 |
CLOSING OF THE SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL
COUNCIL
ADDRESS OF POPE PAUL VI
TO MEN OF THOUGHT AND
SCIENCE
8 December 1965
A very special greeting to you, seekers after truth, to you, men of thought
and science, the explorers of man, of the universe and of history, to all of you
who are pilgrims enroute to the light and to those also who have stopped along
the road, tired and disappointed by their vain search.
Why a special greeting for you? Because all of us here, bishops and Fathers
of the council, are on the lookout for truth. What have our efforts amounted to
during these four years except a more attentive search for and deepening of the
message of truth entrusted to the Church and an effort at more perfect docility
to the spirit of truth.
Hence our paths could not fail to cross. Your road is ours. Your paths are
never foreign to ours. We are the friends of your vocation as searchers,
companions in your fatigues, admirers of your successes and, if necessary,
consolers in your discouragement and your failures.
Hence for you also we have a message and it is this: Continue your search
without tiring and without ever despairing of the truth. Recall the words of one
of your great friends, St. Augustine: "Let us seek with the desire to find, and
find with the desire to seek still more." Happy are those who, while possessing
the truth, search more earnestly for it in order to renew it, deepen it and
transmit it to others. Happy also are those who, not having found it, are
working toward it with a sincere heart. May they seek the light of tomorrow with
the light of today until they reach the fullness of light.
But do not forget that if thinking is something great, it is first a duty.
Woe to him who voluntarily closes his eyes to the light. Thinking is also a
responsibility, so woe to those who darken the spirit by the thousand tricks
which degrade it, make it proud, deceive and deform it. What other basic
principle is there for men of science except to think rightly?
For this purpose, without troubling your efforts, without dazzling
brilliance, we come to offer you the light of our mysterious lamp which is
faith. He who entrusted this lamp to us is the sovereign Master of all thought,
He whose humble disciples we are, the only one who said and could have said: "I
am the light of the world, I am the way, the truth and the life."
These words have meaning for you. Never perhaps, thank God, has there been
so clear a possibility as today of a deep understanding between real science and
real faith, mutual servants of one another in the one truth. Do not stand in the
way of this important meeting. Have confidence in faith, this great friend of
intelligence. Enlighten yourselves with its light in order to take hold of
truth, the whole truth. This is the wish, the encouragement and the hope, which,
before disbanding, is expressed to you by the Fathers of the entire world
assembled at Rome in council.
|