A human person is infinitely precious and must be unconditionally protected.
Hans Kung
Time and again we see leaders and members of religions incite aggression, fanaticism, hate, and xenophobia - even inspire and legitimate violent and bloody conflicts.
We are convinced of the fundamental unity of the human family.
Second, we also got a more authentic liturgy of the people of God, in the vernacular language.
If priests were allowed to marry, if this would be an optional thing, and if he could have wife and children, he would certainly have less temptation to satisfy certain sexual impulses with minors.
However, if the religions in essence merely repeat statements from the United Nations Human Rights Declaration, such a Declaration becomes superfluous; an ethic is more than rights.
All historical experience demonstrates the following: Our earth cannot be changed unless in the not too distant future an alteration in the consciousness of individuals is achieved.
That means that every human being - without distinction of sex, age, race, skin color, language, religion, political view, or national or social origin - possesses an inalienable and untouchable dignity.
At the same time we are aware that our various religions and ethical traditions often offer very different bases for what is helpful and what is unhelpful for men and women, what is right and what is wrong, what is good and what is evil.
As a matter of fact, you have deficiencies in all religions, but you have truth in all religions.
The Epistle to the Romans is an extremely important synthesis of the whole theology of St. Paul.
Religion often is misused for purely power-political goals, including war.
And a third thing is the understanding of the Church as a community, a communion which is just a hierarchy but the people of God, whose servants are the priests and bishops.
After two world wars, the collapse of fascism, nazism, communism and colonialism and the end of the cold war, humanity has entered a new phase of its history.
It is an absolutely unique success of the church community to have introduced such an epoch-making change, in just a few years, without having a serious division.
We are conscious that religions cannot solve the economic, political and social problems of this earth.
Hundreds of millions of human beings on our planet increasingly suffer from unemployment, poverty, hunger, and the destruction of their families.
Humanity today possesses sufficient economic, cultural and spiritual resources to introduce a better global order.
The Gospel has to be the norm.
That is the Roman way: to give favors to the favorites.
I remember the Curia said, that's up to the American bishops, not up to Rome.
I like the catholicity in time: our tradition is one of 2,000 years.
But I have to add - and this answers your other question - this catholicity in time and in space is only meaningful for me if there is, at the same time, a concentration on the Gospel.