To the
participants in a Conference on “The Right to Life and Europe”
EUROPE'S TRUE DIGNITY
LIES IN RESPECT FOR THE RIGHT TO LIFE
18 December 1987
On Friday, 18
December, the Holy Father received in audience the participants in a study
conference on “The Right to Life and Europe”. He addressed them as follows:
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Young Friends,
1. I
am delighted to meet you on the occasion of the study conference being held on
“The Right to Life and Europe”. I greet you all most warmly.
The
theme which is at the heart of your reflections is of great importance for the
future of Europe, indeed, of every people and
nation. Unconditional respect for the
right to life of the conceived but unborn human person is one of the pillars sustaining
every civil society. When a State places
its institutions at the disposal of those who may act to suppress the life of
the unborn child it renounces one of its primary duties and its own dignity as
a state. St. Thomas Aquinas, one of the
greatest teachers of the European conscience, teaches that civil law “has the
force of law to the degree that it is just” (Summa Theologica, I-II, q. 95, a. 2). This justice, as the Angelic Doctor
immediately explains, is founded on the natural law itself, so that a law not
in conformity with it “is not a law, but the corruption of the law” (ibid.).
It
is not necessary to have recourse to the Christian faith to understand these
fundamental truths. When the Church
recalls them, it is not in an effort to introduce a Christian State; she simply wishes to promote a
human State, a State which recognizes as its primary duty the defence of the
fundamental rights of the human person, especially of those who are
weakest. And who is weaker than an unborn
child?
Contradiction with
European culture
2. You
have chosen to reflect in particular on the right to life of the unborn and the
destiny of Europe.
It is easy to note the flagrant contradiction existing between the
legalization of abortion, unfortunately in effect throughout almost all of Europe, and what constitutes the greatness
of European culture. This culture, whose
principal sources are found in tits Greek and Latin heritage, has received from
Christianity the enlightening contribution which has allowed it to reach
superior heights. With Christianity,
Europe has discovered the dignity of every human person as such, a discovery
which has made European culture an eminently humanistic one. With its Latin roots, it has been a school of
law, understood as the rational organization of society upon the foundation of
justice. Heir to Greek culture, European
culture has seen in the right use of reason - conceived as the capacity to
grasp reality without allowing oneself to be dominated by self-interest - one
of the clearest signs of man's greatness.
Into
this incomparable cultural heritage the legalization of abortion has been
inserted as a foreign body, bearing within itself the seeds of corruption. How is it still possible to speak of dignity
of every human person when the killing of the weakest and most innocent is
permitted? In the name of what justice
is the most unjust of discriminations among persons practised: the declaration of some as worthy of defence
and others as lacking that dignity? What sort of reason is at work here, if
even for utilitarian or hedonistic motives the elimination of an innocent human
being is allowed? In truth, on this
issue Europe is risking her future destiny,
because she is showing signs of moral decay, and even of demographic
impoverishment. She could thus see the
breakdown of a cultural patrimony passed on to her by illustrious thinkers,
great jurists and remarkable saints.
3.
Your presence and your keen participation in these days of study, however, show
the seriousness and depth of your will to change the course of Europe.
Do not let your awareness of being a minority hinder you. The history of Europe illustrates that often the great
qualitative leaps of her culture have been realized through the witness of individuals,
often paid for with personal sacrifice.
Power lies in truth itself and not in numbers. Tomorrow's Europe is in your hands. Be worthy of this undertaking. You are working to restore to Europe her true dignity, that of being a
place where the person, every person, is affirmed in his incomparable dignity.
In
invoking upon you the consolation of divine assistance, I bless you from my
heart.