J
JDaniel
Guest
MoM:I tend to see a lot of people using and distorting church teaching as an excuse to promote immoral and selfish acts in an economic context.
God is love, and to love is to share the good of what God gives to you, so that others can partake in the glory of Gods goodness. Love is necessarily social in its distribution, but not to the extreme of socialism when understood in the context of our current situation on earth. In heaven there will be no capitalism since there will be an absolute abundance of good. Private property is good. But it is not absolute. If your use of property and claim to wealth comes at the detriment of others, for example their homes and property, or their food and their essential needs, then this is evil and surely a mortal sin. A human being without the good of property has been bared from the social order that God intended. It is not love. Therefore private property is obviously conditional in that you have a duty to another’s well being as well as yourself. You have private property to serve the good of the community as well as yourself. One does not have wealth simply for themselves but they also have a moral obligation to the needs of others. Hence a rich man goes to hell, if he or she does not use his riches to serve the love of God. This fact also has a binding significance in how we do economics, since we must create a system that serves the common good and not just the good of the individual. Thus it is legitimate to say that an economic use of property which damages or undermines the common good should actually be an illegal as well as immoral use of property just like murder is illegal, and as such a legitimate state ought to have a moral and legal right to intervene on behalf of the common good and obtain that property for the dignified right of the common good. I would say that a capitalist economy is potentially a good since “trading” property isn’t necessarily an evil; but rather an unregulated market place is an evil thing since it undermines the common good. So, this requires something that exists in-between socialism and capitalism, but at the same time it is not socialism or a market that concerns itself with the individual alone. I reject socialism because it takes away private property.
But distributism respects private property and the common good. Sharing the love of God is always a holy and just act so long as it respects the dignity of all people. A true and moral capitalism is obviously not what we have today since it would be impossible that people would be living in poverty and be living without a home, or would be denied proper health treatment on the account of not having enough money. An economy truly regulated to the benefit of the common good would look very different to the world we live in today. I am not saying that everybody must be equal in such a world as that is not necessary. So long as the lowest wage earner is living a sufficiently dignified life that can support his or here family without fear or worry, then it doesn’t matter that there would be richer people in the world.
If you can’t see that, then i feel sorry for you.
But this would seem to require a truly beneficent form of government. And, as we know from history, there has never been even a merely beneficent government. The problem with our Capitalism is that it is too regulated.
God bless,
jd