
Christians committed to the exercise of justice on behalf of a nation or the Church must strive to fully respect the law, the dignity of the person and the need for reconciliation and forgiveness, Pope Leo XIV said. Source: CNS.
On Sunday, the Pope greeted thousands of participants in the Jubilee of Justice. Judges, lawyers, court officials, canon lawyers and law professors from about 100 countries attended the event.
Pope Leo focused his remarks on the beatitude, “Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for righteousness (or justice) for they will be satisfied.”
“To ‘hunger and thirst’ for justice means being aware that it demands personal effort to interpret the law in the most humane way possible,” the Pope said. “But more importantly, it calls us to long for a ‘satisfaction’ that can only be fulfilled in a greater justice – one that transcends particular situations.”
A nation cannot be said to be just only because laws are applied and procedures followed, he said. And upholding the maxim, “to give each their due” is not enough either.
In fact, Pope Leo said, true justice unites the dignity of the person, his or her relationship with others and the shared structures and rules that aim to promote the common good, including of the offender.
The biblical stories of the persistent widow, the prodigal son and the labourers who are paid the same although they work different amounts of time, he said, demonstrate that “it is the power of forgiveness – inherent in the commandment of love – that emerges as a constitutive element of a form of justice capable of uniting the supernatural with the human”.
“Evangelical justice, therefore, does not turn away from human justice, but challenges and reshapes it. It provokes it to go further, because it pushes toward the search for reconciliation,” the Pope said.
“Evil, in fact, must not only be punished, but repaired – and for this, a deep gaze toward the good of individuals and the common good is necessary.
“It is a demanding task, but not impossible for those who, aware that they perform a service more demanding than others, commit themselves to living an irreproachable life.”
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True justice promotes dignity, equality, forgiveness, Pope tells judges (By Cindy Wooden, CNS)