Archbishop
Forte on
Religion and
Freedom
(Part 1)
"Searching
For the
Infinitely
Loving
Father-Mother"
LEEDS,
England,
DEC. 4, 2007
(Zenit.org).-
Here is the
first part
of the
address
given by
Archbishop
Bruno Forte
of Chieti-Vasto,
Italy, a
member of
the
International
Theological
Commission,
to a Nov. 12
meeting of
the bishops
of England
and Wales.
Parts
2 and 3 will
appear
Wednesday
and
Thursday,
respectively.
* * *
What
really is
important in
life is not
so much to
provide
answers, as
to discern
true
questions.
When true
questions
are found,
they
themselves
open the
heart to the
mystery.
Origen used
to say:
"Every true
question is
like the
lance which
pierces the
side of
Christ
causing
blood and
water to
flow forth."
In
this light
we
understand
why Christ
is not first
of all the
answer: He
is first the
restlessness
of the
query, as we
see by the
fact that
the Gospel
opens with
the word "metanoéite,"
change your
heart and
life. Only
at this
price is
Jesus also
the peace
and the
truth which
enlightens.
Therefore if
we want to
find true
answers for
our
condition as
pilgrims in
history
toward the
homeland of
God's
promise, we
must listen
to the true
questions
which lie at
the heart of
history
itself,
since they
will open us
toward the
enlightening
darkness of
the mystery.
Very
often the
mission of
the Church
fails
because we
answer
questions no
one is
asking, or
we pose
questions
which
interest no
one. The
challenge is
to discern
the true
questions,
the
questions
that God
writes on
the tablet
of our heart
and of our
time.
This
is why my
reflection
on "religion
and freedom"
is developed
in three
parts,
similar to
the arches
of a bridge
joining
thought to
life. In the
first arch
-- which I
call
"Horizon" or
"Searching
For the
Infinitely
Loving
Father-Mother"
-- I listen
to the
questions
posed by our
heart and by
the
landscape of
our times,
so that the
true
question may
enter our
mind and
open us to
the horizons
of mystery.
In the
second arch
of the
bridge --
that I call
"Principles"
or "Religion
and Freedom
From Modern
to
Postmodern
Time" -- I
listen to
the
development
of the ideas
of freedom
and religion
in modern
European
history.
Lastly, in
the third
and final
part -- the
third arch
of the
bridge,
which I call
"Consequences"
or "What to
Do to
Respect and
to Promote a
True
Relationship
Between
Religion and
Freedom in
Church and
Society
today" -- I
reflect on
what emerges
from the two
previous
parts to
inspire
practical
choices in
Church and
society.
1.
Horizon:
Searching
For the
Infinitely
Loving
Father-Mother
a)
What is the
greatest
question
which lies
at the heart
of our
heart? The
question
which makes
us restless
and
thoughtful:
"Fecisti cor
nostrum ad
te et
inquietum
est cor
nostrum
donec
requiescat
in te." "You
have made us
for yourself
and our
heart is
restless
until it
rest in
you." It is
Augustine
who speaks
at the
beginning of
his
"Confessions."
The burning
question
which each
of us
carries in
the depths
of his heart
is in fact
the question
of suffering
and death.
If there
were no
death there
would be no
thought,
everything
would be a
flat
eternity: To
live is also
to learn to
die, to live
together
with the
silent,
persistent,
tenacious
challenge of
death.
It is
pointless to
search for
evasion as
we often do,
or easy
consolation
like that of
Epicurius
who says:
"When death
comes I will
not be, and
as long as I
am, death
will not
come." These
words are in
fact only a
pun, an
illusion,
because
death is not
only the
final
destiny, the
last act, it
is something
imminent
which hangs
over and
weighs on
each day of
our fragile,
perishable
living.
To
struggle
with death
means
answering
questions
which
suddenly
spring up in
the heart
like
piercing
wounds: What
is my
destiny?
What is the
meaning of
life? Where
am I going
with all my
worries,
consolations
and joys?
And when I
have all
that I
desire what
else will I
long for
except that
final
victory, the
victory over
death? It is
death then
which sets
us thinking:
This is the
paradox of
the human
condition.
The
thought of
death as our
destiny and
challenge
prompts a
counterattack,
like a need
to defeat
the apparent
triumph of
death: To
think is to
struggle
against
death! So,
we are at
the same
time thrown
toward
death, as
Heidegger
says, and
yet
fashioned
for life.
Without this
contrast we
would accept
the destiny
of death as
something
obvious and
certain,
without
worrying
about it,
without
seeking to
give a
meaning to
life.
The
fact that
death makes
us think and
that we feel
the need to
give
significance
to our acts
and days is
the sign
that deep in
our heart
we, pilgrims
on the way
to death,
are in fact
called to
life. Within
us there is
an
indestructible
longing for
the face of
Someone who
will take
away our
suffering
and tears,
who will
redeem the
infinite
pain of
death.
When
we are alone
and sad,
when no one
seems to
love us and
we even have
reason to
despise or
criticize
ourselves,
from the
depths of
the heart
there arises
a
restlessness,
a longing
for someone
Other who
will welcome
us, make us
feel loved
in spite of
everything,
and defeat
the final
enemy,
death. This
longing
which
appears is
the image of
the Father,
or if you
like of the
Mother,
because
"father" and
"mother" are
in this
sense only
two
metaphors to
express the
same need
inscribed in
our heart:
the need to
have someone
to trust
without
reserve, an
anchor, a
haven in
which to
rest our
insecurity,
our pain, in
the
certainty
that we will
not be
thrown back
into the
abyss of our
nothingness.
As
such the
figure of
the Father
is at the
same time
the figure
of the
loving
Mother, the
womb, the
homeland,
the origin
in which we
place all
that we are.
If in the
depths of
our heart we
find anxiety
facing the
supreme
challenge of
death, and
this makes
us pensive,
if life
becomes a
struggle to
defeat
death, then
the image of
the
infinitely
loving
Father-Mother
is something
we all need.
Hence
we cannot
fail to ask
ourselves:
Why, if this
is so, is it
the case
that in so
many there
is a
visceral
rejection of
the
"father-mother"
figure? Why
do we all,
sooner or
later,
experience a
moment when
we contest
the image of
the
father-mother
in love?
Let us
try to
understand
this
contradiction
between the
need of a
father-mother
figure to
overcome our
anguish and
at the same
time the
rejection of
it, by
reading a
text taken
from "The
Letter to
the Father,"
by Franz
Kafka: "The
feeling of
nothingness
which often
dominates
me," Kafka
says,
"originates
in large
part from
your
influence.
"I was
able to
enjoy all
that you
gave us only
at the price
of shame,
fatigue,
weakness and
a sense of
guilt. I
could only
be grateful
to you as a
beggar, not
with facts.
The first
visible
result of
this
education
was that it
made me flee
from
anything
which
reminded me,
even
vaguely, of
you."
How
often
rejection of
the father
stems from a
need to gain
independence!
How often
paternity-maternity
becomes
possessiveness,
slavery,
dominion!
This is when
we see the
dramatic
image of the
father's
murder.
In
actual fact,
one of the
most
profound
causes of
the anguish
found in the
human heart
is that --
although
everyone
wants to
conquer
death -- we
all need a
loving
father-mother
to embrace
us, with
regard to
whom,
nevertheless,
we all, in
one way or
another,
experience
moments of
rejection
for fear of
suffocation.
The murder
of the
father is a
sort of
ritual
murder, an
act to
affirm our
independence,
our
autonomy. So
we are all
doomed to a
never-ending
condition of
being
orphans,
consequently
longing for
a loving
mother and
father, and
yet fleeing
in order to
remain free
and
independent
like the
prodigal
son, who
chooses to
take his
heritage in
order to
manage his
own life.
This
then is the
great
question: We
need someone
who will
reveal to us
the face of
a loving
father-mother,
who does not
create
dependence,
does not
make us
slaves; a
father-mother
who loves us
and renders
us free. We
need a
father-mother
who does not
compete with
our freedom,
but is its
very
foundation,
the ultimate
guarantee of
truth and
peace in our
heart, who
at the same
time will
heal our
anguish with
the medicine
of love, and
also heal
that fear of
losing our
freedom,
making us
feel loved
in a freedom
which does
not make us
slaves, and
does not
create
dependence.
This is the
infinitely
loving
Father-Mother
sought by
the human
heart.
b) And
at the heart
of history?
Here is the
second
landscape of
our search
for true
questions:
What
happened to
the
father-mother
figure in
the last
century? In
the book
"Age of
Extremes --
The Short
Twentieth
Century
1914-1991,"
by Eric J.
Hobsbawm
(Penguin
Books,
1994),
opened in
1914 with
the outbreak
of World War
I and closed
in 1989 with
the fall of
the Berlin
wall and the
collapse of
ideologies.
We built a
society
without
fathers:
This -- to
be brutal --
is the basis
of the
modern
process of
emancipation.
From
the
Enlightenment
onward,
emancipation
became the
great dream
of hearts,
of minds, of
the masses
of humanity.
But what is
emancipation?
Karl Marx in
his book
"The Jewish
Question"
defines it
as follows:
"Emancipation
means
leading
everything
in this
world back
to man, to
man alone."
There is no
"God": There
is only the
human being
who must run
his life,
his destiny
alone. This
was the
great dream
of
modernity:
Modern
ideologies,
left wing
and right
wing,
pursued this
ambitious
goal of
emancipating
man,
rendering
him the
subject
instead of
the object
of his
history.
The
"great
tales"
("meta-narratives,"
"mega-récits")
of the
modernity,
which
ideologies
are -- myths
just like
those they
were
supposed to
replace --
have in
common the
claim to
build a
world in
which man is
the only
subject and
agent, both
the origin
and summit
of all that
happens. It
cannot be
denied that
this project
is
fascinating
and we are
all its
children.
Which of us
would want
to live in a
society
which has
not passed
through the
process of
emancipation?
Nevertheless,
this dream
had satanic
effects: The
dream of
emancipating
the world
and life was
shattered in
the unheard
of violence
which the
age of
emancipation
produced,
eloquent
signs of
which are
the Shoah of
the Jews and
all the
holocausts
of our
times, up to
the
holocaust of
famine
consumed day
after day.
Is this the
fruit of
adult
reason? Is
this the
result of
the great
ideologies
of the left
and the
right?
Now,
the
fatherless
society is
precisely
the one
which
followed the
dream of
emancipation
by
eliminating
the father.
The bitter
fruit of
totalitarian
and violent
emancipation
however
causes the
need to
recognize
the face of
a welcoming
father-mother
to be felt
once again.
This is not
the search
for the
father-mother
who is the
party, or
money, or
power,
rather it is
the search
for a
father-mother
who
establishes
at the same
time each
individual
person's
dignity and
freedom,
giving
meaning to
life.
We
could say,
then, that
the most
profound
sickness of
this age
which we
call
postmodern,
is that we
-- orphans
of
ideologies
-- are all
weaker, more
fragile,
more tempted
to shut
ourselves up
in the
solitude of
our
selfishness.
When there
are no
horizons of
truth we
drown in the
solitude of
our own
particular
selves. And
this shows
still more
that we all
need a
common
father-mother
to set us
free from
the prison
of our
solitude, to
give us a
horizon for
hoping and
loving, not
the violent
one of
ideology,
but a
liberating
horizon.
There is a
nostalgia
for a hidden
face, the
need for a
common
homeland
which gives
horizons of
meaning
without
exercising
violence.
In
this light,
life appears
either as a
pilgrimage
toward a
promised
homeland or
as a mere
waiting for
death. There
is no other
choice. Life
is either a
passion, a
searching
and
therefore a
restlessness,
or it is a
dying every
day a
little,
evading,
escaping in
all the many
drugs with
which our
society is
afflicted,
and which
only serve
to dull our
senses and
are
incapable of
posing
authentic
questions.
We
need to make
the
decision: "I
will arise
and return
to my
father!"
This is the
great
decision
which our
postmodern
age needs.
To help
their
traveling
companions
to make this
decision,
believers
are the
first who
must arise
and move
toward the
Father. So
this brief
inquiry to
listen to
our heart
and to the
heart of our
time, leads
to a first
temporary
conclusion:
We need to
become
pilgrims
once again,
to overcome
the
frustration
which at
times grips
us,
especially
when we see
no results,
no fruits.
The
most
important
thing for
those who
believe in
God is not
to harvest,
but to sow:
The sowing
will bear
fruit in
time when
and how God
wills.
Therefore we
must say
"no" to
frustration
and "yes" to
a passion
for the
truth which
leads us to
pose true
questions so
we may
search for
the hidden
face, the
face of the
father-mother
in love. The
core of the
Church's
mission
today is to
proclaim
this face to
all those
who are in
search of
it.
[Text
adapted]