
THE SECRET OF
LOVE
The Secret of Love, According to Benedict XVI
Pope Explains Encyclical to Readers of Italian
Magazine
7
February 2006
This article can serve as an introduction to
Pope Benedict's encyclical "God Is Love" which
is on this
link.
VATICAN CITY, FEB. 7, 2006 (Zenit.org).-
Breaking with tradition, Benedict XVI decided to
present personally his encyclical "Deus Caritas
Est" to readers of Famiglia Cristiana, the
biggest weekly magazine in Italy.
The Pope wrote the lines which follow, taking
advantage of the decision of the magazine's
editors, St. Paul's Publications, to give
readers a copy of the document with the Feb. 5
issue.
* * *
Dear Readers of Famiglia Cristiana
I am very pleased that Famiglia Cristiana has
sent you at home the text of my encyclical and
has given me the possibility to accompany it
with some words to facilitate its reading.
Initially, in fact, the text might seem a bit
difficult and theoretical. However, when one
begins to read it, it becomes evident that I
only wished to respond to a couple of very
concrete questions for Christian life.
The first question is the following: Is it
possible to love God?; more than that: Can love
be something that is obligatory? Is it not a
feeling that one has or does not have? The
answer to the first question is: Yes, we can
love God, given that He has not remained at an
unreachable distance but has entered and enters
into our lives. He comes to meet each one of us:
in the sacraments through which he acts in our
lives; with the faith of the Church, through
which he addresses us, making us meet with men
touched by Him, who transmit light to us; with
dispositions through which he intervenes in our
lives; also with the signs of the creation he
has given us.
Not only has he offered us love, above all he
lived it first and knocks on the door of our
hearts in many ways to elicit our response of
love. Love is not only a feeling; to it also
belong the will and the intelligence. With his
Word, God addresses our intelligence, our will
and our feelings, so that we may learn to love
him "with our whole heart and our whole soul."
We do not find love, in fact, suddenly all
ready; instead, so to speak, it matures. We can
learn to love gradually, so that love will
involve all our strength and will open the way
to an honest life.
* * *
The second question is the following: Can we
really love our "neighbor" when he is strange or
even disagreeable? Yes, we can, if we are God's
friends, if we are Christ's friends and, in this
way, it becomes ever clearer that He has loved
and loves us, though we often turn our gaze from
Him and live according to other criteria. If,
instead, friendship with God becomes for us
something ever more important and decisive, then
we will begin to love those whom God loves and
who are in need of us. God wants us to be
friends of his friends and we can be so, if we
are interiorly close to them.
* * *
Finally, this question is also posed: With her
commandments and prohibitions, does not the
Church embitter the joy of "eros," of feeling
ourselves loved, which pushes us toward the
other and seeks to be transformed into union? I
have tried to show in the encyclical that the
most profound promise of "eros" can mature only
when we do not seek transitory and sudden
happiness alone. On the contrary, together we
find the patience to discover the other
increasingly in the depth of his person, in the
totality of body and soul, so that, finally, the
other's happiness is more important than our
own. Then, we no longer want to receive
something but give ourselves and in this
liberation from his "I" man finds himself and is
filled with joy.
I speak in the encyclical of a journey of
purification and maturation necessary so that
the true promise of "eros" may be fulfilled. The
language of the tradition of the Church has
called this process "education in chastity,"
which, in the end, means nothing other than to
learn the totality of love in the patience of
growth and maturation.
* * *
In the second part there is talk of charity, in
the service of the communal love of the Church
toward all who suffer in body or soul and are in
need of the gift of love. Two questions arise
here above all: Can the Church leave this
service to other philanthropic organizations?
The answer is no. The Church cannot do so. The
Church must practice love toward the neighbor
including as a community; otherwise, it would
proclaim the love of God in an incomplete and
insufficient way.
The second question: Would it not be better to
promote an order of justice in which there are
no needy, and charity would become something
superfluous? The answer is the following:
Undoubtedly the end of politics is to create a
just order in society, where what is proper to
each one is recognized and where no one suffers
from abject poverty. In this case, justice is
the true object of politics, as peace cannot
exist without justice. By her very nature, the
Church does not engage in politics in the first
person; rather, she respects the autonomy of the
State and of its institutions.
The search for this order of justice corresponds
to common reason, just as politics is something
that affects all citizens. Often, however,
reason is blinded by interests and the will to
power. Faith serves to purify reason, so that it
may see and decide correctly. Therefore, it is
the task of the Church to cure reason and
reinforce the will to do good. In this
connection, without engaging in politics, the
Church participates passionately in the battle
for justice. It corresponds to Christians
involved in public service to always open, in
their political action, new ways for justice.
However, I have only answered the first half of
our question. The second half, which I like to
stress in the encyclical, says thus: Justice
never makes love superfluous. Beyond justice,
man will always need love, which alone is able
to give a soul to justice. In a world so
profoundly wounded, as the one we know in our
days, this affirmation does not need
demonstrations. The world expects the testimony
of Christian love that is inspired in faith. In
our world, often so dark, the love of God shines
with this love.
Benedict XVI
[Translation by ZENIT]
ZE06020701

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