Benedict XVI is "convinced that there
is also a new springtime for Christianity," because in today's world we
have the desire and search for God, for the permanence of the Truth of
the Gospel rather than the transience of ideologies and the fact that
young people feel "the void" offered by consumerism and ideologies.
Benedict
XVI's comments are contained in an interviewfor the film "Bells of
Europe " on the relationship between Christianity, European culture and
the future of the continent, presented last night to a number of Synod
Fathers.
In the film there are a number of great original interviews
with the major Christian religious leaders, Pope Benedict XVI,
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the Patriarch of Moscow Kirill,
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, the former President of the
Federation of Evangelical Churches in Germany Wolfgang Huber and other
personalities of politics and culture.
Produced by Vatican
Television Center and created by Father Germano Marani, with the support
of several other institutions, including the Gregorian Foundation, the
film has its unifying thread in the sound of the bells from the
different corners of Europe.
This is the text of the interview with the Pope, released today by the Vatican
Q. - Your Holiness, your Encyclicals present a compelling view of
man: a man inhabited by God's charity, a man whose reason is broadened
by the experience of faith, a man who possesses social responsibility
thanks to the dynamism of charity received and given in truth. Holiness,
it is from this anthropological standpoint - in which the evangelical
message exalts all the laudable aspects of humankind, purifying the
grime that covers the authentic countenance of man created in the image
and likeness of God - that you have repeatedly stated that this
rediscovery of the human countenance, of evangelical values, of the
deepest roots of Europe, is a cause of great hope for the European
continent and not only for the European continent. Can you explain to us
the reasons for your hope?
Holy Father - The first reason for my hope consists
in the fact that the desire for God, the search for God, is profoundly
inscribed into each human soul and cannot disappear. Certainly we can
forget God for a time, lay Him aside and concern ourselves with other
things, but God never disappears. St. Augustine's words are true: we men
are restless until we have found God. This restlessness also exists
today, and is an expression of the hope that man may, ever and anew,
even today, start to journey towards this God.
The second reason for my hope lies in the fact that the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, faith in Jesus Christ, is quite simply true; and the truth
never ages. It too may be forgotten for a time, it may be laid aside
and attention may turn to other things, but the truth as such does not
disappear. Ideologies have their days numbered. They appear powerful and
irresistible but, after a certain period, they wear out and lose their
energy because they lack profound truth.
They are particles of truth,
but in the end they are consumed. The Gospel, on the other hand, is true
and can therefore never wear out. In each period of history it reveals
new dimensions, it emerges in all its novelty as it responds to the
needs of the heart and mind of human beings, who can walk in this truth
and so discover themselves. It is this reason, therefore, that I am
convinced there will also be a new springtime for Christianity.
A third reason, an empirical reason, is evident in the fact that this
sense of restlessness today exists among the young. Young people have
seen much - the proposals of the various ideologies and of consumerism -
and they have become aware of the emptiness and insufficiency of those
things. Man was created for the infinite, the finite is too little.
Thus, among the new generations we are seeing the reawakening of this
restlessness, and they too begin their journey making new discoveries of
the beauty of Christianity, non a cut-price or watered-down version,
but Christianity in all its radicalism and profundity. Thus I believe
that anthropology, as such, is showing us that there will always be a
new reawakening of Christianity. The facts confirm this in a single
phrase: Deep foundation. That is Christianity; it is true and the truth always has a future.
Q. - Your Holiness, you have repeatedly said that Europe has had,
and continues to have, a cultural influence on the entire human race,
and it cannot but feel a particular sense of responsibility, not only
for its own future, but also for that of humankind as a whole. Looking
ahead, is it possible to discern the contours of the visible witness
Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants in Europe from the Atlantic to the
Urals must show as, living the Gospel values in which they believe, they
contribute to the building of a Europe faithful to Christ, more
welcoming and united, not merely safeguarding their cultural and
spiritual heritage but also committed to finding new ways to face the
great challenges that characterise the post-modern and multicultural
age?
Holy Father - This is an important question. It is
clear that Europe has great weight in today's world, in terms of
economic, cultural and intellectual importance; as a consequence of this
it also has great responsibility. But Europe, as you said, still has to
find its true identity in order to be able to speak and act in keeping
with her responsibility. In my opinion, the problem today does not
consist in national differences which, thank God, are differences not
divisions. In their cultural, human and temperamental differences,
nations are a rich asset which together give rise to a great symphony of
cultures.
Basically, they are a shared culture. The problem Europe has
in finding its own identity consists, I believe, in the fact that in
Europe today we see two souls: one is abstract anti-historical reason,
which seeks to dominate all else because it considers itself above all
cultures; it is like a reason which has finally discovered itself and
intends to liberate itself from all traditions and cultural values in
favor of an abstract rationality. Strasburg's first verdict on the
crucifix was an example of such abstract reason which seeks emancipation
from all traditions, even from history itself.
Yet we cannot live like
that and, moreover, even "pure reason" is conditioned by a certain
historical context, and only in that context can it exist. We could call
Europe's other soul the Christian one. It is a soul open to all that is
reasonable, a soul which itself created the audaciousness of reason and
the freedom of critical reasoning, but which remains anchored to the
roots from which this Europe was born, the roots which created the
continent's fundamental values and great institutions, in the vision of
the Christian faith.
As you said, this soul has to find a shared
expression in ecumenical dialogue between the Catholic, Orthodox and
Protestant Churches. It must then encounter this abstract reason; in
other words, it must accept and maintain the freedom of reason to
criticise everything it can do and has done, but to practise this and
give it concrete form on the foundations and in the context of the great
values that Christianity has given us. Only by blending these elements
can Europe have weight in the intercultural dialogue of mankind today
and tomorrow.
Only when reason has a historical and moral identity can
it speak to others, search for an "interculturality" in which everyone
can enter and find a fundamental unity in the values that open the way
to the future, to a new humanism. This must be our aim. For us this
humanism arises directly from the view of man created in the image and
likeness of God.