ADDRESS OF POPE JOHN PAUL II
TO PARTICIPANTS IN THE 29th ANNUAL
ASSEMBLY
OF THE ATLANTIC TREATY ASSOCIATION
Saturday, 19 November 1983
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is my great pleasure to welcome today you who have taken part in the
29th
Annual Assembly of the Atlantic Treaty Association. I am pleased to have this
occasion to greet you, together with the members of your families. As
distinguished personalities of your respective Nations you have gathered to
discuss a matter of grave importance for the world at large. Your deliberations
and reflections on the topic of peace augur well for the future of your
activities, and shed a ray of hope on a subject which all too often remains
over-shadowed by discouragement and dismay.
While Nations are naturally preoccupied with the requirements of their own
defence, the seemingly endless instances of discord and unrest in the world, and
especially the frightening spectre of nuclear holocaust, are powerful incentives
to continue the unrelenting search for practical and enduring means of achieving
peace.
The Holy See continually seeks out opportunities to cooperate in the urgent task
of promoting peace, not only because it occupies a special place within the
international community, but also because of its role in accomplishing the very
mission of the Church, which is that of proclaiming the saving message entrusted
to her by Jesus Christ.
In order that this divine message may be effectively made known, the Church
fosters the conditions which enable all men and women to attain their integral
development; and thus she strives to participate in and to encourage those
endeavours which correspond to one of the highest aspirations of the human
spirit, namely, the establishment of true and lasting peace. The Church engages
in this pursuit, furthermore, not in a secondary or extraneous way, but in
faithful compliance to the exhortation of the Lord himself, who said: “Blessed
are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God” (Matth 5, 9).
The Church, and the Holy See in particular, looks to every competent
international organism, as well as to humanity as a whole, to bring to bear the
vast resources of intelligence and will for the effecting of carefully measured,
concrete steps towards fulfilling that universal desire of people everywhere:
peace and security in a well-ordered world.
I wish to encourage you to be steadfast in this quest. And be assured of my
constant prayers, so that one day we may all come to the lasting joy of that
peace which surpasses all understanding.
God bless you.
© Copyright 1983 - Libreria Editrice
Vaticana
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