Vatican
City, 22 November 2013 (VIS) – The Holy Father has sent a video
message to the participants in the Third Festival of the Social
Doctrine of the Church, to be celebrated in Verona from 21 to 24
November. This year the festival takes as its theme “Fewer
inequalities, more differences”, a title which, according to the
Pope, highlights the multiple richness of people as an expression of
personal talents and avoids the mortification of uniformity which
paradoxically increases inequality”.
The
Pontiff addressed the young, “the strength to carry on”, and the
elderly, “the memory of the people”. “Acknowledgement of
difference accords value to people, unlike uniformity, which bears
the risk of discarding them since it prevents their significance from
being recognised. Nowadays, the young and the elderly are considered
dispensable as they do not correspond to the productive logic of a
functionalist vision of society, they do not respond to any useful
criterion of investment. They are described as 'passive', they do not
produce but rather in the market economy they are subjects of
production. We must not forget, however, that the young and the
elderly both bring great richness: they are both the future of a
people”.
The
Pope also addressed some thoughts to the Social Doctrine of the
Church. “The social Magisterium”, he continued, “is a great
reference point which forms a guideline, the result of reflection and
virtuous practice. It is very useful to avoid disorientation. Those
who work in economics and finance are certainly attracted by profit
and, if they are not careful, they risk placing themselves in the
service of profit itself, thus becoming slaves to money. The Social
Doctrine contains a great patrimony of reflections and hope that is
able, even today, to guide people and preserve their freedom. It
takes courage, thought and the strength of faith to stay within the
market while guided by a conscience that places at the centre the
dignity of the person, not the idol of money”.
Francis
concluded his message by speaking about co-operation, and mentioned
how, as a child, he listened to his father speak about Christian
co-operation at a conference. “In that moment I was filled with
enthusiasm about this subject, and I saw that the path lay there”,
he said. “Work and the dignity of the person walk the same path
together, side by side. Solidarity applies also to guaranteeing work:
co-operation constitutes an important element for ensuring the
plurality of presences of employers on the market. Nowadays this is
the subject of some misunderstanding, also at European level, but I
maintain that not regarding as current this form of presence in the
world of production is a form of impoverishment that allows space for
the encroachment of uniformity and does not promote differences and
identity”.
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