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JOHN PAUL II
Meeting with representatives of other Religions and other
Christian Confessions Sunday, 7 November 1999 New Delhi —
Vigyan Bawan
Distinguished Religious Leaders, Dear Friends,
1. It is a great joy for me to visit once again the beloved land of India
and to have this opportunity in particular to greet you, the representatives
of different religious traditions, which embody not only great achievements of
the past but also the hope of a better future for the human family. I thank
the Government and the people of India for the welcome I have received. I come
among you as a pilgrim of peace and as a fellow-traveller on the road that
leads to the complete fulfilment of the deepest human longings. On the
occasion of Diwali, the festival of lights, which symbolizes the victory of
life over death, good over evil, I express the hope that this meeting will
speak to the world of the things which unite us all: our common human origin
and destiny, our shared responsibility for people’s well-being and progress,
our need of the light and strength that we seek in our religious convictions.
Down the ages and in so many ways, India has taught that truth which the great
Christian teachers also propose, that men and women “by inward instinct”
are deeply oriented towards God and seek him from the depths of their being
(cf. Saint Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, III, q. 60, art. 5, 3). On this
basis, I am convinced that together we can successfully take the path of
understanding and dialogue.
2. My presence here among you is meant as a further sign that the Catholic
Church wants to enter ever more deeply into dialogue with the religions of the
world. She sees this dialogue as an act of love which has its roots in God
himself. “God is love”, proclaims the New Testament, “and whoever
remains in love remains in God and God in him. . . Let us love, then, because
he has loved us first. . . no-one who fails to love the brother whom he sees
can love God whom he has not seen” (1 Jn 4:16, 19-20).
It is a sign of hope that the religions of the world are becoming more
aware of their shared responsibility for the well-being of the human family.
This is a crucial part of the globalization of solidarity which must come if
the future of the world is to be secure. This sense of shared responsibility
increases as we discover more of what we have in common as religious men and
women.
Which of us does not grapple with the mystery of suffering and death? Which
of us does not hold life, truth, peace, freedom and justice to be supremely
important values? Which of us is not convinced that moral goodness is soundly
rooted in the individual’s and society’s openness to the transcendent
world of the Divinity? Which of us does not believe that the way to God
requires prayer, silence, asceticism, sacrifice and humility? Which of us is
not concerned that scientific and technical progress should be accompanied by
spiritual and moral awareness? And which of us does not believe that the
challenges now facing society can only be met by building a civilization of
love founded on the universal values of peace, solidarity, justice and
liberty? And how can we do this, except through encounter, mutual
understanding and cooperation?
3. The path before us is demanding, and there is always the temptation to
choose instead the path of isolation and division, which leads to conflict.
This in turn unleashes the forces which make religion an excuse for violence,
as we see too often around the world. Recently I was happy to welcome to the
Vatican representatives of the world religions who had gathered to build upon
the achievements of the Assisi Meeting in 1986. I repeat here what I said to
that distinguished Assembly: “Religion is not, and must not become a pretext
for conflict, particularly when religious, cultural and ethnic identity
coincide. Religion and peace go together: to wage war in the name of religion
is a blatant contradiction”. Religious leaders in particular have the duty
to do everything possible to ensure that religion is what God intends it to be
– a source of goodness, respect, harmony and peace! This is the only way to
honour God in truth and justice!
Our encounter requires that we strive to discern and welcome whatever is
good and holy in one another, so that together we can acknowledge, preserve
and promote the spiritual and moral truths which alone guarantee the world’s
future (cf. Nostra Aetate, 2). In this sense dialogue is never an attempt to
impose our own views upon others, since such dialogue would become a form of
spiritual and cultural domination. This does not mean that we abandon our own
convictions. What it means is that, holding firmly to what we believe, we
listen respectfully to others, seeking to discern all that is good and holy,
all that favours peace and cooperation.
4. It is vital to recognize that there is a close and unbreakable bond
between peace and freedom. Freedom is the most noble prerogative of the human
person, and one of the principal demands of freedom is the free exercise of
religion in society (cf. Dignitatis Humanae, 3). No State, no group has the
right to control either directly or indirectly a person’s religious
convictions, nor can it justifiably claim the right to impose or impede the
public profession and practice of religion, or the respectful appeal of a
particular religion to people’s free conscience. Recalling this year the
fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, I wrote
that “religious freedom constitutes the very heart of human rights. Its
inviolability is such that individuals must be recognized as having the right
even to change their religion, if their conscience so demands. People are
obliged to follow their conscience in all circumstances and cannot be forced
to act against it (cf. Article 18)” (Message for the 1999 World Day of
Peace, 5).
5. In India the way of dialogue and tolerance was the path followed by the
great Emperors Ashoka, Akbar and Chatrapati Shivaji; by wise men like
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa and Swami Vivekananda; and by luminous figures such as
Mahatma Gandhi, Gurudeva Tagore and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, who understood
profoundly that to serve peace and harmony is a holy task. These are people
who, in India and beyond, have made a significant contribution to the
increased awareness of our universal brotherhood, and they point us to a
future where our deep longing to pass through the door of freedom will find
its fulfilment because we will pass through that door together. To choose
tolerance, dialogue and cooperation as the path into the future is to preserve
what is most precious in the great religious heritage of mankind. It is also
to ensure that in the centuries to come the world will not be without that
hope which is the life-blood of the human heart. May the Lord of heaven and
earth grant this now and for ever.
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