
VATICAN (CNS): Professing faith in God as the creator of all human beings, or even simply recognising that all people possess an inherent dignity, has concrete consequences for how people should treat one another and make decisions in politics, economics and social life, Pope Francis writes in his new encyclical, Fratelli Tutti, on Fraternity and Social Friendship.
“Human beings have the same inviolable dignity in every age of history and no one can consider himself or herself authorised by particular situations to deny this conviction or to act against it,” the pope writes.
Pope Francis signed the encyclical on October 3 after celebrating Mass at the tomb of St. Francis of Assisi, and the Vatican released the more than 40,000-word text the next day.
The pope had been rumoured to be writing an encyclical on nonviolence; and, once the Covid-19 coronavirus (SARS-COV-2) pandemic struck, many expected a document exploring in depth his repeated pleas for the world to recogniSe the inequalities and injustices laid bare by the pandemic and adopt corrective economic, political and social policies.
Fratelli Tutti combines those two elements but does so in the framework set by the Document on Human Fraternity for World Peace and Living Together that he and Sheikh Ahmad el-Tayeb, grand imam of al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo, Egypt, signed in 2019.
In fact, in the new document, Pope Francis writes that he was “encouraged” by his dialogue with the Muslim leader and by their joint statement that “God has created all human beings equal in rights, duties and dignity, and has called them to live together as brothers and sisters.”
The encyclical takes its title from St. Francis of Assisi and is inspired by his “fraternal openness,” which, the pope says, calls on people “to acknowledge, appreciate and love each person, regardless of physical proximity, regardless of where he or she was born or lives.”
The title, which literally means “all brothers and sisters” or “all brothers,” are the words with which St. Francis “addressed his brothers and sisters and proposed to them a way of life marked by the flavour of the gospel,” the pope writes.
That flavour, explained throughout the document, involves welcoming the stranger, feeding the hungry, listening to and giving a hand up to the poor, defending the rights of all and ensuring that each person, at every stage of life, is valued and invited to contribute to the community, he said. It also means supporting public policies that do so on a larger scale.
Building on the social teachings of his predecessors, Pope Francis once again strongly condemns the death penalty and makes an initial approach to declaring that the conditions once used to accept a “just war” no longer exist because of the indiscriminately lethal power of modern weapons.
Pope St. John Paul II in The Gospel of Life, published in 1995, cast doubt on whether any nation needed to resort to capital punishment today to protect its people; developing that teaching in 2018, Pope Francis authorised a change to the Catechism of the Catholic Church to make clear that “the death penalty is inadmissible.”
Signalling the start of a similar effort to respond to the current reality of warfare, Pope Francis in Fratelli Tutti raises the question of “whether the development of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, and the enormous and growing possibilities offered by new technologies, have granted war an uncontrollable destructive power over great numbers of innocent civilians.”
He says, “We can no longer think of war as a solution because its risks will probably always be greater than its supposed benefits,” one of the main criteria of just-war theory.
The pope writes, “In view of this, it is very difficult nowadays to invoke the rational criteria elaborated in earlier centuries to speak of the possibility of a ‘just war.’ Never again war!”
At the heart of the new encyclical’s appeal is a meditation on the parable of the good Samaritan and particularly on how Jesus takes a legal scholar’s question, “Who is my neighbour,” and turns it into a lesson on being called not to identify one’s neighbours but to become a neighbour to all, especially those most in need of aid.
“The parable eloquently presents the basic decision we need to make in order to rebuild our wounded world. In the face of so much pain and suffering, our only course is to imitate the good Samaritan,” the pope said.

“Any other decision would make us either one of the robbers or one of those who walked by without showing compassion for the sufferings of the man on the roadside,” he said
“The parable,” he continues, “shows us how a community can be rebuilt by men and women who identify with the vulnerability of others, who reject the creation of a society of exclusion, and act instead as neighbours, lifting up and rehabilitating the fallen for the sake of the common good.”
Pope Francis noted certain trends that hinder fraternity and the ability to a neighbour: including racism, extremism, “aggressive nationalism,” closing borders to migrants and refugees, polarisation, politics as a power grab rather than a service to the common good, mistreatment of women, modern slavery and economic policies that allow the rich to get richer but do not create jobs and do not help the poor.
“The pain, uncertainty and fear, and the realisation of our own limitations, brought on by the pandemic have only made it all the more urgent that we rethink our styles of life, our relationships, the organization of our societies and, above all, the meaning of our existence,” he says.
Pope Francis calls for catechesis and preaching that “speaks more directly and clearly about the social meaning of existence, the fraternal dimension of spirituality, our conviction of the inalienable dignity of each person and our reasons for loving and accepting all our brothers and sisters.”
The pope also reasserts a traditional tenet of Catholic social teaching: “the universal destination of goods” or “the common use of created goods,” which declares, as Pope St. John Paul said, that “God gave the earth to the whole human race for the sustenance of all its members, without excluding or favouring anyone.”
The right to private property and the benefits to individuals and society of protecting that right, Pope Francis writes, “can only be considered a secondary natural right.”
“The right of some to free enterprise or market freedom cannot supersede the rights of peoples and the dignity of the poor, or, for that matter, respect for the natural environment,” the pope says.
“Business abilities, which are a gift from God, should always be clearly directed to the development of others and to eliminating poverty,” especially through the creation of jobs that pay a living wage, Pope Francis writes.