O
Oscarthecat
Guest
Could you explain what you meant by this?I don’t see how as most forms of christianity are socialist
I would agree that some forms of christianity are thinly disguised efforts to advance socialism, such as Liberation Theology.
I would also agree that the Catholic Church (I can’t speak for non-Catholic groups) encourages principles that some socialists would find familiar in theory if not in practice, such as the rights of workers and the understanding of human flourishing as the higher end of social and economic activity.
Despite any appearance of similarities, however, Catholic Social Teaching, beginning Rerum Novarum, specifically condemns Socialism as a political and economic system because, in practice, it is an affront to numerous Christian Social Principles, such as Subsidiarity, Solidarity, and the right to own personal property, and also because it encourages class warfare by pitting the “owners” against the “workers,” not to mention that history has shown time and time again that Socialism is less effective at increasing human flourishing than Capitalism.
Even more, the critical difference that trumps any values that might be shared between some aspects of Christianity and Socialism is the fact that Christianity teaches basic principles and respects the fundamental right of the individual to freely choose to apply these principles in his or her life, while Socialism mandates specific behaviors and social strictures which are legislated according only to the interpretation of bureaucrats in the government.
Catholic Social Teaching emphasizes the role of the individual to live according to those principles that increase human flourishing, and respects the right of the individual to do this freely, without coercion, because any lasting efforts to increase human flourishing in any society must be done with the full understanding, consent, and commitment of the individual. For Catholics, the individual is always the critical variable in society because the emphasis is on the conversion of the individual, which will naturally contribute toward human flourishing.
Socialists, however, don’t believe that most individuals are capable of coming to understand, much less willingly participate, in these principles. Furthermore, they argue that even if individuals were committed to creating a society based on these principles, voluntary self-organization is an inefficient way of achieving the desired goal. Instead, they advocate a system that eliminates the individual as a critical variable by removing such things as the right of the individual to own property, to freely choose if and how to help others, and to decide for themselves how to participate in society for the good of others. Individual Conversion is disregarded, because the State’s interpretation and implementation of social values is the only one that matters.