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Written Word > Articles & Commentaries > July 2009 > A First Look at Caritas in Veritate
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 A First Look at Caritas in Veritate 

By Rev. Robert Barron

I’ve just finished a first reading of Pope Benedict’s new encyclical Caritas in Veritate.  It is a dense and complex text, deeply in continuity with the mainstream of the Catholic social teaching tradition but also fresh, filled with new ideas and proposals.  Let me highlight just a few of the major themes.  Very much in line with his predecessor John Paul II, Benedict insists on the tight connection between love and truth.  In a telling phrase, the Pope says that love without truth devolves into sentimentality and truth without love becomes cold and calculating.  The coming together of the two, which is the structuring logic of the church’s social teaching, is grounded in the God who is, simultaneously, Agape (love) and Logos (reason). 

A real innovation of this letter is the connection that Benedict makes between “social ethics” and “life ethics.”  He argues that Paul VI’s Populorum progressio (whose fortieth anniversary Caritas in veritate celebrates) is best read in tandem with that Pope’s controversial encyclical Humanae vitae.  The radical openness to life, which Pope Paul defended in the Humanae vitae, should be the inspiration for the church’s social doctrine, which is intended to foster the full flourishing of communal life at all levels.  Pope Benedict makes this point even clearer when he comments that societies which de-emphasize life, even to the point of fostering artificial contraception and abortion, suffer quite practical economic hardships.

Another novum in this remarkable text is the Pope’s insistence that, alongside of the contractual logic of the marketplace (one gives in order to receive) and the legal logic of the political realm (one gives because one is obliged to give), there must be the logic of sheer gratuity (one gives simply because it is good to do so).  Without this third element, both the economic and political devolve into something less than fully human.  As many have already commented, Benedict places special emphasis on the obligation to care for the environment.  In fact, nowhere else in Catholic social teaching is there such an extended discussion of this issue.  He makes the helpful clarification that, as believers in creation, we must avoid both an idolization of nature and an exploitation of it.  As created, the world is not divine but it is a kind of sacrament of God; hence it shouldn’t be seen as absolute, but it should be cared for in a spirit of stewardship. 

What might prove most controversial in the encyclical is Benedict’s call for a kind of world government, a truly international political entity with the requisite power to preside over world political and economic affairs.  In saying so, he echoes John XXIII’s praise of the United Nations in Pacem in terris.  One might be forgiven for suspecting that this proposal, given political realities on the ground, might be a bit utopian. 

A final note concerning style.  I must say that much of Caritas in veritate didn’t “sound” like Benedict XVI.  Joseph Ratzinger is a very gracious writer, and his style is marked by a deep Scriptural and Patristic sensibility.  I must say I found this literary and theological elan missing in large sections of this letter.  There is much to learn from this wonderful text, a worthy addition to the impressive collection of papal letters that constitute the social teaching of the Catholic Church.

Posted: 7/13/2009 2:36:27 PM by Word On Fire | with 6 comments
Filed under: CaritasinVeritate, encyclical, PopeBenedict


Comments
Ray Isla
Hi Father Barron

Before I comment, I would just like to take this opportunity to thank you for your kind words of wisdom - I'm all the way here in Melbourne, Australia and I've been sharing the way you deliver Christ's message to the community I serve here CFC-Singles For Christ.

I was deeply moved by your summary regarding Pope Benedict's new encyclical - thank you Father.

I just wanted to query your last paragraph "I must say that much of Caritas in veritate didn’t “sound” like Benedict XVI" ... do you say that as a 'concern' or do you say that as an 'observation'?

I just feel that sometimes, not everything requires theological backing to get a point across. Sometimes we should simply trust and accept what the messenger is telling us.

(Don't get me wrong, I still strongly believe that reference to scripture is important to justify a message. However, the Holy Spirit's messages can sometimes be profound, but in discerning such messages in deep prayer, you know if God has 'earmarked' them as urgent or not)

I guess what I'm commenting on is that in the spirit of Pope Bendict's encyclical (and his on-going service for that matter) we can see how God has been moulding him through his writings.

Keep in inspiring us Fr Barron! You're awesome!!

In Christ's Love

Ray Isla
7/16/2009 8:33:37 PM
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Dominick A. Zarcone
Who am I to question what Pope
Benedict XVI writes? Yet I anticipate accusations of anti-Christ to multiply. Personally his writings have always edified my Catholic faith in Christ. Yet, I just wish he had not made reference to a world political authority, "a kind of world government, a truly international political entity with the requisite power to preside over world political and economic affairs". Again, who am I to question what the
vicar of Christ writes? Yet, I anticipate that many will accuse him and the Catholic Church of being complicit in 'an anti-Christ plot to subjugate the human race to a one-world government'.
Deep in my heart, I am convinced that the authority that the Pope and the Catholic Church desires to see the whole world submit is the authority of none other than, 'the King of Kings, the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God our Savior'. If anyone better understands what he meant by that reference to the world political authority, please help me to understand. Thank you.
7/19/2009 5:59:13 PM
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gb
Father, Late to this thread but it took me awhile to read this encyclical! You're right, it doesn't seem as polished as B16's previous ones but he's weaving more disciplines together too so it has to be more complex.
My main concern is that Americans especially simply can't get past the "world political authority" to really listen to what the Holy Father is saying. Capitalism is given to us more with our mother's milk than Catholicism usually.
IF the world authority is taken in context with the common good, subsidiarity and all the other concepts outlined here, it makes more sense. But I doubt too many people will take the time to think it through.
8/1/2009 10:27:59 AM
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Laurel
Thanks for the review. It’s very informative.
3/11/2010 10:53:58 AM
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ruby
promise you that I am being completely sincere when I say that this is the best piece on the encyclical I have read since it was delivered. Truly outstanding, and a wonderful assistance for people needing to find the right “perspective” in how to approach it. I find it to be a very delightful work when approached the way you have recommended, and I agree that if I attempted to use it as a “policy prescription” it would leave me disappointed at points
9/9/2010 7:44:32 AM
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Maria
I have not read the encyclical and cannot stand the thought of Senator Bob Brown (who has pushed for same-sex marriage in Australia) potentially having drawn credence from our Holy Father regarding the idea of "one world government". I cannot imagine that Pope Benedict XVI would regard for a single moment that the UN is a fine example of "world government" especially in light of the UNFPA and its population control programs not to mention the scandalous operation of the organisation.
2/28/2012 5:14:42 AM
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