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| instruction on the theology of liberation
Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith
Instruction on Certain Aspects of the "Theology of Liberation"
INTRODUCTION
The Gospel of Jesus Christ is a message of freedom and a force for
liberation. In recent years, this essential truth has become the object
of reflection for theologians, with a new kind of attention which is
itself full of promise.
Liberation is first and foremost liberation from the radical slavery of
sin. Its end and its goal is the freedom of the children of God, which
is the gift of grace. As a logical consequence, it calls for freedom
from many different kinds of slavery in the cultural, economic, social
and political spheres, all of which derive ultimately from sin, and so
often prevent people from living in a manner befitting their dignity.
To discern clearly what is fundamental to this issue and what is a
by-product of it, is an indispensable condition for any theological
reflection on liberation.
Faced with the urgency of certain problems, some are tempted to
emphasize, unilaterally, the liberation from servitude of an earthly
and temporal kind. They do so in such a way that they seem to put
liberation from sin in second place, and so fail to give it the primary
importance it is due. Thus, their very presentation of the problems is
confused and ambiguous. Others, in an effort to learn more precisely
what are the causes of the slavery which they want to end, make use of
different concepts without sufficient critical caution. It is
difficult, and perhaps impossible, to purify these borrowed concepts of
an ideological inspiration which is incompatible with Christian faith
and the ethical requirements which flow from it.
The Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith does not intend
to deal here with the vast theme of Christian freedom and liberation in
its own right. This it intends to do in a subsequent document which
will detail in a positive fashion the great richness of this theme for
the doctrine and life of the Church.
The present Instruction has a much more limited and precise purpose: to
draw the attention of pastors, theologians, and all the faithful to the
deviations, and risks of deviation, damaging to the faith and to
Christian living, that are brought about by certain forms of liberation
theology which use, in an insufficiently critical manner, concepts
borrowed from various currents of marxist thought.
This warning should in no way be interpreted as a disavowal of all
those who want to respond generously and with an authentic evangelical
spirit to the "preferential option for the poor". It should not at all
serve as an excuse for those who maintain an attitude of neutrality and
indifference in the face of the tragic and pressing problems of human
misery and injustice. It is, on the contrary, dictated by the certitude
that the serious ideological deviations which it points out tends
inevitably to betray the cause of the poor. More than ever, it is
important that numerous Christians, whose faith is clear and who are
committed to live the Christian life in its fullness, become involved
in the struggle for justice, freedom and human dignity because of their
love for their disinherited, oppressed and persecuted brothers and
sisters. More than ever, the Church intends to condemn abuses,
injustices and attacks against freedom, wherever they occur and whoever
commits them. She intends to struggle, by her own means, for the
defense and advancement of the rights of mankind, especially of the
poor.
I - AN ASPIRATION
1. The powerful and almost irresistible aspiration that people
have for liberation constitutes one of the principal signs of the times
which the Church has to examine and interpret in the light of the
Gospel. (1) This major phenomenon of our time is universally
widespread, though it takes on different forms and exists in different
degrees according to the particular people involved. It is, above all,
among those people who bear the burdens of misery and in the heart of
the disinherited classes that this aspiration expresses itself with the
greatest force.
2. This yearning shows the authentic, if obscure, perception of
the dignity of the human person, created "in the image and likeness of
God" (Gen 1:26-27), ridiculed and scorned in the midst of a variety of
different oppressions: cultural, political, racial, social and
economic, often in conjunction with one another.
3. In revealing to them their vocation as children of God, the
Gospel has elicited in the hearts of mankind a demand and a positive
will for a peaceful and just fraternal life in which everyone will find
respect and the conditions for spiritual as well as material
development. This requirement is no doubt at the very basis of the
aspiration we are talking about here.
4. Consequently mankind will no longer passively submit to
crushing poverty with its effects of death, disease and decline. He
resents this misery as an intolerable violation of his native dignity.
Many factors, and among them certainly the leaven of the Gospel, have
contributed to an awakening of the consciousness of the oppressed.
5. It is widely known, even in still illiterate sections of the
world, that, thanks to the amazing advances in science and technology,
mankind, still growing in numbers, is capable of assuring each human
being the minimum of goods required by his dignity as a person.
6. The scandal of the shocking inequality between the rich and
poor-whether between rich and poor countries, or between social classes
in a single nation-is no longer tolerated. On one hand, people have
attained an unheard of abundance which is given to waste, while on the
other hand so many live in such poverty, deprived of the basic
necessities, that one is hardly able even to count the victims of
malnutrition.
7. The lack of equity and of a sense of solidarity in
international transactions works to the advantage of the industrialized
nations so that the gulf between the rich and the poor is ever
widening. Hence derives the feeling of frustration among third world
countries, and the accusations of exploitation and economic colonialism
brought against the industrialized nations.
8. The memory of crimes of a certain type of colonialism and of its effects often aggravates these injuries and wounds.
9. The Apostolic See, in accord with the Second Vatican Council,
and together with the Episcopal Conferences, has not ceased to denounce
the scandal involved in the gigantic arms race which, in addition to
the threat which it poses to peace, squanders amounts of money so large
that even a fraction of it would be sufficient to respond to the needs
of those people who want for the basic essentials of life.
II - EXPRESSIONS OF THIS ASPIRATION
1. The yearning for justice and for the effective recognition of
the dignity of every human being needs, like every deep aspiration, to
be clarified and guided.
2. In effect, a discernment process is necessary which takes into
account both the theoretical and the practical manifestations of this
aspiration. For there are many political and social movements which
present themselves as authentic spokesmen for the aspirations of the
poor, and claim to be able, though by recourse to violent means, to
bring about the radical changes which will put an end to the oppression
and misery of people.
3. So the aspiration for justice often finds itself the captive
of ideologies which hide or pervert its meaning, and which propose to
people struggling for their liberation goals which are contrary to the
true purpose of human life. They propose ways of action which imply the
systematic recourse to violence, contrary to any ethic which is
respectful of persons.
4. The interpretation of the signs of the times in the light of
the Gospel requires, then, that we examine the meaning of this deep
yearning of people for justice, but also that we study with critical
discernment the theoretical and practical expressions which this
aspiration has taken on.
III - LIBERATION, A CHRISTIAN THEME
1. Taken by itself, the desire for liberation finds a strong and fraternal echo in the heart and spirit of Christians.
2. Thus, in accord with this aspiration, the theological and
pastoral movement known as "Liberation Theology" was born, first in the
countries of Latin America which are marked by the religious and
cultural heritage of Christianity, and then in other countries of the
third world, as well as in certain circles in the industrialized
countries.
3. The expression, "Theology of Liberation", refers first of all
to a special concern for the poor and the victims of oppression, which
in turn begets a commitment to justice. Starting with this approach, we
can distinguish several, often contradictory ways of understanding the
Christian meaning of poverty and the type of commitment to justice
which it requires. As with all movements of ideas, the " theologies of
liberation " present diverse theological positions. Their doctrinal
frontiers are badly defined.
4. The aspiration for liberation, as the term itself suggests,
repeats a theme which is fundamental to the Old and New Testaments. In
itself, the expression "theology of liberation" is a thoroughly valid
term: it designates a theological reflection centered on the biblical
theme of liberation and freedom, and on the urgency of its practical
realization.
The meeting, then, of the aspiration for liberation and the theologies
of liberation is not one of mere chance. The significance of this
encounter between the two can be understood only in light of the
specific message of Revelation, authentically interpreted by the
Magisterium of the Church. (2)
IV - BIBLICAL FOUNDATIONS
1. Thus a theology of liberation correctly understood constitutes
an invitation to theologians to deepen certain essential biblical
themes with a concern for the grave and urgent questions which the
contemporary yearning for liberation, and those movements which more or
less faithfully echo it, pose for the Church. We dare not forget for a
single instant the situations of acute distress which issue such a
dramatic call to theologians.
2. The radical experience of Christian liberty (3) is our first
point of reference. Christ, our Liberator, has freed us from sin and
from slavery to the Law and to the flesh, which is the mark of the
condition of sinful mankind. Thus it is the new life of grace, fruit of
justification, which makes us free. This means that the most radical
form of slavery is slavery to sin. Other forms of slavery find their
deepest root in slavery to sin. That is why freedom in the full
Christian sense, characterized by the life in the Spirit, cannot be
confused with a license to give in to the desires of the flesh. Freedom
is a new life in love.
3. The "theologies of liberation" make wide use of readings from
the book of Exodus. The exodus, in fact, is the fundamental event in
the formation of the chosen people. It represents freedom from foreign
domination and from slavery. One will note that the specific
significance of the event comes from its purpose, for this liberation
is ordered to the foundation of the people of God and the Covenant cult
celebrated on Mt. Sinai. (4) That is why the liberation of the Exodus
cannot be reduced to a liberation which is principally or exclusively
political in nature. Moreover, it is significant that the term freedom
is often replaced in Scripture by the very closely related term,
redemption.
4. The foundational episode of the Exodus will never be effaced
from the memory of Israel. Reference is made to it when, after the
destruction of Jerusalem and the exile to Babylon, the Jewish people
lived in the hope of a new liberation and, beyond that, awaited a
definitive liberation. In this experience God is recognized as the
Liberator. He will enter into a new Covenant with His people. It will
be marked by the gift of His Spirit and the conversion of hearts. (5)
5. The anxieties and multiple sufferings sustained by those who
are faithful to the God of the Covenant provide the theme of several
Psalms: laments, appeals for help and thanksgivings all make mention of
religious salvation and liberation. In this context, suffering is not
purely and simply equated with the social condition of poverty or with
the condition of the one who is undergoing political oppression. It
also includes the hostility of one's enemies, injustice, failure and
death. The Psalms call us back to an essential religious experience: it
is from God alone that one can expect salvation and healing. God, and
not man, has the power to change the situations of suffering. Thus the
"poor of the Lord" live in a total and confident reliance upon the
loving providence of God. (6) Moreover, throughout the whole crossing
of the desert, the Lord did not fail to provide for the spiritual
liberation and purification of his people.
6. In the Old Testament, the prophets after Amos keep affirming
with particular vigor the requirements of justice and solidarity and
the need to pronounce a very severe judgment on the rich who oppress
the poor. They come to the defense of the widow and the orphan. They
threaten the powerful: the accumulation of evils can only lead to
terrible punishments.
Faithfulness to the Covenant cannot be conceived of without the
practice of justice. Justice as regards God and justice as regards
mankind are inseparable. God is the defender and the liberator of the
poor.
7. These requirements are found once again in the New Testament.
They are even more radicalized as can be shown in the discourse on the
Beatitudes. Conversion and renewal have to occur in the depths of the
heart.
8. Already proclaimed in the Old Testament, the commandment of
fraternal love extended to all mankind thus provides the supreme rule
of social life. (7) There are no discriminations or limitations which
can counter the recognition of everyone as neighbor. (8)
9. Poverty for the sake of the kingdom is praised. And in the
figure of the poor, we are led to recognize the mysterious presence of
the Son of Man who became poor himself for love of us. (9) This is the
foundation of the inexhaustible words of Jesus on the judgment in Mt
25:31-46. Our Lord is one with all in distress; every distress is
marked by his presence.
10. At the same time, the requirements of justice and mercy,
already proclaimed in the Old Testament, are deepened to assume a new
significance in the New Testament. Those who suffer or who are
persecuted are identified with Christ. (10) The perfection that Jesus
demands of His disciples (Mt 5:18) consists in the obligation to be
merciful "as your heavenly Father is merciful" (Lk 6:36).
11. It is in light of the Christian vocation to fraternal love
and mercy that the rich are severely reminded of their duty. (11) St.
Paul, faced with the disorders of the Church of Corinth forcefully
emphasizes the bond which exists between participation in the sacrament
of love and sharing with the brother in need. (12)
12. New Testament revelation teaches us that sin is the greatest
evil, since it strikes man in the heart of his personality. The first
liberation, to which all others must make reference, is that from sin.
13. Unquestionably, it is to stress the radical character of the
deliverance brought by Christ and offered to all, be they politically
free or slaves, that the New Testament does not require some change in
the political or social condition as a prerequisite for entrance into
this freedom. However, the Letter to Philemon shows that the new
freedom procured by the grace of Christ should necessarily have effects
on the social level.
14. Consequently, the full ambit of sin, whose first effect is to
introduce disorder into the relationship between God and man, cannot be
restricted to "social sin". The truth is that only a correct doctrine
of sin will permit us to insist on the gravity of its social effects.
15. Nor can one localize evil principally or uniquely in bad
social, political or economic "structures" as though all other evils
came from them so that the creation of the "new man" would depend on
the establishment of different economic and socio-political structures.
To be sure, there are structures which are evil and which cause evil
and which we must have the courage to change. Structures, whether they
are good or bad, are the result of man's actions and so are
consequences more than causes. The root of evil, then, lies in free and
responsible persons who have to be converted by the grace of Jesus
Christ in order to live and act as new creatures in the love of
neighbor and in the effective search for justice, self-control and the
exercise of virtue. (13)
To demand first of all a radical revolution in social relations and
then to criticize the search for personal perfection is to set out on a
road which leads to the denial of the meaning of the person and his
transcendence, and to destroy ethics and its foundation which is the
absolute character of the distinction between good and evil. Moreover,
since charity is the principle of authentic perfection, that perfection
cannot be conceived without an openness to others and a spirit of
service.
V - THE VOICE OF THE MAGISTERIUM
1. In order to answer the challenge leveled at our times by
oppression and hunger, the Church's Magisterium has frequently
expressed her desire to awaken Christian consciences to a sense of
justice, social responsibility and solidarity with the poor and the
oppressed, and to highlight the present urgency of the doctrine and
imperatives contained in Revelation.
2. We would like to mention some of these interventions here: the
papal documents Mater et magistra, Pacem in, terris, Populorum
progressio, and Evangelii nuntiandi. We should likewise mention the
letter to Cardinal Roy, Octogesima adveniens.
3. The Second Vatican Council in turn confronted the questions of
justice and liberty in the Pastoral Constitution, Gaudium et spes.
4. On a number of occasions, the Holy Father has emphasized these
themes, in particular in the encyclicals Redemptor hominis, Dives in
misericordia, and Laborem exercens. These numerous addresses recall the
doctrine of the rights of man and touch directly on the problems of the
liberation of the human person in the face of the diverse kinds of
oppression of which he is the victim. It is especially important to
mention in this connection the Address given before the 26th General
Assembly of the United Nations in New York, October 2, 1979. (14) On
January 28 of that same year, while opening the Third Conference of
CELAM in Puebla, John Paul II affirmed that the complete truth about
man is the basis for any real liberation. (15) This text is a document
which bears directly upon the theology of liberation.
5. Twice the Synod of Bishops treated subjects which are directly
related to a Christian conception of liberation: in 1971, justice in
the world, and in 1974, the relationship between freedom from
oppression and full freedom, or the salvation of mankind. The work of
the Synods of 1971 and 1974 led Paul VI in his Apostolic Constitution
Evangelii nuntiandi to clarify the connection between evangelization
and human liberation or advancement. (16)
6. The concern for the Church for liberation and for human
advancement was also expressed in the establishment of the Pontifical
Commission, Justice and Peace.
7. Numerous national Episcopal Conferences have joined the Holy
See in recalling the urgency of authentic human liberation and the
routes by which to achieve it. In this context, special mention should
be made of the documents of the General Conferences of the Latin
American episcopate at Medellin in 1968 and at Puebla in 1979.
Paul VI was present at the Medellin Conference and John Paul II was at
Puebla. Both dealt with the themes of conversion and liberation.
8. Following Paul VI, who had insisted on the distinctive
character of the Gospel message, (17) a character which is of divine
origin, John Paul II, in his address at Puebla, recalled the three
pillars upon which any authentic theology of liberation will rest:
truth about Jesus Christ, truth about the Church, and truth about
mankind. (18)
VI - A NEW INTERPRETATION OF CHRISTIANITY
1. It is impossible to overlook the immense amount of selfless
work done by Christians, pastors, priests, religious or laypersons,
who, driven by a love for their brothers and sisters living in inhuman
conditions, have endeavored to bring help and comfort to countless
people in the distress brought about by poverty. Among these, some have
tried to find the most effective means to put a quick end to the
intolerable situation.
2. The zeal and the compassion which should dwell in the hearts
of all pastors nevertheless run the risk of being led astray and
diverted to works which are just as damaging to man and his dignity as
is the poverty which is being fought, if one is not sufficiently
attentive to certain temptations.
3. The feeling of anguish at the urgency of the problems cannot
make us lose sight of what is essential nor forget the reply of Jesus
to the Tempter: "It is not on bread alone that man lives, but on every
word that comes from the mouth of God" (Mt 4:4; cf. Dt 8:3).
Faced with the urgency of sharing bread, some are tempted to put
evangelization into parentheses, as it were, and postpone it until
tomorrow: first the bread, than the Word of the Lord. It is a fatal
error to separate these two and even worse to oppose the one to the
other. In fact, the Christian perspective naturally shows they have a
great deal to do with one another. (19)
4. To some it even seems that the necessary struggle for human
justice and freedom in the economic and political sense constitutes the
whole essence of salvation. For them, the Gospel is reduced to a purely
earthly gospel.
5. The different theologies of liberation are situated between
the preferential option for the poor, forcefully reaffirmed without
ambiguity after Medellin at the Conference of Puebla (20) on the one
hand, and the temptation to reduce the Gospel to an earthly gospel on
the other.
6. We should recall that the preferential option described at
Puebla is two-fold: for the poor and for the young. (21) It is
significant that the option for the young has in general been passed
over in total silence.
7. We noted above (cf. 3) that an authentic theology of
liberation will be one which is rooted in the Word of God, correctly
interpreted.
8. But from a descriptive standpoint, it helps to speak of
theologies of liberation, since the expression embraces a number of
theological positions, or even sometimes ideological ones, which are
not simply different but more often incompatible with one another.
9. In this present document, we will only be discussing
developments of that current of thought which, under the name "theology
of liberation", proposes a novel interpretation of both the content of
faith and of Christian existence which seriously departs from the faith
of the Church and, in fact, actually constitutes a practical negation.
10. Concepts uncritically borrowed from marxist ideology and
recourse to theses of a biblical hermeneutic marked by rationalism are
at the basis of the new interpretation which is corrupting whatever was
authentic in the generous initial commitment on behalf of the poor.
VII - MARXIST ANALYSIS
1. Impatience and a desire for results has led certain
Christians, despairing of every other method, to turn to what they call
"marxist analysis".
2. Their reasoning is this: an intolerable and explosive
situation requires effective action which cannot be put off. Effective
action presupposes a scientific analysis of the structural causes of
poverty. Marxism now provides us with the means to make such an
analysis, they say. Then one simply has to apply the analysis to the
third-world situation, especially in Latin America.
3. It is clear that scientific knowledge of the situation and of
the possible strategies for the transformation of society is a
presupposition for any plan capable of attaining the ends proposed. It
is also a proof of the seriousness of the effort.
4. But the term "scientific" exerts an almost mythical
fascination even though everything called "scientific" is not
necessarily scientific at all. That is why the borrowing of a method of
approach to reality should be preceded by a careful epistemological
critique. This preliminary critical study is missing from more than one
"theology of liberation".
5. In the human and social sciences it is well to be aware above
all of the plurality of methods and viewpoints, each of which reveals
only one aspect of reality which is so complex that it defies simple
and univocal explanation.
6. In the case of marxism, in the particular sense given to it in
this context, a preliminary critique is all the more necessary since
the thought of Marx is such a global vision of reality that all data
received from observation and analysis are brought together in a
philosophical and ideological structure, which predetermines the
significance and importance to be attached to them. The ideological
principles come prior to the study of the social reality and are
presupposed in it. Thus no separation of the parts of this
epistemologically unique complex is possible. If one tries to take only
one part, say, the analysis, one ends up having to accept the entire
ideology. That is why it is not uncommon for the ideological aspects to
be predominant among the things which the "theologians of liberation"
borrow from marxist authors.
7. The warning of Paul VI remains fully valid today: marxism as
it is actually lived out poses many distinct aspects and questions for
Christians to reflect upon and act on. However, it would be "illusory
and dangerous to ignore the intimate bond which radically unites them,
and to accept elements of the marxist analysis without recognizing its
connections with the ideology, or to enter into the practice of
class-struggle and of its marxist interpretation while failing to see
the kind of totalitarian society to which this process slowly leads".
(22)
8. It is true that marxist thought ever since its origins, and
even more so lately, has become divided and has given birth to various
currents which diverge significantly from one another. To the extent
that they remain fully marxist, these currents continue to be based on
certain fundamental tenets which are not compatible with the Christian
conception of humanity and society. In this context, certain formulas
are not neutral, but keep the meaning they had in the original marxist
doctrine. This is the case with the "class-struggle". This expression
remains pregnant with the interpretation that Marx gave it, so it
cannot be taken as the equivalent of "severe social conflict", in an
empirical sense. Those who use similar formulas, while claiming to keep
only certain elements of the marxist analysis and yet to reject this
analysis taken as a whole, maintain at the very least a serious
confusion in the minds of their readers.
9. Let us recall the fact that atheism and the denial of the
human person, his liberty and his rights, are at the core of the
marxist theory. This theory, then, contains errors which directly
threaten the truths of the faith regarding.the eternal destiny of
individual persons. Moreover, to attempt to integrate into theology an
analysis whose criterion of interpretation depends on this atheistic
conception is to involve oneself in terrible contradictions. What is
more, this misunderstanding of the spiritual nature of the person leads
to a total subordination of the person to the collectivity, and thus to
the denial of the principles of a social and political life which is in
keeping with human dignity.
10. A critical examination of the analytical methods borrowed
from other disciplines must be carried out in a special way by
theologians. It is the light of faith which provides theology with its
principles. That is why the use of philosophical positions or of human
sciences by the theologian has a value which might be called
instrumental, but yet must undergo a critical study from a theological
perspective. In other words, the ultimate and decisive criterion for
truth can only be a criterion which is itself theological. It is only
in the light of faith, and what faith teaches us about the truth of man
and the ultimate meaning of his destiny, that one can judge the
validity or degree of validity of what other disciplines propose, often
rather conjecturally, as being the truth about man, his history and his
destiny.
11. When modes of interpretation are applied to the economic,
social and political reality of today, which are themselves borrowed
from marxist thought, they can give the initial impression of a certain
plausibility, to the degree that the present-day situation in certain
countries is similar to what Marx described and interpreted in the
middle of the last century. On the basis of these similarities, certain
simplifications are made which, abstracting from specific essential
factors, prevent any really rigorous examination of the causes of
poverty and prolong the confusion.
12. In certain parts of Latin America, the seizure of the vast
majority of the wealth by an oligarchy of owners bereft of social
consciousness, the practical absence or the shortcomings of a rule of
law, military dictators making a mockery of elementary human rights,
the corruption of certain powerful officials, the savage practices of
some foreign capital interests constitute factors which nourish a
passion for revolt among those who thus consider themselves the
powerless victims of a new colonialism in the technological, financial,
monetary or economic order. The recognition of injustice is accompanied
by a pathos which borrows its language from marxism, wrongly presented
as though it were scientific language.
13. The first condition for any analysis is a total openness to
the reality to be described. That is why a critical consciousness has
to accompany the use of any working hypotheses that are being adopted.
One has to realize that these hypotheses correspond to a particular
viewpoint which will inevitably highlight certain aspects of the
reality while leaving others in the shade. This limitation which
derives from the nature of human science is ignored by those who, under
the guise of hypotheses recognized as such, have recourse to such an
all-embracing conception of reality as the thought of Karl Marx.
VIII - SUBVERSION OF THE MEANING OF TRUTH AND VIOLENCE
1. This all-embracing conception thus imposes its logic and leads
the "theologies of liberation" to accept a series of positions which
are incompatible with the Christian vision of humanity. In fact, the
ideological core borrowed from marxism, which we are referring to,
exercises the function of a determining principle. It has this role in
virtue of its being described as "scientific", that is to say, true of
necessity.
In this core, we can distinguish several components.
2. According to the logic of marxist thought, the "analysis" is
inseparable from the praxis, and from the conception of history to
which this praxis is linked. The analysis is for the marxist an
instrument of criticism, and criticism is only one stage in the
revolutionary struggle. This struggle is that of the proletarian class,
invested with its mission in history.
3. Consequently, for the marxist, only those who engage in the struggle can work out the analysis correctly.
4. The only true consciousness, then, is the partisan consciousness.
It is clear that the concept of truth itself is in question here, and
it is totally subverted: there is no truth, they pretend, except in and
through the partisan praxis.
5. For the marxist, the praxis, and the truth that comes from it,
are partisan praxis and truth because the fundamental structure of
history is characterized by class-struggle. There follows, then, the
objective necessity to enter into the class struggle, which is the
dialectical opposite of the relationship of exploitation, which is
being condemned. For the marxist, the truth is a truth of class: there
is no truth but the truth in the struggle of the revolutionary class.
6. The fundamental law of history, which is the law of the class
struggle, implies that society is founded on violence. To the violence
which constitutes the relationship of the domination of the rich over
the poor, there corresponds the counter-violence of the revolution, by
means of which this domination will be reversed.
7. The class struggle is presented as an objective, necessary
law. Upon entering this process on behalf of the oppressed, one "makes"
truth, one acts "scientifically". Consequently, the conception of the
truth goes hand in hand with the affirmation of necessary violence, and
so, of a political amorality. Within this perspective, any reference to
ethical requirements calling for courageous and radical institutional
and structural reforms makes no sense.
8. The fundamental law of class struggle has a global and
universal character. It is reflected in all the spheres of existence:
religious, ethical, cultural and institutional. As far as this law is
concerned, none of these spheres is autonomous. In each of them this
law constitutes the determining element.
9. In particular, the very nature of ethics is radically called
into question because of the borrowing of these theses from marxism. In
fact, it is the transcendent character of the distinction between good
and evil, the principle of morality, which is implicitly denied in the
perspective of the class struggle.
IX - THE THEOLOGICAL APPLICATION OF THIS CORE
1. The positions here in question are often brought out
explicitly in certain of the writings of "theologians of liberation".
In others, they follow logically from their premises. In addition, they
are presupposed in certain liturgical practices, as for example a
"Eucharist" transformed into a celebration of the people in struggle,
even though the persons who participate in these practices may not be
fully conscious of it. We are facing, therefore, a real system, even if
some hesitate to follow the logic to its conclusion. As such, this
system is a perversion of the Christian message as God entrusted it to
His Church. This message in its entirety finds itself then called into
question by the "theologies of liberation".
2. It is not the fact of social stratification with all its
inequity and injustice, but the theory of class struggle as the
fundamental law of history which has been accepted by these "theologies
of liberation" as a principle. The conclusion is drawn that the class
struggle thus understood divides the Church herself, and that in light
of this struggle even ecclesial realities must be judged.
The claim is even made that it would maintain an illusion with bad
faith to propose that love in its universality can conquer what is the
primary structural law of capitalism.
3. According to this conception, the class struggle is the
driving force of history. History thus becomes a central notion. It
will be affirmed that God Himself makes history. It will be added that
there is only one history, one in which the distinction between the
history of salvation and profane history is no longer necessary. To
maintain the distinction would be to fall into "dualism". Affirmations
such as these reflect historicist immanentism. Thus there is a tendency
to identify the kingdom of God and its growth with the human liberation
movement, and to make history itself the subject of its own
development, as a process of the self-redemption of man by means-of the
class struggle.
This identification is in opposition to the faith of the Church as it has been reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council. (23)
4. Along these lines, some go so far as to identify God Himself
with history and to define faith as "fidelity to history", which means
adhering to a political policy which is suited to the growth of
humanity, conceived of as a purely temporal messianism.
5. As a consequence, faith, hope and charity are given a new
content: they become "fidelity to history", "confidence in the future",
and "option for the poor". This is tantamount to saying they have been
emptied of their theological reality.
6. A radical politicization of faith's affirmations and of
theological judgments follows inevitably from this new conception. The
question no longer has to do with simply drawing attention to the
consequences and political implications of the truths of faith, which
are respected beforehand for their transcendent value. In this new
system, every affirmation of faith or of theology is subordinated to a
political criterion, which in turn depends on the class struggle, the
driving force of history.
7. As a result, participation in the class struggle is presented
as a requirement of charity itself. The desire to love everyone here
and now, despite his class, and to go out to meet him with the
non-violent means of dialogue and persuasion, is denounced as
counterproductive and opposed to love.
If one holds that a person should not be the object of hate, it is
claimed nevertheless that, if he belongs to the objective class of the
rich, he is primarily a class enemy to be fought. Thus the universality
of love of neighbor and brotherhood become an eschatological principle,
which will only have meaning for the "new man" who arises out of the
victorious revolution.
8. As far as the Church is concerned, this system would see her
only as a reality interior to history, herself subject to those laws
which are supposed to govern the development of history in its
immanence. The Church, the gift of God and mystery of faith, is emptied
of any specific reality by this reductionism. At the same time, it is
disputed that the participation of Christians who belong to opposing
classes at the same Eucharistic Table still makes any sense.
9. In its positive meaning the Church of the poor signifies the
preference given to the poor, without exclusion, whatever the form of
their poverty, because they are preferred by God. The expression also
refers to the Church of our time, as communion and institution and on
the part of her members, becoming more fully conscious of the
requirement of evangelical poverty.
10. But the "theologies of liberation", vhich reserve credit for
restoring to a place of honor the great texts of the prophets and of
the Gospel in defense of the poor, go on to a disastrous confusion
between the poor of the Scripture and the proletariat of Marx. In this
way they pervert the Christian meaning of the poor, and they transform
the fight for the rights of the poor into a class fight within the
ideological perspective of the class struggle. For them, the Church of
the poor signifies the Church of the class which has become aware of
the requirements of the revolutionary struggle as a step toward
liberation and which celebrates this liberation in its liturgy.
11. A further remark regarding the expression, Church of the
People, will not be out of place here. From the pastoral point of view,
this expression might mean the favored recipients of evangelization to
whom, because of their condition, the Church extends her pastoral love
first of all. One might also refer to the Church as people of God, that
is, people of the New Covenant established in Christ. (24)
12. But the "theologies of liberation" of which we are speaking,
mean by Church of the People a Church of the class, a Church of the
oppressed people whom it is necessary to "conscientize" in the light of
the organized struggle for freedom. For some, the people, thus
understood, even become the object of faith.
13. Building on such a conception of the Church of the People, a
critique of the very structures of the Church is developed. It is not
simply the case of fraternal correction of pastors of the Church whose
behavior does not reflect the evangelical spirit of service and is
linked to old-fashioned signs of authority which scandalize the poor.
It has to do with a challenge to the sacramental and hierarchical
structure of the Church, which was willed by the Lord Himself. There is
a denunciation of members of the hierarchy and the magisterium as
objective representatives of the ruling class which has to be opposed.
Theologically, this position means that ministers take their origin
from the people who therefore designate ministers of their own choice
in accord with the needs of their historic revolutionary mission.
X - A NEW HERMENEUTIC
1. The partisan conception of truth, which can be seen in the
revolutionary praxis of the class, corroborates this position.
Theologians who do not share the theses of the "theology of
liberation", the hierarchy, and especially the Roman Magisterium are
thus discredited in advance as belonging to the class of the
oppressors. Their theology is a theology of class. Arguments and
teachings thus do not have to be examined in themselves since they are
only reflections of class interests. Thus, the instruction of others is
decreed to be, in principle, false.
2. Here is where the global and all-embracing character of the
theology of liberation appears. As a result, it must be criticized not
just on the basis of this or that affirmation, but on the basis of its
classist viewpoint, which it has adopted a priori, and which has come
to function in it as a determining principle.
3. Because of this classist presupposition, it becomes very
difficult, not to say impossible, to engage in a real dialogue with
some " theologians of liberation" in such a way that the other
participant is listened to, and his arguments are discussed with
objectivity and attention. For these theologians start out with the
idea, more or less consciously, that the viewpoint of the oppressed and
revolutionary class, which is their own, is the single true point of
view. Theological criteria for truth are thus relativized and
subordinated to the imperatives of the class struggle. In this
perspective, orthodoxy or the right rule of faith, is substituted by
the notion of orthopraxy as the criterion of the truth. In this
connection it is important not to confuse practical orientation, which
is proper to traditional theology in the same way that speculative
orientation is, with the recognized and privileged priority given to a
certain type of praxis. For them, this praxis is the revolutionary
praxis which thus becomes the supreme criterion for theological truth.
A healthy theological method no doubt will always take the praxis of
the Church into account and will find there one of its foundations, but
that is because that praxis comes from the faith and is a lived
expression of it.
4. For the "theologies of liberation" however, the social
doctrine of the Church is rejected with disdain. It is said that it
comes from the illusion of a possible compromise, typical of the middle
class which has no historic destiny.
5. The new hermeneutic inherent in the "theologies of liberation"
leads to an essentially political re-reading of the Scriptures. Thus, a
major importance is given to the Exodus event inasmuch as it is a
liberation from political servitude. Likewise, a political reading of
the Magnificat is proposed. The mistake here is not in bringing
attention to a political dimension of the readings of Scripture, but in
making of this one dimension the principal or exclusive component. This
leads to a reductionist reading of the Bible.
6. Likewise, one places oneself within the perspective of a
temporal messianism, which is one of the most radical of the
expressions of secularization of the Kingdom of God and of its
absorption into the immanence of human history.
7. In giving such priority to the political dimension, one is led
to deny the radical newness of the New Testament and above all to
misunderstand the person of Our Lord Jesus Christ, true God and true
man, and thus the specific character of the salvation he gave us, that
is above all liberation from sin, which is the source of all evils.
8. Moreover in setting aside the authoritative interpretation of
the Church, denounced as classist, one is at the same time departing
from tradition. In that way, one is robbed of an essential theological
criterion of interpretation and, in the vacuum thus created, one
welcomes the most radical theses of rationalist exegesis. Without a
critical eye, one returns to the opposition of the "Jesus of history"
versus the "Jesus of faith".
9. Of course the creeds of the faith are literally preserved,
especially the Chalcedonian creed, but a new meaning is given to them
which is a negation of the faith of the Church. On one hand, the
Christological doctrine of Tradition is rejected in the name of class;
on the other hand, one claims to meet again the "Jesus of history"
coming from the revolutionary experience of the struggle of the poor
for their liberation.
10. One claims to be reliving an experience similar to that of
Jesus. The experience of the poor struggling for their liberation,
which was Jesus' experience, would thus reveal, and it alone, the
knowledge of the true God and of the Kingdom.
11. Faith in the Incarnate Word, dead and risen for all men, and
whom "God made Lord and Christ" (25) is denied. In its place is
substituted a figure of Jesus who is a kind of symbol who sums up in
Himself the requirements of the struggle of the oppressed.
12. An exclusively political interpretation is thus given to the
death of Christ. In this way, its value for salvation and the whole
economy of redemption is denied.
13. This new interpretation thus touches the whole of the Christian mystery.
14. In a general way, this brings about what can be called an
inversion of symbols. Thus, instead of seeing, with St. Paul, a figure
of Baptism in the Exodus, (26) some end up making of it a symbol of the
political liberation of the people.
15. When the same hermeneutical criterion is applied to the life
and to the hierarchical constitution of the Church, the relationship
between the hierarchy and the " base" becomes the relationship of
obedient domination to the law of the struggle of the classes.
Sacramentality, which is at the root of the ecclesial ministries and
which makes of the Church a spiritual reality which cannot be reduced
to a purely sociological analysis, is quite simply ignored.
16. This inversion of symbols is likewise verified in the area of
the sacraments. The Eucharist is no longer to be understood as the real
sacramental presence of the reconciling sacrifice, and as the gift of
the Body and Blood of Christ. It becomes a celebration of the people in
their struggle. As a consequence, the unity of the Church is radically
denied. Unity, reconciliation and communion in love are no longer seen
as a gift we receive from Christ. (27) It is the historical class of
the poor who by means of their struggle will build unity. For them, the
struggle of the classes is the way to unity. The Eucharist thus becomes
the Eucharist of the class. At the same time, they deny the triumphant
force of the love of God which has been given to us.
XI - ORIENTATIONS
1. The warning against the serious deviations of some "theologies
of liberation" must not at all be taken as some kind of approval, even
indirect, of those who keep the poor in misery, who profit from that
misery, who notice it while doing nothing about it, or who remain
indifferent to it. The Church, guided by the Gospel of mercy and by the
love for mankind, hears the cry for justice (28) and intends to respond
to it with all her might.
2. Thus a great call goes out to all the Church: with boldness
and courage, with farsightedness and prudence, with zeal and strength
of spirit, with a love for the poor which demands sacrifice, pastors
will consider the response to this call a matter of the highest
priority, as many already do.
3. All priests, religious and lay people who hear this call for
justice and who want to work for evangelization and the advancement of
mankind, will do so in communion with their bishop and with the Church,
each in accord with his or her own specific ecclesial vocation.
4. Aware of the ecclesial character of their vocation,
theologians will collaborate loyally and with a spirit of dialogue with
the Magisterium of the Church. They will be able to recognize in the
Magisterium a gift of Christ to His Church (29) and will welcome its
word and its directives with filial respect.
5. It is only when one begins with the task of evangelization
understood in its entirety that the authentic requirements of human
progress and liberation are appreciated. This liberation has as its
indispensable pillars: the truth about Jesus the Savior, the truth
about the Church, and the truth about man and his dignity. (30)
It is in light of the Beatitudes, and especially the Beatitude of the
poor of heart, that the Church, which wants to be the Church of the
poor throughout the world, intends to come to the aid of the noble
struggle for truth and justice. She addresses each person, and for that
reason, every person. She is the "universal Church. The Church of the
Incarnation. She is not the Church of one class or another. And she
speaks in the name of truth itself. This truth is realistic". It leads
to a recognition "of every human reality, every injustice, every
tension and every struggle". (31)
6. An effective defense of justice needs to be based on the truth
of mankind, created in the image of God and called to the grace of
divine sonship. The recognition of the true relationship of human
beings to God constitutes the foundation of justice to the extent that
it rules the relationships between people. That is why the fight for
the rights of man, which the Church does not cease to reaffirm,
constitutes the authentic fight for justice.
7. The truth of mankind requires that this battle be fought in
ways consistent with human dignity. That is why the systematic and
deliberate recourse to blind violence, no matter from which side it
comes, must be condemned. (32) To put one's trust in violent means in
the hope of restoring more justice is to become the victim of a fatal
illusion: violence begets violence and degrades man. It mocks the
dignity of man in the person of the victims and it debases that same
dignity among those who practice it.
8. The acute need for radical reforms of the structures which
conceal poverty and which are themselves forms of violence, should not
let us lose sight of the fact that the source of injustice is in the
hearts of men. Therefore it is only by making an appeal to the moral
potential of the person and to the constant need for interior
conversion, that social change will be brought about which will truly
be in the service of man. (33) For it will only be in the measure that
they collaborate freely in these necessary changes through their own
initiative and in solidarity, that people, awakened to a sense of their
responsibility, will grow in humanity.
The inversion of morality and structures is steeped in a materialist
anthropology which is incompatible with the dignity of mankind.
9. It is therefore an equally fatal illusion to believe that
these new structures will of themselves give birth to a "new man" in
the sense of the truth of man. The Christian cannot forget that it is
only the Holy Spirit who has been given to us Who is the source of
every true renewal and that God is the Lord of History.
10. By the same token, the overthrow by means of revolutionary
violence of structures which generate violence is not ipso facto the
beginning of a just regime. A major fact of our time ought to evoke the
reflection of all those who would sincerely work for the true
liberation of their brothers: millions of our own contemporaries
legitimately yearn to recover those basic freedoms of which they were
deprived by totalitarian and atheistic regimes which came to power by
violent and revolutionary means, precisely in the name of the
liberation of the people. This shame of our time cannot be ignored:
while claiming to bring them freedom, these regimes keep whole nations
in conditions of servitude which are unworthy of mankind. Those who,
perhaps inadvertently, make themselves accomplices of similar
enslavements betray the very poor they mean to help.
11. The class struggle as a road toward a classless society is a
myth which slows reform and aggravates poverty and injustice. Those who
allow themselves to be caught up in fascination with this myth should
reflect on the bitter examples history has to offer about where it
leads. They would then understand that we are not talking here about
abandoning an effective means of struggle on behalf of the poor for an
ideal which has no practical effects. On the contrary, we are talking
about freeing oneself from a delusion in order to base oneself squarely
on the Gospel and its power of realization.
12. One of the conditions for necessary theological correction is
giving proper value to the social teaching of the Church. This teaching
is by no means closed. It is, on the contrary, open to all the new
questions which are so numerous today. In this perspective, the
contribution of theologians and other thinkers in all parts of the
world to the reflection of the Church is indispensable today.
13. Likewise the experience of those who work directly for
evangelization and for the advancement of the poor and the oppressed is
necessary for the doctrinal and pastoral reflection of the Church. In
this sense, it is necessary to affirm that one becomes more aware of
certain aspects of truth by starting with praxis, if by that one means
pastoral praxis and social work which keeps its evangelical inspiration.
14. The teaching of the Church on social issues indicates the
main lines of ethical orientation. But in order that it be able to
guide action directly, the Church needs competent people from a
scientific and technological viewpoint, as well as in the human and
political sciences. Pastors should be attentive to the formation of
persons of such capability who live the Gospel deeply. Laypersons,
whose proper mission is to build society, are involved here to the
highest degree.
15. The theses of the "theologies of liberation" are widely
popularized under a simplified form, in formation sessions or in what
are called "base groups" which lack the necessary catechetical and
theological preparation as well as the capacity for discernment. Thus
these theses are accepted by generous men and women without any
critical judgment being made.
16. That is why pastors must look after the quality and the
content of catechesis and formation which should always present the
whole message of salvation and the imperatives of true liberation
within the framework of this whole message.
17. In this full presentation of Christianity, it is proper to
emphasize those essential aspects which the "theologies of liberation"
especially tend to misunderstand or to eliminate, namely: the
transcendence and gratuity of liberation in Jesus Christ, true God and
true man; the sovereignty of grace; and the true nature of the means of
salvation, especially of the Church and the sacraments. One should also
keep in mind the true meaning of ethics in which the distinction
between good and evil is not relativized, the real meaning of sin, the
necessity for conversion, and the universality of the law of fraternal
love.
One needs to be on guard against the politicization of existence which,
misunderstanding the entire meaning of the Kingdom of God and the
transcendence of the person, begins to sacralize politics and betray
the religion of the people in favor of the projects of the revolution.
18. The defenders of orthodoxy are sometimes accused of
passivity, indulgence or culpable complicity regarding the intolerable
situations of injustice and the political regimes which prolong them.
Spiritual conversion, the intensity of the love of God and neighbor,
zeal for justice and peace, the Gospel meaning of the poor and of
poverty, are required of everyone, and especially of pastors and those
in positions of responsibility. The concern for the purity of the faith
demands giving the answer of effective witness in the service of one's
neighbor, the poor and the oppressed in particular, in an integral
theological fashion. By the witness of their dynamic and constructive
power to love, Christians will thus lay the foundations of this
"civilization of love" of which the Conference of Puebla spoke,
following Paul VI. (34) Moreover there are already many priests,
religious and lay people who are consecrated in a truly evangelical way
for the creation of a just society.
CONCLUSION
The words of Paul VI in his Profession of Faith, express with full
clarity the faith of the Church, from which one cannot deviate without
provoking, besides spiritual disaster, new miseries and new types of
slavery.
"We profess our faith that the Kingdom of God, begun here below
in the Church of Christ, is not of this world, whose form is passing
away, and that its own growth cannot be confused with the progress of
civilization, of science of human technology, but that it consists in
knowing ever more deeply the unfathomable riches of Christ, to hope
ever more strongly in things eternal, to respond ever more ardently to
the love of God, to spread ever more widely grace and holiness among
men. But it is this very same love which makes the Church constantly
concerned for the true temporal good of mankind as well. Never ceasing
to recall to her children that they have no lasting dwelling here on
earth, she urges them also to contribute, each according to his own
vocation and means, to the welfare of their earthly city, to promote
justice, peace and brotherhood among men, to lavish their assistance on
their brothers, especially on the poor and the most dispirited. The
intense concern of the Church, the bride of Christ, for the needs of
mankind, their joys and their hopes, their pains and their struggles,
is nothing other than the great desire to be present to them in order
to enlighten them with the light of Christ, and join them all to Him,
their only Savior. It can never mean that the Church is conforming to
the things of this world, nor that she is lessening the earnestness
with which she awaits her Lord and the eternal Kingdom". (35)
This Instruction was adopted at an Ordinary Meeting of the Sacred
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and was approved at an
audience granted to the undersigned Cardinal Prefect by His Holiness
Pope John Paul II, who ordered its publication.
Given at Rome, at the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, on August 6, 1984, the Feast of the Transfiguration of Our Lord.
JOSEPH Card. RATZINGER
Prefect
ALBERTO BOVONE
Titular Archbishop of Caesarea in Numidia
Secretary
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