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Pope Francis: Do not confuse utility with happiness


Pope hosts homeless lunch at Vatican - June 2020

Pope hosts homeless lunch at Vatican - June 2020

Source: Vatican News

The Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences is holding a meeting entitled: 'Caritas, Social Friendship, and the End of Poverty: Science and Ethics of Happiness' from 3-4 October.

The event opened today with a message from Pope Francis, in which he explains that happiness is the deepest desire of every man and woman, and the Lord promises it to those who live according to His 'style'.

This is the same desire indicated in the Beatitudes, which for St Augustine represent "all the perfection of our life." Everyone tends towards happiness, but not everyone has the same concept of happiness, observed the Pope.

He noted that today we are faced with a prevailing paradigm, widely spread by the "single thought", which confuses utility with happiness, having fun with living well. This claims to be the only valid criterion for discernment and is "a subtle form of ideological colonialism", said the Pope. "It is about imposing the ideology that happiness consists only in what is useful, in things and possessions, in the abundance of things, fame, and money", he added.

Pope Francis went on to say that this pursuit of selfish satisfaction produces the fear of not having enough and leads to greed and covetousness in individuals and countries, rich and poor, as well as to "suffocating materialism and a general state of conflict." This undermines the dignity of people and of the planet itself, and increases poverty and inequality, he continued.

"In these times of opulence, when it should be possible to end poverty, the powers of single-mindedness say nothing about the poor, the elderly, immigrants, the unborn, the seriously ill", said the Pope. They are invisible to the majority, the Pope said, and "when they are made visible, they are often presented as an unworthy burden on the public purse."

To get out of this situation, the Pope said, what we need, is not to have more goods, but "to implement the ever new and revolutionary paradigm of the beatitudes of Jesus, beginning with the first".

"The spirit of poverty" is then "that turning point that opens the way to happiness through a complete paradigm shift." It is "a sure way to reach the fullness to which we are all called," said the Pope.

Pope Francis emphasised the distinction between poverty of spirit, of which Jesus speaks, and material poverty, that is, the deprivation of the necessities of life, which he described in harsh words.

"Poverty as deprivation of what is necessary - that is, misery - is socially, as (Léon) Bloy and (Charles) Péguy saw clearly, a kind of hell, because it weakens human freedom and puts those who suffer from it in a position to become victims of the new forms of slavery (forced labour, prostitution, organ trafficking and so on) in order to survive. These are criminal conditions that in strict justice must be denounced and fought relentlessly. Everyone, according to their responsibility - and in particular governments, multinational and national companies, civil society and religious communities - must do so. They are the worst degradations of human dignity and, for a Christian, the open wounds of the body of Christ, Who cries out from His cross: I thirst."

It is a duty, therefore, to help the poor, continued Pope Francis. "All will be measured according to what they have done to help 'their brothers in need'."

The Pope then went on to consider the growing gap between rich and poor, which is causing social unrest, conflict and undermining democracy.

He explained that this is due to the progressive erosion of the relationships of fraternity, social friendship, harmony, trust, reliability, and respect that are the basis of all civil coexistence. "Of course, the greed that drives the system has long set aside the main economic, social and political consequence of the 'spirit of poverty', that which demands social justice and co-responsibility in the management of goods and the fruits of human labour."

Alongside the widespread globalisation of indifference, the Pope pointed out that, although it is prevalent, "throughout this pandemic time we have seen how the globalisation of solidarity has been able to impose itself with its characteristic discretion in the different corners of our cities". It is good that it is spreading and above all, the Pope noted, it is essential that it is embodied in the lives of young people. We must therefore commit ourselves to this, he said.

Pope Francis concluded his Message by pointing out that that the spirit of poverty, and therefore, the limit placed on profit, is the only way that can guarantee "the very wellbeing of the individual, the economy, and local and global society."

We are all called to a commitment: "to create a global movement against indifference that creates or recreates social institutions, that is inspired by the Beatitudes and that] urges us to seek the civilisation of love."

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