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Arizona_Mike
Guest
Interesting survey from an Evangelical site:
christianitytoday.com/ct/2011/october/survey-bible-reading-liberal.html
christianitytoday.com/ct/2011/october/survey-bible-reading-liberal.html
.kmuestwin
Cathloicism is neither liberal or conservative. It is correct and Godly and it is our duty to bring about positive social change
Of the utmost importance. It’s only that the usual liberal definitions of “social justice” are warped, considering gay marriage, sexual “freedom” and license and general promiscuity of all orientations, subsidized abortion, the handing out of condoms to middle school children, contraception, financial disincentives to marriage, financial incentives to having children out of wedlock, etc. as social “justice”: the latter two are especially applicable to people of lower wealth.Some of the most interesting findings relate to moral attitudes. “How important is it,” the survey asked, "to actively seek social and economic justice in order to be a good person?"
Incorrect. The Sacred Scriptures have been misinterpreted, and Christ supported free enterprise.Khalid #7
If I was an economic conservative/staunch Capitalist, I can’t imagine how I could remain one in good conscience after reading the New Testament (or the Old, for that matter). Laissez-faire Capitalism is an outgrowth of the teachings of some of the leaders of the Protestant Revolt,
Incorrect.The Apostles weren’t only socialists, they were full-blown Communists, which worked for them because they were holy.
Depends what you mean by free enterprise. Free market with no government regulation? No. Free market with government regulation? Yes.Incorrect. The Sacred Scriptures have been misinterpreted, and Christ supported free enterprise.
By His parable of the Talents Jesus is not implying that anyone should seek wealth first in their lives. He is preaching and rewarding prudence, justice, fortitude and temperance, rather than attacking those who accumulate wealth legitimately, He is lambasting the slothful. In the Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (On Social Concerns), 1987, #42, Pope John Paul II emphasises “Likewise, in this concern for the poor, one must not overlook that special form of poverty which consists in being deprived of fundamental human rights, in particular the right to religious freedom and also the right to freedom of economic initiative.”
With Lazarus, a shallow preoccupation with wealth obscures the real sins – pride and selfishness are the culprits. St Augustine effectively says “It was not Lazarus’ poverty that saved him, but his humility. Nor was it wealth that kept the rich man from bliss, but his pride and selfishness (Sermon 24,3).
“Catholic tradition has always had a balanced view of the responsibilities, temptations and opportunities of wealth, and it has never sought to canonize the poor or to demonize the rich. Catholic social doctrine, rather, calls all people to responsibility, generosity and holiness.” Inside The Vatican, June 1997].
Free enterprise economic development started in the great Catholic monastic estates of the ninth century, and a solid basis of economic Catholic thought developed from the fourteenth century. In the fifteenth century the Late Scholastics who were Thomists (followers of St Thomas) “writing and teaching at the University of Salamanca in Spain, sought to explain the full range of human action and social; organization.” They “observed the existence of economic law, inexorable forces of cause and effect that operate very much as other natural laws. Over the course of several generations, they discovered and explained the laws of supply and demand, the cause of inflation, the operation of foreign exchange rates, and the subjective nature of economic value…” For these reasons Joseph Schumpeter applauded them as the first real economists. (Thomas E Woods Jr, The Church And The Market, Lexington Books, 2005, p 8).
Incorrect.
Dr Chafuen notes that “many people close to Jesus were quite wealthy for their times. Joseph seems to have had his own business and perhaps a donkey; Peter owned a fishing boat, and Matthew was a tax collector. Jesus praised the rich man Zaccheus. It was the wealthy Joseph of Arimathea who kept faith even when the Apostles were beset by doubt (Mt 27:57). Jesus does not condemn the possession of riches but, rather disordered attachment to them.” Notice also that Jesus did not ask His Apostles to renounce their property. Christians For Freedom, Ignatius 1986, p 45].
“Voluntary sharing and communal living in a religious community have nothing to do with Communism or other such forced appropriations and destruction of freedom.
“We see in Acts 4:34-35, A Catholic Commentary On Holy Scripture, Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1953:
(This) shows “that property was sold, from time to time, by the owners of it, according as the Church’s need dictated. The sharing of goods was always voluntary. The story of Ananias and Saphira, cf. 5:4, makes it clear that they were not bound to sell, and that after they had, the price was still theirs. When Barnabas gave all his property, such exceptional generosity was chronicled. There are examples of houses held privately in Jerusalem, !2:12; 21:16. St James, in his Epistle, reveals the existence of rich and poor there. The community of goods does not seem to have been very successful, 6:1, and other churches had continually to send alms, voluntarily, ‘each man according to his ability’, to Jerusalem, 11:29.”
In Acts 2:44-47, where the faithful lived together and owned everything in common, these so-called “Apostolics” were condemned by St Thomas and the Late Scholastics, who quote St Augustine. Why?
In his Summa, II-II, Q. 66, art. 2, resp., St Thomas quotes St Augustine: “Augustine says: ‘The people styled apostolic are those who arrogantly claimed this title for themselves because they refused to admit married folk or property owners to their fellowship, arguing from the model of the many monks and clerics in the Catholic Church (De Haeresibus 40).’ But such people are heretics because they cut themselves off from the Church by alleging that those who, unlike themselves, marry and own property have no hope of salvation.”
Communism is where the government has a monopoly on the means of the economy. The apostles were sharing, and redistributing the wealth, but they weren’t communists.I The Apostles weren’t only socialists, they were full-blown Communists, which worked for them because they were holy. Communism is one of those things that looks good on paper, but doesn’t work in real life, due to the fallen nature of man (generally described by Protestants as the “understandable laziness of a man when he can gain nothing for himself by working”, as if it was an acceptable excuse - especially when they’re all either wealthy themselves, or are making the ruling capitalist class wealthy by working under them, and only being paid a tiny proportion of the profit they make for “the boss”, while thinking they’re doing well - both in Heaven and on earth - because they can afford a Mercedes-Benz).
[BIBLEDRB]Acts 2:44-45[/BIBLEDRB]
In modern English, that is, “their property was owned by the community, not by individuals, and they took from each according to their ability (or what they could give), and they gave to all according to their needs”.
I take “communism” in this context not as “forcibly redistributing all wealth” (which is improper, and, as I said above, doesn’t work with fallen man, and the modern plans to try and force it upon people, while at the same time endorsing violent revolution and extreme secularism, i.e. Marxism and Leninism, are pure evil: thus, I am not a “communist” [by which you mean “Marxist”] as in ‘Marxist-Leninist Soviet Union’, but a “socialist”, as in, ‘Northern and Western Europe’), but simply “the redistribution of wealth”, it meaning, as Acts says, that “all things were held in common”, i.e. communally. The state of all things being held communally is “communism”. I can think of no other word for that state, but I suppose a neologism, “communalism”, would work as well.Communism is where the government has a monopoly on the means of the economy. The apostles were sharing, and redistributing the wealth, but they weren’t communists.
Not really. Communism generically means a society in which all property is held in common. The system you describe is more a particular kind of socialist. Communism, however, does not even necessiate a government at all. One can have and anarchic communist society in which people freely share everything entirely with each other. In that sense, perhaps the apostles were communists.Communism is where the government has a monopoly on the means of the economy. The apostles were sharing, and redistributing the wealth, but they weren’t communists.
I take “communism” in this context not as “forcibly redistributing all wealth” (which is improper, and, as I said above, doesn’t work with fallen man, and the modern plans to try and force it upon people, while at the same time endorsing violent revolution and extreme secularism, i.e. Marxism and Leninism, are pure evil: thus, I am not a “communist” [by which you mean “Marxist”] as in ‘Marxist-Leninist Soviet Union’, but a “socialist”, as in, ‘Northern and Western Europe’), but simply “the redistribution of wealth”, it meaning, as Acts says, that “all things were held in common”, i.e. communally. The state of all things being held communally is “communism”. I can think of no other word for that state, but I suppose a neologism, “communalism”, would work as well.
The forcible redistribution of wealth combined with the outlawing of religion, violent revolution, etc. ao you have taken the word “communism” to mean; this is not communism, as an idealized, abstract idea (which was instantiated by the apostles in Acts, in which the rich do not exploit everyone who is less rich as is the status quo in laissez-fair economies, or even semi laissez-fair economies like America), but Marxism, which is a concrete and violent secularist program of government. “Communist” governments of the 20th century were Marxist or Leninist.
Communism is a state where goods are held in common, “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.” Marxism is taking that idea - communal life - and making of it a violent secularist political philosophy of great evil. Don’t confuse the ideal or state of “communism” or “communalism” with the ideology or implementation of Marxism, which is often called by that name.
What Bl John Paul II accepted and developed in Centesimus Annus, 43:Swiss Guy #10
Depends what you mean by free enterprise.
The Welfare State type usurpation as in Europe is condemned:Khalid #12
I am not a “communist” [by which you mean “Marxist”] as in ‘Marxist-Leninist Soviet Union’, but a “socialist”, as in, ‘Northern and Western Europe’), but simply “the redistribution of wealth”, it meaning, as Acts says, that “all things were held in common”, i.e. communally.
.Raskolnikov #13
One can have and anarchic communist society in which people freely share everything entirely with each other. In that sense, perhaps the apostles were communists
It is a gross canard to feel that “the rich exploit everyone who is less rich” in free enterprise economies but, as bad, to assume that free enterprise, based on natural law and which has enabled countless millions to rise above subsistence over hundreds of years, and supported by the Popes, is inherently exploitatively evil.Khalid #12
instantiated by the apostles in Acts, in which the rich do not exploit everyone who is less rich as is the status quo in laissez-fair economies, or even semi laissez-fair economies like America),