings, but feels untrammelled in his inclinations
and destined for a higher form of life. Torn by a welter of anxieties
he is compelled to choose between them and repudiate some among them.
Worse still, feeble and sinful as he is, he often does the very thing
he hates and does not do what he wants. And so he feels himself divided,
and the result is a host of discords in social life."109
Towards the end of the introductory exposition we read: ". . .in
the face of modern developments there is a growing body of men who are
asking the most fundamental of all questions or are glimpsing them with
a keener insight: What is man? What is the meaning of suffering, evil,
death, which have not been eliminated by all this progress? What is the
purpose of these achievements, purchased at so high a price?"110
In the span of the fifteen years since the end of the Second Vatican
Council, has this picture of tensions and threats that mark our epoch
become less disquieting? It seems not. On the contrary, the tensions
and threats that in the Council document seem only to be outlined and
not to manifest in depth all the dangers hidden within them have revealed
themselves more clearly in the space of these years; they have in a different
way confirmed that danger, and do not permit us to cherish the illusions
of the past.
11. Sources of Uneasiness
Thus, in our world the feeling of being under threat is increasing.
There is an increase of that existential fear connected especially, as
I said in the encyclical Redemptor hominis, with the prospect of a conflict
that in view of today's atomic stockpiles could mean the partial self-destruction
of humanity. But the threat does not merely concern what human beings
can do to human beings through the means provided by military technology;
it also concerns many other dangers produced by a materialistic society
which-in spite of "humanistic" declarations-accepts the primacy
of things over persons. Contemporary man, therefore, fears that by the
use of the means invented by this type of society, individuals and the
environment, communities, societies and nations can fall victim to the
abuse of power by other individuals, environments and societies. The
history of our century offers many examples of this. In spite of all
the declarations on the rights of man in his integral dimension, that
is to say in his bodily and spiritual existence, we cannot say that these
examples belong only to the past.
Man rightly fears falling victim to an oppression that will deprive
him of his interior freedom, of the possibility of expressing the truth
of which he is convinced, of the faith that he professes, of the ability
to obey the voice of conscience that tells him the right path to follow.
The technical means at the disposal of modern society conceal within
themselves not only the possibility of self-destruction through military
conflict, but also the possibility of a "peaceful" subjugation
of individuals, of environments, of entire societies and of nations,
that for one reason or another might prove inconvenient for those who
possess the necessary means and are ready to use them without scruple.
An instance is the continued existence of torture, systematically used
by authority as a means of domination and political oppression and practiced
by subordinates with impunity.
Together with awareness of the biological threat, therefore, there is
a growing awareness of yet another threat, even more destructive of what
is essentially human, what is intimately bound up with the dignity of
the person and his or her right to truth and freedom.
All this is happening against the background of the gigantic remorse
caused by the fact that, side by side with wealthy and surfeited people
and societies, living in plenty and ruled by consumerism and pleasure,
the same human family contains individuals and groups that are suffering
from hunger. There are babies dying of hunger under their mothers' eyes.
In various parts of the world, in various socio-economic systems, there
exist entire areas of poverty, shortage and underdevelopment. This fact
is universally known. The state of inequality between individuals and
between nations not only still exists; it is increasing. It still happens
that side by side with those who are wealthy and living in plenty there
exist those who are living in want, suffering misery and often actually
dying of hunger; and their number reaches tens, even hundreds of millions.
This is why moral uneasiness is destined to become even more acute. It
is obvious that a fundamental defect, or rather a series of defects,
indeed a defective machinery is at the root of contemporary economics
and materialistic civilization, which does not allow the human family
to break free from such radically unjust situations.
This picture of today's world in which there is so much evil both physical
and moral, so as to make of it a world entangled in contradictions and
tensions, and at the same time full of threats to human freedom, conscience
and religion-this picture explains the uneasiness felt by contemporary
man. This uneasiness is experienced not only by those who are disadvantaged
or oppressed, but also by those who possess the privileges of wealth,
progress and power. And, although there is no lack of people trying to
understand the causes of this uneasiness, or trying to react against
it with the temporary means offered by technology, wealth or power, still
in the very depth of the human spirit this uneasiness is stronger than
all temporary means. This uneasiness concerns-as the analyses of the
Second Vatican Council rightly pointed out-the fundamental problems of
all human existence. It is linked with the very sense of man's existence
in the world, and is an uneasiness for the future of man and all humanity;
it demands decisive solutions, which now seem to be forcing themselves
upon the human race.
12. Is Justice Enough?
It is not difficult to see that in the modern world the sense of justice
has been reawakening on a vast scale; and without doubt this emphasizes
that which goes against justice in relationships between individuals,
social groups and "classes," between individual peoples and
states, and finally between whole political systems, indeed between what
are called "worlds." This deep and varied trend, at the basis
of which the contemporary human conscience has placed justice, gives
proof of the ethical character of the tensions and struggles pervading
the world.
The Church shares with the people of our time this profound and ardent
desire for a life which is just in every aspect, nor does she fail to
examine the various aspects of the sort of justice that the life of people
and society demands. This is confirmed by the field of Catholic social
doctrine, greatly developed in the course of the last century. On the
lines of this teaching proceed the education and formation of human consciences
in the spirit of justice, and also individual undertakings, especially
in the sphere of the apostolate of the laity, which are developing in
precisely this spirit.
And yet, it would be difficult not to notice that very often programs
which start from the idea of justice and which ought to assist its fulfillment
among individuals, groups and human societies, in practice suffer from
distortions. Although they continue to appeal to the idea of justice,
nevertheless experience shows that other negative forces have gained
the upper hand over justice, such as spite, hatred and even cruelty.
In such cases, the desire to annihilate the enemy, limit his freedom,
or even force him into total dependence, becomes the fundamental motive
for action; and this contrasts with the essence of justice, which by
its nature tends to establish equality and harmony between the parties
in conflict. This kind of abuse of the idea of justice and the practical
distortion of it show how far human action can deviate from justice itself,
even when it is being undertaken in the name of justice. Not in vain
did Christ challenge His listeners, faithful to the doctrine of the Old
Testament, for their attitude which was manifested in the words: An eye
for an eye and a tooth for a tooth."111 This was the form of distortion
of justice at that time; and today's forms continue to be modeled on
it. It is obvious, in fact, that in the name of an alleged justice (for
example, historical justice or class justice) the neighbor is sometimes
destroyed, killed, deprived of liberty or stripped of fundamental human
rights. The experience of the past and of our own time demonstrates that
justice alone is not enough, that it can even lead to the negation and
destruction of itself, if that deeper power, which is love, is not allowed
to shape human life in its various dimensions. It has been precisely
historical experience that, among other things, has led to the formulation
of the saying: summum ius, summa iniuria. This statement does not detract
from the value of justice and does not minimize the significance of the
order that is based upon it; it only indicates, under another aspect,
the need to draw from the powers of the spirit which condition the very
order of justice, powers which are still more profound.
The Church, having before her eyes the picture of the generation to
which we belong, shares the uneasiness of so many of the people of our
time. Moreover, one cannot fail to be worried by the decline of many
fundamental values, which constitute an unquestionable good not only
for Christian morality but simply for human morality, for moral culture:
these values include respect for human life from the moment of conception,
respect for marriage in its indissoluble unity, and respect for the stability
of the family. Moral permissiveness strikes especially at this most sensitive
sphere of life and society. Hand in hand with this go the crisis of truth
in human relationships, lack of responsibility for what one says, the
purely utilitarian relationship between individual and individual, the
loss of a sense of the authentic common good and the ease with which
this good is alienated. Finally, there is the "desacralization" that
often turns into "dehumanization": the individual and the society
for whom nothing is "sacred" suffer moral decay, in spite of
appearances.
VII. THE MERCY OF GOD IN THE MISSION OF THE CHURCH
In connection with this picture of our generation, a picture which cannot
fail to cause profound anxiety, there come to mind once more those words
which, by reason of the Incarnation of the Son of God, resounded in Mary's
Magnificat, and which sing of "mercy from generation to generation." The
Church of our time, constantly pondering the eloquence of these inspired
words, and applying them to the sufferings of the great human family,
must become more particularly and profoundly conscious of the need to
bear witness in her whole mission to God's mercy, following in the footsteps
of the tradition of the Old and the New Covenant, and above all of Jesus
Christ Himself and His Apostles. The Church must bear witness to the
mercy of God revealed in Christ, in the whole of His mission as Messiah,
professing it in the first place as a salvific truth of faith and as
necessary for a life in harmony with faith, and then seeking to introduce
it and to make it incarnate in the lives both of her faithful and as
far as possible in the lives of all people of good will. Finally, the
Church-professing mercy and remaining always faithful to it-has the right
and the duty to call upon the mercy of God, imploring it in the face
of all the manifestations of physical and moral evil, before all the
threats that cloud the whole horizon of the life of humanity today.
13. The Church Professes the Mercy of God and Proclaims It
The Church must profess and proclaim God's mercy in all its truth, as
it has been handed down to us by revelation. We have sought, in the foregoing
pages of the present document, to give at least an outline of this truth,
which finds such rich expression in the whole of Sacred Scripture and
in Sacred Tradition. In the daily life of the Church the truth about
the mercy of God, expressed in the Bible, resounds as a perennial echo
through the many readings of the Sacred Liturgy. The authentic sense
of faith of the People of God perceives this truth, as is shown by various
expressions of personal and community piety. It would of course be difficult
to give a list or summary of them all, since most of them are vividly
inscribed in the depths of people's hearts and minds. Some theologians
affirm that mercy is the greatest of the attributes and perfections of
God, and the Bible, Tradition and the whole faith life of the People
of God provide particular proofs of this. It is not a question here of
the perfection of the inscrutable essence of God in the mystery of the
divinity itself, but of the perfection and attribute whereby man, in
the intimate truth of his existence, encounters the living God particularly
closely and particularly often. In harmony with Christ's words to Philip,112
the "vision of the Father"-a vision of God through faith finds
precisely in the encounter with His mercy a unique moment of interior
simplicity and truth, similar to that which we discover in the parable
of the prodigal son.
"He who has seen me has seen the Father."113 The Church professes
the mercy of God, the Church lives by it in her wide experience of faith
and also in her teaching, constantly contemplating Christ, concentrating
on Him, on His life and on His Gospel, on His cross and resurrection,
on His whole mystery. Everything that forms the "vision" of
Christ in the Church's living faith and teaching brings us nearer to
the "vision of the Father" in the holiness of His mercy. The
Church seems in a particular way to profess the mercy of God and to venerate
it when she directs herself to the Heart of Christ. In fact, it is precisely
this drawing close to Christ in the mystery of His Heart which enables
us to dwell on this point-a point in a sense central and also most accessible
on the human level-of the revelation of the merciful love of the Father,
a revelation which constituted the central content of the messianic mission
of the Son of Man.
The Church lives an authentic life when she professes and proclaims
mercy-the most stupendous attribute of the Creator and of the Redeemer-and
when she brings people close to the sources of the Savior's mercy, of
which she is the trustee and dispenser. Of great significance in this
area is constant meditation on the Word of God, and above all conscious
and mature participation in the Eucharist and in the sacrament of Penance
or Reconciliation. The Eucharist brings us ever nearer to that love which
is more powerful than death: "For as often as we eat this bread
and drink this cup," we proclaim not only the death of the Redeemer
but also His resurrection, "until he comes" in glory.114 The
same Eucharistic rite, celebrated in memory of Him who in His messianic
mission revealed the Father to us by means of His words and His cross,
attests to the inexhaustible love by virtue of which He desires always
to be united with us and present in our midst, coming to meet every human
heart. It is the sacrament of Penance or Reconciliation that prepares
the way for each individual, even those weighed down with great faults.
In this sacrament each person can experience mercy in a unique way, that
is, the love which is more powerful than sin. This has already been spoken
of in the encyclical Redemptor hominis; but it will be fitting to return
once more to this fundamental theme.
It is precisely because sin exists in the world, which "God so
loved...that he gave his only Son,"115 that God, who "is love,"116
cannot reveal Himself otherwise than as mercy. This corresponds not only
to the most profound truth of that love which God is, but also to the
whole interior truth of man and of the world which is man's temporary
homeland.
Mercy in itself, as a perfection of the infinite God, is also infinite.
Also infinite therefore and inexhaustible is the Father's readiness to
receive the prodigal children who return to His home. Infinite are the
readiness and power of forgiveness which flow continually from the marvelous
value of the sacrifice of the Son. No human sin can prevail over this
power or even limit it. On the part of man only a lack of good will can
limit it, a lack of readiness to be converted and to repent, in other
words persistence in obstinacy, opposing grace and truth, especially
in the face of the witness of the cross and resurrection of Christ.
Therefore, the Church professes and proclaims conversion. Conversion
to God always consists in discovering His mercy, that is, in discovering
that love which is patient and kind117 as only the Creator and Father
can be; the love to which the "God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ"118 is faithful to the uttermost consequences in the history
of His covenant with man; even to the cross and to the death and resurrection
of the Son. Conversion to God is always the fruit of the"rediscovery
of this Father, who is rich in mercy.
Authentic knowledge of the God of mercy, the God of tender love, is
a constant and inexhaustible source of conversion, not only as a momentary
interior act but also as a permanent attitude, as a state of mind. Those
who come to know God in this way, who "see" Him in this way,
can live only in a state of being continually converted to Him. They
live, therefore, in statu conversionis; and it is this state of conversion
which marks out the most profound element of the pilgrimage of every
man and woman on earth in statu viatoris. It is obvious that the Church
professes the mercy of God, revealed in the crucified and risen Christ,
not only by the word of her teaching but above all through the deepest
pulsation of the life of the whole People of God. By means of this testimony
of life, the Church fulfills the mission proper to the People of God,
the mission which is a sharing in and, in a sense, a continuation of
the messianic mission of Christ Himself.
The contemporary Church is profoundly conscious that only on the basis
of the mercy of God will she be able to carry out the tasks that derive
from the teaching of the Second Vatican Council, and, in the first place,
the ecumenical task which aims at uniting all those who confess Christ.
As she makes many efforts in this direction, the Church confesses with
humility that only that love which is more powerful than the weakness
of human divisions can definitively bring about that unity which Christ
implored from the Father and which the Spirit never ceases to beseech
for us "with sighs too deep for words."119
14. The Church Seeks To Put Mercy into Practice
Jesus Christ taught that man not only receives and experiences the mercy
of God, but that he is also called "to practice mercy" towards
others: "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy."120
The Church sees in these words a call to action, and she tries to practice
mercy. All the beatitudes of the Sermon on the Mount indicate the way
of conversion and of reform of life, but the one referring to those who
are merciful is particularly eloquent in this regard. Man attains to
the merciful love of God, His mercy, to the extent that he himself is
interiorly transformed in the spirit of that love towards his neighbor.
This authentically evangelical process is not just a spiritual transformation
realized once and for all: it is a whole lifestyle, an essential and
continuous characteristic of the Christian vocation. It consists in the
constant discovery and persevering practice of love as a unifying and
also elevating power despite all difficulties of a psychological or social
nature: it is a question, in fact, of a merciful love which, by its essence,
is a creative love. In reciprocal relationships between persons merciful
love is never a unilateral act or process. Even in the cases in which
everything would seem to indicate that only one party is giving and offering,
and the other only receiving and taking (for example, in the case of
a physician giving treatment, a teacher teaching, parents supporting
and bringing up their children, a benefactor helping the needy), in reality
the one who gives is always also a beneficiary. In any case, he too can
easily find himself in the position of the one who receives, who obtains
a benefit, who experiences merciful love; he too can find himself the
object of mercy.
In this sense Christ crucified is for us the loftiest model, inspiration
and encouragement. When we base ourselves on this disquieting model,
we are able with all humility to show mercy to others, knowing that Christ
accepts it as if it were shown to Himself.121 On the basis of this model,
we must also continually purify all our actions and all our intentions
in which mercy is understood and practiced in a unilateral way, as a
good done to others. An act of merciful love is only really such when
we are deeply convinced at the moment that we perform it that we are
at the same time receiving mercy from the people who are accepting it
from us. If this bilateral and reciprocal quality is absent, our actions
are not yet true acts of mercy, nor has there yet been fully completed
in us that conversion to which Christ has shown us the way by His words
and example, even to the cross, nor are we yet sharing fully in the magnificent
source of merciful love that has been revealed to us by Him.
Thus, the way which Christ showed to us in the Sermon on the Mount with
the beatitude regarding those who are merciful is much richer than what
we sometimes find in ordinary human opinions about mercy. These opinions
see mercy as a unilateral act or process, presupposing and maintaining
a certain distance between the one practicing mercy and the one benefitting
from it, between the one who does good and the one who receives it. Hence
the attempt to free interpersonal and social relationships from mercy
and to base them solely on justice. However, such opinions about mercy
fail to see the fundamental link between mercy and justice spoken of
by the whole biblical tradition, and above all by the messianic mission
of Jesus Christ. True mercy is, so to speak, the most profound source
of justice. If justice is in itself suitable for "arbitration" between
people concerning the reciprocal distribution of objective goods in an
equitable manner, love and only love (including that kindly love that
we call "mercy") is capable of restoring man to Himself.
Mercy that is truly Christian is also, in a certain sense, the most
perfect incarnation of "equality" between people, and therefore
also the most perfect incarnation of justice as well, insofar as justice
aims at the same result in its own sphere. However, the equality brought
by justice is limited to the realm of objective and extrinsic goods,
while love and mercy bring it about that people meet one another in that
value which is man himself, with the dignity that is proper to him. At
the same time, "equality" of people through "patient and
kind" love122 does not take away differences: the person who gives
becomes more generous when he feels at the same time benefitted by the
person accepting his gift; and vice versa, the person who accepts the
gift with the awareness that, in accepting it, he too is doing good is
in his own way serving the great cause of the dignity of the person;
and this contributes to uniting people in a more profound manner.
Thus, mercy becomes an indispensable element for shaping mutual relationships
between people, in a spirit of deepest respect for what is human, and
in a spirit of mutual brotherhood. It is impossible to establish this
bond between people, if they wish to regulate their mutual relationships
solely according to the measure of justice. In every sphere of interpersonal
relationships justice must, so to speak, be "corrected " to
a considerable extent by that love which, as St. Paul proclaims, "is
patient and kind" or, in other words, possesses the characteristics
of that merciful love which is so much of the essence of the Gospel and
Christianity. Let us remember, furthermore, that merciful love also means
the cordial tenderness and sensitivity so eloquently spoken of in the
parable of the prodigal son,123 and also in the parables of the lost
sheep and the lost coin.124 Consequently, merciful love is supremely
indispensable between those who are closest to one another: between husbands
and wives, between parents and children, between friends; and it is indispensable
in education and in pastoral work.
Its sphere of action, however, is not limited to this. If Paul VI more
than once indicated the civilization of love"125 as the goal towards
which all efforts in the cultural and social fields as well as in the
economic and political fields should tend. it must be added that this
good will never be reached if in our thinking and acting concerning the
vast and complex spheres of human society we stop at the criterion of "an
eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth"126 and do not try to transform
it in its essence, by complementing it with another spirit. Certainly,
the Second Vatican Council also leads us in this direction, when it speaks
repeatedly of the need to make the world more human,127 and says that
the realization of this task is precisely the mission of the Church in
the modern world. Society can become ever more human only if we introduce
into the many-sided setting of interpersonal and social relationships,
not merely justice, but also that "merciful love" which constitutes
the messianic message of the Gospel.
Society can become "ever more human" only when we introduce
into all the mutual relationships which form its moral aspect the moment
of forgiveness, which is so much of the essence of the Gospel. Forgiveness
demonstrates the presence in the world of the love which is more powerful
than sin. Forgiveness is also the fundamental condition for reconciliation,
not only in the relationship of God with man, but also in relationships
between people. A world from which forgiveness was eliminated would be
nothing but a world of cold and unfeeling justice, in the name of which
each person would claim his or her own rights vis-a- vis others; the
various kinds of selfishness latent in man would transform life and human
society into a system of oppression of the weak by the strong, or into
an arena of permanent strife between one group and another.
For this reason, the Church must consider it one of her principal duties-at
every stage of history and especially in our modern age-to proclaim and
to introduce into life the mystery of mercy, supremely revealed in Jesus
Christ. Not only for the Church herself as the community of believers
but also in a certain sense for all humanity, this mystery is the source
of a life different from the life which can be built by man, who is exposed
to the oppressive forces of the threefold concupiscence active within
him.128 It is precisely in the name of this mystery that Christ teaches
us to forgive always. How often we repeat the words of the prayer which
He Himself taught us, asking "forgive us our trespasses as we forgive
those who trespass against us," which means those who are guilty
of something in our regard129 It is indeed difficult to express the profound
value of the attitude which these words describe and inculcate. How many
things these words say to every individual about others and also about
himself. The consciousness of being trespassers against each other goes
hand in hand with the call to fraternal solidarity, which St. Paul expressed
in his concise exhortation to "forbear one another in love."130
What a lesson of humility is to be found here with regard to man, with
regard both to one's neighbor and to oneself What a school of good will
for daily living, in the various conditions of our existence If we were
to ignore this lesson, what would remain of any "humanist" program
of life and education?
Christ emphasizes so insistently the need to forgive others that when
Peter asked Him how many times he should forgive his neighbor He answered
with the symbolic number of "seventy times seven,"131 meaning
that he must be able to forgive everyone every time. It is obvious that
such a generous requirement of forgiveness does not cancel out the objective
requirements of justice. Properly understood, justice constitutes, so
to speak, the goal of forgiveness. In no passage of the Gospel message
does forgiveness, or mercy as its source, mean indulgence towards evil,
towards scandals, towards injury or insult. In any case, reparation for
evil and scandal, compensation for injury, and satisfaction for insult
are conditions for forgiveness.
Thus the fundamental structure of justice always enters into the sphere
of mercy. Mercy, however, has the power to confer on justice a new content,
which is expressed most simply and fully in forgiveness. Forgiveness,
in fact, shows that, over and above the process of "compensation" and "truce" which
is specific to justice, love is necessary, so that man may affirm himself
as man. Fulfillment of the conditions of justice is especially indispensable
in order that love may reveal its own nature. In analyzing the parable
of the prodigal son, we have already called attention to the fact that
he who forgives and he who is forgiven encounter one another at an essential
point, namely the dignity or essential value of the person, a point which
cannot be lost and the affirmation of which, or its rediscovery, is a
source of the greatest joy.132
The Church rightly considers it her duty and the purpose of her mission
to guard the authenticity of forgiveness, both in life and behavior and
in educational and pastoral work. She protects it simply by guarding
its source, which is the mystery of the mercy of God Himself as revealed
in Jesus Christ.
The basis of the Church's mission, in all the spheres spoken of in the
numerous pronouncements of the most recent Council and in the centuries-old
experience of the apostolate, is none other than "drawing from the
wells of the Savior"133 this is what provides many guidelines for
the mission of the Church in the lives of individual Christians, of individual
communities, and also of the whole People of God. This "drawing
from the wells of the Savior" can be done only in the spirit of
that poverty to which we are called by the words and example of the Lord: "You
received without pay, give without pay."134 Thus, in all the ways
of the Church's life and ministry-through the evangelical poverty of
her-ministers and stewards and of the whole people which bears witness
to "the mighty works" of its Lord-the God who is "rich
in mercy" has been made still more clearly manifest.
VIII. THE PRAYER OF THE CHURCH IN OUR TIMES
15. The Church Appeals to the Mercy of God
The Church proclaims the truth of God's mercy revealed in the crucified
and risen Christ, and she professes it in various ways. Furthermore,
she seeks to practice mercy towards people through people, and she sees
in this an indispensable condition for solicitude for a better and "more
human" world, today and tomorrow. However, at no time and in no
historical period-especially at a moment as critical as our own-can the
Church forget the prayer that is a cry for the mercy of God amid the
many forms of evil which weigh upon humanity and threaten it. Precisely
this is the fundamental right and duty of the Church in Christ Jesus,
her right and duty towards God and towards humanity. The more the human
conscience succumbs to secularization, loses its sense of the very meaning
of the word "mercy," moves away from God and distances itself
from the mystery of mercy, the more the Church has the right and the
duty to appeal to the God of mercy "with loud cries."135 These "loud
cries" should be the mark of the Church of our times, cries uttered
to God to implore His mercy, the certain manifestation of which she professes
and proclaims as having already come in Jesus crucified and risen, that
is, in the Paschal Mystery. It is this mystery which bears within itself
the most complete revelation of mercy, that is, of that love which is
more powerful than death, more powerful than sin and every evil, the
love which lifts man up when he falls into the abyss and frees him from
the greatest threats.
Modern man feels these threats. What has been said above in this regard
is only a rough outline. Modern man often anxiously wonders about the
solution to the terrible tensions which have built up in the world and
which entangle humanity. And if at times he lacks the courage to utter
the word "mercy," or if in his conscience empty of religious
content he does not find the equivalent, so much greater is the need
for the Church to utter his word, not only in her own name but also in
the name of all the men and women of our time.
Everything that I have said in the present document on mercy should
therefore be continually transformed into an ardent prayer: into a cry
that implores mercy according to the needs of man in the modern world.
May this cry be full of that truth about mercy which has found such rich
expression in Sacred Scripture and in Tradition, as also in the authentic
life of faith of countless generations of the People of God. With this
cry let us, like the sacred writers, call upon the God who cannot despise
anything that He has made,136 the God who is faithful to Himself, to
His fatherhood and His love. And, like the prophets, let us appeal to
that love which has maternal characteristics and which, like a mother,
follows each of her children, each lost sheep, even if they should number
millions, even if in the world evil should prevail over goodness, even
if contemporary humanity should deserve a new "flood" on account
of its sins, as once the generation of Noah did. Let us have recourse
to that fatherly love revealed to us by Christ in His messianic mission,
a love which reached its culmination in His cross, in His death and resurrection.
Let us have recourse to God through Christ, mindful of the words of Mary's
Magnificat, which proclaim mercy "from generation to generation." Let
us implore God's mercy for the present generation. May the Church which,
following the example of Mary, also seeks to be the spiritual mother
of mankind, express in this prayer her maternal solicitude and at the
same time her confident love, that love from which is born the most burning
need for prayer.
Let us offer up our petitions, directed by the faith, by the hope, and
by the charity which Christ has planted in our hearts. This attitude
is likewise love of God, whom modern man has sometimes separated far
from himself, made extraneous to himself, proclaiming in various ways
that God is "superfluous." This is, therefore, love of God,
the insulting rejection of whom by modern man we feel profoundly, and
we are ready to cry out with Christ on the cross: "Father, forgive
them; for they know not what they do."137 At the same time it is
love of people, of all men and women without any exception or division:
without difference of race, culture, language, or world outlook, without
distinction between friends and enemies. This is love for people-it desires
every true good for each individual and for every human community, every
family, every nation, every social group, for young people, adults, parents,
the elderly-a love for everyone, without exception. This is love, or
rather an anxious solicitude to ensure for each individual every true
good and to remove and drive away every sort of evil.
And, if any of our contemporaries do not share the faith and hope which
lead me, as a servant of Christ and steward of the mysteries of God,138
to implore God's mercy for humanity in this hour of history, let them
at least try to understand the reason for my concern. It is dictated
by love for man, for all that is human and which, according to the intuitions
of many of our contemporaries, is threatened by an immense danger. The
mystery of Christ, which reveals to us the great vocation of man and
which led me to emphasize in the encyclical Redemptor hominis his incomparable
dignity, also obliges me to proclaim mercy as God's merciful love, revealed
in that same mystery of Christ. It likewise obliges me to have recourse
to that mercy and to beg for it at this difficult, critical phase of
the history of the Church and of the world, as we approach the end of
the second millennium.
In the name of Jesus Christ crucified and risen, in the spirit of His
messianic mission, enduring in the history of humanity, we raise our
voices and pray that the Love which is in the Father may once again be
revealed at this stage of history, and that, through the work of the
Son and Holy Spirit, it may be shown to be present in our modern world
and to be more powerful than evil: more powerful than sin and death.
We pray for this through the intercession of her who does not cease to
proclaim "mercy...from generation to generation," and also
through the intercession of those for whom there have been completely
fulfilled the words of the Sermon on the Mount: "Blessed are the
merciful, for they shall obtain mercy."139
In continuing the great task of implementing the Second Vatican Council,
in which we can rightly see a new phase of the self- realization of the
Church-in keeping with the epoch in which it has been our destiny to
live-the Church herself must be constantly guided by the full consciousness
that in this work it is not permissible for her, for any reason, to withdraw
into herself. The reason for her existence is, in fact, to reveal God,
that Father who allows us to "see" Him in Christ.140 No matter
how strong the resistance of human history may be, no matter how marked
the diversity of contemporary civilization, no matter how great the denial
of God in the human world, so much the greater must be the Church's closeness
to that mystery which, hidden for centuries in God, was then truly shared
with man, in time, through Jesus Christ.
With my apostolic blessing.
Given in Rome, at St. Peter's, on the thirtieth day of November, the
First Sunday of Advent, in the year 1980, the third of the pontificate.
JOHN PAUL II
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Eph. 2:4.
2. Cf. Jn. 1:18; Heb. 1:1f.
3. Jn. 14:8-9.
4. Eph. 2:4-5.
5. 2 Cor. 1:3.
6. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
spes, no. 22: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1042.
7. Cf. ibid
8. 1 Tm. 6:16.
9. Rom. 1:20.
10. Jn. 1:18.
11. 1 Tm. 6:16.
12. Ti. 3:4.
13. Eph. 2:4.
14. Cf. Gn. 1:28.
15. Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World Gaudium et
spes, no. 9: AAS 58 (1966), p. 1032.
16. 2 Cor. 1:3.
17. Mt. 6:4, 6, 18.
18. Cf. Eph. 3:18; also Lk. 11:5-13.
19. Lk. 4:18-19.
20. Lk. 7:19.
21. Lk. 7:22-23.
22. 1 Jn. 4:16
23. Eph. 2:4.
24. Lk. 15:11-32.
25. Lk. 10:30-37.
26. Mt. 18:23-35.
27. Mt. 18:12-14; Lk. 15:3-7.
28. Lk. 15:8-10.
29. Mt. 22:38.
30. Mt. 5:7.
31. Cf. Jgs. 3:7-9.
32. Cf. 1 Kgs. 8:22-53.
33. Cf. Mi. 7:18-20.
34. Cf. Is. 1:18; 51:4-16.
35. Cf. Bar. 2:11-3, 8.
36. Cf. Neh. 9.
37. Cf. e.g. Hos. 2:21-25 and 15;Is. 54:6-8.
38. Cf. Jer. 31:20; Lz. 39:25-29.
39. Cf. 2 Sm. 11; 12; 24:10.
40. Job passim.
41. Est.. 4:17k ff.
42. Cf. e.g. Neh. 9:30-32; Tb. 3:2-3, 11-12; 8:16-17; 1 Mc. 4:24.
43. Cf. Ex. 3:7f.
44. Cf. Is. 63:9.
45. Ex. 34:6.
46. Cf. Nm. 14:18; 2 Chr. 30:9; Neh. 9:17; Ps. 86(85); Wis. 15:1; Sir.
2:11; Jl. 2:13.
47. Cf. Is. 63:16.
48. Cf. Ex. 4:22.
49. Cf. Hos. 2:3.
50. Cf. Hos. 11:7-9; Jer. 31:20; Is. 54:7f.
51. Cf. Ps. 103(102) and 145(144).
52. In describing mercy, the books of the Old Testament use two expressions
in particular, each having a different semantic nuance. First there
is the term hesed, which indicates a profound attitude of "goodness." When
this is established between two individuals, they do not just wish
each other well; they are also faithful to each other by virtue of
an interior commitment, and therefore also by virtue of a faithfulness
to themselves. Since hesed also means "grace" or "love," this
occurs precisely on the basis of this fidelity. The fact that the commitment
in question has not only a moral character but almost a juridical one
makes no difference. When in the Old Testament the word hesed is used
of the Lord, this always occurs in connection with the covenant that
God established with Israel. This covenant was, on God's part, a gift
and a grace for Israel. Nevertheless, since, in harmony with the covenant
entered into, God had made a commitment to respect it, hesed also acquired
in a certain sense a legal content. The juridical commitment on God's
part ceased to oblige whenever Israel broke the covenant and did not
respect its conditions. But precisely at this point, hesed, in ceasing
to be a juridical obligation, revealed its deeper aspect: it showed
itself as what it was at the beginning, that is, as love that gives,
love more powerful than betrayal, grace stronger than sin.
This fidelity vis-a-vis the unfaithful "daughter of my people"(cf.
Lam. 4:3, 6) is, in brief, on God's part, fidelity to Himself. This becomes
obvious in the frequent recurrence together of the two terms hesed we'e
met (= grace and fidelity), which could be considered a case of hendiadys
(cf. e.g. Ex. 34:6; 2 Sm. 2:6; 15:20; Ps. 25[24]:10; 40[39]:11-12; 85[84]:11;
138[137]:2; Mi. 7:20). "It is not for your sake, O house of Israel,
that I am about to act, but for the sake of my holy name" (Ez. 36:22).
Therefore Israel, although burdened with guilt for having broken the
covenant, cannot lay claim to God's hesed on the ba
|