Pope Benedict XVI warned visiting U.S.
bishops that “radical secularism” threatens the core values of American
culture, and he called on the church in America , including politicians and
other laypeople, to render “public moral witness” on crucial social issues.
The pope spoke Jan. 19 to a group of U.S. bishops who were in Rome
for their periodic “ad limina” visits, which included meetings with the pope
and Vatican
officials, covering a wide range of pastoral matters.
Opening with a dire assessment of the state of American
society, the pope told the bishops that “powerful new cultural currents” have
worn away the country’s traditional moral consensus, which was originally based
on religious faith as well as ethical principles derived from natural law.
Whether they claim the authority of science or democracy,
the pope said, militant secularists seek to stifle the church’s proclamation of
these “unchanging moral truths.” Such a movement inevitably leads to the
prevalence of “reductionist and totalitarian readings of the human person and
the nature of society.”
The pope drew an opposition between current “notions of
freedom detached from moral truth” and Catholicism’s “rational perspective” on
morality, founded on the conviction that the “cosmos is possessed of an inner
logic accessible to human reasoning.” Using the “language” of natural law, he
said, the church should promote social justice by “proposing rational arguments
in public square.”
Coming at the start of an election year, Pope Benedict’s
words were clearly relevant to American politics, a connection he made explicit
by mentioning threats to “that most cherished of American freedoms, the freedom
of religion.”
The pope said that many of the visiting bishops had told him
of “concerted efforts” against the “right of conscientious objection … to
cooperation in intrinsically evil practices” — an apparent reference to
proposals by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, opposed by the U.S. bishops,
that all private health insurance plans cover surgical sterilization procedures
and artificial birth control.
In response to such threats, Pope Benedict said, the church
requires an “engaged, articulate and well-formed Catholic laity” with the
courage and critical skills to articulate the “Christian vision of man and
society.” He said that the education of Catholic laypeople is essential to the
“new evangelization,” an initiative that he has made a priority of his
pontificate.
Offering public witness
Touching on one of most controversial areas of church-state
relations in recent years, the pope spoke of Catholic politicians’ “personal
responsibility to offer public witness to their faith, especially with regard
to the great moral issues of our time,” which he identified as “respect for
God’s gift of life, the protection of human dignity and the promotion of
authentic human rights.”
The pope was not specific about the bishops’ relationship
with such politicians, merely encouraging the bishops to “maintain contacts”
with them and “help them understand” their duty to promote Catholic values.
While acknowledging the “genuine difficulties” facing the
church in the United States ,
the pope concluded on a hopeful note, pointing to a growing appreciation for
“Judeo-Christian” civic values, and a “new generation of Catholics,” who he
said will play a “decisive role in renewing the Church’s presence and witness
in American society.”
Before the speech, Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl, archbishop of Washington , greeted the pope with brief remarks that
recalled his 2008 visit to the United
States .
The pope addressed bishops from the District
of Columbia , Maryland , Delaware , Virginia , West Virginia , the U.S. Archdiocese for the Military
Services, and the Virgin Islands .
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