Peace is possible and it is a duty! An Ever Timely Commitment:
Teaching Peace
Message of Pope John Paul II for the Celebration Of The World Day
Of Peace, 1 January 2004
My words are addressed to you, the Leaders of the nations, who have
the duty of promoting peace!
To you, Jurists, committed to tracing paths to peaceful agreement,
preparing conventions and treaties which strengthen international
legality!
To you, Teachers of the young, who on all continents work tirelessly
to form consciences in the ways of understanding and dialogue!
And to you too, men and women tempted to turn to the unacceptable
means of terrorism and thus compromise at its root the very cause for
which you are fighting!
All of you, hear the humble appeal of the Successor of Peter who
cries out: today too, at the beginning of the New Year 2004, peace
remains possible. And if peace is possible, it is also a duty!
A practical initiative
My first Message for the World Day of Peace, in the beginning of
January 1979, was centred on the theme: 'To Reach Peace, Teach Peace'.
That New Year's Message followed in the path traced by Pope Paul VI
of venerable memory, who had wished to celebrate on January 1 each year
a World Day of Prayer for Peace. I recall the words of the late Pontiff
for the New Year 1968: 'It would be Our desire, then, that this
celebration take place each year as a sign of hope and promise, at the
beginning of the calendar which measures and guides the journey of
human life through time, in order that Peace, with its just and
salutary equilibrium, will dominate the unfolding of history yet to
come'.
Faithful to the wishes expressed by my venerable Predecessor on the
Chair of Peter, each year I have continued this noble tradition by
dedicating the first day of the civil year to reflection and to prayer
for peace in the world.
In the twenty-five years of Pontificate which the Lord has thus far
granted me, I have not failed to speak out before the Church and the
world, inviting believers and all persons of good will to take up the
cause of peace and to help bring about this fundamental good, thereby
assuring the world a better future, one marked by peaceful coexistence
and mutual respect.
Once more this year I feel bound to invite all men and women, on
every continent, to celebrate a new World Day of Peace. Humanity needs
now more than ever to rediscover the path of concord, overwhelmed as it
is by selfishness and hatred, by the thirst for power and the lust for
vengeance.
The science of peace
The eleven Messages addressed to the world by Pope Paul VI
progressively mapped out the path to be followed in attaining the ideal
of peace. Slowly but surely the great Pontiff set forth the various
chapters of a true 'science of peace'. It can be helpful to recall the
themes of the Messages bequeathed to us by Pope Paul VI for this
occasion. Each of these Messages continues to be timely today. Indeed,
before the tragedy of the wars which at the beginning of the Third
Millennium are still causing bloodshed throughout the world, especially
in the Middle East, they take on at times the tone of prophetic
admonishments.
A primer of peace
For my part, throughout these twenty-five years of my Pontificate, I
have sought to advance along the path marked out by my venerable
Predecessor. At the dawn of each new year I have invited people of good
will to reflect, in the light of reason and of faith, on different
aspects of an orderly coexistence.
The result has been a synthesis of teaching about peace which is a
kind of primer on this fundamental theme: a primer easy to understand
by those who are well-disposed, but at the same time quite demanding
for anyone concerned for the future of humanity.
The various colours of the prism of peace have now been amply
illustrated. What remains now is to work to ensure that the ideal of a
peaceful coexistence, with its specific requirements, will become part
of the consciousness of individuals and peoples. We Christians see the
commitment to educate ourselves and others to peace as something at the
very heart of our religion. For Christians, in fact, to proclaim peace
is to announce Christ who is 'our peace' (Eph 2:14); it is to announce
his Gospel, which is a 'Gospel of peace' (Eph 6:15); it is to call all
people to the beatitude of being 'peacemakers' (cf. Mt 5:9).
Teaching peace
In my Message for the World Day of Peace on 1 January 1979 I made
this appeal: To Reach Peace, Teach Peace. Today that appeal is more
urgent than ever, because men and women, in the face of the tragedies
which continue to afflict humanity, are tempted to yield to fatalism,
as if peace were an unattainable ideal.
The Church, on the other hand, has always taught and continues today
to teach a very simple axiom: peace is possible. Indeed, the Church
does not tire of repeating that peace is a duty. It must be built on
the four pillars indicated by Blessed John XXIII in his Encyclical
Pacem in Terris: truth, justice, love and freedom. A duty is thus
imposed upon all those who love peace: that of teaching these ideals to
new generations, in order to prepare a better future for all mankind.
Teaching legality
In this task of teaching peace, there is a particularly urgent need
to lead individuals and peoples to respect the international order and
to respect the commitments assumed by the Authorities which
legitimately represent them. Peace and international law are closely
linked to each another: law favours peace.
From the very dawn of civilization, developing human communities
sought to establish agreements and pacts which would avoid the
arbitrary use of force and enable them to seek a peaceful solution of
any controversies which might arise. Alongside the legal systems of the
individual peoples there progressively grew up another set of norms
which came to be known as ius gentium (the law of the nations). With
the passage of time, this body of law gradually expanded and was
refined in the light of the historical experiences of the different
peoples.
This process was greatly accelerated with the birth of modern
States. From the sixteenth century on, jurists, philosophers and
theologians were engaged in developing the various headings of
international law and in grounding it in the fundamental postulates of
the natural law. This process led with increasing force to the
formulation of universal principles which are prior to and superior to
the internal law of States, and which take into account the unity and
the common vocation of the human family.
Central among all these is surely the principle that pacta sunt
servanda: accords freely signed must be honoured. This is the pivotal
and exceptionless presupposition of every relationship between
responsible contracting parties. The violation of this principle
necessarily leads to a situation of illegality and consequently to
friction and disputes which would not fail to have lasting negative
repercussions. It is appropriate to recall this fundamental rule,
especially at times when there is a temptation to appeal to the law of
force rather than to the force of law.
One of these moments was surely the drama which humanity experienced
during the Second World War: an abyss of violence, destruction and
death unlike anything previously known.
Respect for law
That war, with the horrors and the appalling violations of human
dignity which it occasioned, led to a profound renewal of the
international legal order. The defence and promotion of peace were set
at the centre of a broadly modernized system of norms and institutions.
The task of watching over global peace and security and with
encouraging the efforts of States to preserve and guarantee these
fundamental goods of humanity was entrusted by Governments to an
organization established for this purpose Š the United Nations
Organization Š with a Security Council invested with broad
discretionary power. Pivotal to the system was the prohibition of the
use of force. This prohibition, according to the well-known Chapter VII
of the United Nations Charter, makes provision for only two exceptions.
The first confirms the natural right to legitimate defence, to be
exercised in specific ways and in the context of the United Nations:
and consequently also within the traditional limits of necessity and
proportionality.
The other exception is represented by the system of collective
security, which gives the Security Council competence and
responsibility for the preservation of peace, with power of decision
and ample discretion.
The system developed with the United Nations Charter was meant 'to
save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our
lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind'. In the decades which
followed, however, the division of the international community into
opposing blocs, the cold war in one part of the world, the outbreak of
violent conflicts in other areas and the phenomenon of terrorism
produced a growing break with the ideas and expectations of the
immediate post-war period.
A new international order
It must be acknowledged, however, that the United Nations
Organization, even with limitations and delays due in great part to the
failures of its members, has made a notable contribution to the
promotion of respect for human dignity, the freedom of peoples and the
requirements of development, thus preparing the cultural and
institutional soil for the building of peace.
The activity of national Governments will be greatly encouraged by
the realization that the ideals of the United Nations have become
widely diffused, particularly through the practical gestures of
solidarity and peace made by the many individuals also involved in
Non-Governmental Organizations and in Movements for human rights.
This represents a significant incentive for a reform which would
enable the United Nations Organization to function effectively for the
pursuit of its own stated ends, which remain valid: 'humanity today is
in a new and more difficult phase of its genuine development. It needs
a greater degree of international ordering'. States must consider this
objective as a clear moral and political obligation which calls for
prudence and determination. Here I would repeat the words of
encouragement which I spoke in 1995: 'The United Nations Organization
needs to rise more and more above the cold status of an administrative
institution and to become a moral centre where all the nations of the
world feel at home and develop a shared awareness of being, as it were,
a family of nations'.
The deadly scourge of terrorism
Today international law is hard pressed to provide solutions to
situations of conflict arising from the changed landscape of the
contemporary world. These situations of conflict frequently involve
agents which are not themselves States but rather entities derived from
the collapse of States, or connected to independence movements, or
linked to trained criminal organizations. A legal system made up of
norms established down the centuries as a means of disciplining
relations between sovereign States finds it difficult to deal with
conflicts which also involve entities incapable of being considered
States in the traditional sense. This is particularly the case with
terrorist groups.
The scourge of terrorism has become more virulent in recent years
and has produced brutal massacres which have in turn put even greater
obstacles in the way of dialogue and negotiation, increasing tensions
and aggravating problems, especially in the Middle East.
Even so, if it is to be won, the fight against terrorism cannot be
limited solely to repressive and punitive operations. It is essential
that the use of force, even when necessary, be accompanied by a
courageous and lucid analysis of the reasons behind terrorist attacks.
The fight against terrorism must be conducted also on the political and
educational levels: on the one hand, by eliminating the underlying
causes of situations of injustice which frequently drive people to more
desperate and violent acts; and on the other hand, by insisting on an
education inspired by respect for human life in every situation: the
unity of the human race is a more powerful reality than any contingent
divisions separating individuals and people.
In the necessary fight against terrorism, international law is now
called to develop legal instruments provided with effective means for
the prevention, monitoring and suppression of crime. In any event,
democratic governments know well that the use of force against
terrorists cannot justify a renunciation of the principles of the rule
of law. Political decisions would be unacceptable were they to seek
success without consideration for fundamental human rights, since the
end never justifies the means.
The contribution of the Church
'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God'
(Mt 5:9). How could this saying, which is a summons to work in the
immense field of peace, find such a powerful echo in the human heart if
it did not correspond to an irrepressible yearning and hope dwelling
within us? And why else would peacemakers be called children of God, if
not because God is by nature the God of peace? Precisely for this
reason, in the message of salvation which the Church proclaims
throughout the world, there are doctrinal elements of fundamental
importance for the development of the principles needed for peaceful
coexistence between nations.
History teaches that the building of peace cannot prescind from
respect for an ethical and juridical order, in accordance with the
ancient adage: 'Serva ordinem et ordo servabit te' (preserve order and
order will preserve you). International law must ensure that the law of
the more powerful does not prevail. Its essential purpose is to replace
'the material force of arms with the moral force of law', providing
appropriate sanctions for transgressors and adequate reparation for
victims. This must also be applicable to those government leaders who
violate with impunity human dignity and rights while hiding behind the
unacceptable pretext that it is a matter of questions internal to their
State.
In an Address which I gave to the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the
Holy See on 13 January 1997, I observed that international law is a
primary means for pursuing peace: 'For a long time international law
has been a law of war and peace. I believe that it is called more and
more to become exclusively a law of peace, conceived in justice and
solidarity. And in this context morality must inspire law; morality can
even assume a preparatory role in the making of law, to the extent that
it shows the path of what is right and good'.
Down the centuries, the teaching of the Church, drawing upon the
philosophical and theological reflection of many Christian thinkers,
has made a significant contribution in directing international law to
the common good of the whole human family. Especially in more recent
times the Popes have not hesitated to stress the importance of
international law as a pledge of peace, in the conviction that 'the
harvest of justice is sown in peace by those who make peace' (Jas
3:18). This is the path which the Church, employing the means proper to
her, is committed to following, in the perennial light of the Gospel
and with the indispensable help of prayer.
The civilization of love
At the conclusion of these considerations, I feel it necessary to
repeat that, for the establishment of true peace in the world, justice
must find its fulfilment in charity. Certainly law is the first road
leading to peace, and people need to be taught to respect that law. Yet
one does not arrive at the end of this road unless justice is
complemented by love. Justice and love sometimes appear to be opposing
forces. In fact they are but two faces of a single reality, two
dimensions of human life needing to be mutually integrated. Historical
experience shows this to be true. It shows how justice is frequently
unable to free itself from rancour, hatred and even cruelty. By itself,
justice is not enough. Indeed, it can even betray itself, unless it is
open to that deeper power which is love.
For this reason I have often reminded Christians and all persons of
good will that forgiveness is needed for solving the problems of
individuals and peoples. There is no peace without forgiveness! I say
it again here, as my thoughts turn in particular to the continuing
crisis in Palestine and the Middle East: a solution to the grave
problems which for too long have caused suffering for the peoples of
those regions will not be found until a decision is made to transcend
the logic of simple justice and to be open also to the logic of
forgiveness.
Christians know that love is the reason for God's entering into
relationship with man. And it is love which he awaits as man's
response. Consequently, love is also the loftiest and most noble form
of relationship possible between human beings. Love must thus enliven
every sector of human life and extend to the international order. Only
a humanity in which there reigns the 'civilization of love' will be
able to enjoy authentic and lasting peace.
At the beginning of a New Year I wish to repeat to women and men of
every language, religion and culture the ancient maxim: 'Omnia vincit
amor' (Love conquers all). Yes, dear Brothers and Sisters throughout
the world, in the end love will be victorious! Let everyone be
committed to hastening this victory. For it is the deepest hope of
every human heart.
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