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Title: Gaudium et Spes


1
Gaudium et Spes  Pastoral Constitution on the
Church in the Modern WorldSecond Vatican
Council, 1965
2
The Presiders of Vatican II (1962-1965)
Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini
Pope Paul VI (1963-1978)
Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli Pope John XXIII
(1958-1963)
3
Future Popes Present at Vatican II
  • Paul VI (1963-1978)
  • John Paul I (1978)
  • John Paul II (1978-2005)
  • Benedict XVI (2005-Present)

4
Effects of Vatican II
  • Revised Liturgy
  • Stronger Emphasis on Ecumenism
  • New approach to the World itself

5
The 16 Documents of Vatican II
  • 9 Decrees
  • Ad Gentes (Mission Activity)
  • Apostolicam Actuositatem (Lay People)
  • Christus Dominus (Bishops in the Church)
  • Inter Mirifica (Social Communication)
  • Optatam Totius (Priestly Training)
  • Orientalium Ecclesiarum (Eastern Churches)
  • Perfectae Caritatis (Renewal of Religious Life)
  • Presbyterorum Ordinis (Life of Priests)
  • Unitatis Redintegratio (Ecumenism)

6
The 16 Documents of Vatican II
  • 3 Declarations
  • Dignitatis Humanae (Religious Freedom)
  • Gravissimum Educationis (Christian Education)
  • Nostra Aetate (Relations with Non-Christians)

7
The 16 Documents of Vatican II
  • 4 Constitutions
  • Dei Verbum (Dogmatic Constitution on Divine
    Revelation)
  • Lumen Gentium (Dogmatic Constitution on the
    Church)
  • Gaudium et Spes (Pastoral Constitution on the
    Church in the Modern World)
  • Sacrosanctum Concilium (Constitution on Sacred
    Liturgy)

8
The 16 Documents of Vatican II
  • 4 Constitutions
  • Dei Verbum (Dogmatic Constitution on Divine
    Revelation)
  • Lumen Gentium (Dogmatic Constitution on the
    Church)
  • Gaudium et Spes (Pastoral Constitution on the
    Church in the Modern World)
  • Sacrosanctum Concilium (Constitution on Sacred
    Liturgy)

9
Gaudium et Spes
  • It is an overview of the Churchs teachings about
    humanitys relationship to society, especially in
    reference to economics, poverty, social justice,
    culture, science and technology, and ecumenism.
  • This document was not drafted prior to the
    Council, but arose from the floor of the Council
    and was one of the last to be promulgated (on
    December 7, 1965 the last day of the Council).
  • It was approved by a vote of 2,307 to 75.
  • The words Gaudium et Spes are Latin for Joy and
    Hope, and as is customary with Catholic
    documents, the title is taken from its first
    sentence which sets the tone of its emphasis.

10
  • The joys and hopes, the grief and anguish of
    the people of our time, especially those who are
    poor or afflicted, are the joys and hopes, the
    grief and anguish of the followers of Christ as
    well. Nothing that is genuinely human fails to
    find an echo in their hearts. (1)

11
GS Major Areas of Concern
  • Human Dignity
  • Common Good
  • Signs of the Times
  • Public Responsibility
  • Respect for Families
  • Right of Culture
  • Justice and Development
  • Peace

12
Part 1
  • The Church and the Human Vocation
  • I) The Dignity of the Human Person
  • II) The Human Community
  • III) Humanitys Activity in the Universe
  • IV) Role of the Church in the Modern World

13
Part 1
  • The Church
    and the Human Vocation
  • I) The Dignity of the Human Person
  • Created in the image of God.
  • Human person consists of a body and soul
    composite.
  • Intelligent. Able to know and love their
    Creator.
  • Stewardship. Set by God over all earthly
    creatures to rule and make use of them in a
    manner which glorifies God.
  • Free Will. Part of human nature to pursue good
    and avoid evil.
  • The Mystery of death.
  • The problem with atheism.

14
Part 1

  • The Church and the Human Vocation
  • II) The Human Community
  • The fact that human beings are social by nature
    indicates that the betterment of the person and
    the improvement of society depend on each other.
    (25)
  • The council lays stress on respect for the human
    person everybody should look upon his or her
    neighbor (without any exception) as another self,
    bearing in mind especially their neighbors life
    and the means needed for a dignified way of life,
    lest they follow the example of the rich man who
    ignored Lazarus, who was poor. (27)
  • The varieties of crime are numerous all
    offenses against life itself, such as murder,
    genocide, abortion, euthanasia and willful
    suicide all violations of the integrity of the
    human person, such as mutilation, physical and
    mental torture, undue psychological pressures
    all offenses against human dignity, such as
    subhuman living conditions, arbitrary
    imprisonment, deportation, slavery, prostitution,
    the selling of women and children, degrading work
    conditions where people are treated as mere tools
    for profit rather than free and responsible
    persons all these and the like are criminal
    they poison civilization and they debase the
    perpetrators more than the victims and militate
    against the honor of the Creator. (27)
  • While there are just differences between people,
    their equal dignity as persons demands that we
    strive for fairer and more humane conditions.
    Excessive economic and social disparity between
    individuals and peoples of the one human race is
    a source of scandal and militates against social
    justice, equity, human dignity, as well as social
    and international peace. (29)

15
Part 1
  • The Church
    and the Human Vocation
  • II) The Human Community
  • The social order and its development must
    constantly yield to the good of the person, since
    the order of things must be subordinate to the
    order of persons and not the other way around, as
    the Lord suggested when He said that the Sabbath
    was made for men and women and not men and women
    for the Sabbath. The social order requires
    constant improvement it must be founded in
    truth, built on justice, and enlivened by love
    it should grow in freedom towards a more humane
    equilibrium. If these objectives are to be
    attained there will first have to be a renewal of
    attitudes and far-reaching social changes. (26)
  • The pace of change is so far-reaching and rapid
    nowadays that it is imperative that no one, out
    of indifference to the course of events or
    because of inertia, would indulge in a merely
    individualistic morality. The best way to
    fulfill ones obligations of justice and love is
    to contribute to the common good according to
    ones means and the needs of others, and also to
    promote and help public and private organizations
    devoted to bettering the conditions of life.
    (30)

16
Part 1
  • The Church and the
    Human Vocation
  • III) Humanitys Activity in the Universe
  • Science and Technology are good things and should
    be pursued, but only if ordered to the good.
  • People are of greater value for what they are
    than for what they have. Technical progress is
    of less value than advances toward greater
    justice, wider kinship and a more humane social
    environment. Technical progress may supply the
    material for human advance but it is powerless to
    achieve it. (35)

17
Part 1
  • The Church and the Human Vocation
  • Role of the Church in the Modern World
  • Does the Church have a role in the modern
    world?????

18
You Betcha!
You Betcha!
19
  • In every age, the Church carries the
    responsibility of reading the signs of the times
    and of interpreting them in the light of the
    Gospel, if it is to carry out its task. In
    language intelligible to every generation, it
    should be able to answer the ever recurring
    questions which people ask about the meaning of
    this present life and of the life to come, and
    how one is related to the other. (4)

20
Part 1
  • Church and the Human Vocation
  • IV) Role of the Church in the Modern World
  • In pursuing its own salvific purpose not only
    does the Church communicate divine life to
    humanity but in a certain sense it casts the
    reflected light of that divine life over all the
    earth, notably in the way it heals and elevates
    the dignity of the human person, in the way it
    consolidates society, and endows peoples daily
    activity with a deeper sense and meaning. The
    Church, then, believes that through each of its
    members and its community as a whole it can help
    to make the human family and its history still
    more human. (40)
  • Thus the Church, at once a visible organization
    and a spiritual community, travels the same
    journey as all of humanity and shares the same
    earthly lot with the world it is to be a leaven
    and, as it were, the soul of human society in its
    renewal by Christ and transformation into the
    family of God. (40)

21
Part 1
  • The Church and the Human Vocation
  • IV) Role of the Church in the Modern World
  • What the Church offers to Individuals
  • To follow Christ the perfect human is to become
    more human oneself. (41)
  • The Church answers the question why we are all
    here.
  • God alone satisfies the deepest cravings of the
    human heart. Things of this world can only offer
    temporary happiness.

22
Part 1
  • The Church and the Human
    Vocation
  • IV) Role of the Church in the Modern World
  • What the Church offers to Society
  • By its nature and mission the Church is
    universal in that it is not committed to any one
    culture or to any political, economic, or social
    system. (42)
  • The Churchs purpose and mission is religious.
    It is not properly a political, economic, or
    social system, however, it does have a voice
    regarding how these systems are ordered.
  • The Church is the glue that bonds these systems
    together (provided they are ordered to the good).
  • Every political, economic, and social system has
    their good and bad points.
  • The Church is a standard by which these systems
    are measured.

23
Part 1
  • The Church
    and the Human Vocation
  • IV) Role of the Church in the Modern World
  • What the members of the Church offer
  • It is a mistake to think that, because we have
    here no lasting city, but seek the city which is
    to come, we are entitled to evade our earthly
    responsibilities this is to forget that because
    of our faith we are all the more bound to fulfill
    these responsibilities according to ones
    vocation. (43)
  • Christians who shirk their temporal duties shirk
    their duties towards his neighbor, neglect God
    Himself, and endanger their eternal salvation.
    (43)
  • These actions on the part of all Christians are
    not merely nice things to do, but are in fact
    required of all of us.
  • This also puts in perspective the fact that we as
    individuals make up the Church.
  • No one is permitted to identify his or her own
    opinions with Church authority.
  • Church is not blind to the discrepancy of the
    message it proclaims and errors made as a result
    of human weakness by those to whom the Gospel has
    been entrusted.

24
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • V) The Dignity of Marriage and the Family
  • VI) Proper Development of Culture
  • VII) Economic and Social Life
  • VIII) The Political Community
  • IX) Fostering of Peace and Establishment of a
    Community of Nations

25
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • The Dignity of Marriage and the Family
  • The well-being of the individual person and of
    both human and Christian society is closely bound
    up with the healthy state of the community of
    marriage and the family. (47)
  • God Himself is the author of marriage and has
    endowed it with specific values and purposes
    the procreation and education of children.
  • The family is a microcosm of society as a whole.
  • If family values degenerate, societal values will
    follow suit.
  • If family members do not treat each other with
    dignity, why would we expect our actions in
    society to be different?
  • Just as a family works together to solve problems
    and bear trials, society as a whole should do the
    same.

26
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • Proper Development of Culture
  • Culture is defined in a general sense as those
    things that entail the development and refining
    of humanitys diverse mental and physical
    attributes. Culture comes about as men and women
    seek to perfect their bodily and spiritual
    qualities. Using labor and knowledge, men and
    women try to bring the world under their control
    (subdue it) and by improving customs and
    institutions, they render human life both in the
    family and in the community more human.
  • Culture is the whole network of relationships
    that make up the world in which we live, and it
    is the only route to true humanity.

27
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • Proper Development of Culture
  • Positive Aspects
  • Tremendous expansion of natural and human
    sciences (including social sciences).
  • Increase of technology.
  • Advances in communication.
  • Industrialization, urbanization, and other
    factors which promote community living create new
    mass cultures which give birth to new patterns
    of thinking, acting, and use of leisure.
  • The goal that must always be kept in sight is
    that human culture must evolve in such a way as
    to develop the whole human person harmoniously
    and integrally, and aid in helping everyone
    fulfill the tasks to which they are called.
    Special emphasis should be placed toward
    Christians who are united in communion at the
    heart of the human family.
  • Culture must be subordinated to the integral
    development of the human person, to the good of
    the community and of the whole of humanity.
    (59)

28
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • Proper Development of Culture
  • Challenges
  • With improvements in science and technology, the
    Church must be able to address the moral
    implications of these developments. They must be
    in accord with the natural law.
  • GS also calls for the laity to receive adequate
    theological formation to be applied to the study
    and development of culture in their own state in
    life.
  • With science and technological improvements,
    humanity can realize a higher understanding of
    truth, but a danger exists in thinking God is no
    longer needed.
  • It is important to realize these improvements are
    a means to an end and not an end in themselves.
  • The pursuit of these disciplines are a good
    thing, but they must be understood before they
    can be ordered to the good. This should be
    accomplished utilizing an authentically set of
    Christian values tempered with humility and
    courage.

29
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • Economic and Social Life
  • In the sphere of economics and social life, too,
    the dignity and vocation of the human person as
    well as the welfare of society as a whole have to
    be respected and fostered for people are the
    source, the focus and the aim of all economic and
    social life. (63)
  • At the very time when economic progress,
    provided it is directed and organized in a
    reasonable and human way, could do so much to
    reduce social inequities, it serves all too often
    only to aggravate them in some places it even
    leads to a decline in the situation of the
    underprivileged and to contempt for the poor.
    (63)
  • Luxury and misery exist side by side.
  • The growing contrast between the more
    economically advanced countries and the rest of
    the world may well endanger world peace.

30
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • Economic and Social Life
  • The ultimate and basic purpose of economic
    production does not consist merely in producing
    more goods, nor in profit or prestige economic
    production is meant to be at the service of
    humanity in its totality, taking into account
    peoples material needs and the requirements of
    their intellectual, moral, spiritual, and
    religious life it is intended to benefit all
    individuals and groups of people of whatever race
    or from whatever part of the world. Therefore,
    economic activity is to be carried out in
    accordance with techniques and methods belonging
    to the moral order, so that Gods design for
    humanity may be carried out. (64)
  • Note how the 3 highlighted words correspond to
    the three temptations of Christ in the desert.
  • Economic development should be under the peoples
    control and not left to the judgment of a few
    individuals or groups. The largest group of
    people possible should have an active share in
    directing that development.

31
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • Economic and Social Life
  • We must denounce as false those doctrines which
    stand in the way of all reform on the pretext of
    a false notion of freedom, as well as those which
    subordinate the basic rights of individuals and
    of groups to the collective organization of
    production. (65)
  • True freedom is the power to do what is right
    according to our nature.
  • All people have the right and duty to contribute,
    according to their ability, to the progress and
    development of their own community and this fact
    must be recognized by civil authority.
  • The common good is seriously endangered by
    those who hoard their resources unproductively
    and by those who, apart from the personal right
    to emigrate, deprive their community of much
    needed material and spiritual assistance. (65)
  • Lk 1215-20 You fool, this night your life will
    be demanded of you and the things you have
    prepared, to whom will they belong?

32
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent Problems
  • Economic and Social Life
  • No one, especially public authorities, should
    treat workers simply as mere instruments of
    production, but as persons. (66)
  • Ensure sufficient suitable employment is
    available.
  • Opportunities for appropriate technical and
    professional training should be provided.
  • Safeguards should be put in place to protect the
    livelihood and human dignity of those who through
    age or ill health are seriously disadvantaged.
  • Allowed to be partners in the work of bringing
    Gods creation to perfection.

33
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • Economic and Social Life
  • We believe by faith that through the homage of
    work offered to God, humanity is associated with
    the redemptive work of Jesus Christ, whose labor
    with His hands at Nazareth greatly added to the
    dignity of work. (67)
  • It is every persons duty to work loyally.
  • Everyone has the right to work.
  • Everyone has the right to a living wage.
  • Everyone should be allowed sufficient time for
    rest and leisure to cultivate their family,
    cultural, social, and religious life.
  • Work should be organized in such a way that no
    worker or groups of workers are exploited. So
    called laws of economics are no excuse for this.
  • Employees ought to have a say in the decision
    making process whether it be in person or through
    representation.

34
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • Economic and Social Life
  • Property and other forms of private ownership of
    external goods contribute to self-expression and
    provide people with the opportunity of exercising
    a role in society and in the economy it is very
    important, then, to facilitate access to some
    ownership of external goods on the part of
    individuals and communities. (71)
  • Ownership of private property should be
    considered an extension of human freedom.
  • By its nature, private property has a social
    aspect to it which is based on the law of the
    common destination of earthly goods.
  • If this social quality is overlooked, property
    often becomes an occasion of a passionate desire
    for wealth and greed. As a result, opponents of
    this concept can easily find a pretext for
    challenging this right.

35
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • The Political Community
  • A clearer awareness of human dignity has given
    rise in various parts of the world to a movement
    to establish a politico-juridical order which
    will provide better protection for the rights of
    women and men in public life. (73)
  • The right of free assembly and association.
  • The right to express ones opinions.
  • The right to profess ones religion both
    publically and privately.
  • There is no better way to establish political
    life on a truly human basis than by encouraging
    an interior sense of justice, of good will and of
    service to the common good, and by consolidating
    peoples basic convictions as to the true nature
    of the political community and the aim, proper
    exercise, and the limits of public authority.
    (73)

36
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • The Political Community
  • The common good embraces the sum total of all
    those conditions of social life which enable
    individuals, families, and organizations to
    achieve complete and effective fulfillment.
    (74)
  • The people who go to make up the political
    community are many and varied quite rightly,
    then, they may have widely differing points of
    view. Therefore, lest the political community be
    jeopardized because all individuals follow their
    own opinion, an authority is needed to guide the
    energies of all towards the common good. (74)
  • This authority cannot act mechanically or
    tyrannically, but must act as a moral force based
    on freedom and a sense of responsibility.
  • When citizens are oppressed by a public authority
    which oversteps its competence, they should not
    fail to do whatever is objectively demanded of
    them by the common good, however, they should
    also defend their rights and the rights of others
    against these abuses, but do so in compliance
    with the natural law and the law of the Gospel.

37
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • The Political Community
  • All citizens ought to be aware of their right
    and duty to promote the common good by casting
    their votes. (75)
  • Citizens should render to the state whatever
    material and personal services are required for
    the common good. (Render unto Caesar).
  • Government should not place obstacles in the way
    of family, cultural or social groups.
  • Citizens should be wary of giving too much power
    to public authority, and should not make untimely
    and exaggerated demands in exchange for favors
    and subsidies.
  • Christians must be conscious of their specific
    and proper role in the political community they
    should be a shining example by their sense of
    responsibility and their dedication to the common
    good they should show in practice how authority
    can be reconciled with freedom, personal
    initiative with solidarity and the needs of the
    social framework as a whole, and the advantages
    of unity with the benefits of diversity. (75)

38
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • The Political Community
  • The Church, by reason of her role and
    competence, is not identified with any political
    community nor is it tied to any political system.
    It is at once the sign and the safeguard of the
    transcendental dimension of the human person.
    (76)
  • This sign pertains to individuals within the
    Church, but especially to bishops, priests and
    deacons who make up the hierarchy.
  • But at all times and in all places, the Church
    should be genuinely free to preach the faith, to
    proclaim its teaching about society, to carry out
    its task among people without hindrance, and to
    pass moral judgments even in matters relating to
    politics, whenever the fundamental human rights
    or the salvation of souls requires it. (76)
  • This would include issuing statements on the
    issues for upcoming elections.

39
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • Fostering of Peace and Establishment of a
    Community of Nations
  • Humanity has gradually come closer together and
    is everywhere more conscious of its own unity
    but it will not succeed in accomplishing the task
    awaiting it, that is, the establishment of a
    truly human world for all over the entire earth,
    unless all devote themselves to the cause of true
    peace with renewed vigor. (77)
  • Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be
    called children of God. Mt 59
  • Peace is not merely an absence of war, but is
    more appropriately called the effect of
    righteousness (Is 3217).
  • Peace is the fruit of that right ordering of
    things that God infused into human society.
  • Peace will never be achieved once and for all,
    but must be worked on continuously and
    unceasingly.
  • Peace will not be achieved until the welfare of
    humanity is safeguarded and people are free to
    share with each other the riches of their minds
    and talents in a spirit of mutual trust.
  • Peace is the fruit of love and flows from love of
    God and neighbor.

40
Part 2
  • Some More Urgent
    Problems
  • Fostering of Peace and Establishment of a
    Community of Nations
  • To the extent that people are sinners, the
    threat of war hangs over them and will so
    continue until the coming of Christ but insofar
    as they can vanquish sin by coming together in
    charity, violence itself will be vanquished and
    they will make these words come true They shall
    beat their swords into ploughshares, and their
    spears into pruning hooks nation shall not lift
    up sword against nation, neither shall they learn
    war any more. (78)
  • Nonviolent and conscientious objections are
    legitimate.
  • Every nation is entitled to a just defense, but
    wars to conquer and/or enslave other nations can
    not be allowed.
  • Participation in armed services is permissible,
    but not blind obedience to orders that violate
    the natural law.
  • The arms race is one of the greatest curses on
    the human race and the harm it inflicts on the
    poor is more than can be endured. (81)
  • No act of war in heavily populated areas is
    permissible.
  • Deterrence is not an effective method of avoiding
    war.
  • Every person has a right and duty to work toward
    disarmament and peace.

41
Part 2
  • Some More
    Urgent Problems
  • Fostering of Peace and Establishment of a
    Community of Nations
  • If peace is to be established, the first
    condition is to root out those causes of discord
    between people which lead to wars, especially
    injustice. (83)
  • Discord caused by excessive economic
    inequalities.
  • Also by a desire for power and a contempt for
    people.
  • Envy, distrust, pride, and other selfish passions
    also lead to discord.
  • If these are to be remedied or prevented and if
    unlimited recourse to violence is to be
    restrained, it is of the greatest importance that
    international bodies work more effectively and
    more resolutely to coordinate their efforts. And
    finally, people should work unsparingly to set up
    bodies to promote peace. (83)
  • Greater international cooperation is needed in
    economic matters.
  • Elimination of profiteering, nationalistic
    ambitions, desire for political domination,
    schemes of military strategy, and intrigues for
    spreading and imposing ideologies.
  • Cooperation will come about only if people and
    nations forgo their own prejudices and
    demonstrate their willingness to enter sincere
    dialogue.
  • Ecumenical cooperation is encouraged and
    necessary to achieve justice.
  • The Church, by imparting the divine and natural
    law, makes a contribution toward world peace and
    helps to foster communion among peoples and
    nations.

42
Conclusion
  • Since God the Father is the beginning and end of
    all things, we are all called to be brothers and
    sisters we ought to work together without
    violence and without deceit to build up the world
    in a spirit of genuine peace. (92)
  • By this all will know that you are my disciples,
    if you have love for one another. (Jn 1335)
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