It is not exaggerated to say that the large part of the intensive work of K. Wojtyla the philosopher, poet, theologian, just like huge sections of his magisterium, were dedicated to support this affirmation, investigated above all for its anthropological foundations.
Even if one were only to look at the words of the first encyclical of John Paul II, one would find two texts that, in a certain way, trace the coordinates that his teaching and his reflective commitment have always retained, albeit expressing them in a great variety of forms.
The recognition of the primacy of love in human existence is very clear: “Man cannot live without love. He remains a being that is incomprehensible to himself, his life is senseless, if love is not revealed to him, if he does not encounter love, if he does not experience it and make it his own, if he does not participate intimately in it” (RH 10).
In line with this, to look at the Redeemer as the One who immediately poses Himself as the interlocutor of the love experience, without whom man cannot live, not only exalts His unique redemptive claim but manifests the historical and theological place where such claim can be recognized and embraced by man. Such a place can only be the act of human freedom, without which love is not conceivable, through which freedom can accept the call, address Christ and be determined by Him.
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At the same time, however, the encyclical also indicates the methodological perspective enabling us to acquire this primacy; but above all points to the appropriate anthropological approach to justify its pertinence and impelling reasons. It is useful to refer directly to the text:
“Man in the full truth of his existence, of his personal being and also of his community and social being – in the sphere of his own family, in the sphere of society and very diverse contexts, in the sphere of his own nation or people (perhaps still only that of his clan or tribe), and in the sphere of the whole of mankind – this man is the primary route that the Church must travel in fulfilling her mission: he is the primary and fundamental way for the Church, the way traced out by Christ himself, the way that leads invariably through the mystery of the Incarnation and Redemption” (RH 14).
The metaphor presented in Redemptor Hominis by the notion of “way” applied to both Christ and man, according to the same viewpoint (Christ, as well as man, is the Church’s way), invites the conclusion that according to John Paul II to say Christ, in His uniqueness of being the Son of God, Incarnate and Redeemer, leads first of all to say man; at the same time, to look at man according to the totality of the factors constituting his existence leads to Christ just as immediately, as Christ is the only fact in which the human event is completely understood and enhanced.
When man is designated as the “primary and fundamental way of the Church”, it seems this is something more than the simple reaffirmation that he is the destinée of the Church’s mission. There is, perhaps, in this expression a deeper suggestion to be considered than just a movement towards man: in taking care of his complete existence, the Church must bear in mind that man is not only the “object” of the ecclesial action, but that he is also the “method” which has to lead to such action. It is, in fact, characteristic of the anthropological sensibility of John Paul II to highlight the fact that a man’s exclusive experience of his own self represents the point of departure of every attempt to understand and interpret the self. It is known that this represents a peculiar fact and the methodological path of all the philosophical works of K. Wojtyla, which he has above all explored and justified in his speculative and demanding work Person and Act, where he underlines several times the irreducibility of the experience which every man makes of himself, and how all experiences with others pass through it.
In particular, it is worth underlining the dense articulation of the primacy of experience, the centrality of the acting person and the clear recognition of the auto-teleological dynamism of the human person. These last three elements are constantly discussed in the light of the conviction that experience, taken in its totality, has its own intrinsic logos, since “every human experience is therefore also a kind of understanding of that which I am experiencing […] We hold, that is, that the act is a particular moment of the vision – or rather of the experience – of the human person.”
We can thus affirm that the teaching of John Paul II stresses the fact that there is no possible anthropological reflection except that which moves from the self-reflection, particularly because undoubtedly this is much more than a simple question of meaning. In fact, this reflection is the act designating the ultimate level without which man does not exist, and which allows him – equally – to acquire knowledge of the transcendence of his own subjectivity. Having clarified, in fact, the role played by human subjectivity in view of an adequate anthropology “which seeks to understand and interpret man in that which is essentially human”, it is understood, in such a context, that the reflection on himself does not simply represent the initial input of a journey which from the early stages should lead man to find the answer which can completely fulfill his proper subjectivity in something outside himself. If this were the case, it would follow that man would only be capable to express a question, which in its insurmountable formality should leave aside any relevant anthropological contents. On the contrary, such a reflection is that factor without which – in its actuality – man cannot find himself and cannot become aware of the dynamism of his own self-transcendence.
In the light of this re-reading of the primacy of man in the mission of the Church, strongly characterized in a methodological sense, the text of the encyclical immediately leads us to a Christocentric perspective (“a way undertaken by Christ Himself, which invariably passes through the incarnation and redemption”), putting into action the other great constitutive aspect of the Wojtylian reflection. This, in fact, is always found in taking into consideration the centrality of the mystery of Christ to the condition of man in history: the constant recalling of the words of Christ which indicate the “beginning”, almost a leitmotiv in the texts where he reflects on love and marriage. It seems always necessary to look at man from a historical perspective that includes the work of Him who in history has placed Himself as the only Lord and Redeemer.
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The words of Redemptor Hominis suggest the need to look and talk not about an “abstract”, but a real man, a “concrete”, “historical” man (Redemptor Hominis, 13). Such actuality has a precise content: each man is objectively included in the one “historical” event of the Redemption and, because of it, he really is the way his Father has wanted him. Accordingly, the problem of finding a middle term establishing a convincing relationship between man and Christ needs reconsidering. In fact, by the primacy granted to the historical form of man’s existence and the event of Christ, these can only relate to each other through their primary historicity, that is, through their freedom. In this way, the Church-world question is taken back to that of the relationship between Christ and each historical human being.
The Pope takes it upon himself to show the actual anthropological relevance of the origin by showing its “exemplary” aspect; that is, by showing how, if the anthropological elements present in the origin belong to a life condition that no longer is fully attainable (the original state), they are, nevertheless, still decisive for the elaboration of an “adequate anthropology”. The whole proposal contained in the Catechesis on human love (1979-1984) must be verified: without a convincing explanation of the reasons why the origin is an indispensable instance of man in the here and now of his historical existence, the contents and outlook on human existence conveyed by the catechesis would inevitably lose their unique interest.