| Pope releases his first encyclical(AP)
 Updated: 2006-01-25 20:15
 
 Pope Benedict XVI said Wednesday in his first encyclical that the Roman 
Catholic Church has no desire to govern states or set public policy, but can't 
remain silent when its charity is needed to ease suffering around the world. 
 
 
 
 
 |  Pope Benedict XVI greets the crowd gathered in 
 St Peter's square during his weekly Angelus prayers in the Vatican January 
 22, 2006. [Reuters]
 |  
 In the long-awaited document "God is Love," Benedict explores the 
relationship between God's love for mankind and the church's works of charity, 
saying the two are intrinsically linked and the foundation of the Christian 
faith. 
 The 71-page encyclical, eagerly watched for clues about Benedict's major 
concerns, characterizes his early pontificate as one in which he seeks to return 
to the basics of Christianity with a relatively uncontroversial meditation on 
love and the need for greater works of charity in an unjust world. 
 Even Vatican officials have expressed some surprise at the topic, considering 
Benedict was the Vatican's chief doctrinal watchdog and could easily have delved 
into a more problematic issue such as bioethics in his first authoritative text. 
 In the encyclical, Benedict said the church's work caring for widows, the 
sick and orphans was as much a part of its mission as celebrating the sacraments 
and spreading the Gospels. However, he stressed that the church's charity 
workers must never use their work to proselytize or push a particular political 
ideology. 
 "Love is free; it is not practiced as a way of achieving other ends," he 
wrote. 
 "Those who practice charity in the church's name will never seek to impose 
the church's faith upon others. They realize that a pure and generous love is 
the best witness to the God in whom we believe and by whom we are driven to 
love." 
 He rejected the criticism of charity found in Marxist thought, which holds 
that charity is merely an excuse by the rich to keep the poor in their place 
when the rich should be working for a more just society. 
 While the Marxist model, in which the state tries to provide for every social 
need, did respond to the plight of the poor faster than even the church did 
during the Industrial Revolution, it was a failed experiment because it couldn't 
respond to every human need, he wrote. 
 Even in the most just societies, charity will always be necessary, he said. 
 "There will always be suffering which cries out for consolation and help. 
There will always be loneliness. There will always be situations of material 
need where help in the form of concrete love of neighbor is indispensable," he 
said. 
 Benedict stressed that the state alone is responsible for creating that just 
society, not the church. "As a political task, this cannot be the church's 
immediate responsibility," he said. 
 However, he said the church wants to be involved in political life by helping 
"form consciences in political life and stimulate greater insight into the 
authentic requirements of justice as well as greater readiness to act 
accordingly, even when this might involve conflict with situations of personal 
interest." 
 He said the church was "duty-bound" to offer such a contribution, and that 
the lay faithful, who as citizens of the state, are duty-bound to carry it out 
through works of charity. 
 While stressing that the church has no direct political role, he did offer a 
prescription for what the state should do. 
 "We do not need a state which regulates and controls everything, but a state 
which, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, generously acknowledges 
and supports initiatives arising from the different social forces and combines 
spontaneity with closeness to those in need," he wrote. 
 
 
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