M
Mrs_Sally
Guest
The Church teaches preferential treatment of all poor. The encyclicals quoted earlier about the responsibilities of employers to their workers, and States to their citizens, apply equally across the globe. Unfortunately, nations that are not Christian are not likely to follow Christian thinking outside of whatever concepts also apply in their own religious/faith philosophy. And even in Christian nations, it is easy for non-Catholics, and even Catholics to discount what the Popes have taught.
How to ensure that the poor (whether working or not) are cared for is a problem with several possible solutions. I think the issue we have now is that everyone is hoping that someone else will implement a solution (private charity wants employers to pay more, employers hope the State helps more, the State figures private charity will step in, etc.) and so their are still big gaps that people can fall through.
Wishing everyone on this thread abundance at Thanksgiving and a blessed Advent!
How to ensure that the poor (whether working or not) are cared for is a problem with several possible solutions. I think the issue we have now is that everyone is hoping that someone else will implement a solution (private charity wants employers to pay more, employers hope the State helps more, the State figures private charity will step in, etc.) and so their are still big gaps that people can fall through.
Wishing everyone on this thread abundance at Thanksgiving and a blessed Advent!