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PONTIFICAL
CHANCERY
On Authority, Conscience, and the Dignity of the Human Person
Patriarchal Letter of Radislav I of Rome-Ruthenia
26 January A.D. 2026
Dearly beloved in Christ:
Across the centuries, human societies have risen and fallen not only by
the strength of their armies or the wealth of their treasuries, but by
the moral character of those who exercise authority and of those who
obey it. Authority, in its proper form, is a gift entrusted by God for
the protection of life, the preservation of order, and the service of
the common good. It is neither self-originating nor self-justifying. It
exists only insofar as it remains oriented toward justice, restraint,
and the dignity of the human person. History teaches a sobering lesson:
when authority forgets its limits, and when obedience forgets its
conscience, the result is not order and stability, but harm and
violence clothed in procedure.
Obedience is a virtue only when it remains bound to moral truth.
Detached from conscience, obedience becomes mere compliance.
Compliance, when unexamined, becomes a pathway by which ordinary people
participate in extraordinary wrongs. No law, no command, no institution
absolves a person from the responsibility to discern whether an action
serves justice or undermines it before God and neighbor. To say “I was
only following orders” has never healed a wound, restored a life, or
justified an injustice. The doctrine of the faith is clear that each
person remains morally accountable not only for what they intend, but
for what they enable.
Power tempts not only rulers, but systems. Then, systems, once
untethered from moral restraint, tend to reward efficiency over wisdom,
order over mercy, and loyalty over truth.
When fear is cultivated as a tool of governance, compassion comes to be
portrayed as weakness. Restraint in turn is mocked as betrayal, and
cruelty begins to appear a so-called necessity. In such climates,
cruelty often appears ordinary, and conscience is dismissed as
inconvenience. Yet no society is strengthened by the erosion of its
moral foundations. Authority that relies on intimidation rather than
legitimacy eventually consumes itself.
Institutions are judged not by their declarations, but by their
practices. Those who serve within them, whether in uniform, office, or
administration, do not cease to be moral agents when they assume a
role. To carry out harm while claiming neutrality is not neutrality; it
is moral abdication. To enforce injustice while claiming legality is
not lawfulness; it is moral evasion. The measure of an institution’s
integrity is found in whether it permits, protects, and even honors
those who refuse to act against conscience.
One of the great moral dangers of any age is the temptation to
outsource responsibility, i.e., to surrender judgment upward, to
systems, or to ideology. Yet, conscience cannot be delegated. Human
dignity cannot be compartmentalized. Moral responsibility cannot be
automated. Whenever a person is reduced to a category, a statistic, or
an obstacle, something essential has already been lost, both in the
victim and in the one who consents to such reduction.
We therefore call all people, especially those entrusted with
authority, to renewed vigilance of the heart. Let leaders remember that
they are stewards, not masters. Let servants of institutions remember
that loyalty does not require moral blindness. Let citizens remember
that order without justice is merely organized disorder. Above all, let
us resist the ancient temptation to believe that “our side” is exempt
from moral scrutiny. No tradition, no nation, no cause is purified by
abandoning the dignity of the human person.
The health of a society is revealed not in moments of triumph, but in
moments of strain, when fear tempts us to surrender principle for the
illusion of control. May we choose instead the harder path: the path of
conscience over convenience, of restraint over domination, and of moral
courage over silent compliance. For it is not power that preserves
civilization, but the disciplined conscience of those who wield it.
May wisdom guide us. May humility restrain us. And may we never forget
that every human being stands before God not as an instrument, but as a
person entrusted to our care.
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