Vatican City, 11 March 2015 (VIS) –
This morning Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin gave a Lectio
Magistralis at the Pontifical Gregorian University of Rome, during
the “Dies Academicus”, the annual study day dedicated to a theme
that the different departments of the university analyse from the
perspectives of various fields of study (theology, philosophy,
history, culture, canon law, social sciences, missiology, psychology,
spirituality, etc). This year's theme was “Peace: gift of God,
human responsibility, Christian commitment”. The title of the
Secretary of State's Lectio Magistralis was “The diplomatic
activity of the Holy See in the service of peace”.
“The diplomatic activity of the Holy
See is not content to observe events or evaluate their importance;
nor can it remain merely a critical voice”, affirmed Cardinal
Parolin. “It acts to facilitate the coexistence and cohabitation of
various nations, to promote fraternity between peoples, where the
term fraternity is a synonym for effective collaboration, true
cooperation, harmonious and orderly, of a solidarity structured in
favour of the common good and that of individuals. And the common
good, as we know, has more than a link with peace. The Holy See works
substantially on the international scene not to guarantee a generic
security – made more difficult in this period of lasting
instability – but to sustain an idea of peace as the fruit of just
relations, of respect for international law, of the protection of
fundamental human rights beginning with those of the least among us,
the most vulnerable”.
“The diplomacy of the Holy See has a
clear ecclesial function”, he added: “if it is the tool of
communion that unites the Roman Pontiff with the Bishops at the head
of the local Churches, or that guarantees the life of the local
Churches in relation to the civil authorities, I dare say that it is
also the vehicle of the Successor of Peter for reaching the
peripheries, both ecclesiastically and in terms of the human family.
… In the field of civil society, which forms of ethical guidance
would be lacking were the Holy See not present in different
intergovernmental contexts, in the areas of cooperation, disarmament,
the struggle against poverty, the eradication of hunger, care for the
sick, and promoting literacy?”.
Cardinal Parolin went on to explain
that “papal diplomacy is entrusted the task of working in favour of
peace following the methods and rules that are applicable to subjects
of international law, therefore formulating practical answers in
legal terms to prevent, resolve or regulate conflicts and to avoid
their possible degeneration into the irrationality of armed force.
But”, he concluded, “it is above all an activity that
demonstrates how the aim pursued is primarily religious and as such
is about being true 'workers for peace', and not 'workers for war or
at least agents of misunderstanding', as Pope Francis reminds us”.
No comments:
Post a Comment