George Weigel on Caritas in Veritate -- Right On!

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Hardly.
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.”
[See *Christians For Freedom
, Ignatius 1986, p46, (with a new edition, since) by Dr Alejandro Chafuen.

Two major principles of Catholic social teaching are solidarity and subsidiarity, plus condemnation of the Welfare State.
Great point! Thanks.

I just have two simple questions about what to assent to in an otherwise brilliant encyclical given prior social teaching. So far no one has answered them head on.

Thanks again.
 
Fr of Jazz
And this coupled with (b) the use of the word “redistribution” with respect to wealth at least 7 times #s 32, 36, 37, 39, 42 (3 times), 49].
Should one expect the gift of more and more free stuff from the government?
These comments draw out the perceptions which Pope Benedict XVI is communicating, I think:

Fr Sirico:
“Several commentators have worried about his frequent calls for wealth redistribution. Benedict does see a role for the state here, but much of the needed redistribution is the result of every voluntary and mutually beneficial exchange. To understand such passages fully and accurately, we do well to put our political biases on the shelf.

“This encyclical is a theological version of his predecessor’s more philosophical effort to anchor the free economy’s ethical foundation. Much of it stands squarely with a long tradition of writings of a certain “classical liberal” tradition, one centered on the moral foundation of economics, from St. Thomas Aquinas and his disciples, Frederic Bastiat in the 19th century, Wilhelm Roepke, and even the secular F.A. Hayek in the 20th century. It also clearly resonates with some European Christian democratic thought.”

Fr De Celles:
“….the Pope writes specifically of the need for the “redistribution of wealth,” which many say is anathema to capitalism. Unfortunately, his use of the term is often ambiguous, but in no way suggests a massive effort by government to take from the rich, by taxes or other means, to give to the poor. In fact, he seems to argue against that kind of radical redistribution when he later proposes the need for an “effective antidote against any form of all-encompassing welfare state” [CV 57]. The only time he is clear on what he means by “wealth redistribution” is when he uses it to mean increasing the share of wealth of the poor by normal market economic activity such as, better jobs, increased profits, etc. [CV 42]. No capitalist I know would object to that, or even to the normal redistribution of wealth that comes through reasonable taxation…… This seems consistent with what he said just six months prior to releasing CV: ‘the illusion that a policy of mere redistribution of existing wealth can definitively resolve the problem must be set aside. …Wealth creation therefore becomes an inescapable duty… if the fight against material poverty is to be effective in the long term.’ Message of the World Day of Peace, January 1, 2009.”

Donald Devine:
“….Globalization–that is the world market–is precisely how we want redistribution to take place, freely, which it will in a truly free market. If redistribution takes place through the market governed by just property laws, is this not just what we desire? So far, I see no regression.

“Benedict specifically rejects the idea of “two typologies of social doctrine, one pre-conciliar and one post-conciliar, differing from one another: on the contrary, there is a single teaching, consistent and at the same time ever new.”

“Benedict reaffirms the “importance of distributive justice and social justice” and the social responsibility of business. That vision is “still timely,” says Benedict; but the “world that Pope Paul VI had before him” has changed.
Perhaps at one time it was conceivable that first the creation of wealth could be entrusted to the economy, and then the task of distributing it could be assigned to politics. Today that would be more difficult, given that economic activity is no longer circumscribed within territorial limits, while the authority of governments continues to be principally local. Hence the canons of justice must be respected from the outset, as the economic process unfolds, and not just afterwards or incidentally.

“Supporters of economic and social freedom should be reassured that this papal argument directly follows market theorist and Nobel laureate F.A. Hayek’s prescription that just rules must come first and distributional results must proceed from them rather than being allocated by political authorities afterwards.

“Immediately following is the phrase that so offended conservative critics concerning redistribution. But read it.
Space also needs to be created within the market for economic activity carried out by subjects who freely choose to act according to principles other than those of pure profit, without sacrificing the production of economic value in the process. The many economic entities that draw their origin from religious and lay initiatives demonstrate that this is concretely possible. Economic life undoubtedly requires contracts, in order to regulate relations of exchange between goods of equivalent value. But it also needs just laws and forms of redistribution governed by politics, and what is more, it needs works redolent of the spirit of gift. The economy in the global era seems to privilege the former logic, that of contractual exchange, but directly or indirectly it also demonstrates its need for the other two: political logic, and the logic of the unconditional gift.

For Benedict, redistribution comes from politics, yes, but through prior rules adopted by people “who freely choose” them in the spirit of the unconditional gift. What spirit could be freer or more in accord with Hayek’s logic, including when he used religious orders and local communities as examples of communal actions freely undertaken and not at all inconsistent with the market? Benedict explains that a loving gift is not mere “sentimentality” that is “detached from ethical living” by political or economic ideologies where “social action ends up serving private interests and the logic of power.” True charity is rather based on loving concrete actions guided by the truth that must be in the spirit of a gift.
tinyurl.com/3zdzbwm
 
Thanks again. These excerpts do get at my concerns head on. . . and help a great deal. A few observations.
These comments draw out the perceptions which Pope Benedict XVI is communicating, I think:

Fr Sirico:
“Several commentators have worried about his frequent calls for wealth redistribution. Benedict does see a role for the state here, but much of the needed redistribution is the result of every voluntary and mutually beneficial exchange. To understand such passages fully and accurately, we do well to put our political biases on the shelf.
Good except the last sentence. But as long as he’s not throwing the failed socialist states among them a bone or floating a trial socialist balloon, I’m happy.
“This encyclical is a theological version of his predecessor’s more philosophical effort to anchor the free economy’s ethical foundation. Much of it stands squarely with a long tradition of writings of a certain “classical liberal” tradition, one centered on the moral foundation of economics, from St. Thomas Aquinas and his disciples, . . ., and even the secular F.A. Hayek in the 20th century. It also clearly resonates with some European Christian democratic thought.”
First sentence, good.
Re the second, as per Gadamer one never puts biases on a shelf: one starts with ones fore-understanding of a subject (biases) but allows it to be addressed and corrected or confirmed by what the text actually says. Besides my “bias” is largely the tradition of catholic social teaching that came before CiV.
Fr De Celles:
“….the Pope writes specifically of the need for the “redistribution of wealth,” which many say is anathema to capitalism. Unfortunately, his use of the term is often ambiguous, but in no way suggests a massive effort by government to take from the rich, by taxes or other means, to give to the poor. In fact, he seems to argue against that kind of radical redistribution when he later proposes the need for an “effective antidote against any form of all-encompassing welfare state” [CV 57]. The only time he is clear on what he means by “wealth redistribution” is when he uses it to mean increasing the share of wealth of the poor by normal market economic activity such as, better jobs, increased profits, etc. [CV 42]. No capitalist I know would object to that, or even to the normal redistribution of wealth that comes through reasonable taxation…… This seems consistent with what he said just six months prior to releasing CV: ‘the illusion that a policy of mere redistribution of existing wealth can definitively resolve the problem must be set aside. …Wealth creation therefore becomes an inescapable duty… if the fight against material poverty is to be effective in the long term.’ Message of the World Day of Peace, January 1, 2009.”
This paragraph is huge.
Agreed, his use of “redistribution” is ambiguous at times. It’s also a loaded term with extreme leftist overtones in the US–and for good reason.

Yes, #57 is very consoling. Also, perhaps you noticed these too:
Integral human development presupposes the responsible freedom of the individual and of peoples: no structure can guarantee this development over and above human responsibility. [17]

From this standpoint, international organizations might question the actual effectiveness of their bureaucratic and administrative machinery, which is often excessively costly. At times it happens that those who receive aid become subordinate to the aid-givers, and the poor serve to perpetuate expensive bureaucracies which consume an excessively high percentage of funds intended for development. [47]

Where does #42 say what he says it does? I can’t find it. I like the idea though.

“The Message of the World Day of Peace” (Jan 1, 2009) is definitely reassuring not only #11 quoted above, but also #14: “In the Encyclical Letter Centesimus Annus, John Paul II warned of the need to “abandon a mentality in which the poor – as individuals and as peoples – are considered a burden, as irksome intruders trying to consume what others have produced.” The poor, he wrote, “ask for the right to share in enjoying material goods and to make good use of their capacity for work, thus creating a world that is more just and prosperous for all”
Donald Devine:
. . . . For Benedict, redistribution comes from politics, yes, but through prior rules adopted by people “who freely choose” them in the spirit of the unconditional gift. What spirit could be freer or more in accord with Hayek’s logic, including when he used religious orders and local communities as examples of communal actions freely undertaken and not at all inconsistent with the market? Benedict explains that a loving gift is not mere “sentimentality” that is “detached from ethical living” by political or economic ideologies where “social action ends up serving private interests and the logic of power.” True charity is rather based on loving concrete actions guided by the truth that must be in the spirit of a gift.
Hmmm, seems to leave open the possibility that a country could vote in a socialist economy.

In the Middle Ages members of the religious orders shared things in common, but ad extra the order as a whole functioned as a player in a free market.

We already have plenty of social programs; but certainly a new spirit of charity and gratuity could animate them. I’m all for that.

Summing up:
So it is your opinion that one can read the few confusing parts of CiV in the light of and presuming the tradition of social teaching especially so well articulated by JPII and that these passages are in reality both conservative of the past and mark a genuine development of the tradition?

The information you‘ve sent my way seems to suggest that that is happily the case.
 
Thanks for your addition to the conversation.

Perhaps I shouldn’t have mentioned Weigel in the title–it seems to pull everyone’s attention from the real issues and down the road of branding and name calling.

I’d be grateful if you would address yourself instead to the issues I spelled out in the post above and the one below to “fone bone 2011” (post #6). They are real ones, as far as I can see for those of us who are faithful to the magisterium, until they are resolved. Maybe you can help. What is your solution?
I don’t see anything to “resolve.” It seems that most of your issues revolve around trying to make Catholic teaching more compatible with unfettered capitalism–which it is not. Frankly, my solution is that Catholics should stop wishing (and sometimes demanding) that the Church’s teaching on social justice be made to conform with currently popular American poltical and economic theories.
 
I don’t see anything to “resolve.” It seems that most of your issues revolve around trying to make Catholic teaching more compatible with unfettered capitalism–which it is not. Frankly, my solution is that Catholics should stop wishing (and sometimes demanding) that the Church’s teaching on social justice be made to conform with currently popular American poltical and economic theories.
On the contrary, my issues are in trying to see the continuity of CiV with the tradition of catholic social teaching up to JPII. He taught bridled capitalism, the right of private ownership of the means of production, the right and presumption of individual initiative, the centrality of wealth creation, we should create opportunity for the poor not just throw free stuff at them, condemned collectivism as inhuman as does the CCC, etc., etc.

My concern was: am I to assent–in contradiction to the entire history of social teaching–to wealth redistribution as that term is used here in the US and to nebulous and unapplied concepts of gratuity meaning . . . what? . . . expect the gift of more and more free stuff from the government, like failing European economies and some of our states.

Below “Abu” brought some writers to my attention that made the case for continuity point by point. That was very helpful and pretty much resolved the issue for me. One in particular quoted Benedict XVI’s Message for the World Day of Peace 2009 that gave much needed context.
“Hence, the illusion that a policy of mere redistribution of existing wealth can definitively resolve the problem must be set aside. In a modern economy, the value of assets is utterly dependent on the capacity to generate revenue in the present and the future. Wealth creation therefore becomes an inescapable duty, which must be kept in mind if the fight against material poverty is to be effective in the long term.” (#11)
 
Thanks for information and discussion.

My problem is I have no idea–in these few cases–just what one is expected to assent to.
Okay. That’s not what Weigel’s response was, though - the response that my first link argues against and my second link satirizes.
So what is one supposed to assent to? the traditional Catholic social teaching on private property and ownership of the means of production, market economy, emphasis on economic initiative, and bridled capitalism, OR now, apparently, collectivist income and wealth redistribution?
I see no reason not to view that as a false dichotomy born from pigeonholing Catholic social teaching into a conservative American economic ideology.

The author of the article I linked to above states in said article that the whole of Caritas in Veritate came as no surprise to him in light of the Holy Father’s other writings, so it honestly seems to me that the only people who saw discontinuity were those with an entrenched interest in defending a neo-liberal economic theory.

Perhaps the correct response for us Americans is to accept that not every economic issue can be couched in our nation’s political terminology, and to realize and accept that “collectivist income and wealth redistribution” is not the only alternative to the kind of capitalism that conservative Americans like Weigel are used to defending.
 
TMC
It seems that most of your issues revolve around trying to make Catholic teaching more compatible with unfettered capitalism–which it is not. Frankly, my solution is that Catholics should stop wishing (and sometimes demanding) that the Church’s teaching on social justice be made to conform with currently popular American poltical and economic theories.
I’m surprised that the fallacy that there is “unfettered capitalism” still exists.

The Church’s social teaching is more than “social justice”, and free enterprise is the revered development of the Catholic Late Scholastics, supported by Blessed John Paul II in Centesimus Annus and Pope Benedict XVI, and unrelated to mere theory of any kind. The economic laws discovered by the Late Scholastics are based on cause and effect.

Do We Need Social Justice Or Social Engineering?
This question is answered by Fr Torraco of EWTN on Nov-24-2003 to a Question:
What is “Social Justice”? When was this concept introduced in Catholic moral doctrine?
Answer by Fr.Stephen F. Torraco on Nov-24-2003:

'The term “social justice” was introduced into Catholic teaching in the 19th century. On the one hand, it is intended, at least in part, to avoid the error of reducing what Aristotle calls “general justice” (devotion to the common good of one’s country) to LEGAL justice. On the other hand, consciously or not, the term “social justice” aptly reflects the political philosophy of the modern philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, according to whom justice is fundamentally a matter of achieving the proper institutions and external settings that would effectively mold human beings into model citizens. In other words, for Rousseau, justice is not rooted in nature as it is for Aristotle and for the Church’s teaching. It is something that has to be attained by “social engineering.”

‘Unfortunately, in the minds of many if not most, consciously or not, the term “social justice” is viewed more in a Rousseaunian than an Aristotelian way. From the vantage point of both Aristotle and the Church’s teaching, the phrase “social justice” is redundant because justice is already social: it is the social virtue par excellence.’
 
I’m surprised that the fallacy that there is “unfettered capitalism” still exists.

The Church’s social teaching is more than “social justice”, and free enterprise is the revered development of the Catholic Late Scholastics, supported by Blessed John Paul II in Centesimus Annus and Pope Benedict XVI, and unrelated to mere theory of any kind. The economic laws discovered by the Late Scholastics are based on cause and effect.

Do We Need Social Justice Or Social Engineering?
This question is answered by Fr Torraco of EWTN on Nov-24-2003 to a Question:
What is “Social Justice”? When was this concept introduced in Catholic moral doctrine?
Answer by Fr.Stephen F. Torraco on Nov-24-2003:

'The term “social justice” was introduced into Catholic teaching in the 19th century. On the one hand, it is intended, at least in part, to avoid the error of reducing what Aristotle calls “general justice” (devotion to the common good of one’s country) to LEGAL justice. On the other hand, consciously or not, the term “social justice” aptly reflects the political philosophy of the modern philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, according to whom justice is fundamentally a matter of achieving the proper institutions and external settings that would effectively mold human beings into model citizens. In other words, for Rousseau, justice is not rooted in nature as it is for Aristotle and for the Church’s teaching. It is something that has to be attained by “social engineering.”

‘Unfortunately, in the minds of many if not most, consciously or not, the term “social justice” is viewed more in a Rousseaunian than an Aristotelian way. From the vantage point of both Aristotle and the Church’s teaching, the phrase “social justice” is redundant because justice is already social: it is the social virtue par excellence.’
Thanks again and I couldn’t agree more. Of course we can reform society to be more in accord with nature, but that involves a far different set of assumptions then social engineering.

I would just add that the economic laws discovered by the late scholastics were based on data and the lived economic experience of the Commercial Revolution beginning in the 11 c. This clearly involved private ownership, free markets, individual and civic initiative, profit, development of the middle class, independence of the economic order, etc. This last one is interesting because most medieval communes, chartered towns, were incorporated based on a policy of exception from the feudal order, with the emerging middle class being major players in the towns’ growth and life. Further it was the mendicant orders, paradoxically, that not only ministered to the populace of the new towns with their own culture but also worked out a theological justification for their economic and political life.

Just curious—have you read any of these works? They certainly opened my eyes to how things economic worked.

David S. Landes, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some are so Rich and Some so Poor. NY: W.W. Norton & Company, 1999.

Keith D. Lilley, Urban Life in the Middle Ages, 1000-1450. NY: Palgrave, 2002.

Henri Pirenne, Medieval Cities: Their Origin and the Revival of Trade. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1925.

Lester Little, Religious Poverty and the Profit Economy in Medieval Europe. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1978.

Lynn White, Jr. Medieval Technology and Social Change. New York: Oxford University Press, 1964.
 
Okay. That’s not what Weigel’s response was, though - the response that my first link argues against and my second link satirizes.

I see no reason not to view that as a false dichotomy born from pigeonholing Catholic social teaching into a conservative American economic ideology.

The author of the article I linked to above states in said article that the whole of Caritas in Veritate came as no surprise to him in light of the Holy Father’s other writings, so it honestly seems to me that the only people who saw discontinuity were those with an entrenched interest in defending a neo-liberal economic theory.

Perhaps the correct response for us Americans is to accept that not every economic issue can be couched in our nation’s political terminology, and to realize and accept that “collectivist income and wealth redistribution” is not the only alternative to the kind of capitalism that conservative Americans like Weigel are used to defending.
I think that last is basically a fair statement, assuming Weigel’s capitalism diverges from that of Catholic social teaching.

Basically my concerns can be summed up in one word “continuity.” Responses dealing directly and point by point with these concerns have allayed my jitters. Up to and including JPII the church’s economic teaching falls squarely on the side of bridled, regulated capitalism. The context for CiV in Benedict’s thought as evidenced from other writings of his (e.g., Message for the World Day of Peace 2009) makes it clear he also affirms this tradition and seeks to build on it and suffuse it with a spirit of charity. Basically the few problems I had with CiV are resolved.
 
Thanks for your ideas and contributions, Fr of Jazz. No I haven’t read any of those works, but have been weaned on Christians For Freedom, Chafuen; The Church And The Market, Woods; Victory of Reason, Stark; How The Catholic Church Built Western Civilization, Woods; The Clash Of Orthodoxies, George, among others.
 
I’m not sure how close Weigel is to the mark here. I’m not even sure his objection is doctrinal or stylistic.

Take this for instance: “(b) the use of the word “redistribution” with respect to wealth at least 7 times #s 32, 36, 37, 39, 42 (3 times), 49]. We all know that “redistribution” is code for collectivist/socialist policies and ideologies.”

But does it to a Pope who is not an American and may or may not consider American political “code words” mandatory on him?

After all, the Popes from Leo XIII on have favored the widest possible ownership of productive assets by individuals and families. But none (including Pope Benedict) has ever suggested that such ownership should be achieved through confiscation and donation. Rather, their thoughts (as i understood them) are more concerned with a reasonable degree of ease of acquisition.

For example, farm land (and I know the encyclicals don’t always mean farm land) around here is very expensive relative to what it can produce. Why is that? Well, there are several reasons; some of which have to do with government(s) and some of which don’t. One big one recently is the government’s corn subsidy. In order to cash in on that (or crop insurance, whichever pays first) people raised a lot of corn this year on land where it should never have been planted. This whole area, in fact, is not really good for corn. And yet, people planted it in order to cash in. Turns out it turned dry so the crop insurance program is on the hook in a very big way. Because of all that, land prices went up a good deal even in the face of the recession

Then, strange to tell, the government decided to subsidize the planting and growing of that gigantic grass 'miscantheus giganticus" in a number of counties here, believing it coudl produce even more ethanol per acre than corn. Sure as the world, people will plant it next year, and with subidies will produce a whole lot of it, and either collect money for the grass or insurance if it fails.

And the natural, and best uses for land around here are grazing and forestry.

But because of government programs, the price is well above what grazing and forestry could justify.

Also, government spending is so crazy and Fed accommodation so generous that interest rates encourage the “carry trade”, thus punching securities prices above what they probably should be.

If I want to start a machine shop, I can probably deduct the cost of all my equipment and materials in fairly short order. But if i buy land to farm, I can’t deduct the cost of land at all. Another distorting thing.

And, frankly, if some of the ups and downs of the recent market aren’t engineered by short sellers, I’m a monkey’s uncle. But who will hold them to account? Nobody.

And if I was wealthy and started a private foundation for the purpose of persuading women not to have children at all because of “global warming”, the government would bless my efforts with a tax deduction and an exemption for the gain on my investments in the foundation. So my foundation is in the market buying assets that feed an ideology rather than a family, and I’m bidding the price up.

There are lots of things like that in this economy, and not just with land. I think it’s that kind of thing the Popes mean; things that stand in the way of acquisition of productive assets, or that artificially trash those efforts people make in acquiring them.

It may be noted as well that excessive consumerism also retards the acquisition by families of productive assets, and the Popes discourage that and the corporate manipulation and government policies that encourage it. Consumerism itself, often pushed by governments and corporations also discourages “distribution of wealth” by absorbing it.

So do excessive transfer payments.

I’ll admit I have considerable admiration for Weigel. But I think he’s off the mark with this one the way he expresses himself, and in any event I think Weigel mostly just wishes the Pope hadn’t used the word.

But one more thing. It’s one thing to think of “distribution” in an American context, but another in the context of, say, Zimbabwe, where Mugabe’s cronies force others off the land and appropriate it. Pope Benedict is not only addressing Americans with his Encyclical.
 
I’m not sure how close Weigel is to the mark here. I’m not even sure his objection is doctrinal or stylistic.

Take this for instance: “(b) the use of the word “redistribution” with respect to wealth at least 7 times #s 32, 36, 37, 39, 42 (3 times), 49]. We all know that “redistribution” is code for collectivist/socialist policies and ideologies.”

But does it to a Pope who is not an American and may or may not consider American political “code words” mandatory on him?

After all, the Popes from Leo XIII on have favored the widest possible ownership of productive assets by individuals and families. But none (including Pope Benedict) has ever suggested that such ownership should be achieved through confiscation and donation. Rather, their thoughts (as i understood them) are more concerned with a reasonable degree of ease of acquisition.

For example, farm land (and I know the encyclicals don’t always mean farm land) around here is very expensive relative to what it can produce. Why is that? Well, there are several reasons; some of which have to do with government(s) and some of which don’t. One big one recently is the government’s corn subsidy. In order to cash in on that (or crop insurance, whichever pays first) people raised a lot of corn this year on land where it should never have been planted. This whole area, in fact, is not really good for corn. And yet, people planted it in order to cash in. Turns out it turned dry so the crop insurance program is on the hook in a very big way. Because of all that, land prices went up a good deal even in the face of the recession

Then, strange to tell, the government decided to subsidize the planting and growing of that gigantic grass 'miscantheus giganticus" in a number of counties here, believing it coudl produce even more ethanol per acre than corn. Sure as the world, people will plant it next year, and with subidies will produce a whole lot of it, and either collect money for the grass or insurance if it fails.

And the natural, and best uses for land around here are grazing and forestry.

But because of government programs, the price is well above what grazing and forestry could justify.

Also, government spending is so crazy and Fed accommodation so generous that interest rates encourage the “carry trade”, thus punching securities prices above what they probably should be.

If I want to start a machine shop, I can probably deduct the cost of all my equipment and materials in fairly short order. But if i buy land to farm, I can’t deduct the cost of land at all. Another distorting thing.

And, frankly, if some of the ups and downs of the recent market aren’t engineered by short sellers, I’m a monkey’s uncle. But who will hold them to account? Nobody.

And if I was wealthy and started a private foundation for the purpose of persuading women not to have children at all because of “global warming”, the government would bless my efforts with a tax deduction and an exemption for the gain on my investments in the foundation. So my foundation is in the market buying assets that feed an ideology rather than a family, and I’m bidding the price up.

There are lots of things like that in this economy, and not just with land. I think it’s that kind of thing the Popes mean; things that stand in the way of acquisition of productive assets, or that artificially trash those efforts people make in acquiring them.

It may be noted as well that excessive consumerism also retards the acquisition by families of productive assets, and the Popes discourage that and the corporate manipulation and government policies that encourage it. Consumerism itself, often pushed by governments and corporations also discourages “distribution of wealth” by absorbing it.

So do excessive transfer payments.

I’ll admit I have considerable admiration for Weigel. But I think he’s off the mark with this one the way he expresses himself, and in any event I think Weigel mostly just wishes the Pope hadn’t used the word.

But one more thing. It’s one thing to think of “distribution” in an American context, but another in the context of, say, Zimbabwe, where Mugabe’s cronies force others off the land and appropriate it. Pope Benedict is not only addressing Americans with his Encyclical.
Basically my concerns can be summed up in one word “continuity.” Responses dealing directly and point by point with these concerns have allayed my jitters. Up to and including JPII the church’s economic teaching falls squarely on the side of bridled, regulated capitalism. The context for CiV in Benedict’s thought as evidenced from other writings of his (e.g., Message for the World Day of Peace 2009) makes it clear he also affirms this tradition and seeks to build on it and suffuse it with a spirit of charity. Basically, the few problems I had with CiV are resolved.

“Redistribution” of wealth, at least in concept, goes all the way back to the origins of European socialism. Actually now I’m beginning to think the Pope knowingly used the term to redefine it according tradition of Catholic social teaching. If it were practiced, the net result in time would actually be a redistribution wealth proportionately speaking without destroying the free market, private initiative, private ownership of the means of production, and the free and independent creation of wealth.
 
I’m not sure how close Weigel is to the mark here. I’m not even sure his objection is doctrinal or stylistic.

Take this for instance: “(b) the use of the word “redistribution” with respect to wealth at least 7 times #s 32, 36, 37, 39, 42 (3 times), 49]. We all know that “redistribution” is code for collectivist/socialist policies and ideologies.”

But does it to a Pope who is not an American and may or may not consider American political “code words” mandatory on him?

After all, the Popes from Leo XIII on have favored the widest possible ownership of productive assets by individuals and families. But none (including Pope Benedict) has ever suggested that such ownership should be achieved through confiscation and donation. Rather, their thoughts (as i understood them) are more concerned with a reasonable degree of ease of acquisition.
Exactly.
I’ll admit I have considerable admiration for Weigel. But I think he’s off the mark with this one the way he expresses himself, and in any event I think Weigel mostly just wishes the Pope hadn’t used the word.

But one more thing. It’s one thing to think of “distribution” in an American context, but another in the context of, say, Zimbabwe, where Mugabe’s cronies force others off the land and appropriate it. Pope Benedict is not only addressing Americans with his Encyclical.
More great points. I too really like some of Weigel’s writings… but on Caritas in Veritate he just got paranoid.
 
I’m not sure how close Weigel is to the mark here. I’m not even sure his objection is doctrinal or stylistic.

Take this for instance: “(b) the use of the word “redistribution” with respect to wealth at least 7 times #s 32, 36, 37, 39, 42 (3 times), 49]. We all know that “redistribution” is code for collectivist/socialist policies and ideologies.”

But does it to a Pope who is not an American and may or may not consider American political “code words” mandatory on him?

After all, the Popes from Leo XIII on have favored the widest possible ownership of productive assets by individuals and families. But none (including Pope Benedict) has ever suggested that such ownership should be achieved through confiscation and donation. Rather, their thoughts (as i understood them) are more concerned with a reasonable degree of ease of acquisition.

For example, farm land (and I know the encyclicals don’t always mean farm land) around here is very expensive relative to what it can produce. Why is that? Well, there are several reasons; some of which have to do with government(s) and some of which don’t. One big one recently is the government’s corn subsidy. In order to cash in on that (or crop insurance, whichever pays first) people raised a lot of corn this year on land where it should never have been planted. This whole area, in fact, is not really good for corn. And yet, people planted it in order to cash in. Turns out it turned dry so the crop insurance program is on the hook in a very big way. Because of all that, land prices went up a good deal even in the face of the recession

Then, strange to tell, the government decided to subsidize the planting and growing of that gigantic grass 'miscantheus giganticus" in a number of counties here, believing it coudl produce even more ethanol per acre than corn. Sure as the world, people will plant it next year, and with subidies will produce a whole lot of it, and either collect money for the grass or insurance if it fails.

And the natural, and best uses for land around here are grazing and forestry.

But because of government programs, the price is well above what grazing and forestry could justify.

Also, government spending is so crazy and Fed accommodation so generous that interest rates encourage the “carry trade”, thus punching securities prices above what they probably should be.

If I want to start a machine shop, I can probably deduct the cost of all my equipment and materials in fairly short order. But if i buy land to farm, I can’t deduct the cost of land at all. Another distorting thing.

And, frankly, if some of the ups and downs of the recent market aren’t engineered by short sellers, I’m a monkey’s uncle. But who will hold them to account? Nobody.

And if I was wealthy and started a private foundation for the purpose of persuading women not to have children at all because of “global warming”, the government would bless my efforts with a tax deduction and an exemption for the gain on my investments in the foundation. So my foundation is in the market buying assets that feed an ideology rather than a family, and I’m bidding the price up.

There are lots of things like that in this economy, and not just with land. I think it’s that kind of thing the Popes mean; things that stand in the way of acquisition of productive assets, or that artificially trash those efforts people make in acquiring them.

It may be noted as well that excessive consumerism also retards the acquisition by families of productive assets, and the Popes discourage that and the corporate manipulation and government policies that encourage it. Consumerism itself, often pushed by governments and corporations also discourages “distribution of wealth” by absorbing it.

So do excessive transfer payments.

I’ll admit I have considerable admiration for Weigel. But I think he’s off the mark with this one the way he expresses himself, and in any event I think Weigel mostly just wishes the Pope hadn’t used the word.

But one more thing. It’s one thing to think of “distribution” in an American context, but another in the context of, say, Zimbabwe, where Mugabe’s cronies force others off the land and appropriate it. Pope Benedict is not only addressing Americans with his Encyclical.
If you go to the vatican website and plug the word “redistribution” into the search function, you will see that the Church has been talking about redistribution for many years. This is not a new concept slipped past the Pope by conspiratorial lefties. It has been a part of the Church’s teaching since…, well forever.
 
Has anyone else read George Weigel’s review–scathing at times–of Caritas in Veritate? I think he is totally on the money!
article.nationalreview.com/print/?q=NTdkYjU3MDE2YTdhZTE4NWIyN2FkY2U5YTFkM2ZiMmE=
Bottom line: the encyclical is good in many parts but caters to the lefties way too often. It uses the word “redistribution” with respect to wealth at least 7 times #s 32, 36, 37, 39, 42 (3 times), 49]. :banghead:
What are your substantive reasons for agreeing with Weigel over the Pope?

I understand that as a Catholic you are allowed to do so. But I would imagine that you would need some strong reasons for taking such a stance. I am not in full communion with Rome, but I think very carefully before disagreeing with Pope Benedict.

I get from your post that the encyclical goes against your political opinions. But shouldn’t you hold to your political opinions tentatively, if they turn out to be against the mind of the Church?

Edwin
 
TMC
If you go to the vatican website and plug the word “redistribution” into the search function, you will see that the Church has been talking about redistribution for many years. This is not a new concept slipped past the Pope by conspiratorial lefties. It has been a part of the Church’s teaching since…, well forever.
Would that Pope Leo XIII’s advice had been heeded sooner:
“If I were to pronounce on any single matter of a prevailing economic problem, I should be interfering with the freedom of men to work out their own affairs. Certain cases must be solved in the domain of facts, case by case as they occur…[M]en must realise in deeds those things, the principles of which have been placed beyond dispute…[T]hese things one must leave to the solution of time and experience.” [Pope Leo XIII. Quoted in *The Church And The Market, Dr Thomas E. Woods, Lexington Books, 2005, p 4].

Re “the dangerous inadequacies of ‘ecclesiastical economics’ at the time of Paul VI, the apparent re-distributist bias of the thinking in papal social doctrine should have been rejected on empirical as well as moral grounds. Redistributism is the theory that a finite amount of goods exists in the world so that what one person or country has implies that someone else must lose by the same amount. The theory is in many ways attractive, but it is quite false as a fact. To solve the modern problem of poverty, it is said, we must redistribute existing wealth politically, not create new wealth.”
(Fr James V Schall, SJ, Does Catholicism Still Exist?, Alba House 1994, p176)

Providentially, with Blessed John Paul II, in Centesimus Annus, 1991, we find that “the whole problematic and tenor of this attention were significantly shifted away from the re-distributionist context about which I have been concerned. The very meaning of ‘options for the poor’ need no longer be ideological in overtones but directed instead to real possibilities for a poor people to overcome their own problems with the intelligent aid of those who know how to produce wealth in the first place.” (Ibid. p178).

On Pope Benedict XVI’s Caritas et Veritate, Fr. Robert Sirico, president and co-founder of the Acton Institute (U.S.A.), explains…
‘the principal form of assistance needed by developing countries is that of allowing and encouraging the gradual penetration of their products into international markets.’…
Benedict does see a role for the state here [in wealth redistribution], but much of the needed redistribution is the result of every voluntary and mutually beneficial exchange.”

“….the market economy consists of voluntary property exchanges. There is no mechanism of ‘distribution’ whatsoever.” (Ludwig Von Mises – Thomas E Woods Jr, The Church And The Market, Lexington Books, 2005, p 201).
 
If you go to the vatican website and plug the word “redistribution” into the search function, you will see that the Church has been talking about redistribution for many years. This is not a new concept slipped past the Pope by conspiratorial lefties. It has been a part of the Church’s teaching since…, well forever.
Let me add, rumors of the use of “redistribution” are greatly exaggerated. I did check. The word “redistribution” is not in any social encyclical of JPII, Paul VI, John XXIII, Quadragesimo Anno, nor Rerum Novarum.” It does show up in the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, but (not surprisingly) is never footnoted, except in one place where the footnote covers inequities not “redistribution.” The Compendium is by—you guessed it—the Pontifical Council for Peace and Justice.
 
Let me add, rumors of the use of “redistribution” are greatly exaggerated. I did check. The word “redistribution” is not in any social encyclical of JPII, Paul VI, John XXIII, Quadragesimo Anno, nor Rerum Novarum.” It does show up in the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, but (not surprisingly) is never footnoted, except in one place where the footnote covers inequities not “redistribution.” The Compendium is by—you guessed it—the Pontifical Council for Peace and Justice.
Check again. From John Paul II’s Redemptor Hominis:
Such a task is not an impossible one. The principle of solidarity, in a wide sense, must inspire the effective search for appropriate in stitutions and mechanisms, whether in the sector of trade, where the laws of healthy competition must be allowed to lead the way, or on the level of a wider and more immediate redistribution of riches and of control over them, in order that the economically developing peoples may be able not only to satisfy their essential needs but also to advance gradually and effectively.
It is something that John Paul spoke about often, including in a speech he gave to the World Conference on Agriculture in 1979:
However, it has to be borne in mind that to overcome imbalances and the strident inequalities in living conditions between the agricultural sector and the other sectors of the economy, or between the social groups within a given country, the public authorities must have a well-planned policy, one that is committed to the redistribution of income to the advantage of the very poor.
While Paul VI did not use the precise word “redistribution,” he did advocate for it in Populorum Progessio:
If certain landed estates impede the general prosperity because they are extensive, unused or poorly used, or because they bring hardship to peoples or are detrimental to the interests of the country, the common good sometimes demands their expropriation.
It took me five minutes on the Vatican website to find these examples. I am sure there are many more, as the principle dates back to the very beginning of our faith. The suggestion by some that our current Pope has been duped by conspiratorial lefties to insert novel and un-Christian language into an encyclical is both ridiculous and insulting. This is what the Church teaches and has always taught.
 
Check again. From John Paul II’s Redemptor Hominis:

It is something that John Paul spoke about often, including in a speech he gave to the World Conference on Agriculture in 1979:

While Paul VI did not use the precise word “redistribution,” he did advocate for it in Populorum Progessio:

It took me five minutes on the Vatican website to find these examples. I am sure there are many more, as the principle dates back to the very beginning of our faith. The suggestion by some that our current Pope has been duped by conspiratorial lefties to insert novel and un-Christian language into an encyclical is both ridiculous and insulting. This is what the Church teaches and has always taught.
You’ll notice I said “social encyclicals”–which are what formally teach the church’s social doctrine. What I said stands. I would also point out that “redistribution” is not used in Gaudium et spes nor in CCE “Guidelines for the Study of and Teaching of the Church’s Social Doctrine in the Formation of Priests.”

Popularum progressio rejects collectivism (#33) as does JPII and advocates “redistribution” in sense (2) below as does John Paul II which is clear from the explicit teaching his social encyclicals that, again, never use the word “redistribution.” In Redemptor hominis (16), which you cite, immediately before he uses the word “redistribution” he says “laws of healthy competition must be allowed to lead the way”.

I would distinguish, then, and perhaps we are thinking the same thing regarding the word “redistribution.”

(1) If by “redistribution” one means the taking of an individual’s or group’s earned or accumulated wealth by governmental fiat to redistribute according a governmental agenda which seeks a direct leveling down of wealth across a nation’s populace and to establish equality of result not just an equality of opportunity, that is tantamount to collectivism which is condemned. The principle of and the word “redistribution” in this sense has been part of European philosophical socialism, not catholic social teaching (=CST), from the beginning.

(2) If by “redistribution” one is speaking of the inevitable end result of the application of the actual social teaching of the Church (the aim of CST from the beginning) which includes the regulated but free market; private ownership of property and the means of production; independent individual or group initiative; competition; bridled, regulated capitalism; condemns collectivism; and also teaches the creation of opportunity; education; opening markets for broader access; establishment of the rule of law and democratic structures where lacking; opposing religious fundamentalism; sharing scientific, medical, technical, and business know how; the presumption of initiative; cutting back on expensive aid bureaucracies for poor countries, then I’m all for it.
 
If certain landed estates impede the general prosperity because they are extensive, unused or poorly used, or because they bring hardship to peoples or are detrimental to the interests of the country, the common good sometimes demands their expropriation.
Opps! Also–

This highly nuanced exception is a far, far cry from collectivism, nationalising industry, and redistribution on a systemic level as a policy.
 
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