The Role of Faith for a Cohesive and Sustainable World
His-All Holiness, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
(Davos, January 22, 2020)
(Davos, January 22, 2020)
Distinguished participants,
Honorable guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is an honor to address this important event organized by the World
Economic Forum with a special emphasis on the role of faith for a
cohesive and sustainable world. We are pleased today to be able to share
insights on the mission faith from the experience and wisdom of the
Orthodox Church and participate in this crucial conversation for the
future of humanity and the world. Faith is a main chapter in the history
of culture; culture cannot be understood without taking into account
the impact that faith has on it.
Faith can achieve its mission and fulfill its role of cohesion and
sustainability through dialogue and witness to the world. Throughout our
almost three decades of Patriarchal ministry, we have striven for the
promotion of dialogue, which we consider to be the most effective means
for addressing problems. Dialogue is a gesture and source of solidarity;
it leads to the overcoming of prejudices and mistrust; it promotes
mutual familiarization and appreciation; and it builds respect for
otherness.
It is tragic that many people tend today to identify religion with
terror, war, and intolerance. Almost every day we learn of violence in
the name of religion. This tendency to identify religion with its
negative aspects is unfortunately reinforced today through the
misinterpretations of religion, which circulate especially among
progressive intellectuals. Ignorance, intolerance and violence are the
failure and not the essence of religion. They are the marks of
fundamentalism and extremism, which regard their own ideology and
interests as truth that must be imposed upon others. Yet, our conviction
– as we have repeatedly declared throughout our tenure – is that any
crime supposedly committed in the name of God is actually a crime
against God. This is why we work to combat religious fundamentalism –
“this expression of morbid religiosity,” as was stated in the Encyclical
of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church (Crete, June 2016,
§ 17).
In our times, word is made of “the return of God,” expressed as the
presence of religion in public space and the definitive annulation of
the theory on the impending “post-religious age” and of the total
secularization of culture. The famous German philosopher and sociologist
Jürgen Habermas, who first characterized contemporary western societies
as “post-secular,”[1]
stated that political decisions in these societies should not offend
the core values and convictions of religious communities, which on their
behalf are obliged to respect civil law and human rights, as well as to
cultivate interreligious understanding and dialogue.
It is overly utopic to expect that solidarity and social cohesion can
be established through globalization, economic progress, improved
living standards, science and technology, digital communication and the
Internet. A world of peace and justice cannot exist without the
contribution of the great spiritual powers of humanity – that is, of
religions and their encounter and cooperation. We have also persistently
underlined that understanding other people’s beliefs and values is an
indispensable precondition of establishing dialogue and coexisting
peacefully. Faith strengthens the commitment of human action, and it
enlarges our witness for freedom and justice, even providing support to
our efforts when they appear to be at an impasse.
This is why, the Ecumenical Patriarchate has pioneered ecumenical
organizations, such as the World Council of Churches, and has advocated
and advanced bilateral dialogues with non-Orthodox Christians, Muslims
and Jews in the Middle East and internationally. Such dialogue does not
imply abandoning or betraying one’s belief or tradition, but instead
encourages learning to live in solidarity with all people, with whom we
share this world. We believe that the appropriate response to our
present multifaceted crisis is the development and establishment of a
culture of solidarity. Our conviction is nourished by the very essence
of the Gospel.
The term “solidarity” points, on the one hand, to the history of
struggles for social justice, freedom and dignity, while dynamically
expressing the social and political dimension of the term “fraternity”
formulated in the triptych of the French Revolution “Liberté – Égalité –
Fraternité.” However, it also promotes the idea of law, of social
justice and of the social content of freedom as co-freedom, as
cooperation for the common good, as co-responsibility for the common
home (“οἶκος”). On the other hand, solidarity points to the Biblical
fraternity, to the unconditional love and help toward our fellow human
beings, promoting the social dimension and expression of true freedom.
In this way, the term “solidarity” contains the two unshakeable pillars
of humanism: justice and love.
In a culture of solidarity, human rights can function as universal
humanistic principles for peaceful coexistence and social justice,
representing the “culture of humanity,” while ensuring the “right to
difference” on the basis of respect for these universal values, as well
as the orientation of social and economic life toward the dignity of the
human person. They will serve as humanistic criteria for a more just
globalization and as answers to the challenges or new threats to freedom
and justice. The culture of solidarity signifies a life, where the “law
of the fittest” is not predominant, but instead the strength of law and
justice prevails.
In this sense, the Ecumenical Patriarchate declared 2013 as “the year
of universal solidarity.” In our Patriarchal Encyclical we articulated
the conviction that the ongoing worldwide economic and social crisis
ultimately expresses a lack of solidarity. Our aim was to sensitize
individuals and peoples to poverty and the great inequalities that
exist. We underscored the necessity for initiatives to ensure the right
that every human being enjoys the essential goods of life. For us, this
immense crisis is a result of a broader spiritual crisis. Humanity needs
a renewed culture of solidarity, that transforms our society of
“having” into a society of “being.”
Our future is common, and the way to this future is a common journey
for us all. No single leader and no single state, no single nation and
no single religion, indeed no single science and no single institution
can face contemporary challenges alone. We need one another; we need
common goals; we need collaborative efforts. We are called to build
bridges based on love and understanding, and not to construct walls of
division and exclusion based on fear and ignorance. The Ecumenical
Patriarchate invites all of you to join in these endeavors.
Unfortunately, the Orthodox Church is often accused of neglecting the
world for the sake of its spiritual life; of being centered on worship
and liturgy while ignoring social problems; of turning solely toward the
future, to the Kingdom of God that is to come, while disregarding
contemporary and current challenges. Yet, the exact opposite is the
case. For Orthodox believers, faith presupposes and leads to a proper
approach to the earthly reality. Faith definitely cannot be confined to
the private sphere.
Distinguished audience,
As it has been said, the democratic society “lives from powers, which
cannot be created by itself.” According to His Eminence Walter Cardinal
Kasper, “every society needs institutions of transcendence,” which
represent publicly the “dimension of the Divine.”[2]
We believe that all of humanity needs such a grounding as in Plato’s
statement that “God is the measure of all things” (Laws, 716 c),
formulated against the “homo-mensura” maxim of Protagoras that “man is
the measure of all things.” The future does not belong to the
self-ordained “man-god,” a new Prometheus, who ignores or abolishes
limits and undeniable measures. All attempts to found a just society
need some reference to an “Absolutum.” For us, such a central power is
Christianity, in which the Biblical tradition, the ancient Greek idea of
freedom and political humanism and the Roman culture of justice have
found a creative synthesis.
In this spirit, we are very sceptical about the characterization of
contemporary Europe as a “post-Christian Europe.” Europe’s secularized
present cannot be separated from its past, which is inspired and formed
by a cultural heritage centered around Christianity. We must accept that
the retreat of this Christian consciousness in Europe ultimately has a
negative impact on Europe’s identity and self-understanding.
The year 1989 marked worldwide the end of the period of the Cold War.
However, it was not the “end of history,” in the sense of the already
certain and stable global dominion of the “market economy,” or of the
prevalence of freedom and prosperity according to the model of Western
democracies, characterized by philosopher Karl Popper as the best
politico-social systems, which mankind has ever experienced in its
historical trajectory.[3]
The old rivalries were replaced by the rise of a polycentric world,
marked by the emphatic consciousness of cultural diversity and the
potential clashes among civilizations, within the environment of
globalization.
What was the public role of religion during these thirty years after
the great change? It is a fact that religion was a factor, which
influenced developments, both local and global, in an ambivalent way.
Today religions are called to develop and give prominence to their
peace-making power and humanistic principles, their precious spiritual
and moral heritage, as well as their deep anthropological knowledge, all
of which strengthen our engagement with and struggle for the protection
of human dignity. Faith and religion can play a vital role in raising
awareness, advancing dialogue and fostering collaboration among people
on contemporary global challenges.
And what is the place and role of the Orthodox Church in face of the
current crisis? In many geopolitical contexts worldwide, Orthodoxy was,
is, and will continue to be a minority religion with a universal message
and a legacy of a long-standing historic presence. In regions such as
the Middle East, South-Eastern Europe, and the Balkans, the Orthodox
Christian faith has shaped the religious landscape for centuries, or
even millennia. The challenges in this context are real and urgent. In
the Middle East in particular, the survival of Christianity hangs in the
balance. During the war in Syria and the uprising of the so-called
“Islamic State,” news reports and articles regularly reminded us of the
reality of Christians in the Middle East and their continuous struggle
to survive in the very region where Christianity was born. It is
important for us here to understand that these Christians are more than
just a historical link to the world of the Gospel. They are the heirs to
a unique spiritual and cultural legacy and symbol for the value and
respect of religious diversity worldwide.
Faced with the contemporary international and globalized crisis, all
faith communities must renew their message, functioning as a positive
challenge to individuals and peoples, and offering an alternative model
of life within a globalized culture, which bestowed humanity with
precious gifts, but at the same time seems to push people to live for
themselves, ignoring the others, with whom they have to share the world.
In this sense, the faithful can become more humanist than humanist
themselves, because the struggle for social cohesion and the protection
of the integrity of creation is not just a moral imperative, but a
commandment of God.
Thank you for your kind attention!
[1]
Jürgen Habermas, “Faith and Knowledge,” in ibid., The Future of the
Human Nature. Faith and Knowledge, M. Topali, trans. (Athens: Scripta
Publications, 2004), 171 (in Greek).
[2] Walter Cardinal Kasper, Zukunft aus dem Glauben (Mainz, 1978), 90.
[3] Karl Popper, Auf der Suche nach einer besseren Welt (München/Zürich, 1994), 128.