Welfare is not socialism. Public health care is not socialism. And nobody is making the rich poor because of a just form taxation for the benefit of the poor. Your confusion between socialism and state intervention on behalf of the “economically oppressed” is dangerous to the material and spiritual well being of human society.
It also explains why all the rich have been so quick to help the poor on their own. It explains why the difference in CEO salaries in the US is hundreds of times the rate of the lowest paid workers of their companies, when it was about 30X in the fifties and sixties.
It is so joyful that the decades have made the hearts of the rich so open to helping the least of Jesus’ flock.
Peace
Both of you are misunderstanding what the Church teaches *and why. *We do not give to the poor because it helps them out, so the most efficient way of ensuring that the poor are helped is what the Church advocates or shoudl advocate.
What the Church teaches is that we should each be holy. We should each strive to attain holiness.
Look at what Black Rose quoted earlier (I don’t know where she got the quote from):
I would prefer a welfare state to private charity, simply because the former is more effective.
A welfare state is more effective in attaining what end? Look what comes next:
Personally, private charity gets me dejected because I am often too tough on myself; resentful that my meager charitable acts do not have much measurable impact on the world.** I would gladly be relieved of my personal “responsibility” of providing** for the poor domestically, since it is a source of frustration due to my personal inefficacy, while welcoming it as a collective burden.
Looking only at the efficiency of getting aid to poor people *discourages *this writer. If this writer has little money, then can give only a little money, what’s the point? How much is $5 going to really help a poor person?
But looking at this from the point of view of the Church, where the goal is not to ensure that the poor have more material stuff but is instead to gain holiness. There is no separation between the poor and those with more: witness the accolades for the widow’s contribution of two pence.
From a material standpoint, the contribution of more money is better. From the spiritual standpoint, what counts is the sacrifice. The widow sacrificed her last 2 pence, which counted more than the rich man’s contribution of many times that amount for which he made no sacrifice.
The writer above may have been going without a meal during the course of the week in order to afford the (hypothesized) $5 in alms. This would be worth much more than the CEO’s contribution of $500,000 out of millions, *on a spiritual level. *
Now see what the writer says here: When living in an extensive welfare state, my moral responsibilities will not completely evaporate;
He thinks that because he has “given,” ie, had taken from his paycheck, that he is pretty much off the hook. No need for him to make any further contributions to the needy–his work is done except for the meager task which follows:
I would still have the burden of not only financially supporting the state,–which he would have had in any case, so is irrelevant-- but I also would have to fervently commit my intellect to relentless defending the system-- Oh, the agony, the difficulty, the effort of *relentlessly! *defending the system in a land which welcomes the system with open arms!–and treating my fellow citizens with respect, amity, and friendship while not being judgmental on the unfortunate.-- and a major point from Pope John Paul II’s Centissimus Annus: whom should be helped, and whom are we instead merely enabling, keeping down by disincentivizing effort? Why should the government hand out money to drug addicts? Why should the government hand out money to women who stay at home and have babies from one father after another, or who care for each other’s babies to get the money?
We have a perverted view of alsmgiving and helping the poor and needy. Welfare causes those who have material goods to think that their responsibility is finished when the government takes money out of their paycheck–oh, except for *relentlessly *defending this system–and causes the poor to think they are useless and have a right to what others have earned with no responsiblity for thanking anyone or for helping themselves or others.