"True patriotism never seeks to advance the well-being of one's own nation at the expense of others. For in the end this would harm one's own nation as well: doing wrong damages both aggressor and victim" (Saint John Paul II, Speech to United Nations, 1995).
Thirty years later, it is even more clear that nations must collaborate for the well-being of the whole human family and our earthly home... indeed, for the very survival of these. Collaboration, however, cannot be manufactured by a global totalitarian system (see the monstrous failed experiments of the last century). Not will it come about by the magic of some "invisible hand," as the unsought consequence of nations closing in on themselves, betraying cooperative commitments, and limiting themselves to making transactional "deals" with each other that are inherently unstable and ignore the needs of the rest of the world.
We inhabit local places directly, but we have reached out to wider geographic places by the technological "extensions" of our presence via rapid and facile mobility, enhanced electronic communications, and all the engagements and activities they make possible. We have unprecedented and astonishing possibilities in this 21st century which inevitably involve us in an exponentially bigger "space," drawing us to reach out in exploration toward greater understanding, empathy, and real communicative connection with other persons over great distances.
The human "reach," however, remains limited in the temporal realm, even with all the "extensions" of transportation and communication that make us in some respects "larger" but also carry the danger of misshaping our spatio-temporal ground, distracting and distorting our perception, and over-extending and exhausting our capacities. As bodily persons, we need some kind of locality. The vast majority of us need a strong local foundation for a dignified human life with its proximate physical needs and its engagement with firm integral human relationships.
Fundamentally, there are the relationships that originate from and are generated by our natural bodily persons. This refers to the proper features of our "historical" roots and expression-by-self-giving that move through time in the lineage of our families, wherein we receive the gift of human life and give it to others, thereby "living" an organic bodily-personal "extension" from past-to-present-to-future and collaborating naturally in the intergenerational history of the whole human family. For embodied personal existence, this also entails the gifts and responsibilities of human formation, concrete care, and the most specific forms of love by which as bodily persons we naturally participate in the "movement" of human history.
We all are involved in at least some features of this lineage and the personal bonds built by it (by our origin from our parents, and at least "mediately" through extended family bonds or those very real bonds forged by the profound human "re-generative decision" of adoption). Furthermore, basic human community is facilitated by local, physical proximity that is usually essential for at least the security of fundamental physical needs, but also provides a larger space for interpersonal and communal life constituted by the freedom and creativity of people sharing life together in a given, natural fashion. Human beings are thus "naturally networked," and this is what has inspired us to develop further techniques of "networking" with wider spaces and more distant peoples and activities - by traveling, by hospitality, by study, and by communications media.
It is essential to our humanity that we continue to have families, communities, nations, and peoples whose own responsibilities and actions must be respected and valued according to the principle of subsidiarity. At the same time, the various spheres of subsidiary action naturally seek to be interconnected and at the service of one another through a conscious and vital solidarity.
We find ourselves today in a whole world of unprecedented mutual dependence, co-involvement, and - thanks to the ongoing technological revolution - a proximity to one another over distances that can be enriching in many ways but also strange, partial and ephemeral, easily misunderstood, and sometimes invasive or too much to handle. It's easy to lose our balance, our sense of place, and become isolated. We are also caught up more and more in systems we don't understand, and sustained by powers we do not know. We are still limited and ignorant of many things in a world whose interdependence benefits some at the expense of others, with new forms of oppressive poverty, and possibly new reckless experiments of thoughtless plundering of the physical world. These new forms of violence are among the most imminent dangers that threaten all of us in the hyper-powered emergence of this new epoch in human history.
For the whole human family to flourish today and tomorrow, we must grow in the awareness that the earth is the common home of everyone, and that we are all brothers and sisters. We must remember that the physical creation is good, and that it has been entrusted to us to contemplate the wisdom and beauty of its Origin through all the intrinsic, diverse, and interrelated significance of created things (with their mysterious, constitutive, distinctive qualities as signs of the unfathomable Divine omnipotence and gratuitousness).
The world has also been entrusted to the freedom of our creative work to understand and further its vital development - with a freedom informed by wisdom and responsibility, attention, care, and restraint in governing our own ambitions as we develop harmoniously and reap with gratitude the fruits of creative things.
We can only be stewards of creation together, as children of God, as brothers and sisters of His Son who draws all things to Himself by the Holy Spirit. Indeed, this "fraternity" - this communion of persons - is who we are called to be, together.