The Pope has sent a message to Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, to mark that body's plenary assembly which is currently being held in Rome. The assembly is focusing on how the encyclical, Caritas in Veritate, has been received in various communities.
“Only with charity, supported by hope and illuminated by the light of faith and reason, is it possible to achieve the goals of the integral liberation of humanity and universal justice”, the Holy Father writes.
Referring to the “fundamental problems affecting the destiny of peoples and of world institutions, as well as of the human family,” which are examined in “Caritas in veritate,” Benedict XVI points out that social and national inequalities “have by no means disappeared. ... Co-ordination among States – which is often inadequate because, rather than aiming to achieve solidarity, it aims only at a balance of power – leaves the field open to renewed inequalities, to the danger of the predominance of economic and financial groups which dictate – and intend to continue to do so – the political agenda at the expense of the universal common good.”
The Holy Father stresses the urgent need “for commitment to educating Catholic laity in Church social doctrine.” Lay Catholics “must undertake to promote the correct ordering of social life, while respecting the legitimate autonomy of worldly institutions.”
“A profound understanding of the social doctrine of the Church is of fundamental importance, in harmony with all her theological heritage and strongly rooted in affirming the transcendent dignity of men and women, in defending human life from conception to natural death and in religious freedom. ... It is necessary to prepare lay people capable of dedicating themselves to the common good, especially in complex environments such as the world of politics.”
The Pope concludes his message by expressing the hope that the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace may continue “to prepare fresh 'aggiornamenti' of Church social doctrine.” In order to globalize this doctrine, he writes, “it may be appropriate to create centers and institutions for its study, dissemination and implementation throughout the world.”