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ENCYCLICAL LETTER FIDES ET RATIO
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF JOHN PAUL II TO THE BISHOPS OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FAITH AND REASON
My Venerable Brother Bishops, Health and the Apostolic Blessing!
Faith and reason are like two wings on which the human spirit rises to
the contemplation of truth; and God has placed in the human heart a desire
to know the truthin a word, to know himselfso that, by knowing
and loving God, men and women may also come to the fullness of truth about
themselves (cf. Ex 33:18; Ps 27:8-9; 63:2-3; Jn 14:8;
1 Jn 3:2).
INTRODUCTION
KNOW YOURSELF
1. In both East and West, we may trace a journey which has led humanity
down the centuries to meet and engage truth more and more deeply. It is a
journey which has unfoldedas it mustwithin the horizon of
personal self-consciousness: the more human beings know reality and the
world, the more they know themselves in their uniqueness, with the
question of the meaning of things and of their very existence becoming
ever more pressing. This is why all that is the object of our knowledge
becomes a part of our life. The admonition Know yourself was
carved on the temple portal at Delphi, as testimony to a basic truth to be
adopted as a minimal norm by those who seek to set themselves apart from
the rest of creation as human beings, that is as those who know
themselves.
Moreover, a cursory glance at ancient history shows clearly how in
different parts of the world, with their different cultures, there arise
at the same time the fundamental questions which pervade human life: Who
am I? Where have I come from and where am I going? Why is there evil? What
is there after this life? These are the questions which we find in the
sacred writings of Israel, as also in the Veda and the Avesta; we find
them in the writings of Confucius and Lao-Tze, and in the preaching of
Tirthankara and Buddha; they appear in the poetry of Homer and in the
tragedies of Euripides and Sophocles, as they do in the philosophical
writings of Plato and Aristotle. They are questions which have their
common source in the quest for meaning which has always compelled the
human heart. In fact, the answer given to these questions decides the
direction which people seek to give to their lives.
2. The Church is no stranger to this journey of discovery, nor could she
ever be. From the moment when, through the Paschal Mystery, she received
the gift of the ultimate truth about human life, the Church has made her
pilgrim way along the paths of the world to proclaim that Jesus Christ is
the way, and the truth, and the life (Jn 14:6). It is
her duty to serve humanity in different ways, but one way in particular
imposes a responsibility of a quite special kind: the diakonia of the
truth.(1) This mission on the one hand makes the believing community a
partner in humanity's shared struggle to arrive at truth; (2) and on the
other hand it obliges the believing community to proclaim the certitudes
arrived at, albeit with a sense that every truth attained is but a step
towards that fullness of truth which will appear with the final Revelation
of God: For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now
I know in part; then I shall understand fully (1 Cor 13:12).
3. Men and women have at their disposal an array of resources for
generating greater knowledge of truth so that their lives may be ever more
human. Among these is philosophy, which is directly concerned with
asking the question of life's meaning and sketching an answer to it.
Philosophy emerges, then, as one of noblest of human tasks. According to
its Greek etymology, the term philosophy means love of wisdom.
Born and nurtured when the human being first asked questions about the
reason for things and their purpose, philosophy shows in different modes
and forms that the desire for truth is part of human nature itself. It is
an innate property of human reason to ask why things are as they are, even
though the answers which gradually emerge are set within a horizon which
reveals how the different human cultures are complementary.
Philosophy's powerful influence on the formation and development of the
cultures of the West should not obscure the influence it has also had upon
the ways of understanding existence found in the East. Every people has
its own native and seminal wisdom which, as a true cultural treasure,
tends to find voice and develop in forms which are genuinely
philosophical. One example of this is the basic form of philosophical
knowledge which is evident to this day in the postulates which inspire
national and international legal systems in regulating the life of
society.
4. Nonetheless, it is true that a single term conceals a variety of
meanings. Hence the need for a preliminary clarification. Driven by the
desire to discover the ultimate truth of existence, human beings seek to
acquire those universal elements of knowledge which enable them to
understand themselves better and to advance in their own self-realization.
These fundamental elements of knowledge spring from the wonder awakened
in them by the contemplation of creation: human beings are astonished to
discover themselves as part of the world, in a relationship with others
like them, all sharing a common destiny. Here begins, then, the journey
which will lead them to discover ever new frontiers of knowledge. Without
wonder, men and women would lapse into deadening routine and little by
little would become incapable of a life which is genuinely personal.
Through philosophy's work, the ability to speculate which is proper to
the human intellect produces a rigorous mode of thought; and then in turn,
through the logical coherence of the affirmations made and the organic
unity of their content, it produces a systematic body of knowledge. In
different cultural contexts and at different times, this process has
yielded results which have produced genuine systems of thought. Yet often
enough in history this has brought with it the temptation to identify one
single stream with the whole of philosophy. In such cases, we are clearly
dealing with a philosophical pride which seeks to present its
own partial and imperfect view as the complete reading of all reality. In
effect, every philosophical system, while it should always be
respected in its wholeness, without any instrumentalization, must still
recognize the primacy of philosophical enquiry, from which it
stems and which it ought loyally to serve.
Although times change and knowledge increases, it is possible to discern
a core of philosophical insight within the history of thought as a whole.
Consider, for example, the principles of non-contradiction, finality and
causality, as well as the concept of the person as a free and intelligent
subject, with the capacity to know God, truth and goodness. Consider as
well certain fundamental moral norms which are shared by all. These are
among the indications that, beyond different schools of thought, there
exists a body of knowledge which may be judged a kind of spiritual
heritage of humanity. It is as if we had come upon an implicit
philosophy, as a result of which all feel that they possess these
principles, albeit in a general and unreflective way. Precisely because it
is shared in some measure by all, this knowledge should serve as a kind of
reference-point for the different philosophical schools. Once reason
successfully intuits and formulates the first universal principles of
being and correctly draws from them conclusions which are coherent both
logically and ethically, then it may be called right reason or, as the
ancients called it, orthós logos, recta ratio.
5. On her part, the Church cannot but set great value upon reason's
drive to attain goals which render people's lives ever more worthy. She
sees in philosophy the way to come to know fundamental truths about human
life. At the same time, the Church considers philosophy an indispensable
help for a deeper understanding of faith and for communicating the truth
of the Gospel to those who do not yet know it.
Therefore, following upon similar initiatives by my Predecessors, I wish
to reflect upon this special activity of human reason. I judge it
necessary to do so because, at the present time in particular, the search
for ultimate truth seems often to be neglected. Modern philosophy clearly
has the great merit of focusing attention upon man. From this
starting-point, human reason with its many questions has developed further
its yearning to know more and to know it ever more deeply. Complex systems
of thought have thus been built, yielding results in the different fields
of knowledge and fostering the development of culture and history.
Anthropology, logic, the natural sciences, history, linguistics and so
forththe whole universe of knowledge has been involved in one way or
another. Yet the positive results achieved must not obscure the fact that
reason, in its one-sided concern to investigate human subjectivity, seems
to have forgotten that men and women are always called to direct their
steps towards a truth which transcends them. Sundered from that truth,
individuals are at the mercy of caprice, and their state as person ends up
being judged by pragmatic criteria based essentially upon experimental
data, in the mistaken belief that technology must dominate all. It has
happened therefore that reason, rather than voicing the human orientation
towards truth, has wilted under the weight of so much knowledge and little
by little has lost the capacity to lift its gaze to the heights, not
daring to rise to the truth of being. Abandoning the investigation of
being, modern philosophical research has concentrated instead upon human
knowing. Rather than make use of the human capacity to know the truth,
modern philosophy has preferred to accentuate the ways in which this
capacity is limited and conditioned.
This has given rise to different forms of agnosticism and relativism
which have led philosophical research to lose its way in the shifting
sands of widespread scepticism. Recent times have seen the rise to
prominence of various doctrines which tend to devalue even the truths
which had been judged certain. A legitimate plurality of positions has
yielded to an undifferentiated pluralism, based upon the assumption that
all positions are equally valid, which is one of today's most widespread
symptoms of the lack of confidence in truth. Even certain conceptions of
life coming from the East betray this lack of confidence, denying truth
its exclusive character and assuming that truth reveals itself equally in
different doctrines, even if they contradict one another. On this
understanding, everything is reduced to opinion; and there is a sense of
being adrift. While, on the one hand, philosophical thinking has succeeded
in coming closer to the reality of human life and its forms of expression,
it has also tended to pursue issuesexistential, hermeneutical or
linguisticwhich ignore the radical question of the truth about
personal existence, about being and about God. Hence we see among the men
and women of our time, and not just in some philosophers, attitudes of
widespread distrust of the human being's great capacity for knowledge.
With a false modesty, people rest content with partial and provisional
truths, no longer seeking to ask radical questions about the meaning and
ultimate foundation of human, personal and social existence. In short, the
hope that philosophy might be able to provide definitive answers to these
questions has dwindled.
6. Sure of her competence as the bearer of the Revelation of Jesus
Christ, the Church reaffirms the need to reflect upon truth. This is why I
have decided to address you, my venerable Brother Bishops, with whom I
share the mission of proclaiming the truth openly (2 Cor
4:2), as also theologians and philosophers whose duty it is to explore
the different aspects of truth, and all those who are searching; and I do
so in order to offer some reflections on the path which leads to true
wisdom, so that those who love truth may take the sure path leading to it
and so find rest from their labours and joy for their spirit.
I feel impelled to undertake this task above all because of the Second
Vatican Council's insistence that the Bishops are witnesses of
divine and catholic truth.(3) To bear witness to the truth is
therefore a task entrusted to us Bishops; we cannot renounce this task
without failing in the ministry which we have received. In reaffirming the
truth of faith, we can both restore to our contemporaries a genuine trust
in their capacity to know and challenge philosophy to recover and develop
its own full dignity.
There is a further reason why I write these reflections. In my
Encyclical Letter Veritatis Splendor, I drew attention to certain
fundamental truths of Catholic doctrine which, in the present
circumstances, risk being distorted or denied.(4) In the present
Letter, I wish to pursue that reflection by concentrating on the theme of
truth itself and on its foundation in relation to faith.
For it is undeniable that this time of rapid and complex change can leave
especially the younger generation, to whom the future belongs and on whom
it depends, with a sense that they have no valid points of reference. The
need for a foundation for personal and communal life becomes all the more
pressing at a time when we are faced with the patent inadequacy of
perspectives in which the ephemeral is affirmed as a value and the
possibility of discovering the real meaning of life is cast into doubt.
This is why many people stumble through life to the very edge of the abyss
without knowing where they are going. At times, this happens because those
whose vocation it is to give cultural expression to their thinking no
longer look to truth, preferring quick success to the toil of patient
enquiry into what makes life worth living. With its enduring appeal to the
search for truth, philosophy has the great responsibility of forming
thought and culture; and now it must strive resolutely to recover its
original vocation. This is why I have felt both the need and the duty to
address this theme so that, on the threshold of the third millennium of
the Christian era, humanity may come to a clearer sense of the great
resources with which it has been endowed and may commit itself with
renewed courage to implement the plan of salvation of which its history is
part.
CHAPTER I
THE REVELATION OF GOD'S WISDOM
Jesus, revealer of the Father
7. Underlying all the Church's thinking is the awareness that she is the
bearer of a message which has its origin in God himself (cf. 2 Cor
4:1-2). The knowledge which the Church offers to man has its origin not in
any speculation of her own, however sublime, but in the word of God which
she has received in faith (cf. 1 Th 2:13). At the origin of our
life of faith there is an encounter, unique in kind, which discloses a
mystery hidden for long ages (cf. 1 Cor 2:7; Rom 16:25-26)
but which is now revealed: In his goodness and wisdom, God chose to
reveal himself and to make known to us the hidden purpose of his will (cf.
Eph 1:9), by which, through Christ, the Word made flesh, man has
access to the Father in the Holy Spirit and comes to share in the divine
nature.(5) This initiative is utterly gratuitous, moving from God to
men and women in order to bring them to salvation. As the source of love,
God desires to make himself known; and the knowledge which the human being
has of God perfects all that the human mind can know of the meaning of
life.
8. Restating almost to the letter the teaching of the First Vatican
Council's Constitution Dei Filius, and taking into account the
principles set out by the Council of Trent, the Second Vatican Council's
Constitution Dei Verbum pursued the age-old journey of understanding
faith, reflecting on Revelation in the light of the teaching of
Scripture and of the entire Patristic tradition. At the First Vatican
Council, the Fathers had stressed the supernatural character of God's
Revelation. On the basis of mistaken and very widespread assertions, the
rationalist critique of the time attacked faith and denied the possibility
of any knowledge which was not the fruit of reason's natural capacities.
This obliged the Council to reaffirm emphatically that there exists a
knowledge which is peculiar to faith, surpassing the knowledge proper to
human reason, which nevertheless by its nature can discover the Creator.
This knowledge expresses a truth based upon the very fact of God who
reveals himself, a truth which is most certain, since God neither deceives
nor wishes to deceive.(6)
9. The First Vatican Council teaches, then, that the truth attained by
philosophy and the truth of Revelation are neither identical nor mutually
exclusive: There exists a twofold order of knowledge, distinct not
only as regards their source, but also as regards their object. With
regard to the source, because we know in one by natural reason, in the
other by divine faith. With regard to the object, because besides those
things which natural reason can attain, there are proposed for our belief
mysteries hidden in God which, unless they are divinely revealed, cannot
be known.(7) Based upon God's testimony and enjoying the
supernatural assistance of grace, faith is of an order other than
philosophical knowledge which depends upon sense perception and experience
and which advances by the light of the intellect alone. Philosophy and the
sciences function within the order of natural reason; while faith,
enlightened and guided by the Spirit, recognizes in the message of
salvation the fullness of grace and truth (cf. Jn 1:14)
which God has willed to reveal in history and definitively through his
Son, Jesus Christ (cf. 1 Jn 5:9; Jn 5:31-32).
10. Contemplating Jesus as revealer, the Fathers of the Second Vatican
Council stressed the salvific character of God's Revelation in history,
describing it in these terms: In this Revelation, the invisible God
(cf. Col 1:15; 1 Tim 1:17), out of the abundance of his
love speaks to men and women as friends (cf. Ex 33:11; Jn 15:14-15)
and lives among them (cf. Bar 3:38), so that he may invite and
take them into communion with himself. This plan of Revelation is realized
by deeds and words having an inner unity: the deeds wrought by God in the
history of salvation manifest and confirm the teaching and realities
signified by the words, while the words proclaim the deeds and clarify the
mystery contained in them. By this Revelation, then, the deepest truth
about God and human salvation is made clear to us in Christ, who is the
mediator and at the same time the fullness of all Revelation.(8)
11. God's Revelation is therefore immersed in time and history. Jesus
Christ took flesh in the fullness of time (Gal 4:4);
and two thousand years later, I feel bound to restate forcefully that in
Christianity time has a fundamental importance.(9) It is within time
that the whole work of creation and salvation comes to light; and it
emerges clearly above all that, with the Incarnation of the Son of God,
our life is even now a foretaste of the fulfilment of time which is to
come (cf. Heb 1:2).
The truth about himself and his life which God has entrusted to humanity
is immersed therefore in time and history; and it was declared once and
for all in the mystery of Jesus of Nazareth. The Constitution Dei
Verbum puts it eloquently: After speaking in many places and
varied ways through the prophets, God 'last of all in these days has
spoken to us by his Son' (Heb 1:1-2). For he sent his Son, the
eternal Word who enlightens all people, so that he might dwell among them
and tell them the innermost realities about God (cf. Jn 1:1-18).
Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh, sent as 'a human being to human
beings', 'speaks the words of God' (Jn 3:34), and completes the
work of salvation which his Father gave him to do (cf. Jn 5:36;
17:4). To see Jesus is to see his Father (Jn 14:9). For this
reason, Jesus perfected Revelation by fulfilling it through his whole work
of making himself present and manifesting himself: through his words and
deeds, his signs and wonders, but especially though his death and glorious
Resurrection from the dead and finally his sending of the Spirit of truth.(10)
For the People of God, therefore, history becomes a path to be followed
to the end, so that by the unceasing action of the Holy Spirit (cf. Jn
16:13) the contents of revealed truth may find their full expression.
This is the teaching of the Constitution Dei Verbum when it states
that as the centuries succeed one another, the Church constantly
progresses towards the fullness of divine truth, until the words of God
reach their complete fulfilment in her.(11)
12. History therefore becomes the arena where we see what God does for
humanity. God comes to us in the things we know best and can verify most
easily, the things of our everyday life, apart from which we cannot
understand ourselves.
In the Incarnation of the Son of God we see forged the enduring and
definitive synthesis which the human mind of itself could not even have
imagined: the Eternal enters time, the Whole lies hidden in the part, God
takes on a human face. The truth communicated in Christ's Revelation is
therefore no longer confined to a particular place or culture, but is
offered to every man and woman who would welcome it as the word which is
the absolutely valid source of meaning for human life. Now, in Christ, all
have access to the Father, since by his Death and Resurrection Christ has
bestowed the divine life which the first Adam had refused (cf. Rom
5:12-15). Through this Revelation, men and women are offered the
ultimate truth about their own life and about the goal of history. As the
Constitution Gaudium et Spes puts it, only in the mystery of
the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light.(12) Seen
in any other terms, the mystery of personal existence remains an insoluble
riddle. Where might the human being seek the answer to dramatic questions
such as pain, the suffering of the innocent and death, if not in the light
streaming from the mystery of Christ's Passion, Death and Resurrection?
Reason before the mystery
13. It should nonetheless be kept in mind that Revelation remains
charged with mystery. It is true that Jesus, with his entire life,
revealed the countenance of the Father, for he came to teach the secret
things of God.(13) But our vision of the face of God is always fragmentary
and impaired by the limits of our understanding. Faith alone makes it
possible to penetrate the mystery in a way that allows us to understand it
coherently.
The Council teaches that the obedience of faith must be given to
God who reveals himself.(14) This brief but dense statement points
to a fundamental truth of Christianity. Faith is said first to be an
obedient response to God. This implies that God be acknowledged in his
divinity, transcendence and supreme freedom. By the authority of his
absolute transcendence, God who makes himself known is also the source of
the credibility of what he reveals. By faith, men and women give their
assent to this divine testimony. This means that they acknowledge
fully and integrally the truth of what is revealed because it is God
himself who is the guarantor of that truth. They can make no claim upon
this truth which comes to them as gift and which, set within the context
of interpersonal communication, urges reason to be open to it and to
embrace its profound meaning. This is why the Church has always considered
the act of entrusting oneself to God to be a moment of fundamental
decision which engages the whole person. In that act, the intellect and
the will display their spiritual nature, enabling the subject to act in a
way which realizes personal freedom to the full.(15) It is not just that
freedom is part of the act of faith: it is absolutely required. Indeed, it
is faith that allows individuals to give consummate expression to their
own freedom. Put differently, freedom is not realized in decisions made
against God. For how could it be an exercise of true freedom to refuse to
be open to the very reality which enables our self-realization? Men and
women can accomplish no more important act in their lives than the act of
faith; it is here that freedom reaches the certainty of truth and chooses
to live in that truth.
To assist reason in its effort to understand the mystery there are the
signs which Revelation itself presents. These serve to lead the search for
truth to new depths, enabling the mind in its autonomous exploration to
penetrate within the mystery by use of reason's own methods, of which it
is rightly jealous. Yet these signs also urge reason to look beyond their
status as signs in order to grasp the deeper meaning which they bear. They
contain a hidden truth to which the mind is drawn and which it cannot
ignore without destroying the very signs which it is given.
In a sense, then, we return to the sacramental character of
Revelation and especially to the sign of the Eucharist, in which the
indissoluble unity between the signifier and signified makes it possible
to grasp the depths of the mystery. In the Eucharist, Christ is truly
present and alive, working through his Spirit; yet, as Saint Thomas said
so well, what you neither see nor grasp, faith confirms for you,
leaving nature far behind; a sign it is that now appears, hiding in
mystery realities sublime.(16) He is echoed by the philosopher
Pascal: Just as Jesus Christ went unrecognized among men, so does
his truth appear without external difference among common modes of
thought. So too does the Eucharist remain among common bread.(17)
In short, the knowledge proper to faith does not destroy the mystery; it
only reveals it the more, showing how necessary it is for people's lives:
Christ the Lord in revealing the mystery of the Father and his love
fully reveals man to himself and makes clear his supreme calling,(18)
which is to share in the divine mystery of the life of the Trinity.(19)
14. From the teaching of the two Vatican Councils there also emerges a
genuinely novel consideration for philosophical learning. Revelation has
set within history a point of reference which cannot be ignored if the
mystery of human life is to be known. Yet this knowledge refers back
constantly to the mystery of God which the human mind cannot exhaust but
can only receive and embrace in faith. Between these two poles, reason has
its own specific field in which it can enquire and understand, restricted
only by its finiteness before the infinite mystery of God.
Revelation therefore introduces into our history a universal and
ultimate truth which stirs the human mind to ceaseless effort; indeed, it
impels reason continually to extend the range of its knowledge until it
senses that it has done all in its power, leaving no stone unturned. To
assist our reflection on this point we have one of the most fruitful and
important minds in human history, a point of reference for both philosophy
and theology: Saint Anselm. In his Proslogion, the Archbishop of
Canterbury puts it this way: Thinking of this problem frequently and
intently, at times it seemed I was ready to grasp what I was seeking; at
other times it eluded my thought completely, until finally, despairing of
being able to find it, I wanted to abandon the search for something which
was impossible to find. I wanted to rid myself of that thought because, by
filling my mind, it distracted me from other problems from which I could
gain some profit; but it would then present itself with ever greater
insistence... Woe is me, one of the poor children of Eve, far from God,
what did I set out to do and what have I accomplished? What was I aiming
for and how far have I got? What did I aspire to and what did I long
for?... O Lord, you are not only that than which nothing greater can be
conceived (non solum es quo maius cogitari nequit), but you are
greater than all that can be conceived (quiddam maius quam cogitari
possit)... If you were not such, something greater than you could be
thought, but this is impossible.(20)
15. The truth of Christian Revelation, found in Jesus of Nazareth,
enables all men and women to embrace the mystery of their own
life. As absolute truth, it summons human beings to be open to the
transcendent, whilst respecting both their autonomy as creatures and their
freedom. At this point the relationship between freedom and truth is
complete, and we understand the full meaning of the Lord's words: You
will know the truth, and the truth will make you free (Jn 8:32).
Christian Revelation is the true lodestar of men and women as they
strive to make their way amid the pressures of an immanentist habit of
mind and the constrictions of a technocratic logic. It is the ultimate
possibility offered by God for the human being to know in all its fullness
the seminal plan of love which began with creation. To those wishing to
know the truth, if they can look beyond themselves and their own concerns,
there is given the possibility of taking full and harmonious possession of
their lives, precisely by following the path of truth. Here the words of
the Book of Deuteronomy are pertinent: This commandment which I
command you is not too hard for you, neither is it far off. It is not in
heaven that you should say, 'Who will go up for us to heaven, and bring it
to us, that we may hear it and do it?' Neither is it beyond the sea, that
you should say, 'Who will go over the sea for us, and bring it to us, that
we may hear and do it?' But the word is very near you; it is in your mouth
and in your heart, that you can do it (30:11-14). This text finds an
echo in the famous dictum of the holy philosopher and theologian
Augustine: Do not wander far and wide but return into yourself. Deep
within man there dwells the truth (Noli foras ire, in te ipsum
redi. In interiore homine habitat veritas).(21)
These considerations prompt a first conclusion: the truth made known to
us by Revelation is neither the product nor the consummation of an
argument devised by human reason. It appears instead as something
gratuitous, which itself stirs thought and seeks acceptance as an
expression of love. This revealed truth is set within our history as an
anticipation of that ultimate and definitive vision of God which is
reserved for those who believe in him and seek him with a sincere heart.
The ultimate purpose of personal existence, then, is the theme of
philosophy and theology alike. For all their difference of method and
content, both disciplines point to that path of life (Ps
16:11) which, as faith tells us, leads in the end to the full and
lasting joy of the contemplation of the Triune God.
CHAPTER II
CREDO UT INTELLEGAM
Wisdom knows all and understands all (Wis
9:11)
16. Sacred Scripture indicates with remarkably clear cues how deeply
related are the knowledge conferred by faith and the knowledge conferred
by reason; and it is in the Wisdom literature that this
relationship is addressed most explicitly. What is striking about these
biblical texts, if they are read without prejudice, is that they embody
not only the faith of Israel, but also the treasury of cultures and
civilizations which have long vanished. As if by special design, the
voices of Egypt and Mesopotamia sound again and certain features common to
the cultures of the ancient Near East come to life in these pages which
are so singularly rich in deep intuition.
It is no accident that, when the sacred author comes to describe the
wise man, he portrays him as one who loves and seeks the truth: Happy
the man who meditates on wisdom and reasons intelligently, who reflects in
his heart on her ways and ponders her secrets. He pursues her like a
hunter and lies in wait on her paths. He peers through her windows and
listens at her doors. He camps near her house and fastens his tent-peg to
her walls; he pitches his tent near her and so finds an excellent
resting-place; he places his children under her protection and lodges
under her boughs; by her he is sheltered from the heat and he dwells in
the shade of her glory (Sir 14:20-27).
For the inspired writer, as we see, the desire for knowledge is
characteristic of all people. Intelligence enables everyone, believer and
non-believer, to reach the deep waters of knowledge (cf. Prov
20:5). It is true that ancient Israel did not come to knowledge of the
world and its phenomena by way of abstraction, as did the Greek
philosopher or the Egyptian sage. Still less did the good Israelite
understand knowledge in the way of the modern world which tends more to
distinguish different kinds of knowing. Nonetheless, the biblical world
has made its own distinctive contribution to the theory of knowledge.
What is distinctive in the biblical text is the conviction that there is
a profound and indissoluble unity between the knowledge of reason and the
knowledge of faith. The world and all that happens within it, including
history and the fate of peoples, are realities to be observed, analysed
and assessed with all the resources of reason, but without faith ever
being foreign to the process. Faith intervenes not to abolish reason's
autonomy nor to reduce its scope for action, but solely to bring the human
being to understand that in these events it is the God of Israel who acts.
Thus the world and the events of history cannot be understood in depth
without professing faith in the God who is at work in them. Faith sharpens
the inner eye, opening the mind to discover in the flux of events the
workings of Providence. Here the words of the Book of Proverbs are
pertinent: The human mind plans the way, but the Lord directs the
steps (16:9). This is to say that with the light of reason human
beings can know which path to take, but they can follow that path to its
end, quickly and unhindered, only if with a rightly tuned spirit they
search for it within the horizon of faith. Therefore, reason and faith
cannot be separated without diminishing the capacity of men and women to
know themselves, the world and God in an appropriate way.
17. There is thus no reason for competition of any kind between reason
and faith: each contains the other, and each has its own scope for action.
Again the Book of Proverbs points in this direction when it exclaims: It
is the glory of God to conceal things, but the glory of kings is to search
things out (Prov 25:2). In their respective worlds, God and
the human being are set within a unique relationship. In God there lies
the origin of all things, in him is found the fullness of the mystery, and
in this his glory consists; to men and women there falls the task of
exploring truth with their reason, and in this their nobility consists.
The Psalmist adds one final piece to this mosaic when he says in prayer: How
deep to me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! If I try
to count them, they are more than the sand. If I come to the end, I am
still with you (139:17-18). The desire for knowledge is so great and
it works in such a way that the human heart, despite its experience of
insurmountable limitation, yearns for the infinite riches which lie
beyond, knowing that there is to be found the satisfying answer to every
question as yet unanswered.
18. We may say, then, that Israel, with her reflection, was able to open
to reason the path that leads to the mystery. With the Revelation of God
Israel could plumb the depths of all that she sought in vain to reach by
way of reason. On the basis of this deeper form of knowledge, the Chosen
People understood that, if reason were to be fully true to itself, then it
must respect certain basic rules. The first of these is that reason must
realize that human knowledge is a journey which allows no rest; the second
stems from the awareness that such a path is not for the proud who think
that everything is the fruit of personal conquest; a third rule is
grounded in the fear of God whose transcendent sovereignty and
provident love in the governance of the world reason must recognize.
In abandoning these rules, the human being runs the risk of failure and
ends up in the condition of the fool. For the Bible, in this
foolishness there lies a threat to life. The fool thinks that he knows
many things, but really he is incapable of fixing his gaze on the things
that truly matter. Therefore he can neither order his mind (Prov 1:7)
nor assume a correct attitude to himself or to the world around him. And
so when he claims that God does not exist (cf. Ps 14:1),
he shows with absolute clarity just how deficient his knowledge is and
just how far he is from the full truth of things, their origin and their
destiny.
19. The Book of Wisdom contains several important texts which cast
further light on this theme. There the sacred author speaks of God who
reveals himself in nature. For the ancients, the study of the natural
sciences coincided in large part with philosophical learning. Having
affirmed that with their intelligence human beings can know the
structure of the world and the activity of the elements... the cycles of
the year and the constellations of the stars, the natures of animals and
the tempers of wild beasts (Wis 7:17, 19-20)in a word,
that he can philosophizethe sacred text takes a significant step
forward. Making his own the thought of Greek philosophy, to which he seems
to refer in the context, the author affirms that, in reasoning about
nature, the human being can rise to God: From the greatness and
beauty of created things comes a corresponding perception of their Creator
(Wis 13:5). This is to recognize as a first stage of divine
Revelation the marvellous book of nature, which, when read
with the proper tools of human reason, can lead to knowledge of the
Creator. If human beings with their intelligence fail to recognize God as
Creator of all, it is not because they lack the means to do so, but
because their free will and their sinfulness place an impediment in the
way.
20. Seen in this light, reason is valued without being overvalued. The
results of reasoning may in fact be true, but these results acquire their
true meaning only if they are set within the larger horizon of faith: All
man's steps are ordered by the Lord: how then can man understand his own
ways? (Prov 20:24). For the Old Testament, then, faith
liberates reason in so far as it allows reason to attain correctly what it
seeks to know and to place it within the ultimate order of things, in
which everything acquires true meaning. In brief, human beings attain
truth by way of reason because, enlightened by faith, they discover the
deeper meaning of all things and most especially of their own existence.
Rightly, therefore, the sacred author identifies the fear of God as the
beginning of true knowledge: The fear of the Lord is the beginning
of knowledge (Prov 1:7; cf. Sir 1:14).
Acquire wisdom, acquire understanding (Prov
4:5)
21. For the Old Testament, knowledge is not simply a matter of careful
observation of the human being, of the world and of history, but supposes
as well an indispensable link with faith and with what has been revealed.
These are the challenges which the Chosen People had to confront and to
which they had to respond. Pondering this as his situation, biblical man
discovered that he could understand himself only as being in
relationwith himself, with people, with the world and with
God. This opening to the mystery, which came to him through Revelation,
was for him, in the end, the source of true knowledge. It was this which
allowed his reason to enter the realm of the infinite where an
understanding for which until then he had not dared to hope became a
possibility.
For the sacred author, the task of searching for the truth was not
without the strain which comes once the limits of reason are reached. This
is what we find, for example, when the Book of Proverbs notes the
weariness which comes from the effort to understand the mysterious designs
of God (cf. 30:1-6). Yet, for all the toil involved, believers do not
surrender. They can continue on their way to the truth because they are
certain that God has created them explorers (cf. Qoh 1:13),
whose mission it is to leave no stone unturned, though the temptation to
doubt is always there. Leaning on God, they continue to reach out, always
and everywhere, for all that is beautiful, good and true.
22. In the first chapter of his Letter to the Romans, Saint Paul helps
us to appreciate better the depth of insight of the Wisdom literature's
reflection. Developing a philosophical argument in popular language, the
Apostle declares a profound truth: through all that is created the eyes
of the mind can come to know God. Through the medium of creatures,
God stirs in reason an intuition of his power and his divinity
(cf. Rom 1:20). This is to concede to human reason a capacity
which seems almost to surpass its natural limitations. Not only is it not
restricted to sensory knowledge, from the moment that it can reflect
critically upon the data of the senses, but, by discoursing on the data
provided by the senses, reason can reach the cause which lies at the
origin of all perceptible reality. In philosophical terms, we could say
that this important Pauline text affirms the human capacity for
metaphysical enquiry.
According to the Apostle, it was part of the original plan of the
creation that reason should without difficulty reach beyond the sensory
data to the origin of all things: the Creator. But because of the
disobedience by which man and woman chose to set themselves in full and
absolute autonomy in relation to the One who had created them, this ready
access to God the Creator diminished.
This is the human condition vividly described by the Book of Genesis
when it tells us that God placed the human being in the Garden of Eden, in
the middle of which there stood the tree of knowledge of good and
evil (2:17). The symbol is clear: man was in no position to discern
and decide for himself what was good and what was evil, but was
constrained to appeal to a higher source. The blindness of pride deceived
our first parents into thinking themselves sovereign and autonomous, and
into thinking that they could ignore the knowledge which comes from God.
All men and women were caught up in this primal disobedience, which so
wounded reason that from then on its path to full truth would be strewn
with obstacles. From that time onwards the human capacity to know the
truth was impaired by an aversion to the One who is the source and origin
of truth. It is again the Apostle who reveals just how far human thinking,
because of sin, became empty, and human reasoning became
distorted and inclined to falsehood (cf. Rom 1:21-22). The eyes of
the mind were no longer able to see clearly: reason became more and more a
prisoner to itself. The coming of Christ was the saving event which
redeemed reason from its weakness, setting it free from the shackles in
which it had imprisoned itself.
23. This is why the Christian's relationship to philosophy requires
thorough-going discernment. In the New Testament, especially in the
Letters of Saint Paul, one thing emerges with great clarity: the
opposition between the wisdom of this world and the wisdom of
God revealed in Jesus Christ. The depth of revealed wisdom disrupts the
cycle of our habitual patterns of thought, which are in no way able to
express that wisdom in its fullness.
The beginning of the First Letter to the Corinthians poses the dilemma
in a radical way. The crucified Son of God is the historic event upon
which every attempt of the mind to construct an adequate explanation of
the meaning of existence upon merely human argumentation comes to grief.
The true key-point, which challenges every philosophy, is Jesus Christ's
death on the Cross. It is here that every attempt to reduce the Father's
saving plan to purely human logic is doomed to failure. Where is the
one who is wise? Where is the learned? Where is the debater of this age?
Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? (1 Cor 1:20),
the Apostle asks emphatically. The wisdom of the wise is no longer enough
for what God wants to accomplish; what is required is a decisive step
towards welcoming something radically new: God chose what is foolish
in the world to shame the wise...; God chose what is low and despised in
the world, things that are not to reduce to nothing things that are
(1 Cor 1:27-28). Human wisdom refuses to see in its own weakness
the possibility of its strength; yet Saint Paul is quick to affirm: When
I am weak, then I am strong (2 Cor 12:10). Man cannot grasp
how death could be the source of life and love; yet to reveal the mystery
of his saving plan God has chosen precisely that which reason considers foolishness
and a scandal. Adopting the language of the philosophers of
his time, Paul comes to the summit of his teaching as he speaks the
paradox: God has chosen in the world... that which is nothing to
reduce to nothing things that are (cf. 1 Cor 1:28). In order
to express the gratuitous nature of the love revealed in the Cross of
Christ, the Apostle is not afraid to use the most radical language of the
philosophers in their thinking about God. Reason cannot eliminate the
mystery of love which the Cross represents, while the Cross can give to
reason the ultimate answer which it seeks. It is not the wisdom of words,
but the Word of Wisdom which Saint Paul offers as the criterion of both
truth and salvation.
The wisdom of the Cross, therefore, breaks free of all cultural
limitations which seek to contain it and insists upon an openness to the
universality of the truth which it bears. What a challenge this is to our
reason, and how great the gain for reason if it yields to this wisdom! Of
itself, philosophy is able to recognize the human being's ceaselessly
self-transcendent orientation towards the truth; and, with the assistance
of faith, it is capable of accepting the foolishness of the
Cross as the authentic critique of those who delude themselves that they
possess the truth, when in fact they run it aground on the shoals of a
system of their own devising. The preaching of Christ crucified and risen
is the reef upon which the link between faith and philosophy can break up,
but it is also the reef beyond which the two can set forth upon the
boundless ocean of truth. Here we see not only the border between reason
and faith, but also the space where the two may meet.
CHAPTER III
INTELLEGO UT CREDAM
Journeying in search of truth
24. In the Acts of the Apostles, the Evangelist Luke tells of Paul's
coming to Athens on one of his missionary journeys. The city of
philosophers was full of statues of various idols. One altar in particular
caught his eye, and he took this as a convenient starting-point to
establish a common base for the proclamation of the kerygma. Athenians,
he said, I see how extremely religious you are in every way. For as
I went through the city and looked carefully at the objects of your
worship, I found among them an altar with the inscription, 'To an unknown
god'. What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you
(Acts 17:22-23). From this starting-point, Saint Paul speaks of
God as Creator, as the One who transcends all things and gives life to
all. He then continues his speech in these terms: From one ancestor
he made all nations to inhabit the whole earth, and he allotted the times
of their existence and the boundaries of the places where they would live,
so that they would search for God and perhaps grope for him and find himthough
indeed he is not far from each one of us (Acts 17:26-27).
The Apostle accentuates a truth which the Church has always treasured:
in the far reaches of the human heart there is a seed of desire and
nostalgia for God. The Liturgy of Good Friday recalls this powerfully
when, in praying for those who do not believe, we say: Almighty and
eternal God, you created mankind so that all might long to find you and
have peace when you are found.(22) There is therefore a path which
the human being may choose to take, a path which begins with reason's
capacity to rise beyond what is contingent and set out towards the
infinite.
In different ways and at different times, men and women have shown that
they can articulate this intimate desire of theirs. Through literature,
music, painting, sculpture, architecture and every other work of their
creative intelligence they have declared the urgency of their quest. In a
special way philosophy has made this search its own and, with its specific
tools and scholarly methods, has articulated this universal human desire.
25. All human beings desire to know,(23) and truth is the
proper object of this desire. Everyday life shows how concerned each of us
is to discover for ourselves, beyond mere opinions, how things really are.
Within visible creation, man is the only creature who not only is capable
of knowing but who knows that he knows, and is therefore interested in the
real truth of what he perceives. People cannot be genuinely indifferent to
the question of whether what they know is true or not. If they discover
that it is false, they reject it; but if they can establish its truth,
they feel themselves rewarded. It is this that Saint Augustine teaches
when he writes: I have met many who wanted to deceive, but none who
wanted to be deceived.(24) It is rightly claimed that persons have
reached adulthood when they can distinguish independently between truth
and falsehood, making up their own minds about the objective reality of
things. This is what has driven so many enquiries, especially in the
scientific field, which in recent centuries have produced important
results, leading to genuine progress for all humanity.
No less important than research in the theoretical field is research in
the practical fieldby which I mean the search for truth which looks
to the good which is to be performed. In acting ethically, according to a
free and rightly tuned will, the human person sets foot upon the path to
happiness and moves towards perfection. Here too it is a question of
truth. It is this conviction which I stressed in my Encyclical Letter Veritatis
Splendor: There is no morality without freedom... Although each
individual has a right to be respected in his own journey in search of the
truth, there exists a prior moral obligation, and a grave one at that, to
seek the truth and to adhere to it once it is known.(25)
It is essential, therefore, that the values chosen and pursued in one's
life be true, because only true values can lead people to realize
themselves fully, allowing them to be true to their nature. The truth of
these values is to be found not by turning in on oneself but by opening
oneself to apprehend that truth even at levels which transcend the person.
This is an essential condition for us to become ourselves and to grow as
mature, adult persons.
26. The truth comes initially to the human being as a question: Does
life have a meaning? Where is it going? At first sight, personal
existence may seem completely meaningless. It is not necessary to turn to
the philosophers of the absurd or to the provocative questioning found in
the Book of Job in order to have doubts about life's meaning. The daily
experience of sufferingin one's own life and in the lives of othersand
the array of facts which seem inexplicable to reason are enough to ensure
that a question as dramatic as the question of meaning cannot be
evaded.(26) Moreover, the first absolutely certain truth of our life,
beyond the fact that we exist, is the inevitability of our death. Given
this unsettling fact, the search for a full answer is inescapable. Each of
us has both the desire and the duty to know the truth of our own destiny.
We want to know if death will be the definitive end of our life or if
there is something beyondif it is possible to hope for an after-life
or not. It is not insignificant that the death of Socrates gave philosophy
one of its decisive orientations, no less decisive now than it was more
than two thousand years ago. It is not by chance, then, that faced with
the fact of death philosophers have again and again posed this question,
together with the question of the meaning of life and immortality.
27. No-one can avoid this questioning, neither the philosopher nor the
ordinary person. The answer we give will determine whether or not we think
it possible to attain universal and absolute truth; and this is a decisive
moment of the search. Every truthif it really is truthpresents
itself as universal, even if it is not the whole truth. If something is
true, then it must be true for all people and at all times. Beyond this
universality, however, people seek an absolute which might give to all
their searching a meaning and an answersomething ultimate, which
might serve as the ground of all things. In other words, they seek a final
explanation, a supreme value, which refers to nothing beyond itself and
which puts an end to all questioning. Hypotheses may fascinate, but they
do not satisfy. Whether we admit it or not, there comes for everyone the
moment when personal existence must be anchored to a truth recognized as
final, a truth which confers a certitude no longer open to doubt.
Through the centuries, philosophers have sought to discover and
articulate such a truth, giving rise to various systems and schools of
thought. But beyond philosophical systems, people seek in different ways
to shape a philosophy of their ownin personal
convictions and experiences, in traditions of family and culture, or in
journeys in search of life's meaning under the guidance of a master. What
inspires all of these is the desire to reach the certitude of truth and
the certitude of its absolute value.
The different faces of human truth
28. The search for truth, of course, is not always so transparent nor
does it always produce such results. The natural limitation of reason and
the inconstancy of the heart often obscure and distort a person's search.
Truth can also drown in a welter of other concerns. People can even run
from the truth as soon as they glimpse it because they are afraid of its
demands. Yet, for all that they may evade it, the truth still influences
life. Life in fact can never be grounded upon doubt, uncertainty or
deceit; such an existence would be threatened constantly by fear and
anxiety. One may define the human being, therefore, as the one who
seeks the truth.
29. It is unthinkable that a search so deeply rooted in human nature
would be completely vain and useless. The capacity to search for truth and
to pose questions itself implies the rudiments of a response. Human beings
would not even begin to search for something of which they knew nothing or
for something which they thought was wholly beyond them. Only the sense
that they can arrive at an answer leads them to take the first step. This
is what normally happens in scientific research. When scientists,
following their intuition, set out in search of the logical and verifiable
explanation of a phenomenon, they are confident from the first that they
will find an answer, and they do not give up in the face of setbacks. They
do not judge their original intuition useless simply because they have not
reached their goal; rightly enough they will say that they have not yet
found a satisfactory answer.
The same must be equally true of the search for truth when it comes to
the ultimate questions. The thirst for truth is so rooted in the human
heart that to be obliged to ignore it would cast our existence into
jeopardy. Everyday life shows well enough how each one of us is
preoccupied by the pressure of a few fundamental questions and how in the
soul of each of us there is at least an outline of the answers. One reason
why the truth of these answers convinces is that they are no different in
substance from the answers to which many others have come. To be sure, not
every truth to which we come has the same value. But the sum of the
results achieved confirms that in principle the human being can arrive at
the truth.
30. It may help, then, to turn briefly to the different modes of truth.
Most of them depend upon immediate evidence or are confirmed by
experimentation. This is the mode of truth proper to everyday life and to
scientific research. At another level we find philosophical truth,
attained by means of the speculative powers of the human intellect.
Finally, there are religious truths which are to some degree grounded in
philosophy, and which we find in the answers which the different religious
traditions offer to the ultimate questions.(27)
The truths of philosophy, it should be said, are not restricted only to
the sometimes ephemeral teachings of professional philosophers. All men
and women, as I have noted, are in some sense philosophers and have their
own philosophical conceptions with which they direct their lives. In one
way or other, they shape a comprehensive vision and an answer to the
question of life's meaning; and in the light of this they interpret their
own life's course and regulate their behaviour. At this point, we may pose
the question of the link between, on the one hand, the truths of
philosophy and religion and, on the other, the truth revealed in Jesus
Christ. But before tackling that question, one last datum of philosophy
needs to be weighed.
31. Human beings are not made to live alone. They are born into a family
and in a family they grow, eventually entering society through their
activity. From birth, therefore, they are immersed in traditions which
give them not only a language and a cultural formation but also a range of
truths in which they believe almost instinctively. Yet personal growth and
maturity imply that these same truths can be cast into doubt and evaluated
through a process of critical enquiry. It may be that, after this time of
transition, these truths are recovered as a result of the
experience of life or by dint of further reasoning. Nonetheless, there are
in the life of a human being many more truths which are simply believed
than truths which are acquired by way of personal verification. Who, for
instance, could assess critically the countless scientific findings upon
which modern life is based? Who could personally examine the flow of
information which comes day after day from all parts of the world and
which is generally accepted as true? Who in the end could forge anew the
paths of experience and thought which have yielded the treasures of human
wisdom and religion? This means that the human beingthe one who
seeks the truthis also the one who lives by belief.
32. In believing, we entrust ourselves to the knowledge acquired by
other people. This suggests an important tension. On the one hand, the
knowledge acquired through belief can seem an imperfect form of knowledge,
to be perfected gradually through personal accumulation of evidence; on
the other hand, belief is often humanly richer than mere evidence, because
it involves an interpersonal relationship and brings into play not only a
person's capacity to know but also the deeper capacity to entrust oneself
to others, to enter into a relationship with them which is intimate and
enduring.
It should be stressed that the truths sought in this interpersonal
relationship are not primarily empirical or philosophical. Rather, what is
sought is the truth of the personwhat the person is and what
the person reveals from deep within. Human perfection, then, consists not
simply in acquiring an abstract knowledge of the truth, but in a dynamic
relationship of faithful self-giving with others. It is in this faithful
self-giving that a person finds a fullness of certainty and security. At
the same time, however, knowledge through belief, grounded as it is on
trust between persons, is linked to truth: in the act of believing, men
and women entrust themselves to the truth which the other declares to
them.
Any number of examples could be found to demonstrate this; but I think
immediately of the martyrs, who are the most authentic witnesses to the
truth about existence. The martyrs know that they have found the truth
about life in the encounter with Jesus Christ, and nothing and no-one
could ever take this certainty from them. Neither suffering nor violent
death could ever lead them to abandon the truth which they have discovered
in the encounter with Christ. This is why to this day the witness of the
martyrs continues to arouse such interest, to draw agreement, to win such
a hearing and to invite emulation. This is why their word inspires such
confidence: from the moment they speak to us of what we perceive deep down
as the truth we have sought for so long, the martyrs provide evidence of a
love that has no need of lengthy arguments in order to convince. The
martyrs stir in us a profound trust because they give voice to what we
already feel and they declare what we would like to have the strength to
express.
33. Step by step, then, we are assembling the terms of the question. It
is the nature of the human being to seek the truth. This search looks not
only to the attainment of truths which are partial, empirical or
scientific; nor is it only in individual acts of decision-making that
people seek the true good. Their search looks towards an ulterior truth
which would explain the meaning of life. And it is therefore a search
which can reach its end only in reaching the absolute.(28) Thanks to the
inherent capacities of thought, man is able to encounter and recognize a
truth of this kind. Such a truthvital and necessary as it is for
lifeis attained not only by way of reason but also through trusting
acquiescence to other persons who can guarantee the authenticity and
certainty of the truth itself. There is no doubt that the capacity to
entrust oneself and one's life to another person and the decision to do so
are among the most significant and expressive human acts.
It must not be forgotten that reason too needs to be sustained in all
its searching by trusting dialogue and sincere friendship. A climate of
suspicion and distrust, which can beset speculative research, ignores the
teaching of the ancient philosophers who proposed friendship as one of the
most appropriate contexts for sound philosophical enquiry.
From all that I have said to this point it emerges that men and women
are on a journey of discovery which is humanly unstoppablea search
for the truth and a search for a person to whom they might entrust
themselves. Christian faith comes to meet them, offering the concrete
possibility of reaching the goal which they seek. Moving beyond the stage
of simple believing, Christian faith immerses human beings in the order of
grace, which enables them to share in the mystery of Christ, which in turn
offers them a true and coherent knowledge of the Triune God. In Jesus
Christ, who is the Truth, faith recognizes the ultimate appeal to
humanity, an appeal made in order that what we experience as desire and
nostalgia may come to its fulfilment.
34. This truth, which God reveals to us in Jesus Christ, is not opposed
to the truths which philosophy perceives. On the contrary, the two modes
of knowledge lead to truth in all its fullness. The unity of truth is a
fundamental premise of human reasoning, as the principle of
non-contradiction makes clear. Revelation renders this unity certain,
showing that the God of creation is also the God of salvation history. It
is the one and the same God who establishes and guarantees the
intelligibility and reasonableness of the natural order of things upon
which scientists confidently depend,(29) and who reveals himself as the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. This unity of truth, natural and
revealed, is embodied in a living and personal way in Christ, as the
Apostle reminds us: Truth is in Jesus (cf. Eph 4:21;
Col 1:15-20). He is the eternal Word in whom all things
were created, and he is the incarnate Word who in his entire
person (30) reveals the Father (cf. Jn 1:14, 18). What human
reason seeks without knowing it (cf. Acts 17:23) can
be found only through Christ: what is revealed in him is the full
truth (cf. Jn 1:14-16) of everything which was created in
him and through him and which therefore in him finds its fulfilment (cf.
Col 1:17).
35. On the basis of these broad considerations, we must now explore more
directly the relationship between revealed truth and philosophy. This
relationship imposes a twofold consideration, since the truth conferred by
Revelation is a truth to be understood in the light of reason. It is this
duality alone which allows us to specify correctly the relationship
between revealed truth and philosophical learning. First, then, let us
consider the links between faith and philosophy in the course of history.
From this, certain principles will emerge as useful reference-points in
the attempt to establish the correct link between the two orders of
knowledge.
CHAPTER IV
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FAITH AND REASON
Important moments in the encounter of faith and reason
36. The Acts of the Apostles provides evidence that Christian
proclamation was engaged from the very first with the philosophical
currents of the time. In Athens, we read, Saint Paul entered into
discussion with certain Epicurean and Stoic philosophers
(17:18); and exegetical analysis of his speech at the Areopagus has
revealed frequent allusions to popular beliefs deriving for the most part
from Stoicism. This is by no means accidental. If pagans were to
understand them, the first Christians could not refer only to Moses
and the prophets when they spoke. They had to point as well to
natural knowledge of God and to the voice of conscience in every human
being (cf. Rom 1:19-21; 2:14-15; Acts 14:16-17). Since in
pagan religion this natural knowledge had lapsed into idolatry (cf. Rom
1:21-32), the Apostle judged it wiser in his speech to make the link
with the thinking of the philosophers, who had always set in opposition to
the myths and mystery cults notions more respectful of divine
transcendence.
One of the major concerns of classical philosophy was to purify human
notions of God of mythological elements. We know that Greek religion, like
most cosmic religions, was polytheistic, even to the point of divinizing
natural things and phenomena. Human attempts to understand the origin of
the gods and hence the origin of the universe find their earliest
expression in poetry; and the theogonies remain the first evidence of this
human search. But it was the task of the fathers of philosophy to bring to
light the link between reason and religion. As they broadened their view
to include universal principles, they no longer rested content with the
ancient myths, but wanted to provide a rational foundation for their
belief in the divinity. This opened a path which took its rise from
ancient traditions but allowed a development satisfying the demands of
universal reason. This development sought to acquire a critical awareness
of what they believed in, and the concept of divinity was the prime
beneficiary of this. Superstitions were recognized for what they were and
religion was, at least in part, purified by rational analysis. It was on
this basis that the Fathers of the Church entered into fruitful dialogue
with ancient philosophy, which offered new ways of proclaiming and
understanding the God of Jesus Christ.
37. In tracing Christianity's adoption of philosophy, one should not
forget how cautiously Christians regarded other elements of the cultural
world of paganism, one example of which is gnosticism. It was easy to
confuse philosophyunderstood as practical wisdom and an education
for lifewith a higher and esoteric kind of knowledge, reserved to
those few who were perfect. It is surely this kind of esoteric speculation
which Saint Paul has in mind when he puts the Colossians on their guard: See
to it that no-one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deceit,
according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the
universe and not according to Christ (2:8). The Apostle's words seem
all too pertinent now if we apply them to the various kinds of esoteric
superstition widespread today, even among some believers who lack a proper
critical sense. Following Saint Paul, other writers of the early
centuries, especially Saint Irenaeus and Tertullian, sound the alarm when
confronted with a cultural perspective which sought to subordinate the
truth of Revelation to the interpretation of the philosophers.
38. Christianity's engagement with philosophy was therefore neither
straight-forward nor immediate. The practice of philosophy and attendance
at philosophical schools seemed to the first Christians more of a
disturbance than an opportunity. For them, the first and most urgent task
was the proclamation of the Risen Christ by way of a personal encounter
which would bring the listener to conversion of heart and the request for
Baptism. But that does not mean that they ignored the task of deepening
the understanding of faith and its motivations. Quite the contrary. That
is why the criticism of Celsusthat Christians were illiterate
and uncouth(31)is unfounded and untrue. Their initial
disinterest is to be explained on other grounds. The encounter with the
Gospel offered such a satisfying answer to the hitherto unresolved
question of life's meaning that delving into the philosophers seemed to
them something remote and in some ways outmoded.
That seems still more evident today, if we think of Christianity's
contribution to the affirmation of the right of everyone to have access to
the truth. In dismantling barriers of race, social status and gender,
Christianity proclaimed from the first the equality of all men and women
before God. One prime implication of this touched the theme of truth. The
elitism which had characterized the ancients' search for truth was clearly
abandoned. Since access to the truth enables access to God, it must be
denied to none. There are many paths which lead to truth, but since
Christian truth has a salvific value, any one of these paths may be taken,
as long as it leads to the final goal, that is to the Revelation of Jesus
Christ.
A pioneer of positive engagement with philosophical thinkingalbeit
with cautious discernmentwas Saint Justin. Although he continued to
hold Greek philosophy in high esteem after his conversion, Justin claimed
with power and clarity that he had found in Christianity the only
sure and profitable philosophy.(32) Similarly, Clement of Alexandria
called the Gospel the true philosophy,(33) and he understood
philosophy, like the Mosaic Law, as instruction which prepared for
Christian faith (34) and paved the way for the Gospel.(35) Since philosophy
yearns for the wisdom which consists in rightness of soul and speech and
in purity of life, it is well disposed towards wisdom and does all it can
to acquire it. We call philosophers those who love the wisdom that is
creator and mistress of all things, that is knowledge of the Son of God.(36)
For Clement, Greek philosophy is not meant in the first place to bolster
and complete Christian truth. Its task is rather the defence of the faith:
The teaching of the Saviour is perfect in itself and has no need of
support, because it is the strength and the wisdom of God. Greek
philosophy, with its contribution, does not strengthen truth; but, in
rendering the attack of sophistry impotent and in disarming those who
betray truth and wage war upon it, Greek philosophy is rightly called the
hedge and the protective wall around the vineyard.(37)
39. It is clear from history, then, that Christian thinkers were
critical in adopting philosophical thought. Among the early examples of
this, Origen is certainly outstanding. In countering the attacks launched
by the philosopher Celsus, Origen adopts Platonic philosophy to shape his
argument and mount his reply. Assuming many elements of Platonic thought,
he begins to construct an early form of Christian theology. The name theology
itself, together with the idea of theology as rational discourse about
God, had to this point been tied to its Greek origins. In Aristotelian
philosophy, for example, the name signified the noblest part and the true
summit of philosophical discourse. But in the light of Christian
Revelation what had signified a generic doctrine about the gods assumed a
wholly new meaning, signifying now the reflection undertaken by the
believer in order to express the true doctrine about God. As it
developed, this new Christian thought made use of philosophy, but at the
same time tended to distinguish itself clearly from philosophy. History
shows how Platonic thought, once adopted by theology, underwent profound
changes, especially with regard to concepts such as the immortality of the
soul, the divinization of man and the origin of evil.
40. In this work of christianizing Platonic and Neo-Platonic thought,
the Cappadocian Fathers, Dionysius called the Areopagite and especially
Saint Augustine were important. The great Doctor of the West had come into
contact with different philosophical schools, but all of them left him
disappointed. It was when he encountered the truth of Christian faith that
he found strength to undergo the radical conversion to which the
philosophers he had known had been powerless to lead him. He himself
reveals his motive: From this time on, I gave my preference to the
Catholic faith. I thought it more modest and not in the least misleading
to be told by the Church to believe what could not be demonstratedwhether
that was because a demonstration existed but could not be understood by
all or whether the matter was not one open to rational proofrather
than from the Manichees to have a rash promise of knowledge with mockery
of mere belief, and then afterwards to be ordered to believe many fabulous
and absurd myths impossible to prove true.(38) Though he accorded
the Platonists a place of privilege, Augustine rebuked them because,
knowing the goal to seek, they had ignored the path which leads to it: the
Word made flesh.(39) The Bishop of Hippo succeeded in producing the first
great synthesis of philosophy and theology, embracing currents of thought
both Greek and Latin. In him too the great unity of knowledge, grounded in
the thought of the Bible, was both confirmed and sustained by a depth of
speculative thinking. The synthesis devised by Saint Augustine remained
for centuries the most exalted form of philosophical and theological
speculation known to the West. Reinforced by his personal story and
sustained by a wonderful holiness of life, he could also introduce into
his works a range of material which, drawing on experience, was a prelude
to future developments in different currents of philosophy.
41. The ways in which the Fathers of East and West engaged the
philosophical schools were, therefore, quite different. This does not mean
that they identified the content of their message with the systems to
which they referred. Consider Tertullian's question: What does
Athens have in common with Jerusalem? The Academy with the Church?.(40)
This clearly indicates the critical consciousness with which Christian
thinkers from the first confronted the problem of the relationship between
faith and philosophy, viewing it comprehensively with both its positive
aspects and its limitations. They were not naive thinkers. Precisely
because they were intense in living faith's content they were able to
reach the deepest forms of speculation. It is therefore minimalizing and
mistaken to restrict their work simply to the transposition of the truths
of faith into philosophical categories. They did much more. In fact they
succeeded in disclosing completely all that remained implicit and
preliminary in the thinking of the great philosophers of antiquity.(41) As
I have noted, theirs was the task of showing how reason, freed from
external constraints, could find its way out of the blind alley of myth
and open itself to the transcendent in a more appropriate way. Purified
and rightly tuned, therefore, reason could rise to the higher planes of
thought, providing a solid foundation for the perception of being, of the
transcendent and of the absolute.
It is here that we see the originality of what the Fathers accomplished.
They fully welcomed reason which was open to the absolute, and they
infused it with the richness drawn from Revelation. This was more than a
meeting of cultures, with one culture perhaps succumbing to the
fascination of the other. It happened rather in the depths of human souls,
and it was a meeting of creature and Creator. Surpassing the goal towards
which it unwittingly tended by dint of its nature, reason attained the
supreme good and ultimate truth in the person of the Word made flesh.
Faced with the various philosophies, the Fathers were not afraid to
acknowledge those elements in them that were consonant with Revelation and
those that were not. Recognition of the points of convergence did not
blind them to the points of divergence.
42. In Scholastic theology, the role of philosophically trained reason
becomes even more conspicuous under the impulse of Saint Anselm's
interpretation of the intellectus fidei. For the saintly
Archbishop of Canterbury the priority of faith is not in competition with
the search which is proper to reason. Reason in fact is not asked to pass
judgement on the contents of faith, something of which it would be
incapable, since this is not its function. Its function is rather to find
meaning, to discover explanations which might allow everyone to come to a
certain understanding of the contents of faith. Saint Anselm underscores
the fact that the intellect must seek that which it loves: the more it
loves, the more it desires to know. Whoever lives for the truth is
reaching for a form of knowledge which is fired more and more with love
for what it knows, while having to admit that it has not yet attained what
it desires: To see you was I conceived; and I have yet to conceive
that for which I was conceived (Ad te videndum factus sum; et nondum
feci propter quod factus sum).(42) The desire for truth,
therefore, spurs reason always to go further; indeed, it is as if reason
were overwhelmed to see that it can always go beyond what it has already
achieved. It is at this point, though, that reason can learn where its
path will lead in the end: I think that whoever investigates
something incomprehensible should be satisfied if, by way of reasoning, he
reaches a quite certain perception of its reality, even if his intellect
cannot penetrate its mode of being... But is there anything so
incomprehensible and ineffable as that which is above all things?
Therefore, if that which until now has been a matter of debate concerning
the highest essence has been established on the basis of due reasoning,
then the foundation of one's certainty is not shaken in the least if the
intellect cannot penetrate it in a way that allows clear formulation. If
prior thought has concluded rationally that one cannot comprehend (rationabiliter
comprehendit incomprehensibile esse) how supernal wisdom knows its own
accomplishments..., who then will explain how this same wisdom, of which
the human being can know nothing or next to nothing, is to be known and
expressed?.(43)
The fundamental harmony between the knowledge of faith and the knowledge
of philosophy is once again confirmed. Faith asks that its object be
understood with the help of reason; and at the summit of its searching
reason acknowledges that it cannot do without what faith presents.
The enduring originality of the thought of Saint Thomas Aquinas
43. A quite special place in this long development belongs to Saint
Thomas, not only because of what he taught but also because of the
dialogue which he undertook with the Arab and Jewish thought of his time.
In an age when Christian thinkers were rediscovering the treasures of
ancient philosophy, and more particularly of Aristotle, Thomas had the
great merit of giving pride of place to the harmony which exists between
faith and reason. Both the light of reason and the light of faith come
from God, he argued; hence there can be no contradiction between them.(44)
More radically, Thomas recognized that nature, philosophy's proper
concern, could contribute to the understanding of divine Revelation. Faith
therefore has no fear of reason, but seeks it out and has trust in it.
Just as grace builds on nature and brings it to fulfilment,(45) so faith
builds upon and perfects reason. Illumined by faith, reason is set free
from the fragility and limitations deriving from the disobedience of sin
and finds the strength required to rise to the knowledge of the Triune
God. Although he made much of the supernatural character of faith, the
Angelic Doctor did not overlook the importance of its reasonableness;
indeed he was able to plumb the depths and explain the meaning of this
reasonableness. Faith is in a sense an exercise of thought;
and human reason is neither annulled nor debased in assenting to the
contents of faith, which are in any case attained by way of free and
informed choice.(46)
This is why the Church has been justified in consistently proposing
Saint Thomas as a master of thought and a model of the right way to do
theology. In this connection, I would recall what my Predecessor, the
Servant of God Paul VI, wrote on the occasion of the seventh centenary of
the death of the Angelic Doctor: Without doubt, Thomas possessed
supremely the courage of the truth, a freedom of spirit in confronting new
problems, the intellectual honesty of those who allow Christianity to be
contaminated neither by secular philosophy nor by a prejudiced rejection
of it. He passed therefore into the history of Christian thought as a
pioneer of the new path of philosophy and universal culture. The key point
and almost the kernel of the solution which, with all the brilliance of
his prophetic intuition, he gave to the new encounter of faith and reason
was a reconciliation between the secularity of the world and the
radicality of the Gospel, thus avoiding the unnatural tendency to negate
the world and its values while at the same time keeping faith with the
supreme and inexorable demands of the supernatural order.(47)
44. Another of the great insights of Saint Thomas was his perception of
the role of the Holy Spirit in the process by which knowledge matures into
wisdom. From the first pages of his Summa Theologiae,(48) Aquinas
was keen to show the primacy of the wisdom which is the gift of the Holy
Spirit and which opens the way to a knowledge of divine realities. His
theology allows us to understand what is distinctive of wisdom in its
close link with faith and knowledge of the divine. This wisdom comes to
know by way of connaturality; it presupposes faith and eventually
formulates its right judgement on the basis of the truth of faith itself:
The wisdom named among the gifts of the Holy Spirit is distinct from
the wisdom found among the intellectual virtues. This second wisdom is
acquired through study, but the first 'comes from on high', as Saint James
puts it. This also distinguishes it from faith, since faith accepts divine
truth as it is. But the gift of wisdom enables judgement according to
divine truth.(49)
Yet the priority accorded this wisdom does not lead the Angelic Doctor
to overlook the presence of two other complementary forms of wisdomphilosophical
wisdom, which is based upon the capacity of the intellect, for all its
natural limitations, to explore reality, and theological wisdom,
which is based upon Revelation and which explores the contents of faith,
entering the very mystery of God.
Profoundly convinced that whatever its source, truth is of the
Holy Spirit (omne verum a quocumque dicatur a Spiritu Sancto est)
(50) Saint Thomas was impartial in his love of truth. He sought truth
wherever it might be found and gave consummate demonstration of its
universality. In him, the Church's Magisterium has seen and recognized the
passion for truth; and, precisely because it stays consistently within the
horizon of universal, objective and transcendent truth, his thought scales
heights unthinkable to human intelligence.(51) Rightly, then,
he may be called an apostle of the truth.(52) Looking
unreservedly to truth, the realism of Thomas could recognize the
objectivity of truth and produce not merely a philosophy of what
seems to be but a philosophy of what is.
The drama of the separation of faith and reason
45. With the rise of the first universities, theology came more directly
into contact with other forms of learning and scientific research.
Although they insisted upon the organic link between theology and
philosophy, Saint Albert the Great and Saint Thomas were the first to
recognize the autonomy which philosophy and the sciences needed if they
were to perform well in their respective fields of research. From the late
Medieval period onwards, however, the legitimate distinction between the
two forms of learning became more and more a fateful separation. As a
result of the exaggerated rationalism of certain thinkers, positions grew
more radical and there emerged eventually a philosophy which was separate
from and absolutely independent of the contents of faith. Another of the
many consequences of this separation was an ever deeper mistrust with
regard to reason itself. In a spirit both sceptical and agnostic, some
began to voice a general mistrust, which led some to focus more on faith
and others to deny its rationality altogether.
In short, what for Patristic and Medieval thought was in both theory and
practice a profound unity, producing knowledge capable of reaching the
highest forms of speculation, was destroyed by systems which espoused the
cause of rational knowledge sundered from faith and meant to take the
place of faith.
46. The more influential of these radical positions are well known and
high in profile, especially in the history of the West. It is not too much
to claim that the development of a good part of modern philosophy has seen
it move further and further away from Christian Revelation, to the point
of setting itself quite explicitly in opposition. This process reached its
apogee in the last century. Some representatives of idealism sought in
various ways to transform faith and its contents, even the mystery of the
Death and Resurrection of Jesus, into dialectical structures which could
be grasped by reason. Opposed to this kind of thinking were various forms
of atheistic humanism, expressed in philosophical terms, which regarded
faith as alienating and damaging to the development of a full rationality.
They did not hesitate to present themselves as new religions serving as a
basis for projects which, on the political and social plane, gave rise to
totalitarian systems which have been disastrous for humanity.
In the field of scientific research, a positivistic mentality took hold
which not only abandoned the Christian vision of the world, but more
especially rejected every appeal to a metaphysical or moral vision. It
follows that certain scientists, lacking any ethical point of reference,
are in danger of putting at the centre of their concerns something other
than the human person and the entirety of the person's life. Further
still, some of these, sensing the opportunities of technological progress,
seem to succumb not only to a market-based logic, but also to the
temptation of a quasi-divine power over nature and even over the human
being.
As a result of the crisis of rationalism, what has appeared finally is
nihilism. As a philosophy of nothingness, it has a certain
attraction for people of our time. Its adherents claim that the search is
an end in itself, without any hope or possibility of ever attaining the
goal of truth. In the nihilist interpretation, life is no more than an
occasion for sensations and experiences in which the ephemeral has pride
of place. Nihilism is at the root of the widespread mentality which claims
that a definitive commitment should no longer be made, because everything
is fleeting and provisional.
47. It should also be borne in mind that the role of philosophy itself
has changed in modern culture. From universal wisdom and learning, it has
been gradually reduced to one of the many fields of human knowing; indeed
in some ways it has been consigned to a wholly marginal role. Other forms
of rationality have acquired an ever higher profile, making philosophical
learning appear all the more peripheral. These forms of rationality are
directed not towards the contemplation of truth and the search for the
ultimate goal and meaning of life; but instead, as instrumental
reason, they are directedactually or potentiallytowards
the promotion of utilitarian ends, towards enjoyment or power.
In my first Encyclical Letter I stressed the danger of absolutizing such
an approach when I wrote: The man of today seems ever to be under
threat from what he produces, that is to say from the result of the work
of his hands and, even more so, of the work of his intellect and the
tendencies of his will. All too soon, and often in an unforeseeable way,
what this manifold activity of man yields is not only subject to
'alienation', in the sense that it is simply taken away from the person
who produces it, but rather it turns against man himself, at least in
part, through the indirect consequences of its effects returning on
himself. It is or can be directed against him. This seems to make up the
main chapter of the drama of present-day human existence in its broadest
and universal dimension. Man therefore lives increasingly in fear. He is
afraid of what he producesnot all of it, of course, or even most of
it, but part of it and precisely that part that contains a special share
of his genius and initiativecan radically turn against himself.(53)
In the wake of these cultural shifts, some philosophers have abandoned
the search for truth in itself and made their sole aim the attainment of a
subjective certainty or a pragmatic sense of utility. This in turn has
obscured the true dignity of reason, which is no longer equipped to know
the truth and to seek the absolute.
48. This rapid survey of the history of philosophy, then, reveals a
growing separation between faith and philosophical reason. Yet closer
scrutiny shows that even in the philosophical thinking of those who helped
drive faith and reason further apart there are found at times precious and
seminal insights which, if pursued and developed with mind and heart
rightly tuned, can lead to the discovery of truth's way. Such insights are
found, for instance, in penetrating analyses of perception and experience,
of the imaginary and the unconscious, of personhood and intersubjectivity,
of freedom and values, of time and history. The theme of death as well can
become for all thinkers an incisive appeal to seek within themselves the
true meaning of their own life. But this does not mean that the link
between faith and reason as it now stands does not need to be carefully
examined, because each without the other is impoverished and enfeebled.
Deprived of what Revelation offers, reason has taken side-tracks which
expose it to the danger of losing sight of its final goal. Deprived of
reason, faith has stressed feeling and experience, and so run the risk of
no longer being a universal proposition. It is an illusion to think that
faith, tied to weak reasoning, might be more penetrating; on the contrary,
faith then runs the grave risk of withering into myth or superstition. By
the same token, reason which is unrelated to an adult faith is not
prompted to turn its gaze to the newness and radicality of being.
This is why I make this strong and insistent appealnot, I trust,
untimelythat faith and philosophy recover the profound unity which
allows them to stand in harmony with their nature without compromising
their mutual autonomy. The parrhesia of faith must be matched by
the boldness of reason.
CHAPTER V
THE MAGISTERIUM'S INTERVENTIONS IN PHILOSOPHICAL MATTERS
The Magisterium's discernment as diakonia of the truth
49. The Church has no philosophy of her own nor does she canonize any
one particular philosophy in preference to others.(54) The underlying
reason for this reluctance is that, even when it engages theology,
philosophy must remain faithful to its own principles and methods.
Otherwise there would be no guarantee that it would remain oriented to
truth and that it was moving towards truth by way of a process governed by
reason. A philosophy which did not proceed in the light of reason
according to its own principles and methods would serve little purpose. At
the deepest level, the autonomy which philosophy enjoys is rooted in the
fact that reason is by its nature oriented to truth and is equipped
moreover with the means necessary to arrive at truth. A philosophy
conscious of this as its constitutive status cannot but
respect the demands and the data of revealed truth.
Yet history shows that philosophyespecially modern philosophyhas
taken wrong turns and fallen into error. It is neither the task nor the
competence of the Magisterium to intervene in order to make good the
lacunas of deficient philosophical discourse. Rather, it is the
Magisterium's duty to respond clearly and strongly when controversial
philosophical opinions threaten right understanding of what has been
revealed, and when false and partial theories which sow the seed of
serious error, confusing the pure and simple faith of the People of God,
begin to spread more widely.
50. In the light of faith, therefore, the Church's Magisterium can and
must authoritatively exercise a critical discernment of opinions and
philosophies which contradict Christian doctrine.(55) It is the task of
the Magisterium in the first place to indicate which philosophical
presuppositions and conclusions are incompatible with revealed truth, thus
articulating the demands which faith's point of view makes of philosophy.
Moreover, as philosophical learning has developed, different schools of
thought have emerged. This pluralism also imposes upon the Magisterium the
responsibility of expressing a judgement as to whether or not the basic
tenets of these different schools are compatible with the demands of the
word of God and theological enquiry.
It is the Church's duty to indicate the elements in a philosophical
system which are incompatible with her own faith. In fact, many
philosophical opinionsconcerning God, the human being, human freedom
and ethical behaviour engage the Church directly, because they touch
on the revealed truth of which she is the guardian. In making this
discernment, we Bishops have the duty to be witnesses to the truth,
fulfilling a humble but tenacious ministry of service which every
philosopher should appreciate, a service in favour of recta ratio,
or of reason reflecting rightly upon what is true.
51. This discernment, however, should not be seen as primarily negative,
as if the Magisterium intended to abolish or limit any possible mediation.
On the contrary, the Magisterium's interventions are intended above all to
prompt, promote and encourage philosophical enquiry. Besides, philosophers
are the first to understand the need for self-criticism, the correction of
errors and the extension of the too restricted terms in which their
thinking has been framed. In particular, it is necessary to keep in mind
the unity of truth, even if its formulations are shaped by history and
produced by human reason wounded and weakened by sin. This is why no
historical form of philosophy can legitimately claim to embrace the
totality of truth, nor to be the complete explanation of the human being,
of the world and of the human being's relationship with God.
Today, then, with the proliferation of systems, methods, concepts and
philosophical theses which are often extremely complex, the need for a
critical discernment in the light of faith becomes more urgent, even if it
remains a daunting task. Given all of reason's inherent and historical
limitations, it is difficult enough to recognize the inalienable powers
proper to it; but it is still more difficult at times to discern in
specific philosophical claims what is valid and fruitful from faith's
point of view and what is mistaken or dangerous. Yet the Church knows that
the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden in Christ (Col
2:3) and therefore intervenes in order to stimulate philosophical
enquiry, lest it stray from the path which leads to recognition of the
mystery.
52. It is not only in recent times that the Magisterium of the Church
has intervened to make its mind known with regard to particular
philosophical teachings. It is enough to recall, by way of example, the
pronouncements made through the centuries concerning theories which argued
in favour of the pre-existence of the soul,(56) or concerning the
different forms of idolatry and esoteric superstition found in
astrological speculations,(57) without forgetting the more systematic
pronouncements against certain claims of Latin Averroism which were
incompatible with the Christian faith.(58)
If the Magisterium has spoken out more frequently since the middle of
the last century, it is because in that period not a few Catholics felt it
their duty to counter various streams of modern thought with a philosophy
of their own. At this point, the Magisterium of the Church was obliged to
be vigilant lest these philosophies developed in ways which were
themselves erroneous and negative. The censures were delivered
even-handedly: on the one hand, fideism (59) and radical
traditionalism,(60) for their distrust of reason's natural capacities,
and, on the other, rationalism (61) and ontologism (62)
because they attributed to natural reason a knowledge which only the light
of faith could confer. The positive elements of this debate were assembled
in the Dogmatic Constitution Dei Filius, in which for the first
time an Ecumenical Councilin this case, the First Vatican Councilpronounced
solemnly on the relationship between reason and faith. The teaching
contained in this document strongly and positively marked the
philosophical research of many believers and remains today a standard
reference-point for correct and coherent Christian thinking in this
regard.
53. The Magisterium's pronouncements have been concerned less with
individual philosophical theses than with the need for rational and hence
ultimately philosophical knowledge for the understanding of faith. In
synthesizing and solemnly reaffirming the teachings constantly proposed to
the faithful by the ordinary Papal Magisterium, the First Vatican Council
showed how inseparable and at the same time how distinct were faith and
reason, Revelation and natural knowledge of God. The Council began with
the basic criterion, presupposed by Revelation itself, of the natural
knowability of the existence of God, the beginning and end of all
things,(63) and concluded with the solemn assertion quoted earlier: There
are two orders of knowledge, distinct not only in their point of
departure, but also in their object.(64) Against all forms of
rationalism, then, there was a need to affirm the distinction between the
mysteries of faith and the findings of philosophy, and the transcendence
and precedence of the mysteries of faith over the findings of philosophy.
Against the temptations of fideism, however, it was necessary to stress
the unity of truth and thus the positive contribution which rational
knowledge can and must make to faith's knowledge: Even if faith is
superior to reason there can never be a true divergence between faith and
reason, since the same God who reveals the mysteries and bestows the gift
of faith has also placed in the human spirit the light of reason. This God
could not deny himself, nor could the truth ever contradict the truth.(65)
54. In our own century too the Magisterium has revisited the theme on a
number of occasions, warning against the lure of rationalism. Here the
pronouncements of Pope Saint Pius X are pertinent, stressing as they did
that at the basis of Modernism were philosophical claims which were
phenomenist, agnostic and immanentist.(66) Nor can the importance of the
Catholic rejection of Marxist philosophy and atheistic Communism be
forgotten.(67)
Later, in his Encyclical Letter Humani Generis, Pope Pius XII
warned against mistaken interpretations linked to evolutionism,
existentialism and historicism. He made it clear that these theories had
not been proposed and developed by theologians, but had their origins outside
the sheepfold of Christ.(68) He added, however, that errors of this
kind should not simply be rejected but should be examined critically: Catholic
theologians and philosophers, whose grave duty it is to defend natural and
supernatural truth and instill it in human hearts, cannot afford to ignore
these more or less erroneous opinions. Rather they must come to understand
these theories well, not only because diseases are properly treated only
if rightly diagnosed and because even in these false theories some truth
is found at times, but because in the end these theories provoke a more
discriminating discussion and evaluation of philosophical and theological
truths.(69)
In accomplishing its specific task in service of the Roman Pontiff's
universal Magisterium,(70) the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith has
more recently had to intervene to re-emphasize the danger of an uncritical
adoption by some liberation theologians of opinions and methods drawn from
Marxism.(71)
In the past, then, the Magisterium has on different occasions and in
different ways offered its discernment in philosophical matters. My
revered Predecessors have thus made an invaluable contribution which must
not be forgotten.
55. Surveying the situation today, we see that the problems of other
times have returned, but in a new key. It is no longer a matter of
questions of interest only to certain individuals and groups, but
convictions so widespread that they have become to some extent the common
mind. An example of this is the deep-seated distrust of reason which has
surfaced in the most recent developments of much of philosophical
research, to the point where there is talk at times of the end of
metaphysics. Philosophy is expected to rest content with more modest
tasks such as the simple interpretation of facts or an enquiry into
restricted fields of human knowing or its structures.
In theology too the temptations of other times have reappeared. In some
contemporary theologies, for instance, a certain rationalism is
gaining ground, especially when opinions thought to be philosophically
well founded are taken as normative for theological research. This happens
particularly when theologians, through lack of philosophical competence,
allow themselves to be swayed uncritically by assertions which have become
part of current parlance and culture but which are poorly grounded in
reason.(72)
There are also signs of a resurgence of fideism, which fails to
recognize the importance of rational knowledge and philosophical discourse
for the understanding of faith, indeed for the very possibility of belief
in God. One currently widespread symptom of this fideistic tendency is a biblicism
which tends to make the reading and exegesis of Sacred Scripture the sole
criterion of truth. In consequence, the word of God is identified with
Sacred Scripture alone, thus eliminating the doctrine of the Church which
the Second Vatican Council stressed quite specifically. Having recalled
that the word of God is present in both Scripture and Tradition,(73) the
Constitution Dei Verbum continues emphatically: Sacred
Tradition and Sacred Scripture comprise a single sacred deposit of the
word of God entrusted to the Church. Embracing this deposit and united
with their pastors, the People of God remain always faithful to the
teaching of the Apostles.(74) Scripture, therefore, is not the
Church's sole point of reference. The supreme rule of her faith
(75) derives from the unity which the Spirit has created between Sacred
Tradition, Sacred Scripture and the Magisterium of the Church in a
reciprocity which means that none of the three can survive without the
others.(76)
Moreover, one should not underestimate the danger inherent in seeking to
derive the truth of Sacred Scripture from the use of one method alone,
ignoring the need for a more comprehensive exegesis which enables the
exegete, together with the whole Church, to arrive at the full sense of
the texts. Those who devote themselves to the study of Sacred Scripture
should always remember that the various hermeneutical approaches have
their own philosophical underpinnings, which need to be carefully
evaluated before they are applied to the sacred texts.
Other modes of latent fideism appear in the scant consideration accorded
to speculative theology, and in disdain for the classical philosophy from
which the terms of both the understanding of faith and the actual
formulation of dogma have been drawn. My revered Predecessor Pope Pius XII
warned against such neglect of the philosophical tradition and against
abandonment of the traditional terminology.(77)
56. In brief, there are signs of a widespread distrust of universal and
absolute statements, especially among those who think that truth is born
of consensus and not of a consonance between intellect and objective
reality. In a world subdivided into so many specialized fields, it is not
hard to see how difficult it can be to acknowledge the full and ultimate
meaning of life which has traditionally been the goal of philosophy.
Nonetheless, in the light of faith which finds in Jesus Christ this
ultimate meaning, I cannot but encourage philosophersbe they
Christian or notto trust in the power of human reason and not to set
themselves goals that are too modest in their philosophizing. The lesson
of history in this millennium now drawing to a close shows that this is
the path to follow: it is necessary not to abandon the passion for
ultimate truth, the eagerness to search for it or the audacity to forge
new paths in the search. It is faith which stirs reason to move beyond all
isolation and willingly to run risks so that it may attain whatever is
beautiful, good and true. Faith thus becomes the convinced and convincing
advocate of reason.
The Church's interest in philosophy
57. Yet the Magisterium does more than point out the misperceptions and
the mistakes of philosophical theories. With no less concern it has sought
to stress the basic principles of a genuine renewal of philosophical
enquiry, indicating as well particular paths to be taken. In this regard,
Pope Leo XIII with his Encyclical Letter Æterni Patris took
a step of historic importance for the life of the Church, since it remains
to this day the one papal document of such authority devoted entirely to
philosophy. The great Pope revisited and developed the First Vatican
Council's teaching on the relationship between faith and reason, showing
how philosophical thinking contributes in fundamental ways to faith and
theological learning.(78) More than a century later, many of the insights
of his Encyclical Letter have lost none of their interest from either a
practical or pedagogical point of viewmost particularly, his
insistence upon the incomparable value of the philosophy of Saint Thomas.
A renewed insistence upon the thought of the Angelic Doctor seemed to Pope
Leo XIII the best way to recover the practice of a philosophy consonant
with the demands of faith. Just when Saint Thomas distinguishes
perfectly between faith and reason, the Pope writes, he unites
them in bonds of mutual friendship, conceding to each its specific rights
and to each its specific dignity.(79)
58. The positive results of the papal summons are well known. Studies of
the thought of Saint Thomas and other Scholastic writers received new
impetus. Historical studies flourished, resulting in a rediscovery of the
riches of Medieval thought, which until then had been largely unknown; and
there emerged new Thomistic schools. With the use of historical method,
knowledge of the works of Saint Thomas increased greatly, and many
scholars had courage enough to introduce the Thomistic tradition into the
philosophical and theological discussions of the day. The most influential
Catholic theologians of the present century, to whose thinking and
research the Second Vatican Council was much indebted, were products of
this revival of Thomistic philosophy. Throughout the twentieth century,
the Church has been served by a powerful array of thinkers formed in the
school of the Angelic Doctor.
59. Yet the Thomistic and neo-Thomistic revival was not the only sign of
a resurgence of philosophical thought in culture of Christian inspiration.
Earlier still, and parallel to Pope Leo's call, there had emerged a number
of Catholic philosophers who, adopting more recent currents of thought and
according to a specific method, produced philosophical works of great
influence and lasting value. Some devised syntheses so remarkable that
they stood comparison with the great systems of idealism. Others
established the epistemological foundations for a new consideration of
faith in the light of a renewed understanding of moral consciousness;
others again produced a philosophy which, starting with an analysis of
immanence, opened the way to the transcendent; and there were finally
those who sought to combine the demands of faith with the perspective of
phenomenological method. From different quarters, then, modes of
philosophical speculation have continued to emerge and have sought to keep
alive the great tradition of Christian thought which unites faith and
reason.
60. The Second Vatican Council, for its part, offers a rich and fruitful
teaching concerning philosophy. I cannot fail to note, especially in the
context of this Encyclical Letter, that one chapter of the Constitution
Gaudium et Spes amounts to a virtual compendium of the biblical
anthropology from which philosophy too can draw inspiration. The chapter
deals with the value of the human person created in the image of God,
explains the dignity and superiority of the human being over the rest of
creation, and declares the transcendent capacity of human reason.(80) The
problem of atheism is also dealt with in Gaudium et Spes, and the
flaws of its philosophical vision are identified, especially in relation
to the dignity and freedom of the human person.(81) There is no doubt that
the climactic section of the chapter is profoundly significant for
philosophy; and it was this which I took up in my first Encyclical Letter
Redemptor Hominis and which serves as one of the constant
reference-points of my teaching: The truth is that only in the
mystery of the Incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light. For
Adam, the first man, was a type of him who was to come, Christ the Lord.
Christ, the new Adam, in the very revelation of the mystery of the Father
and of his love, fully reveals man to himself and brings to light his most
high calling.(82)
The Council also dealt with the study of philosophy required of
candidates for the priesthood; and its recommendations have implications
for Christian education as a whole. These are the Council's words: The
philosophical disciplines should be taught in such a way that students
acquire in the first place a solid and harmonious knowledge of the human
being, of the world and of God, based upon the philosophical heritage
which is enduringly valid, yet taking into account currents of modern
philosophy.(83)
These directives have been reiterated and developed in a number of other
magisterial documents in order to guarantee a solid philosophical
formation, especially for those preparing for theological studies. I have
myself emphasized several times the importance of this philosophical
formation for those who one day, in their pastoral life, will have to
address the aspirations of the contemporary world and understand the
causes of certain behaviour in order to respond in appropriate ways.(84)
61. If it has been necessary from time to time to intervene on this
question, to reiterate the value of the Ang |