Pope Francis: Our Response to Injustice Must Be More Than Condemnation

‘First and foremost, it must be the active promotion of the good: denouncing evil and promoting the good,’ the Holy Father said on Oct. 23.

Pope Francis meets with the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation at the Vatican on Oct. 23.
Pope Francis meets with the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation at the Vatican on Oct. 23. (photo: Vatican Media / National Catholic Register)

Denunciation is not enough when it comes to issues of injustice, the Pope said this weekend.

“Our response to injustice and exploitation must be more than mere condemnation. First and foremost, it must be the active promotion of the good: denouncing evil and promoting the good,” said Pope Francis on Oct. 23.

“This means putting the Church's social doctrine into practice,” he said.

Pope Francis encouraged Christians to “sow many small seeds that can bear fruit in an economy that is equitable and beneficial, humane and people-centered.”

He spoke in an audience with the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation’s annual convention, which was held at the Vatican Oct. 21-22.

The foundation is named after the ninth encyclical by Pope St. John Paul II, which addressed the social teaching of the Church, particularly in regard to workers and the economy, and the relationship of the state to society.

“In every area today, we are more than ever obliged to bear witness to attention for others, to to go out of ourselves, to commit ourselves with gratuitousness to the development of a more just and equitable society, where selfishness and partisan interests do not prevail,” the Pope said.

“And at the same time, we are called to watch over respect for the human person, his freedom, the protection of his inviolable dignity. Here is the mission to implement the social doctrine of the Church.”

“In carrying on these values ​​and this lifestyle, we know we often go against the tide, but let us always remember: We are not alone. God has come close to us, not in words, but with his presence. In Jesus, God became Incarnate," Francis said.

The theme of the foundation’s conference this year is “Solidarity, Cooperation and Responsibility: The Antidotes to Combat Injustices, Inequalities and Exclusion.”

“These are important reflections, in a time in which uncertainty and instability mark the lives of so many people, and communities are aggravated by an economic system that continues to discard lives in the name of the god of money, fostering destructive attitudes towards the resources of the earth and fueling many forms of injustice,” the Pope said.

“As Christians we are called to a love without borders and without limits. We are called to be a sign and witness that it is possible to  pass beyond the walls of selfishness and personal and national interest, beyond the power of money, which often decides the destiny of peoples, beyond ideological divisions that foster hatred; beyond all historical and cultural barriers and, above all, beyond indifference,” he said.

“It is therefore a great task to build a more united, just and equitable world. For believers,  however, it is not simply a practical matter detached from doctrine. Indeed, it is the way to embody our faith, to praise the God who loves men and women, who loves life. Dear brothers and  sisters, the good that you do for every person on earth brings joy to the heart of God in heaven.”