Theologizing of a Christian. Human Rights and the Roman Catholic Church after the Second Vatican Council |
Autor: | Leher Stephan |
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Veröffentlichung: | |
Kategorie | artikel |
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Publiziert in: | |
Datum: | 2021-08-23 |
1 | Abstract (deutsch) |
2 | Die vorliegende Trilogie ist der Grundüberzeugung verpflichtet, dass die Verwirklichung der Menschenrechte notwendige Voraussetzung für Frieden und Gerechtigkeit in der Welt ist. Die Allgemeine Erklärung der Menschenrechte von 1948 hält diese Überzeugung in ihrer Präambel fest und Papst Johannes XXIII macht sie sich in seiner Enzyklika Pacem in Terris 1963 zu eigen. Das von ihm einberufene Zweite Vatikanische Konzil hingegen, nimmt gegenüber den Menschenrechten eine zwiespältige Haltung ein. Die Trilogie untersucht die 16 Dokumente des Zweiten Vatikanischen Konzils auf die Ambivalenz von Verwirklichung und Verweigerung von Menschenrechten innerhalb der Römisch Katholischen Kirche. Die Exegese von Abschnitten des Lukasevangeliums, die Erinnerung an spirituelle Traditionen der Römisch Katholischen Kirche und eine ganzheitliche theologische Argumentation machen klar, dass die Verwirklichung der Menschenrechte innerhalb der Römisch Katholischen Kirche die Gültigkeitsbedingung für ihre religiösen Geltungsansprüche in der Welt darstellen. Will die Römisch Katholische Kirche einen Beitrag zu Frieden und Gerechtigkeit in der Welt leisten, muss sie zuerst innerhalb ihrer eigenen Verfasstheit die Menschenrechte voll anerkennen und als rule of law promulgieren. |
3 | Abstract (englisch) |
4 | The first part of the Trilogy explicates the bedrock conviction that women, men and queer realize their physical, psychic, social and spiritual integrity with the help of speech acts. I describe speech acts as social choices of speakers and listeners who reciprocally enhance their equal dignity, freedom and rights in a discourse. I make clear that the investigation of the state of the integrity of the individual person is a matter for empirical science; I call the experience to be consciously enjoying my integrity, the mystical experience. In the second part of the Trilogy, I talk about personal mystical experiences, meditations and about basic convictions concerning my Christian faith. As validity condition of the validity of any religious claim, I discuss their correspondence with the principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, notably the recognition and respect of the equal dignity, freedom and rights of all women, men and queer. The third part of the Trilogy completes my systematic investigation of the official teachings of the Roman Catholic Church as promoted in the 16 documents of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965). A Council serves the Roman Catholic Church to describe the essence and purpose of her being and I analyze this purpose and essence within the historical context of the making of the 16 texts of the Second Vatican Council. My investigation shows that throughout the documents there is an ambivalent parallelism between two contradicting descriptions of the Roman Catholic Church. The texts show that there is the social institution of the Roman Catholic Church as an absolute monarchy with an authoritarian and discriminating hierarchical structure and that there is the faith institution of the Roman Catholic Church as the People of God and the Gospel of the just world of Jesus Christ. I hold that the social institution of the Roman Catholic Church needs to change, because of the essence and purpose of a Church as a community of faithful. I present a social model for the Church that realizes the dignity of the individual faithful as the social choice of the individual woman, man and queer. Dignity includes the social choice to give away some freedom and rights to women, men and queer as possibility condition for the social realization of their dignity. Giving away something of my freedom and rights for the social realization of the dignity of others enhances the dignity of both, my dignity and the dignity of the others. This mutual enhancement of dignity constitutes not only a basic function for operating democracies but constitutes also a basic element of the just world of God. |
5 | Volltext |
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