Caring for the Common Home and Calling for a Diverse Future: Pope Francis and Byung-Chul Han in Dialogue
Abstract
:Awe constitutes a rupture with the ordinary and humdrum setting in which we operate and in relation to which we have become indifferent. However, we only need this instant of grace to intuit the possibility of a deeper and more prodigious relationship with the real.1(José Tolentino Mendonça, “Return to Awe”)If you can see, look. If you can look, observe.2(José Saramago, Blindness)
1. Introduction3
Awe constitutes a rupture with the ordinary and routine humdrum setting in which we operate and in relation to which we have become indifferent. However, we only need this instant of grace to intuit the possibility of a deeper and more prodigious relationship with the real.
The storm exposes our vulnerability and uncovers those false and superfluous certainties around which we have constructed our daily schedules, our projects, our habits and priorities. It shows us how we have allowed to become dull and feeble the very things that nourish, sustain and strengthen our lives and our communities. The tempest lays bare all our prepackaged ideas and forgetfulness of what nourishes our people’s souls; all those attempts that anesthetize us with ways of thinking and acting that supposedly “save” us, but instead prove incapable of putting us in touch with our roots and keeping alive the memory of those who have gone before us. We deprive ourselves of the antibodies we need to confront adversity.
- (i)
- The “common home”, its maladies, and the call for renovation;
- (ii)
- From fear and discipline to numbness;
- (iii)
- The call for caring for the “common home” and the search for the culture of encounter.
2. Caring for the Common Home: Pope Francis and Byung-Chul Han in Dialogue
1. “LAUDATO SI’, mi’ Signore”–“Praise be to you, my Lord”. In the words of this beautiful canticle, Saint Francis of Assisi reminds us that our common home is like a sister with whom we share our life and a beautiful mother who opens her arms to embrace us. “Praise be to you, my Lord, through our Sister, Mother Earth, who sustains and governs us, and who produces various fruit with coloured flowers and herbs”.(LS’ 1)
11. (…) If we approach nature and the environment without this openness to awe and wonder, if we no longer speak the language of fraternity and beauty in our relationship with the world, our attitude will be that of masters, consumers, ruthless exploiters, unable to set limits on their immediate needs. By contrast, if we feel intimately united with all that exists, then sobriety and care will well up spontaneously. The poverty and austerity of Saint Francis were no mere veneer of asceticism, but something much more radical: a refusal to turn reality into an object simply to be used and controlled.(LS’ 11)
113. (…) But humanity has changed profoundly, and the accumulation of constant novelties exalts a superficiality which pulls us in one direction. It becomes difficult to pause and recover depth in life. If architecture reflects the spirit of an age, our megastructures and drab apartment blocks express the spirit of globalized technology, where a constant flood of new products coexists with a tedious monotony. Let us refuse to resign ourselves to this, and continue to wonder about the purpose and meaning of everything. Otherwise we would simply legitimate the present situation and need new forms of escapism to help us endure the emptiness.
114. All of this shows the urgent need for us to move forward in a bold cultural revolution. Science and technology are not neutral; from the beginning to the end of a process, various intentions and possibilities are in play and can take on distinct shapes. Nobody is suggesting a return to the Stone Age, but we do need to slow down and look at reality in a different way, to appropriate the positive and sustainable progress which has been made, but also to recover the values and the great goals swept away by our unrestrained delusions of grandeur.(LS’ 113–114)
[p]ain shakes up the habitual relations between meanings, and forces the mind into a radical change in perspective that shows everything in a new light. As opposed to pleasure, pain triggers processes of reflection. It gives the mind a ‘dialectical clarity par excellence’. It makes the mind more perceptive. It opens up a whole new way of seeing (…).(Idem: 40–41)
[t]oday, we are utterly dominated by the ego—even dazed, intoxicated by it. The increasingly strong narcissistic ego, in confronting the other, mainly meets itself when it meets the other. Digital media also tends to promote the disappearance of the other. By making the other available, it diminishes the resistance of the other. We find it increasingly difficult to perceive the otherness of the other. The other deprived of his or her otherness can only be consumed. A sensibility for the other presupposes an ‘exposure’ that ‘offer[s] itself even in suffering’. This is pain. Without this primordial pain, the ego rears its head again, its foroneself, and reifies the other into an object. The other is withdrawn from the grasp of the ego only with the ego’s pain of being exposed. This pain, as an ethical, meta-physical pain, precedes the kind of pain which I experience as mine. It is a pain towards the other, an original being exposed that is more passive than any passivity of the ego. The pain of exposure, which also precedes compassion, renders a comfortable return to oneself, the pleasure in oneself, impossible.(Idem: 52; Han’s italics)
The parable 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. At the same time, it warns us about the attitude of those who think only of themselves and fail to shoulder the inevitable responsibilities of life as it is.
3. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | “O espanto constitui uma rutura com o quadro ordinário e rotineiro em que funcionámos, e face ao qual nos tornámos indiferentes. Basta-nos, contudo, esse instante de graça para intuirmos a possibilidade de uma relação mais profunda e prodigiosa com o real.” (The translation of this passage from the chronicle “Tornar ao Espanto” into English is mine). |
2 | The original in Portuguese is: “Se podes olhar, vê. Se podes ver, repara.” (Saramago 1995). For the translation of Saramago’s novel into English, see (Saramago [1995] 1999). |
3 | I would like to thank Lucia Boldrini and Emma Hallemans for their thought-provoking questions and comments when a different, abridged version of this essay was delivered at the XIII Summer School for the Study of Culture (The Lisbon Consortium) in Lisbon in July 2023. I am also grateful to the reviewers of this essay for their insightful comments, suggestions and bibliographic references. |
4 | On the lessons taught by the pandemic, see, among many, Santos (2020); Roy (2020) and Esposito (in Christiaens and De Cawer 2020), and (Esposito ([2022] 2023). |
5 | The 1990s Balkan conflicts that tore apart former Yugoslavia, despite their violence and cruelty, cannot be compared to the dimension of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. |
6 | |
7 | When referring to the programmatic dimension of the texts under analysis and bearing in mind that Pope Francis is the leader of the Catholic Church and that Byung-Chul Han is Catholic, I do not associate their texts with any kind of proselytism. |
8 | The project is coordinated by CITER (Research Centre for Theology and Religious Studies) with the participation of researchers from CECC (Research Centre for Communication and Culture). The project comprises 10 working groups, and I am involved with the group called “Theopoetics, Aesthetics and Performativity of the Common Home”. |
9 | FCH is the acronym of Faculty of Human Sciences at Universidade Católica Portuguesa. |
10 | International media widely covered the event that the Vatican called “An Extraordinary Prayer in the Time of Pandemic”. For images of the event and of the Pope walking in a rainy and empty Vatican, see, among many, https://www.tbsnews.net/coronavirus-chronicle/pope-holds-dramatic-solitary-service-relief-coronavirus-61942, accessed on 20 June 2023 (Pope Francis Holds Dramatic Solidary Service for Relief from Coronavirus 2023). |
11 | The text of the prayer is available online: https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/homilies/2020/documents/papa-francesco_20200327_omelia-epidemia.html (Pope Francis 2020b), accessed on 20 June 2023. |
12 | The concept of awe has gained particular visibility in the new millennium in the field of Psychology, as illustrated, among others, by various publications on the topic in Frontiers journals, Keltner and Haidt (2003), Allen’s “The Science of Awe” White Paper (Allen 2018) and Keltner (2022). However, the experience of awe and awe as a topic have pervaded the study of Philosophy. It is worth recalling that in Metaphysics 982 b 12 ff. (Aristotle 2016) Aristotle attributed the beginning of Philosophy to awe ( “It is owing to wonder that men both now begin, and at first began, to philosophize.”). I am grateful to one of the reviewers of this essay for drawing my attention to the fact that Western philosophy refers to the Greek word “deinòn”, which evokes the ideas of fear, fright, something terrible. The same reviewer reminded me that Freud uses the term “Das Unheimliche”, meaning “perturbing”, “uncanny”; and that Heidegger uses the word “unhemlich” to translate “deinòn”, which means “bewildering” and “disorientating”. |
13 | Parts of this quotation are also referred to in FT 32. |
14 | Consider that the texts belong to different genres. Even though an encyclical is also a philosophical text, it is primarily a theological document, a pastoral letter on Catholic doctrine addressed to members of the clergy. |
15 | I am borrowing from Mendonça the title of the chronicle from where I selected the first epigraph of this work. |
16 | Consider the distinction between “home” and “house” in various languages, for example. |
17 | Han’s characterization of the twentieth century as an “immunological age” corresponds to a recurrent pattern in Philosophy that examines the relations between immunity, conflict and community. It was Foucault who explored immunity to discuss the notion of biopolitics, a term used to refer to the means and mechanisms through which power operates on and affects society in order to control and manipulate human life. Roberto Esposito has thoroughly investigated the relationships between mechanisms of immunization and the community to discuss modern biopolitics. In his most recent book Common Immunity. Biopolitics in the Age of the Pandemic (Esposito [2022] 2023), he attempts to delineate a genealogy of the immunity paradigm within the project of modernity by examining the impact of the twofold process of politicizing medicine and medicalizing politics on community life and identity. One of the most interesting aspects of Esposito’s premises is his analysis of how immunity can turn against itself, thus transforming into auto-immunity, and its impact on the community (which Han has never done in his discussion of the immunological age). For this discussion, see Rosàs Tosas (2022). It is worth pointing out that in The Burnout Society Han dismisses Esposito’s immunological analysis, claiming that the Italian philosopher does not address contemporary problems (Han [2010] 2015, p. 3). In The Palliative Society, Han does not make any reference to Esposito, possibly because Han’s achievement society is not immunological. |
18 | The encyclical Fratelli Tutti was influenced by a declaration signed by Pope Francis and The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, Ahmad Al-Tayyeb, titled “A Document on Human Fraternity for World Peace and Living Together”, during the Pope’s apostolic journey to the United Arab Emirates in February 2019 (Pope Francis & The Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Ahmad Al-Tayyeb 2019). |
19 | Despite the interest of Han’s characterization of the burnout society and its evolution to a palliative society, the use the philosopher makes of medical language to address the paradigm shift in late modernity is problematic. Han does not refer to how bodies respond to autoimmune diseases when antibodies are produced to attack one’s healthy cells. In other words, to when the Self is considered by the immunological system as an Other, as a foreigner, a potential enemy that it is necessary to fight against and eliminate. How effective and fair are the parallels between the immunological age with the dialectic of negativity and between the society of achievement with the dialectic of positivity when autoimmune diseases are under discussion? When raising this issue, I do not aim to call into question or disqualify Han’s premises, but I firmly believe the examination of autoimmune diseases may arouse new metaphors that will pave the way for new rationalities regarding compassion and the care for the Self, the Other and the planet; in sum, for our common home. On Han’s omission of auto-immunity, see also note 17. |
20 | The parable revolves around the aid provided by a Samaritan to a Jew who had been assaulted and abandoned on the road by burglars, in a historical context when Samaritans were considered as the Other to be avoided. None of the passersby who saw the man in need on the road helped him, and aid came from someone who was not expected to provide help. On how Samaritans were considered in Jesus’ time, see FT 80 and 83. |
21 | On Pope Francis’s reflection on the dangers of individualism, see FT 105. |
22 | The adoption of this global ethics is crucial to change the way migrants are seen and treated. They should not be considered as threats, but as a gift, for they “bring an opportunity for enrichment and the integral human development of all” (FT 133). |
23 | The struggle to have large-scale environmental destruction recognized as an international crime, prosecutable at the International Criminal Court is not recent, but has acquired visibility in the last ten years. Until now, the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC) lists four crimes: genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, crimes of aggression. On this issue, see the site of the Stop Ecocide International (2023) (https://www.stopecocide.earth/, accessed on 3 June 2023). The activist Greta Thunberg is one of the main advocates for this cause. |
24 | For information on the 2023 World Youth Day, see, among others, the official site of the event, Available online: https://www.lisboa2023.org/en, accessed on 29 July 2023 (The World Youth Day 2023). |
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Martins, A. Caring for the Common Home and Calling for a Diverse Future: Pope Francis and Byung-Chul Han in Dialogue. Religions 2023, 14, 1396. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14111396
Martins A. Caring for the Common Home and Calling for a Diverse Future: Pope Francis and Byung-Chul Han in Dialogue. Religions. 2023; 14(11):1396. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14111396
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartins, Adriana. 2023. "Caring for the Common Home and Calling for a Diverse Future: Pope Francis and Byung-Chul Han in Dialogue" Religions 14, no. 11: 1396. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14111396
APA StyleMartins, A. (2023). Caring for the Common Home and Calling for a Diverse Future: Pope Francis and Byung-Chul Han in Dialogue. Religions, 14(11), 1396. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14111396