Dear friends,

 

Compared to other cultures and to ist own history, Europe is a rather “humane” continent. It’s Christianity that contributed much to that! Because of its lived values of the gospel, Europe was and is a ‘leaven of civilization’ to the world.

 

Can Europe remain this leaven, when today the basics of humanity are under attack? When the existence universal and absolute values is put into question; when the dignity of man is no longer regarded as inalienable; when the evaluation of benefits becomes the sole criteria of decision-making… what humanity could Europe possibly pass on, which humanity could it be proud of?

 

Josef Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI, explains in the following Letter for Europe what the ‘soul’ and the identity of Europe precisely consist of and what endangers them. But he doesn’t stop there: full of hope he describes how we Christians, with the help of God, can build a ‘new Europe’.

 

This short text requires slow reading. We tried to highlight some of the most crucial passages to easen it a bit.

 

For a Europe embedded in Christian values!

 

Your Europe for Christ Team

 

PS: don’t forget to pray the daily Our Father for a Christian Europe!

 

 

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Europe’s Christian values: leaven of the world’s civilization

 

Excerpts from an address by Benedict XVI to the participants of a conference of the Commission of the Bishops' Conference of the European Community (COMECE) on March 24th, 2007.

 

… An authentic European "common home" cannot be built without considering the identity of the people of this Continent of ours. It is a question of a historical, cultural, and moral identity before being a geographic, economic, or political one; an identity comprised of a set of universal values that Christianity helped forge, thus giving Christianity not only a historical but a foundational role vis-à-vis Europe. These values, which make up the soul of the Continent, must remain in the Europe of the third millennium as a "ferment" of civilization. If these values were to disappear, how could the "old" Continent continue to function as a "leaven" for the entire world? If, for the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, the Governments of the Union wish to "get nearer" to their citizens, how can they exclude an element essential to European identity such as Christianity, with which a vast majority of citizens continue to identify? Is it not surprising that today's Europe, while aspiring to be regarded as a community of values, seems ever more often to deny the very existence of universal and absolute values? Does not this unique form of "apostasy" {lapse} from itself, even more than its apostasy from God, lead Europe to doubt its own identity? And so the opinion prevails that an "evaluation of the benefits" is the only way to moral discernment and that the common good is synonymous with compromise. In reality, if compromise can constitute a legitimate balance between different particular interests, it becomes a common evil whenever it involves agreements that dishonour human nature.

 

A community built without respect for the true dignity of the human being, disregarding the fact that every person is created in the image of God ends up doing no good to anyone. For this reason it seems ever more important that Europe be on guard against the pragmatic attitude, widespread today, which systematically justifies compromise on essential human values, as if it were the inevitable acceptance of a lesser evil. This kind of pragmatism, even when presented as balanced and realistic, is in reality neither, since it denies the dimension of values and ideals inherent in human nature. When non-religious and relativistic tendencies are woven into this pragmatism, Christians as such are eventually denied the very right to enter into the public discussion, or their contribution is discredited as an attempt to preserve unjustified privileges. In this historical hour and faced with the many challenges that confront it, the European Union, in order to be a valid guarantor of the rule of law and an efficient promoter of universal values, cannot but recognize clearly the certain existence of a stable and permanent human nature, source of common rights for all individuals, including those who deny them. In this context, the right to conscientious objection should be protected, every time fundamental human rights are violated.

 

Dear friends, I know how difficult it is for Christians to defend this truth of the human person. Nevertheless do not give in to fatigue or discouragement! You know that it is your duty, with God's help, to contribute to the consolidation of a new Europe which will be realistic but not cynical, rich in ideals and free from naïve illusions, inspired by the perennial and life-giving truth of the Gospel. Therefore, be actively present in the public debate on a European level, knowing that this discussion is now an integral part of the national debate. And to this commitment add effective cultural action. Do not bend to the logic of power as an end in itself! May Christ's admonition be a constant stimulus and support for you: "If the salt loses its flavour it is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled by men." (cf. Mt. 5:13). May the Lord make all your efforts fruitful and help you to recognize and use properly what is positive in today's civilization, while denouncing with courage all that is contrary to human dignity.