Meeting with world of culture and science in
Georgia
Use Your Creativity for the
Promotion of Life!
9 November 1999
Mr President,
Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
1. I have greatly looked forward to this meeting with the men and women of
culture, science and the arts of Georgia, for you are in a real way the
representatives and the guardians of Georgia's unique cultural heritage. Georgia
is well known as a country of poets and artists, and the proud heir of an
ancient tradition, enriched down the centuries by elements drawn from contacts
with other nations and peoples. Now, with the collapse of walls which for so
long symbolized the separation between East and West, Georgia has entered upon a
new and challenging chapter in its history, and is fully committed to rebuilding
its social fabric and creating a future of hope and prosperity for its people.
As representatives of the world of culture, you have an irreplaceable role in
this process. It is up to you to forge a new cultural vision that will draw upon
the heritage of the past in order to inspire and shape the future.
This noble task becomes a sacred trust at the time when Georgia is about to
celebrate its 3,000th anniversary as a nation.
I am particularly grateful to President Shevardnadze for presiding at
this meeting, and I thank him for his warm welcome and kind words of
introduction. To the Catholicos-Patriarch I express my profound gratitude. To
all of you, distinguished guests, I express the hope that my visit will serve to
highlight Georgia's special vocation as a builder of peace throughout this
region and as a bridge between the countries of the Caucasus and the rest of
Europe.
2. In addressing you today, I cannot but recall the contribution of
Christianity to Georgian culture. It is a significant fact that for many
centuries your national literature was almost exclusively religious in
inspiration. This reflects which holds true for all human culture. Culture in
fact is a reality born of self-transcendence; it takes shape from an impulse by
which human individuality seeks to rise above its limitations in an interior
drive to communicate and share. In this sense, we may say that culture has its
ultimate roots in man's naturally religious soul. For the inner force which man
experiences, and which impels him to seek the fulfillment of his being in his
relations with others, remains unsatisfied until it attains the Other who is
Absolute.
It is precisely in this movement of self-transcendence, of recognition of the
other, of the need to communicate with the other, that culture is created.
But this drive towards the other is possible only through love. Ultimately,
it is love alone which succeeds in uprooting the tragic selfishness that lies
deep within the human heart. It is love which helps us to place others and the
Other at the center of our lives. Christians have always sought to create a
culture which is fundamentally open to the eternal and transcendent, while at
the same time attentive to the temporal, the concrete, the human.
Generations of Christians have striven to build and to pass on a culture, the
goal of which is an ever more profound and universal fraternal communion of
persons. Yet this universality is not one of oppressive uniformity. Genuine
culture respects the mystery of the human person, and must therefore involve a
dynamic exchange between the particular and the universal. It must seek a
synthesis of unity and diversity. Love alone is capable of holding this tension
in a creative and fruitful balance.
3. These thoughts come spontaneously to mind in considering the ancient
Christian culture of Georgia. The preaching of the Gospel not only made known
the word of salvation but also prompted the birth of the Georgian
alphabet and the subsequent growth of your national identity. The Christian
faith inspired a love for the written word which has had a profound
effect on your language, your literature and your whole cultural life.
The tradition according to which Georgians present at the Crucifixion of
Christ brought back from Jerusalem the seamless tunic of the Lord
symbolizes as it were the nation's resolute aspiration to unity. So too,
the traditions according to which the Gospel was preached in your country by the
Apostles Andrew and Simon, as well as by St Clement of Rome, exiled to the mines
of the Chersonese. While they emphasize the venerable antiquity of the Church in
Georgia, such traditions are also an indication of a profound consciousness of
the bonds of communion which the Church in this land maintained within the one
Church of Christ. A sign of the importance attached to this communion are the
many translations which are part of the Georgian religious literature; these
represent a genuine treasure which you have shared with the whole Christian
world, present in different parts of the Christian world; we need only to think
of the Monastery of Iviron on Mount Athos. This openness of your culture, so
evident in the past, is equally important today. We all know how essential it
is, especially in this part of the world, to promote a culture of solidarity
and cooperation, a culture capable of combining all the richness of your own
identity with the wealth found in the encounter with other peoples and
societies.
4. We now see a process of globalization which tends to underestimate
distinctiveness and variety, and which is marked by the rise of new forms of
ethnocentrism and exaggerated nationalism. In such a situation, the challenge is
to promote and pass on a living culture, a culture capable of fostering
communication and brotherhood between different groups and peoples, and between
the different fields of human creativity. Today's world is challenging us, in
other words, to know and respect one another in and through the diversity of
our cultures. If we respond, the human family will enjoy unity and peace,
while individual cultures will be enriched and renewed, purified of all that
poses an obstacle to mutual encounter and dialogue.
One of the most difficult challenges of our time is the encounter between
tradition and modernity. This dialogue between old and new will in great
part determine the future of the younger generation, and therefore the future of
the nation. It is a dialogue which calls for much thought and reflection, and
demands a wise equilibrium, for much is at stake. On the one hand, there can be
the temptation to take refuge in forms of nostalgia closed to what is positive
in the contemporary world. On the other hand, there is a strong tendency today
to adopt uncritically the syncretism and existential aimlessness which are
typical of a certain modernity. In meeting the cultural challenges of the
present, Georgia's spiritual heritage is a resource of inestimable value, for it
preserves the great treasure of a unified and comprehensive notion of man and
his destiny. This heritage and the traditions which spring from it are a
precious birthright of all Georgians, which even the stones proclaim - we need
only think of that remarkable jewel which is the church of Jvari, a beacon of
spiritual fight for your land.
5. Today there is an urgent need to recover the vision of an organic unity
embracing man and all of human history. Christians are convinced that at the
heart of this unity is the mystery of Christ, the Incarnate Word of God, who
reveals man to himself and discloses his sublime vocation (cf. Gaudium et
spes n. 22). Do not be afraid of Christ! Faith in him opens before us a
spiritual world that has inspired and continues to inspire humanity's
intellectual and artistic energies. Christ sets us free for authentic creativity
precisely because he makes us capable of entering into the mystery of Love, the
love of God and the love of man, and in doing so he makes it possible for us to
appreciate and at the same time to transcend particularity.
May men and women committed to the arts, science, politics and culture use
their creativity for the promotion of life in all its truth and beauty and
goodness. This can only be done by striving for an integral vision of man.
Where such a vision is weak, human dignity is diminished, and the goods of
creation, meant for the benefit and progress of humanity, sooner or later turn
against man and against life. The century now drawing to a close, with its
painful experiences of war, violence, torture and various forms of ideological
oppression, testifies all too eloquently to this. At the same time, it stands as
a witness to the enduring power of the human spirit to triumph over all that
seeks to suffocate the irrepressible quest for truth and freedom.
Dear friends, I offer my cordial good wishes for your work and I pray that
the Jubilee of Christ which we are preparing to celebrate will be an invitation
to all people of good will to work together to build a future of-hope, a true
civilization of love. Upon all of you I invoke the light and joy which are the
gifts of the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life.

Priests for Life
PO Box 141172
Staten Island, NY 10314
Tel. 888-PFL-3448, (718) 980-4400
Fax 718-980-6515
Email pfl@priestsforlife.org
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