N
nysacerdote
Guest
In your opinion, can a person be loyal Roman Catholic while also holding true the tenets of communism?
No. As far as my reading of social encyclicals (Rerum Novarum, Quadregesimo Anno, and so on) has told me, Catholics can be monarchists, or believe in a democratic or republican form of government, but cannot endorse communism or socialism - because these two systems deny human dignity and free will, and make them subordinate to an all-powerful state. Communism is the political version of the Tower of Babel - it is a man-made edifice that arrogantly ascribes to itself powers that belong to God alone. And history teaches us that Communism is a brutal, violent, and immoral system.In your opinion, can a person be loyal Roman Catholic while also holding true the tenets of communism?
No.In your opinion, can a person be loyal Roman Catholic while also holding true the tenets of communism?
In fact, if you read classical communist philosophers such as Karl Marx you will notice that they are not only hostile towards what we now call ‘totalitarianism’, but they are against the state as such. Marx thought that states have two central aspects; one being bureaucracy and this aspect was to be abolished immediatly by the revolution, and be replaced by democratic bottom-up forms of goverment (that is the people are not just only to elect members of parliament, but also judges, military officers, hospital directors etc). The second central aspect of the state is the monopoly of violence and this was according to Marx to be abolished when peace and unity has grown so much among men that it is not longer needed.No. As far as my reading of social encyclicals (Rerum Novarum, Quadregesimo Anno, and so on) has told me, Catholics can be monarchists, or believe in a democratic or republican form of government, but cannot endorse communism or socialism - because these two systems deny human dignity and free will, and make them subordinate to an all-powerful state.