Cardinal Parolin at UNESCO:
The Church has never regarded culture or education
as mere tools of evangelisation
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Vatican City, 3 June 2015 (VIS) – Cardinal
Secretary of State Pietro Parolin spoke this morning at the conference
“Educating today and tomorrow”, organised by the Mission of the Holy See
permanent observer at UNESCO, with the Congregation for Catholic Education, to
celebrate 70 years since the founding of this United Nations organ, the 50th
anniversary of the conciliar declaration “Gravissimumeducationis”, a key text
for Catholic education, and 25 years since the apostolic constitution “Ex corde
Ecclesiae”, a document of reference for Catholic universities.
In his discourse the cardinal presented an overview
of the history of the educational service offered by the Catholic Church since
its origins, emphasising that the pedagogy of the Church is
based on biblical anthropology in which the relationship of love and
reciprocity between man and God appears from Genesis onwards. He also
underlined the importance attributed to this theme by Vatican Council II, in
which a full and complete education is proposed, aimed at laying the
foundations for an inclusive and peaceful society open to dialogue, and went on
to mention current educational challenges and perspectives, such as the extreme
fragmentation of knowledge and the worrying lack of communication between different
disciplines. The Secretary of State affirmed the need to counteract the concept
of the human being as a machine for production, proposing instead a vision of
the person, and reiterated the need for formation in dialogue and the
construction of fraternity.
“Culture and education have never been considered
by the Catholic Church merely as tools for evangelisation, but rather as
dimensions of humanity with high intrinsic value. Investment in the education
of the younger generations is a condition for the 'progressive development of
peoples … an object of deep interest and concern to the Church. This is
particularly true in the case of those peoples who are trying to escape the
ravages of hunger, poverty, endemic disease and ignorance; of those who are seeking
a larger share in the benefits of civilisation and a more active improvement of
their human qualities', as Paul VI affirmed in his encyclical
'Populorumprogressio'. The Church shares in the efforts for greater access to
literacy, to education for all and for continuing formation. These pillars are
made even more solid with regard to the fundamental commitment in favour of
ethnic and religious minorities and for the female gender, so important for the
harmonious growth of society”.
The Catholic Church, an “expert in humanity”, has
placed education at the centre of her mission and continues to consider it as a
priority, especially in a context of “global emergency for education”, caused
both by processes of change and by a reductionist perspective that tends to
limit the scope of universal education to a purely economic aspect. In fact,
looking closely, the recent financial crisis has been of an entropic nature: it
gave rise to a loss of meaning and consequent social apathy. By this refusal,
there is a tendency to lose one's orientation towards the common good and to
drift away from the propulsive value of relationality in the name of a
minimalist anthropology of 'homo oeconomicus', which stifles interpersonal
relationships”.
He continued, “We live in times in which many
perceive the signs of an epochal transition. As the history of humanity shows
us, these periods are marked by instability and disorientation. Faced with the
intensification of sentiments of opposition and hatred, it would appear
necessary to start to 'share beauty' and 'praise creation', acknowledging the
contribution that each person can offer and proposing humble and patient
closeness between individuals, communities and peoples. At the foundation of
this shared responsibility there is, as John Paul II said in his address to
this same prestigious institution, “a fundamental dimension, capable of rocking
the foundations of the systems that structure the whole of humanity and of
freeing human existence, individual and collective, from the threats that weigh
upon it. This fundamental dimension is man, man in his integrity, man who lives
in both the sphere of material values and the sphere of spiritual values.
Respect for the inalienable rights of the human person is the root of all
this”.
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