Let me specify that these would be the social teachings which affect our economic perception as Catholics, and it’s not necessarily the teachings themselves (I don’t think) that I have a problem with. I’m all for a society geared toward helping the poor, hungry, etc. but statements from the bishops/Pope on these issues are beginning to bother me. I would label myself economically conservative, and it would seem the holy father is quite a bit further to the left. In his encyclical Caritas in Veritate he calls for a, “true world political authority” but, aside from scaring the pants off of me, this seems to be completely contradictory to the concept of subsidiarity. Likewise with the Bishops, most promote socialized medicine, amnesty for illegal immigrants, and various large government welfare programs. I wouldn’t concern myself so much with it if they didn’t promote it like it’s anything more than their opinion. They seem to expect us to accept these things are part of Church Doctrine. I would point out problems like how forced charity is a contradiction in terms. But really I don’t want to debate the merits and faults of economic conservatism or liberalis. However, do I have to accept these teachings for of a new world order? And why does this seem to be a radical movement to the left compared to earlier social encyclicals, like in the 1800s?
edit: I just read that the world government should, “open up the unprecedented possibility of large-scale redistribution of wealth on a world-wide scale”. I’m having a real hard time swallowing this kind of thing and its starting to eat at me. Is it just me?
Are you speaking about this quote: The processes of globalization, suitably understood and directed, open up the unprecedented possibility of large-scale redistribution of wealth on a world-wide scale; if badly directed, however, they can lead to an increase in poverty and inequality, and could even trigger a global crisis.
If you read that carefully and in its full context (click on the link to read the entire section), you will not read that global redistribution of wealth (i.e., bulk turning over of money from those countries that have to those countries that do not have) is not being advocated. Rather, the Holy Father is stating that an *effect *of globalization is the redistribution of wealth on a world-wide scale.
If you think about this, that is just a matter of common sense. Let us say you buy a shirt that was made in the Nicaragua. In an ideal world, you would redistribute your wealth in exchange for the shirt (i.e., you would pay for it). The store would then redistribute its wealth to the distributor by purchasing 1,000 shirts. The distributor would then redistribute its wealth to the company in Nicaragua by buying a shipping container with 100,000 shirts in it. And the company in Nicaragua would redistribute its wealth by paying its workers for their labor and the farmers for the cotton.
In this ideal world, the shirt company in Nicaragua would pay its workers sufficiently (
If a workman’s wages be sufficient to enable him comfortably to support himself, his wife, and his children, he will find it easy, if he be a sensible man, to practice thrift, and he will not fail, by cutting down expenses, to put by some little savings and thus secure a modest source of income -
Rerum Novarum 46), as would the distributor and the shopkeeper in the US.
The true market capitalist does not concern himself with the morality of the wages of labor, but I don’t personally see how a true Catholic, even a conservative one, can do so. Because in doing so, one must deny the humanity of the worker.
On the other hand, the left-wing “social justice” person (Catholic or otherwise) does not recognize the basis tenet that businesses operate for the purpose of making profit, that businesses will not operate at a loss, and that there are second, third, and fourth order effects to every business decision that affect the entire economy (for example, an increase in minimum wage is always involved by an eventual increase in prices across the board…thus negating the benefit of the increase in wage). They encourage envy and theft by
forced redistribution of wealth which actually reduce solidarity between peoples and increase the divide between classes of people, rather than encouraging an environment characterized by charity (agape) and solidarity, which cannot be dictated by any government action. They equate society with the State, which utterly corrupts the social teachings of the Church.