M
markomalley
Guest
This very insightful, if long, piece by Anthony Esolen in Crisis Magazine:
Pope Leo XIII affirms that a well governed State will promote the material and moralprosperity of its citizens, will honor private property and free association, and will protect the poor from abuse or depredation by the rich.
How to do these things? Leo lays down four principles.
(just giving the list…go to the article for the explanation of these principles – note, the names of these four principles are given by Esolen to capture the major themes of Pope Leo XIII’s principles)
Leo could not have foreseen that “the State” would become an interest in its own right, a new aristocracy, but utterly detached from locale and tradition and unknown to their subjects. The true State thrives by moral rule. But “the State,” the cancerous Metastate, thrives by immorality. It helps to cause the chaos it then pretends to ameliorate. Strong and self-reliant families hurt the Metastate, so the Metastate rewards profligacy and licentiousness, and promotes the easy severance of father from children. The Metastate knows that if people but make an earnest attempt to govern themselves by the Ten Commandments and the Gospel, they will be free and prosperous, and the Metastate will shrivel. Perish the thought.
Father-headed families? Free associations? I credit the Metastate with knowing its enemies.
A good collection of Leo XIII’s writings can be found at Papal Encyclicals Online. Of course, everybody has heard of Rerum Novarum (On Capital and Labor) May 15, 1891 However, I wonder how many have actually studied the ***actual ***encyclical (rather than a perverted socialist interpretation of that encyclical). In addition to Rerum Novarum, the following are of particular interest (IMHO)
Pope Leo XIII affirms that a well governed State will promote the material and moralprosperity of its citizens, will honor private property and free association, and will protect the poor from abuse or depredation by the rich.
How to do these things? Leo lays down four principles.
(just giving the list…go to the article for the explanation of these principles – note, the names of these four principles are given by Esolen to capture the major themes of Pope Leo XIII’s principles)
- The Principle of Moral Health.
- The Law of Sufficient Generality
- The Principle of the Home (subsidiarity)
- The Principle of the Human Person
Leo could not have foreseen that “the State” would become an interest in its own right, a new aristocracy, but utterly detached from locale and tradition and unknown to their subjects. The true State thrives by moral rule. But “the State,” the cancerous Metastate, thrives by immorality. It helps to cause the chaos it then pretends to ameliorate. Strong and self-reliant families hurt the Metastate, so the Metastate rewards profligacy and licentiousness, and promotes the easy severance of father from children. The Metastate knows that if people but make an earnest attempt to govern themselves by the Ten Commandments and the Gospel, they will be free and prosperous, and the Metastate will shrivel. Perish the thought.
Father-headed families? Free associations? I credit the Metastate with knowing its enemies.
A good collection of Leo XIII’s writings can be found at Papal Encyclicals Online. Of course, everybody has heard of Rerum Novarum (On Capital and Labor) May 15, 1891 However, I wonder how many have actually studied the ***actual ***encyclical (rather than a perverted socialist interpretation of that encyclical). In addition to Rerum Novarum, the following are of particular interest (IMHO)
- *Quod Apostolici Muneris (On Socialism) December 28, 1878 *
- Immortale Dei (On the Christian Constitution of States) November 1, 1885
- *Libertas Praestantissimum(On the Nature of Human Liberty) June 20, 1888 *
- *Sapientiae Christianae (On Christians as Citizens) January 10, 1890 *
- *Graves De Communi Re (On Christian Democracy) January 18, 1901 *