Doctrinal Note on some questions regarding the participation of
Catholics in political life
November 24, 2002
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
The Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, having received the opinion of the
Pontifical Council for the Laity, has decided
that it would be appropriate to publish the
present Doctrinal Note on some questions
regarding the participation of Catholics in
political life. This Note is directed to the
Bishops of the Catholic Church and, in a
particular way, to Catholic politicians and all
lay members of the faithful called to
participate in the political life of democratic
societies.
I. A constant teaching
1. The commitment of Christians in the world has
found a variety of expressions in the course of the
past 2000 years. One such expression has been
Christian involvement in political life: Christians,
as one Early Church writer stated, "play their full
role as citizens".[1]
Among the saints, the Church venerates many men and
women who served God through their generous
commitment to politics and government. Among these,
Saint Thomas More, who was proclaimed Patron of
Statesmen and Politicians, gave witness by his
martyrdom to "the inalienable dignity of the human
conscience".[2]Though
subjected to various forms of psychological
pressure, Saint Thomas More refused to compromise,
never forsaking the "constant fidelity to legitimate
authority and institutions" which distinguished him;
he taught by his life and his death that "man cannot
be separated from God, nor politics from morality".[3]
It is commendable that in today's democratic
societies, in a climate of true freedom, everyone is
made a participant in directing the body politic.[4]
Such societies call for new and fuller forms of
participation in public life by Christian and
non-Christian citizens alike. Indeed, all can
contribute, by voting in elections for lawmakers and
government officials, and in other ways as well, to
the development of political solutions and
legislative choices which, in their opinion, will
benefit the common good.[5]
The life of a democracy could not be productive
without the active, responsible and generous
involvement of everyone, "albeit in a diversity and
complementarity of forms, levels, tasks, and
responsibilities".[6]
By fulfilling their civic duties, "guided by a
Christian conscience",[7]
in conformity with its values, the lay faithful
exercise their proper task of infusing the temporal
order with Christian values, all the while
respecting the nature and rightful autonomy of that
order,[8]
and cooperating with other citizens according to
their particular competence and responsibility.[9]
The consequence of this fundamental teaching of the
Second Vatican Council is that "the lay faithful are
never to relinquish their participation in 'public
life', that is, in the many different economic,
social, legislative, administrative and cultural
areas, which are intended to promote organically and
institutionally the common good".[10]This
would include the promotion and defence of goods
such as public order and peace, freedom and
equality, respect for human life and for the
environment, justice and solidarity.
The present Note does not seek to set out the
entire teaching of the Church on this matter, which
is summarized in its essentials in the Catechism of
the Catholic Church, but intends only to recall some
principles proper to the Christian conscience, which
inspire the social and political involvement of
Catholics in democratic societies.[11]
The emergence of ambiguities or questionable
positions in recent times, often because of the
pressure of world events, has made it necessary to
clarify some important elements of Church teaching
in this area.
II. Central points in the current cultural and
political debate
2. Civil society today is undergoing a complex
cultural process as the end of an era brings with it
a time of uncertainty in the face of something new.
The great strides made in our time give evidence of
humanity's progress in attaining conditions of life
which are more in keeping with human dignity. The
growth in the sense of responsibility towards
countries still on the path of development is
without doubt an important sign, illustrative of a
greater sensitivity to the common good. At the same
time, however, one cannot close one's eyes to the
real dangers which certain tendencies in society are
promoting through legislation, nor can one ignore
the effects this will have on future generations.
A kind of cultural relativism exists today,
evident in the conceptualization and defence of an
ethical pluralism, which sanctions the decadence and
disintegration of reason and the principles of the
natural moral law. Furthermore, it is not unusual to
hear the opinion expressed in the public sphere that
such ethical pluralism is the very condition for
democracy.[12]
As a result, citizens claim complete autonomy with
regard to their moral choices, and lawmakers
maintain that they are respecting this freedom of
choice by enacting laws which ignore the principles
of natural ethics and yield to ephemeral cultural
and moral trends,[13]
as if every possible outlook on life were
of equal value. At the same time, the value of
tolerance is disingenuously invoked when a large
number of citizens, Catholics among them, are asked
not to base their contribution to society and
political life - through the legitimate means
available to everyone in a democracy - on their
particular understanding of the human person and the
common good. The history of the twentieth century
demonstrates that those citizens were right who
recognized the falsehood of relativism, and with it,
the notion that there is no moral law rooted in the
nature of the human person, which must govern our
understanding of man, the common good and the state.
3. Such relativism, of course, has nothing to do
with the legitimate freedom of Catholic citizens to
choose among the various political opinions that are
compatible with faith and the natural moral law, and
to select, according to their own criteria, what
best corresponds to the needs of the common good.
Political freedom is not - and cannot be - based
upon the relativistic idea that all conceptions of
the human person's good have the same value and
truth, but rather, on the fact that politics are
concerned with very concrete realizations of the
true human and social good in given historical,
geographic, economic, technological and cultural
contexts. From the specificity of the task at hand
and the variety of circumstances, a plurality of
morally acceptable policies and solutions arises. It
is not the Church's task to set forth specific
political solutions - and even less to propose a
single solution as the acceptable one - to temporal
questions that God has left to the free and
responsible judgment of each person. It is, however,
the Church's right and duty to provide a moral
judgment on temporal matters when this is required
by faith or the moral law.[14]
If Christians must "recognize the legitimacy of
differing points of view about the organization of
worldly affairs",[15]
they are also called to reject, as injurious to
democratic life, a conception of pluralism that
reflects moral relativism. Democracy must be based
on the true and solid foundation of non-negotiable
ethical principles, which are the underpinning of
life in society.
On the level of concrete political action, there
can generally be a plurality of political parties in
which Catholics may exercise - especially through
legislative assemblies - their right and duty to
contribute to the public life of their country.[16]
This arises because of the contingent nature of
certain choices regarding the ordering of society,
the variety of strategies available for
accomplishing or guaranteeing the same fundamental
value, the possibility of different interpretations
of the basic principles of political theory, and the
technical complexity of many political problems. It
should not be confused, however, with an ambiguous
pluralism in the choice of moral principles or
essential values. The legitimate plurality of
temporal options is at the origin of the commitment
of Catholics to politics and relates directly to
Christian moral and social teaching. It is in the
light of this teaching that lay Catholics must
assess their participation in political life so as
to be sure that it is marked by a coherent
responsibility for temporal reality.
The Church recognizes that while democracy is the
best expression of the direct participation of
citizens in political choices, it succeeds only to
the extent that it is based on a correct
understanding of the human person.[17]
Catholic involvement in political life cannot
compromise on this principle, for otherwise the
witness of the Christian faith in the world, as well
as the unity and interior coherence of the faithful,
would be non-existent. The democratic structures on
which the modern state is based would be quite
fragile were its foundation not the centrality of
the human person. It is respect for the person that
makes democratic participation possible. As the
Second Vatican Council teaches, the protection of
"the rights of the person is, indeed, a necessary
condition for citizens, individually and
collectively, to play an active part in public life
and administration".[18]
4. The complex array of today's problems branches
out from here, including some never faced by past
generations. Scientific progress has resulted in
advances that are unsettling for the consciences of
men and women and call for solutions that respect
ethical principles in a coherent and fundamental
way. At the same time, legislative proposals are put
forward which, heedless of the consequences for the
existence and future of human beings with regard to
the formation of culture and social behaviour,
attack the very inviolability of human life.
Catholics, in this difficult situation, have the
right and the duty to recall society to a deeper
understanding of human life and to the
responsibility of everyone in this regard. John Paul
II, continuing the constant teaching of the Church,
has reiterated many times that those who are
directly involved in lawmaking bodies have a "grave
and clear obligation to oppose" any law that attacks
human life. For them, as for every Catholic, it is
impossible to promote such laws or to vote for them.[19]
As John Paul II has taught in his Encyclical Letter
Evangelium vitae regarding the situation in which it
is not possible to overturn or completely repeal a
law allowing abortion which is already in force or
coming up for a vote, "an elected official, whose
absolute personal opposition to procured abortion
was well known, could licitly support proposals
aimed at limiting the harm done by such a law and at
lessening its negative consequences at the level of
general opinion and public morality".[20]
In this context, it must be noted also that a
well-formed Christian conscience does not permit one
to vote for a political program or an individual law
which contradicts the fundamental contents of faith
and morals. The Christian faith is an integral
unity, and thus it is incoherent to isolate some
particular element to the detriment of the whole of
Catholic doctrine. A political commitment to a
single isolated aspect of the Church's social
doctrine does not exhaust one's responsibility
towards the common good. Nor can a Catholic think of
delegating his Christian responsibility to others;
rather, the Gospel of Jesus Christ gives him this
task, so that the truth about man and the world
might be proclaimed and put into action.
When political activity comes up against moral
principles that do not admit of exception,
compromise or derogation, the Catholic commitment
becomes more evident and laden with responsibility.
In the face of fundamental and inalienable ethical
demands, Christians must recognize that what is at
stake is the essence of the moral law, which
concerns the integral good of the human person. This
is the case with laws concerning abortion and
euthanasia (not to be confused with the decision to
forgo extraordinary treatments, which is morally
legitimate). Such laws must defend the basic right
to life from conception to natural death. In the
same way, it is necessary to recall the duty to
respect and protect the rights of the human embryo.
Analogously, the family needs to be safeguarded and
promoted, based on monogamous marriage between a man
and a woman, and protected in its unity and
stability in the face of modern laws on divorce: in
no way can other forms of cohabitation be placed on
the same level as marriage, nor can they receive
legal recognition as such. The same is true for the
freedom of parents regarding the education of their
children; it is an inalienable right recognized also
by the Universal Declaration on Human Rights. In the
same way, one must consider society's protection of
minors and freedom from modern forms of slavery
(drug abuse and prostitution, for example). In
addition, there is the right to religious freedom
and the development of an economy that is at the
service of the human person and of the common good,
with respect for social justice, the principles of
human solidarity and subsidiarity, according to
which "the rights of all individuals, families, and
organizations and their practical implementation
must be acknowledged".[21]
Finally, the question of peace must be mentioned.
Certain pacifistic and ideological visions tend at
times to secularize the value of peace, while, in
other cases, there is the problem of summary ethical
judgments which forget the complexity of the issues
involved. Peace is always "the work of justice and
the effect of charity".[22]
It demands the absolute and radical rejection of
violence and terrorism and requires a constant and
vigilant commitment on the part of all political
leaders.
III. Principles of Catholic doctrine on the
autonomy of the temporal order and on pluralism.
5. While a plurality of methodologies reflective
of different sensibilities and cultures can be
legitimate in approaching such questions, no
Catholic can appeal to the principle of pluralism or
to the autonomy of lay involvement in political life
to support policies affecting the common good which
compromise or undermine fundamental ethical
requirements. This is not a question of
"confessional values" per se, because such ethical
precepts are rooted in human nature itself and
belong to the natural moral law. They do not require
from those who defend them the profession of the
Christian faith, although the Church's teaching
confirms and defends them always and everywhere as
part of her service to the truth about man and about
the common good of civil society. Moreover, it
cannot be denied that politics must refer to
principles of absolute value precisely because these
are at the service of the dignity of the human
person and of true human progress.
6. The appeal often made to "the rightful
autonomy of the participation of lay Catholics" in
politics needs to be clarified. Promoting the common
good of society, according to one's conscience, has
nothing to do with "confessionalism" or religious
intolerance. For Catholic moral doctrine, the
rightful autonomy of the political or civil sphere
from that of religion and the Church - but not from
that of morality - is a value that has been attained
and recognized by the Catholic Church and belongs to
inheritance of contemporary
civilization.[23]
John Paul II has warned many times of the
dangers which follow from confusion between the
religious and political spheres. "Extremely
sensitive situations arise when a specifically
religious norm becomes or tends to become the law of
a state without due consideration for the
distinction between the domains proper to religion
and to political society. In practice, the
identification of religious law with civil law can
stifle religious freedom, even going so far as to
restrict or deny other inalienable human rights".[24]
All the faithful are well aware that
specifically religious activities (such as the
profession of faith, worship, administration of
sacraments, theological doctrines, interchange
between religious authorities and the members of
religions) are outside the state's responsibility.
The state must not interfere, nor in any way require
or prohibit these activities, except when it is a
question of public order. The recognition of civil
and political rights, as well as the allocation of
public services may not be made dependent upon
citizens' religious convictions or activities.
The right and duty of Catholics and all citizens
to seek the truth with sincerity and to promote and
defend, by legitimate means, moral truths concerning
society, justice, freedom, respect for human life
and the other rights of the person, is something
quite different. The fact that some of these truths
may also be taught by the Church does not lessen the
political legitimacy or the rightful "autonomy" of
the contribution of those citizens who are committed
to them, irrespective of the role that reasoned
inquiry or confirmation by the Christian faith may
have played in recognizing such truths. Such
"autonomy" refers first of all to the attitude of
the person who respects the truths that derive from
natural knowledge regarding man's life in society,
even if such truths may also be taught by a specific
religion, because truth is one. It would be a
mistake to confuse the proper autonomy exercised by
Catholics in political life with the claim of a
principle that prescinds from the moral and social
teaching of the Church.
By its interventions in this area, the Church's
Magisterium does not wish to exercise political
power or eliminate the freedom of opinion of
Catholics regarding contingent questions. Instead,
it intends - as is its proper function - to instruct
and illuminate the consciences of the faithful,
particularly those involved in political life, so
that their actions may always serve the integral
promotion of the human person and the common good.
The social doctrine of the Church is not an
intrusion into the government of individual
countries. It is a question of the lay Catholic's
duty to be morally coherent, found within one's
conscience, which is one and indivisible. "There
cannot be two parallel lives in their existence: on
the one hand, the so-called 'spiritual life', with
its values and demands; and on the other, the
so-called 'secular' life, that is, life in a family,
at work, in social responsibilities, in the
responsibilities of public life and in culture. The
branch, engrafted to the vine which is Christ, bears
its fruit in every sphere of exis
In democratic societies, all proposals are freely
discussed and examined. Those who, on the basis of
respect for individual conscience, would view the
moral duty of Christians to act according to their
conscience as something that disqualifies them from
political life, denying the legitimacy of their
political involvement following from their
convictions about the common good, would be guilty
of a form of intolerant secularism. Such a position
would seek to deny not only any engagement of
Christianity in public or political life, but even
the possibility of natural ethics itself. Were this
the case, the road would be open to moral anarchy,
which would be anything but legitimate pluralism.
The oppression of the weak by the strong would be
the obvious consequence. The marginalization of
Christianity, moreover, would not bode well for the
future of society or for consensus among peoples;
indeed, it would threaten the very spiritual and
cultural foundations of civilization.[26]
IV. Considerations regarding particular aspects
7. In recent years, there have been cases within
some organizations founded on Catholic principles,
in which support has been given to political forces
or movements with positions contrary to the moral
and social teaching of the Church on fundamental
ethical questions. Such activities, in contradiction
to basic principles of Christian conscience, are not
compatible with membership in organizations or
associations which define themselves as Catholic.
Similarly, some Catholic periodicals in certain
countries have expressed perspectives on political
choices that have been ambiguous or incorrect, by
misinterpreting the idea of the political autonomy
enjoyed by Catholics and by not taking into
consideration the principles mentioned above.
Faith in Jesus Christ, who is "the way, the
truth, and the life"(Jn 14:6), calls Christians to
exert a greater effort in building a culture which,
inspired by the Gospel, will reclaim the values and
contents of the Catholic Tradition. The presentation
of the fruits of the spiritual, intellectual and
moral heritage of Catholicism in terms
understandable to modern culture is a task of great
urgency today, in order to avoid also a kind of
Catholic cultural diaspora. Furthermore, the
cultural achievements and mature experience of
Catholics in political life in various countries,
especially since the Second World War, do not permit
any kind of 'inferiority complex' in comparison with
political programs which recent history has revealed
to be weak or totally ruinous. It is insufficient
and reductive to think that the commitment of
Catholics in society can be limited to a simple
transformation of structures, because if at the
basic level there is no culture capable of
receiving, justifying and putting into practice
positions deriving from faith and morals, the
changes will always rest on a weak foundation.
Christian faith has never presumed to impose a
rigid framework on social and political questions,
conscious that the historical dimension requires men
and women to live in imperfect situations, which are
also susceptible to rapid change. For this reason,
Christians must reject political positions and
activities inspired by a utopian perspective which,
turning the tradition of Biblical faith into a kind
of prophetic vision without God, makes ill use of
religion by directing consciences towards a hope
which is merely earthly and which empties or
reinterprets the Christian striving towards eternal
life.
At the same time, the Church teaches that
authentic freedom does not exist without the truth.
"Truth and freedom either go together hand in hand
or together they perish in misery".[27]
In a society in which truth is neither mentioned
nor sought, every form of authentic exercise of
freedom will be weakened, opening the way to
libertine and individualistic distortions and
undermining the protection of the good of the human
person and of the entire society.
8. In this regard, it is helpful to recall a
truth which today is often not perceived or
formulated correctly in public opinion: the right to
freedom of conscience and, in a special way, to
religious freedom, taught in the Declaration
Dignitatis humanae of the Second Vatican Council, is
based on the ontological dignity of the human person
and not on a non-existent equality among religions
or cultural systems of human creation.[28]
Reflecting on this question, Paul VI taught that "in
no way does the Council base this right to religious
freedom on the fact that all religions and all
teachings, including those that are erroneous, would
have more or less equal value; it is based rather on
the dignity of the human person, which demands that
he not be subjected to external limitations which
tend to constrain the conscience in its search for
the true religion or in adhering to it".[
29 ] The
teaching on freedom of conscience and on religious
freedom does not therefore contradict the
condemnation of indifferentism and religious
relativism by Catholic doctrine;[30]
on the contrary, it is fully in accord with it.
V. Conclusion
9. The principles contained in the present Note
are intended to shed light on one of the most
important aspects of the unity of Christian life:
coherence between faith and life, Gospel and
culture, as recalled by the Second Vatican Council.
The Council exhorted Christians "to fulfill their
duties faithfully in the spirit of the Gospel. 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 shirk our earthly responsibilities;
this is to forget that by our faith we are bound all
the more to fulfill these responsibilities according
to the vocation of each... May Christians...be proud
of the opportunity to carry out their earthly
activity in such a way as to integrate human,
domestic, professional, scientific and technical
enterprises with religious values, under whose
supreme direction all things are ordered to the
glory of God".[31]
The Sovereign Pontiff John Paul II, in the
Audience of November 21, 2002, approved the present
Note, adopted in the Plenary Session of this
Congregation, and ordered its publication.
Rome, from the Offices of the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, November 24, 2002, the
Solemnity of Christ the King.
+ Joseph Card. RATZINGER
Prefect
+ Tarcisio BERTONE, S.D.B.
Archbishop Emeritus of Vercelli
Secretary
Notes
[1] Letter to Diognetus, 5,5;
Cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, No. 2240.
[2] John Paul II, Apostolic Letter
Motu Proprio Proclaiming Saint Thomas More Patron of
Statesmen and Politicians, 1: AAS 93 (2001), 76.
[3] Ibid., 4.
[4] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 31; Catechism
of the Catholic Church, No. 1915.
[5] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 75.
[6] John Paul II, Apostolic
Exhortation, Christifideles laici, 42: AAS 81
(1989), 472. The present doctrinal Note refers to
the involvement in political life of lay members of
the faithful. The Bishops of the Church have the
right and the duty to set out the moral principles
relating to the social order; "Nevertheless active
participation in political parties is reserved to
the lay faithful" (ibid., 60). Cf. Congregation for
the Clergy, Directory for the Ministry and Life of
Priests (March 31, 1994), 33.
[7] Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 76.
[8] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 36.
[9] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Decree Apostolicam actuositatem, 7; Dogmatic
Constitution Lumen gentium, 36; Pastoral
Constitution Gaudium et spes, 31 and 43.
[10] John Paul II, Apostolic
Exhortation Christifideles laici, 42.
[11] In the last two centuries,
the Papal Magisterium has spoken on the principal
questions regarding the social and political order.
Cf. Leo XIII, Encyclical Letter Diuturnum illud: ASS
14 (1881-1882), 4 ff; Encyclical Letter Immortale
Dei: ASS 18 (1885-1886), 162ff; Encyclical Letter
Libertas præstantissimum: ASS 20 (1887-1888), 593ff;
Encyclical Letter Rerum novarum: ASS 23 (1890-1891),
643ff; Benedict XV, Encyclical Letter Pacem Dei
munus pulcherrimum: AAS 12 (1920), 209ff; Pius XI,
Encyclical Letter Quadragesimo anno: AAS 23 (1931),
190ff; Encyclical Letter Mit brennender Sorge: AAS
29 (1937), 145-167; Encyclical Letter Divini
Redemptoris: AAS 29 (1937), 78ff; Pius XII,
Encyclical Letter Summi Pontificatus: AAS 31 (1939),
423ff; Radiomessaggi natalizi 1941-1944; John XXIII,
Encyclical Letter Mater et magistra: AAS 53 (1961),
401-464; Encyclical Letter Pacem in terris: AAS 55
(1963), 257-304; Paul VI, Encyclical Letter
Populorum progressio: AAS 59 (1967), 257-299;
Apostolic Letter Octogesima adveniens: AAS 63
(1971), 401-441.
[12] Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter Centesimus annus, 46: AAS 83 (1991);
Encyclical Letter Veritatis splendor, 101: AAS 85
(1993), 1212-1213; Discourse to the Italian
Parliament, 5: L'Osservatore Romano (November 15,
2002).
[13]
Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter Evangelium vitae, 22: AAS 87 (1995), 425-426.
[14] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 76.
[15] Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 75.
[16]
Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 43 and 75.
[17] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 25.
[18] Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 73.
[19] Cf. John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter Evangelium vitae, 73.
[20] Ibid.
[21] Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 75.
[22]
Catechism of the Catholic
Church,No. 2304.
[23] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 76.
[24] John Paul II, Message for
the 1991 World Day of Peace: "If you want peace,
respect the conscience of every person", 4: AAS 83
(1991), 414-415.
[25] John Paul II, Apostolic
Exhortation Christifideles laici, 59.
[26] Cf. John Paul II, Address to
the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Holy See:
L'Osservatore Romano (January 11, 2002).
[27] John Paul II, Encyclical
Letter Fides et ratio, 90: AAS 91 (1999), 75.
[28] Cf. Second Vatican Council,
Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 1: "This Sacred
Council begins by professing that God himself has
made known to the human race how men by serving him
can be saved and reach the state of the blessed. We
believe that this one true religion subsists in the
Catholic and Apostolic Church". This does not lessen
the sincere respect that the Church has for the
various religious traditions, recognizing in them
"elements of truth and goodness". See also, Second
Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen
gentium, 16; Decree Ad gentes, 11; Declaration
Nostra aetate, 2; John Paul II, Encyclical Letter
Redemptoris missio, 55: AAS 83 (1991), 302-304;
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith,
Declaration Dominus Iesus, 2, 8, 21: AAS 92 (2000),
742-765.
[29] Paul VI, Address to the
Sacred College and to the Roman Prelature: in
Insegnamenti di Paolo VI, 14 (1976), 1088-1089.
[30]
Cf. Pius IX, Encyclical
Letter Quanta cura: ASS 3 (1867), 162; Leo XIII,
Encyclical Letter Immortale Dei: ASS 18 (1885),
170-171; Pius XI, Encyclical Letter Quas primas: AAS
17 (1925), 604-605; Catechism of the Catholic
Church, No. 2108; Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, Declaration Dominus Iesus, 22.
[31] Second Vatican Council,
Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et spes, 43; see also
John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Christifideles
laici, 59.