T
tonyrey
Guest
Sorry for not answering these points directly. Well, the earliest Christians renounced property, and held everything in common, as testified in the Gospels and Acts. This is the testimony of Scripture.
Secondly, the Rule of Benedict wasn’t designed for a ‘special’ Christian life- but rather, a truly Christian life. Benedict reacted to the culture of Rome (which, at that stage, was Christian). He offered a way to restore the primitive Christian life. He saw conversio morum of monastic life simply as a true conversion to the values of Christianity.
Note also Benedict was influence by the Regula Basili. Now Basil laid down what seems like a rule of communal, living, involving renounciation of propety. However, he did not understand it as a rule for monks- no, he present it as a rule for Christians. The earliest monks, who renounced propety, saw themselves as simply following the Gospel. Which indeed they were.
There is no crime in being rich, if everyone has enough. There is a crime in being rich, though, if someone is hungry at your door, and you do nothing.
But my argument is this: a capitalist system institutionalizes injustice. It is unjust that some have more than they need, while others do not have enough. A system which tolerate this is an unjust system.
All young people should have equal opportunity to the same schools. All sick people deserve the same access to medical treatment.
According to natural law, people have a natural right to what they need to live (food, clothing, perhaps where they live). Any concept of ‘private property’ beyond this is merely a social convention. There is nothing sacred about it, at all.
Also, St. Augustine, while very good, is not infallible. Remember, he also had a ‘just war’ theory- which turned out to be false.