The Holy See has released Lumen Fidei (The Light of Faith), the first encyclical letter of Pope Francis.
The document is dated June 29, the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul.
It was introduced to the media at a press conference in Rome on July 5.
The encyclical on faith was begun by Pope Benedict XVI, before his
resignation, and completed by Pope Francis, who referred to the document
as the work of “four hands,” suggesting that the encyclical represented
the work of both himself and his predecessor.
In his introduction, Pope Francis writes that Benedict XVI “had almost
completed a first draft of an encyclical on faith.” He says that he
“added a few contributions of my own.” Still the document is signed only
by Pope Francis, and will be known to Church history as the 1st
encyclical of the new Pontiff.
At the Vatican press conference introducing the new encyclical,
Archbishop Rino Fisichella, the president of the Pontifical Council for
the New Evangelization, commented on the question of authorship: “It
must be said without hesitation that while Lumen Fidei resumes
some of the intuition and themes typical of the ministery of Benedict
XVI, it is fully Pope Francisco’s text.” Pope Francis himself, clearly
intent on underlining that his teachings are in full accord with those
of Pope Benedict, observed in his introduction that the text is “in
continuity with all that the Church’s magisterium has pronounced on this
theological virtue.”
The encyclical does cover some of the arguments that were central to the
teaching of Benedict XVI during his pontificate, such as the importance
of joining faith and reason and the danger of eliminating God from
public discussion. The document also bears the scholarly tone of the
Pope-emeritus, including allusions to Nietzsche, Dante, Dostoevsky,
Wittgenstein, and T. S. Eliot along with citations from early Church
fathers and a plethora of Scriptural references. At the same time, the
encyclical also covers themes that Pope Francis has emphasized,
including the impossibility of achieving justification through one’s own
merits and the need to put faith into action through help for the poor.
Following the usual Vatican practice, the encyclical takes its title
from the opening words: Lumen Fidei, the light of faith. In its
opening section the Pope remarks on how the gift of faith has always
been associated with light, which enables believers to see things
clearly.
However, the encyclical continues, in modern thought “faith came to be
associated with darkness,” and philosophers sought for truth divorced
from faith. That quest proved illusory, the Pope writes: “Slowly but
surely, however, it would become evident that the light of autonomous
reason is not enough to illumine the future; ultimately the future
remains shadowy and fraught with fear of the unknown.” The encyclical
strongly insists on the need to regain a proper understanding for the
natural partnership between faith and reason.
“Today more than ever, we
need to be reminded of this bond between faith and truth, given the
crisis of truth in our age.”
The faith of the Judeo-Christian tradition traces back to God’s revelation to Abraham, Lumen Fidei
notes. That revelation was a dramatic departure from the beliefs of
others at that time, the encyclical notes: “God is not the god of a
particular place, or a deity linked to specific sacred time, but the God
of a person, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, capable of
interacting with man and establishing a covenant with him.”
This personal God called the people of Israel into a covenant, the
encyclical continues. But Chosen People did not always respond: “The
history of Israel also shows us the temptation of unbelief to which the
people yielded more than once. Here the opposite of faith is shown to be
idolatry.” The temptation toward idolatry continues among believers to
this day, the Pope says, adding that idolatry is “a pretext for setting
ourselves at the center of reality and worshiping the work of our own
hands.”
The God of Abraham seeks the love of his people. Modern man tends to
think of love as an emotion, the Pope observes. But a deep love is
something far more than an emotional reaction; it is based on a
recognition of truth. “Only to the extent that love is grounded in truth
can it endure over time, can it transcend the passing moment and be
sufficiently solid to sustain a shared journey. If love is not tied to
truth, it falls prey to fickle emotions and cannot stand the test of
time.”
Pope Francis writes that anyone who shows love for others is taking the
first steps toward faith: “Anyone who sets off on the path of doing good
to others is already drawing near to God, is already sustained by his
help, for it is characteristic of the divine light to brighten our eyes
whenever we walk towards the fullness of love.”
Still, Lumen Fidei cautions that no one should seek faith alone.
In fact the Pope writes bluntly: “It is impossible to believe on our
own.” In the New Covenant, Jesus offers the Church as the guarantor of
faith. Moreover the faith is transmitted and strengthened through the
sacramental life of the Church, especially in Baptism. Sharing in the
faith, all members of the Church, at all times, “possess a unity which
enriches us because it is given to us and makes us one.”
Christian faith, the encyclical teaches, is not a static idea; it is
recognized by believers as “a journey, but also as a process of
building.” Here Lumen Fidei goes on to say that the faithful
should build the Church, and awaken the faith of others, by service to
the world’s poor and needy. There is no tension between service to the
poor and the quest for truth, Pope Francis writes: “How many men and
women of faith have found mediators of light in those who suffer!”
The encyclical concludes with an invocation of the Virgin Mary. “In her
own life Mary completed the pilgrimage of faith,” the Pope writes,
referring to her as a “perfect icon” of faith.
Introducing the document to the press, Archbishop Gerhard Müller, the
prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, took note of
the encyclical’s message that faith is necessary to the welfare of
society. He said that the Pope “wishes to restate in a new way the truth
that faith in Jesus Christ is a good for humanity-- truly a good for
everyone; a common good.”
Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, drew
out another aspect of the papal teaching. Calling attention to the
encyclical’s connection between truth and lasting love, he said that the
Pope “reminds us of the deep affinities between faith and the endless
love a man and woman promise to each other when they unite in
matrimony.”
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