
Why I chose love as the theme of my first encyclical
POPE BENEDICT XVIBenedict XVI has published his first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est, God is love. Why did he write it? Why did he choose this theme? What was his intention? The Holy Father responds to these questions in the text below.
The
cosmic excursion in which Dante wants to involve the reader in his Divine Comedy
ends before the everlasting light that is God himself, before that light which
at the same time is the love “which moves the sun and the other stars”
(Paradise XXXIII, verse 145). Light and love are but one thing. They are
the primordial creative power that moves the universe.
If these words
of the poet reveal the thought of Aristotle, who saw in the eros the power
that moves the world, Dante's gaze, however, perceives something totally new and
unimaginable for the Greek philosopher.
Eternal light not only is presented
with the three circles of which he speaks with those profound verses that we know:
“Eternal Light, You only dwell within Yourself, and only You know You; Self-knowing,
Self-known, You love and smile upon Yourself!” (Paradise XXXIII,
verses 124-126).
In reality, the perception of a human face the
face of Jesus Christ which Dante sees in the central circle of light is
even more overwhelming than this revelation of God as trinitarian circle of knowledge
and love.
God, infinite light, whose incommensurable mystery had been
intuited by the Greek philosopher, this God has a human face and we can
add a human heart.
In this vision of Dante is shown, on one hand,
the continuity between the Christian faith in God and the search promoted by reason
and by the realm of religions; at the same time, however, in it is also appreciated
the novelty that exceeds all human search, the novelty that only God himself could
reveal to us: the novelty of a love that has led God to assume a human face, more
than that, to assume the flesh and blood, the whole of the human being.
Today the word “love” is so tarnished, so
spoiled and so abused, that one is almost afraid to pronounce it with one's lips.
And yet it is a primordial word, expression of the primordial reality; we cannot
simply abandon it, we must take it up again, purify it and give back to it its
original splendor so that it might illuminate our life and lead it on the right
path.
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God's eros is not only a primordial cosmic
force, it is love that has created man and that bends before him, as the Good
Samaritan bent before the wounded man, victim of thieves, who was lying on the
side of the road that went from Jerusalem to Jericho.
Today the word
“love” is so tarnished, so spoiled and so abused, that one is almost
afraid to pronounce it with one's lips.
And yet it is a primordial word,
expression of the primordial reality; we cannot simply abandon it, we must take
it up again, purify it and give back to it its original splendor so that it might
illuminate our life and lead it on the right path.
This awareness led
me to choose love as the theme of my first encyclical.
I wished to express
to our time and to our existence something of what Dante audaciously recapitulated
in his vision. He speaks of his “sight” that “was enriched”
when looking at it, changing him interiorly (cfr. Paradise XXXIII, verses
112-114).
It is precisely this: that faith might become a vision-comprehension
that transforms us. I wished to underline the centrality of faith in God, in that
God who has assumed a human face and a human heart.Faith is not a theory that
one can take up or lay aside. It is something very concrete: It is the criterion
that decides our lifestyle.
In an age in which hostility and greed have
become superpowers, an age in which we witness the abuse of religion to the point
of culminating in hatred, neutral rationality on its own is unable to protect
us. We are in need of the living God who has loved us unto death.
Thus,
in this encyclical, the subjects “God,” “Christ” and “love”
are welded, as the central guide of the Christian faith. I wished to show the
humanity of faith, of which eros forms part, man's “yes” to
his corporeal nature created by God, a “yes” that in the indissoluble
marriage between man and woman finds its rooting in creation.
And in
it, eros is transformed into agape, love for the other that no longer
seeks itself but that becomes concern for the other, willingness to sacrifice
oneself for him and openness to the gift of a new human life. The Christian agape,
love for one's neighbor in the following of Christ, is not something foreign,
put to one side or something that even goes against the eros; on the contrary,
with the sacrifice Christ made of himself for man he offered a new dimension,
which has developed ever more in the history of the charitable dedication of Christians
to the poor and the suffering.
A first reading of the encyclical might
perhaps give the impression that it is divided in two parts, that it is not greatly
related within itself: a first, theoretical part that talks about the essence
of love, and a second part that addresses ecclesial charity, with charitable organizations.
In an age in which hostility and greed have
become superpowers, an age in which we witness the abuse of religion to the point
of culminating in hatred, neutral rationality on its own is unable to protect
us. We are in need of the living God who has loved us unto death.
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However, what interested me was precisely the unity of the two topics,
which can only be properly understood if they are seen as only one thing.
Above all, it was necessary to show that man is created to love and that this
love, which in the first instance is manifested above all as eros between
man and woman, must be transformed interiorly later into agape, in gift
of self to the other to respond precisely to the authentic nature of the eros.
With this foundation, it had then to be clarified that the essence of
the love of God and of one's neighbor described in the Bible is the center of
Christian life, it is the fruit of faith.
Then, it was necessary to underline
in a second part that the totally personal act of the agape cannot remain
as something merely individual, but, on the contrary, it must also become an essential
act of the Church as community: that is, an institutional form is also needed
that expresses itself in the communal action of the Church.
The ecclesial
organization of charity is not a form of social assistance that is superimposed
by accident on the reality of the Church, an initiative that others could also
take. On the contrary, it forms part of the nature of the Church.
Just
as to the divine Logos corresponds the human announcement, the word of faith,
so also to the agape which is God must correspond the agape of the
Church, her charitable activity.
This activity, in addition to its first
very concrete meaning of help to the neighbor, also communicates to others the
love of God, which we ourselves have received. In a certain sense, it must make
the living God visible. In the charitable organization, God and Christ must not
be strange words; in fact, they indicate the original source of ecclesial charity.
The strength of "Caritas" depends on the strength of faith of all its members
and collaborators.
The spectacle of suffering man touches our heart.
But charitable commitment has a meaning that goes well beyond mere philanthropy.
God himself pushes us in our interior to alleviate misery. In this way, in a word,
we take him to the suffering world.
The more we take him consciously
and clearly as gift, the more effectively will our love change the world and awaken
hope, a hope that goes beyond death. 
Deus
Caritas Est may be read here

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The pope read the above text the morning of Monday, January 23,
to the participants at an international meeting promoted in the Vatican by the
Pontifical Council “Cor Unum.” It is a fitting preface to the encyclical.
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