Common Grounds


Yes, to Life, to Rule of Law, to Solidarity …

February 21, 2020

Living Words from John Paul II

Edited by Abraham A. van Kempen

 

Published Sunday, 23 February 2020

Yes, to Life, to Rule of Law, to Solidarity …

Each week we let Saint Pope John Paul II share meaningful signposts to spark socio-economic

 

"YES, TO LIFE"! Respect life itself and individual lives: everything starts here, for the most fundamental of human rights is certainly the right to life.

 

When all moral criteria are removed, scientific research involving the sources of life becomes a denial of the being and the dignity of the person.

 

War itself is an attack on human life since it brings in its wake suffering and death. The battle for peace is always a battle for life!

 

Next, RESPECT FOR LAW. The world would be totally different if people began to apply in a straightforward manner the agreements already signed!

 

Finally, the DUTY OF SOLIDARITY. In a world with a superabundance of information, but which paradoxically finds it so difficult to communicate and where living conditions are scandalously unequal, it is important to spare no effort to ensure that everyone feels responsible for the growth and happiness of all. Our future is at stake. An unemployed young person, a handicapped person who is marginalized, elderly people who are uncared for, countries which are captives of hunger and poverty: these situations all too often make people despair and fall prey to the temptation either of closing in on themselves or of resorting to violence.

 

Choices need to be made so that humanity can still have a future. Therefore, the peoples of the earth and their leaders must sometimes have the courage to say "No".

 

"NO TO DEATH"! That is to say, no to all that attacks the incomparable dignity of every human being.

 

"No" to all that weakens the family, the basic cell of society.

 

"No" to all that destroys in children the sense of striving, their respect for themselves and others, the sense of service.

 

"NO TO SELFISHNESS"! In other words, to all that impels man to protect himself inside the cocoon of a privileged social class or a cultural comfort which excludes others.

 

Let us mention for example the problem of water resources, which the United Nations Organization has asked us all to consider during this year 2003.

 

Selfishness is also the indifference of prosperous nations towards nations left out in the cold. All peoples are entitled to receive a fair share of the goods of this world and of the know-how of the more advanced countries.

 

How can we fail to think here, for example, of the access of everyone to generic medicines, needed to continue the fight against current pandemics, an access — alas — often thwarted by short-term economic considerations?

 

"NO TO WAR"!

 

It is always a defeat for humanity.

 

International law, honest dialogue, solidarity between States, the noble exercise of diplomacy: these are methods worthy of individuals and nations in resolving their differences.

 

I say this as I think of those who still place their trust in nuclear weapons and of the all-too-numerous conflicts which continue to hold hostage our brothers and sisters in humanity.

 

At Christmas, Bethlehem reminded us of the unresolved crisis in the Middle East, where two peoples, Israeli and Palestinian, are called to live side-by-side, equally free and sovereign, in mutual respect.

 

Without needing to repeat what I said to you last year on this occasion, I will simply add today, faced with the constant degeneration of the crisis in the Middle East, that the solution will never be imposed by recourse to terrorism or armed conflict, as if military victories could be the solution. And what are we to say of the threat of a war which could strike the people of Iraq, the land of the Prophets, a people already sorely tried by more than twelve years of embargo?

 

War is never just another means that one can choose to employ for settling differences between nations. As the Charter of the United Nations Organization and international law itself remind us, war cannot be decided upon, even when it is a matter of ensuring the common good, except as the very last option and in accordance with very strict conditions, without ignoring the consequences for the civilian population both during and after the military operations.

 

It is therefore possible to change the course of events, once goodwill, trust in others, fidelity to commitments and cooperation between responsible partners are allowed to prevail.

 

Excerpts from: ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS POPE JOHN PAUL II TO THE DIPLOMATIC CORPS, The Vatican, 13 January 2003.

 

http://www.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/speeches/2003/january/documents/hf_jp-ii_spe_20030113_diplomatic-corps.html






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