When Pope Paul VI addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations on October 4, 1965, the memory of the cataclysm of World War II was still fresh in everyone's mind. The unprecedented perils born in the aftermath of that war continued to afflict millions of people whose lives were subjected to the resulting expansion of totalitarian Communist regimes. Other countries (especially new nations emerging from colonialism) were often subjected to dictatorships, corruption, and regional warfare. But an unprecedented number of nations (not only the USA and Western Europe, but around the world) struggled to establish or improve the ideals of democracy in ways that sought to respect the dignity of every human person. It was a struggle that inevitably involved failures (great and small), misunderstandings, the manipulative dynamics of power-politics, and many other problems. But there were also positive achievements: such as improvements in general social mobility and the recognition of the rights of minority groups within these nations, as well as unprecedented international collaboration in an increasingly globally interconnected world.
Paul VI's trip to United Nations headquarters in New York was his third major trip by air, making him at the time the most-travelled Pope in history. Like subsequent Popes who would surpass him, however, he traveled in the service of his unique pastoral ministry. The world, created and loved by God and redeemed by Christ, had many troubles. Human beings — called to live as brothers and sisters — remained deeply and dangerously divided.
"Peace" was more and more recognized as a necessary ideal, yet it remained very far from any kind of adequate realization. The proliferation of potentially world-destroying nuclear weapons cast a huge shadow over the world. Ironically, the gigantic nuclear arsenals of the two "Great Powers" during the Cold War era engendered a kind of "military equilibrium," but it remained extremely fragile (coming very near to breaking in October 1962), not to mention morally "problematic" to say the least. It was based on a System-Of-Terror that essentially "held innocent civilians hostage" as the primary targets of nuclear warheads capable of traveling great distances via intercontinental ballistic missiles. The missiles were locked onto opponent's civilian targets, establishing a correlation of threats to respond to any "first use" of these horrible weapons with a "retaliatory strike" that would destroy a substantial portion of the first-user's civilian population centers and all their inhabitants. This bizarre strategic edifice was called "Mutually Assured Destruction" (M.A.D., an apt anagram).
By 1965, however, everyone felt uneasy about this set-up. It seemed in some ways that Communism (other than in Mao Zedong's Chinese Dystopia) was beginning to "wear thin" not only in reality — where it never worked — but even in the imaginations of its ideological elites, although it still strongly attracted radicals in poor and/or post-colonial newly independent countries. Meanwhile, the "Free World" was on the threshold of its own very-big-blunders (a topic for another post). But in 1965, there seemed to be some hope of movement toward peace. The shock of the Cuban Missile Crisis had led to the signing of the first Nuclear Test Ban treaty by the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union.
Thus, there appeared a “small opening” (a proverbial window of opportunity) for a Pope to address fundamental issues regarding the dignity of the human person and the unity of the human family in an exciting, complex, and bewildering historical moment. The Pope emphasized the need for a more profound wisdom to correspond to the progress of unprecedented technological power, the need to renounce the waging of offensive war with its ruthless weapons and their tendency toward uncontrollable and incalculable escalation and chaos (while still recognizing the need for self-defense), and the need to search for a better kind of peace — a search that still motivates people of good will.And Pope Paul VI especially wanted to witness to this new "Global Areopagus" the unbreakable bond by which every authentic human need draws us toward the God who took our humanity to Himself and redeemed us: Jesus Christ, who makes us children of God our Father in a new way, and brothers and sisters of one another. Pope Paul and his successors are not naive about the weakness of humanity; rather they proclaim this bond of our redeemed humanity in Christ, that calls us to and makes possible a "higher wisdom" and a greater love, a depth of fraternity that is destined to be fulfilled in God's Kingdom, and that can also shed new light and awaken new possibilities for mutual love, for peace, among peoples and nations on our pilgrimage through life in this world.
Here is a selection from Pope Paul VI's speech to the United Nations on October 4, 1965 (with emphasis added):
"There is no need for a long talk to proclaim the main purpose of your Institution. It is enough to recall that the blood of millions, countless unheard-of sufferings, useless massacres and frightening ruins have sanctioned the agreement that unites you with an oath that ought to change the future history of the world: never again war, never again war! It is peace, peace, that has to guide the destiny of the nations of all mankind!... The pathways [to peace] are marked out before you and the first one is disarmament.
"If you want to be brothers, let the arms fall from your hands. A person cannot love with offensive weapons in his hands. Arms, and especially the terrible arms that modern science has provided you, engender bad dreams, feed evil sentiments, create nightmares, hostilities, and dark resolutions even before they cause any victims and ruins. They call for enormous expenses. They interrupt projects of solidarity and of useful labor. They warp the outlook of nations. So long as man remains the weak, changeable, and even wicked being that he so often shows himself to be, defensive arms will, alas, be necessary. But your courage and good qualities urge you on to a study of means that can guarantee the security of international life without any recourse to arms...
"The edifice [i.e. the United Nations] you are building does not rest on purely material and terrestrial foundations, for in that case it would be a house built on sand. It rests most of all upon consciences. Yes, the time has come for "conversion," for personal transformation, for interior renewal. We have to get used to a new way of thinking about man, a new way of thinking about man's community life, and, last of all, a new way of thinking about the pathways of history and the destinies of the world. As St. Paul says, we must "put on the new man, which has been created according to God in justice and holiness of truth" (Ephesians 4:23).
"The hour has come when a pause, a moment of recollection, reflection, you might say of prayer, is absolutely needed so that we may think back over our common origin, our history, our common destiny. The appeal to the moral conscience of man has never before been as necessary as it is today, in an age marked by such great human progress. For the danger comes neither from progress nor from science; if these are used well they can, on the contrary, help to solve a great number of the serious problems besetting mankind. The real danger comes from man, who has at his disposal ever more powerful instruments that are as well fitted to bring about ruin as they are to achieve lofty conquests.
"To put it in a word, the edifice of modern civilization has to be built on spiritual principles, for they are the only ones capable not only of supporting it, but of shedding light on it and inspiring it. And we are convinced, as you know, that these indispensable principles of higher wisdom cannot rest on anything but faith in God. Is He the unknown God of whom St. Paul spoke to the Athenians on the Areopagus — unknown to those who, without suspecting it, were nevertheless looking for Him and had Him close beside them, as is the case with so many men of our times? For us, in any case, and for all those who accept the ineffable revelation that Christ has made to us of Him, He is the living God, the Father of all men."















































