Francis 4 Principles: REALITIES ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN IDEAS
231. There also exists a constant tension between
ideas and realities. Realities simply are, whereas ideas are worked out. There
has to be continuous dialogue between the two, lest ideas become detached from
realities.It is dangerous to dwell in the realm of words alone, of images and
rhetoric.
So a third principle comes into play: realities are greater than ideas. This calls for rejecting the various means of masking reality: angelic forms of purity, dictatorships of relativism, empty rhetoric, objectives more ideal than real, brands of ahistorical fundamentalism, ethical systems bereft of kindness, intellectual discourse bereft of wisdom.
So a third principle comes into play: realities are greater than ideas. This calls for rejecting the various means of masking reality: angelic forms of purity, dictatorships of relativism, empty rhetoric, objectives more ideal than real, brands of ahistorical fundamentalism, ethical systems bereft of kindness, intellectual discourse bereft of wisdom.
232. Ideas – conceptual elaborations – are at the
service of communication, understanding, and praxis. Ideas disconnected from
realities give rise to ineffectual forms of idealism and nominalism, capable at
most of classifying and defining, but certainly not calling to action.
What
calls us to action are realities illuminated by reason. Formal nominalism has
to give way to harmonious objectivity. Otherwise, the truth is manipulated,
cosmetics take the place of real care for our bodies.
We have politicians
– and even religious leaders – who wonder why people do not understand and
follow them, since their proposals are so clear and logical. Perhaps it is
because they are stuck in the realm of pure ideas and end up reducing politics or
faith to rhetoric. Others have left simplicity behind and have imported a
rationality foreign to most people.
233. Realities are greater than ideas. This
principle has to do with incarnation of the word and its being put into
practice: “By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit that confesses that
Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is from God” (1 Jn 4:2).
The principle of
reality, of a word already made flesh and constantly striving to take flesh
anew, is essential to evangelization.
It helps us to see that the Church’s
history is a history of salvation, to be mindful of those saints who
inculturated the Gospel in the life of our peoples and to reap the fruits of
the Church’s rich bi-millennial tradition, without pretending to come up with a
system of thought detached from this treasury, as if we wanted to reinvent the
Gospel.
At the same time, this principle impels us to put the word into
practice, to perform works of justice and charity which make that word
fruitful. Not to put the word into practice, not to make it reality, is to
build on sand, to remain in the realm of pure ideas and to end up in a lifeless
and unfruitful self-centeredness and Gnosticism.