I
Ian_Ward
Guest
Its not perfect, but serves its purpose for its time.
Give me a break.I never thought of Jesus as stealing money; but if you say He was a socialist. so be it.
I never thought of Jesus being envious; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
I never thought of Jesus as a tyrant; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
I never thouhgt of Jesus as taking one’s free will; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
I never thought of Jesus as choosing the economic winners and the loosers; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
ANother thing could you please not use a large font when replying to me.I never thought of Jesus as stealing money; but if you say He was a socialist. so be it.
I never thought of Jesus being envious; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
I never thought of Jesus as a tyrant; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
I never thouhgt of Jesus as taking one’s free will; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
I never thought of Jesus as choosing the economic winners and the loosers; but if you say He was a socialist, so be it.
But Jesus did not give up His pickup truck WWJD ]*Give me a break.
Jesus drove the money lenders out of the temple.
He preached the beatitudes.
He would not have supported the blatant greed of huge multi national corporations as we see it in the world today.
Try and not be naive.
Your post and mine seem to be like ships crossing in the night.I am pretty sure Jesus would not support third world debt, vicious austerity programs and brutal dispossession of the land. Yes Peter owned a fishing boat. Jesus was in favor of the peasants and the workers owning the means of their livelihood. Your point is?
Do you have links for all this stuff?I am referring to large muti nationla corporations and banks who have not paid their share of taxes, who have despolied the world and olluted it. Shell ruined the coast of FLorida and routinely polluets the mouth of the Niger. Union Carbide happily poisined thousands in India. The IMF regulalry forces thord wolrd countries to accept cheap westenr goods that result in the destruction of local jobs. I think the west has quiet a lot to answer for in terms of impoverishing the developing world. If you think that sort of behaviour is what our Lord had in mind with the beatitudes then I really wonder whether we are reading the same encyclicals. RN is more relevant today than it ever was, and it essentially calls for balance between labor and capital. Like it or not it calls for a living wage. How do we define a living wage I suppose in the same way we define pornography. I cannot define it but I knwo what it is when I see it.
I think if you didn’t defend Capitalism, and instead defended the specific Catholic teachings like free enterprise, private ownership, you will avoid a lot of confusion.The error here is that greed is evil in life and is not only unnecessary for anyone to succeed in free enterprise, but needs to be replaced by prudence, justice, fortitude and temperance. There is no room for greed as a virtue.
CCC2536:
“The tenth commandment forbids greed and the desire to amass earthly goods without limit. It forbids avarice arising from a passion for riches and their attendant power. It also forbids the desire to commit injustice by harming our neighbor in his temporal goods.”
“It is the capacity to motivate work and the systematic reinvestment of profits that account for the immense productivity of capitalism, just as Weber and Marx pointed out more than a century ago.” The Victory of Reason, Rodney Stark, Random House, 2005, p 57].
- “Pure capitalism” is not in Rerum Novarum
- Catholic teaching develops and all now know the emphatic affirmation of the free market by Bl John Paul II and Benedict XVI about which only this poster is so confused as to continue to ridicule the Popes and fantasise about others having the same myopia.
Until and unless you listen, learn and love you will remain confused.PeterGStanley #210
Children, how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdom of God! 25 It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God…. wonder what he meant here?
To enable all to see the truth, is precisely why you have been shown the reasoning of Christ, the reasoning and affirmations of Popes and the reasoning of great priests who clearly identify free enterprise as enabling the best utilization of mankind’s talents in commerce.I think you are causing confusion and even stating something incorrect when you say that Capitalism is good/not immoral/neutral etc. It would be better to simply emphasize the importance and goodness of each of the elements that the Church has promoted. Only a system that acknowledges and promotes all these goods will truly serve humanity.
To enable all to see the truth, is precisely why you have been shown the reasoning of Christ, the reasoning and affirmations of Popes and the reasoning of great priests who clearly identify free enterprise as enabling the best utilization of mankind’s talents in commerce.
Perennially confusing the greatness of free enterprise against the vices of PEOPLE leads to continually denigrating the Catholic Late Scholastics who developed the principles and the Popes who emphatically affirmed those principles – not seeing the wood for the trees.
Pope Benedict XVI clearly affirms: “Society does not have to protect itself from the market, as if the development of the latter were ipso facto to entail the death of authentically human relations…Therefore it is not the instrument that must be called to account, but individuals, their moral conscience and their personal and social responsibility.” (Caritas in Veritate, Benedict XVI, 2009, #36).
“**These criticisms are directed not so much against an economic system as against an ethical and cultural system.” **[Bl JPII, *Centesimus Annus
You have a great break: you are living in a country that 30% of the people desire a free market, although we are loosing it quickly.Give me a break.
Jesus drove the money lenders out of the temple.
He preached the beatitudes.
He would not have supported the blatant greed of huge multi national corporations as we see it in the world today.
Try and not be naive.
That is implying denigration of Christ, the Popes and the real thinkers who offer free enterprise as the worthy way of doing business – as being unreasonable.passer_by #230
So for some thinkers, albeit not you, greed, individualism, consumerism seems like an important part of Capitalism.
You have a great break: you are living in a country that 30% of the people desire a free market, although we are loosing it quickly.
No where in the beautitudes does Our Savior and Lord say take from others in order to be charitable.
He would never had us to judge the “huge multi national corporations” as greedy. He told us not to judge (He ment not to judge another’s charactor; one’s action, yes\QUOTE]
There is plenty of information about the misbehavior of huge corporations in the developed world. Why are you guys so keen to defend huge big organizations over the little person.
So now Our Lord wants us to be cahritable to Shell and BP. Come on.
This is a good summary of the true Catholic position on this problem.I think if you didn’t defend Capitalism, and instead defended the specific Catholic teachings like free enterprise, private ownership, you will avoid a lot of confusion.
Capitalism means different things to different people. For some, including those who engage in it, Capitalism includes free enterprise, private ownership PLUS rejection of ideas like temperance, moderation, sharing etc.
So when you keep repeating how Pope’s affirmed free enterprise, Private ownership, I think very few disagree. What they find puzzling is you then going froward and saying Capitalism is good. Capitalism might be good or bad depending on how it is practiced in a country. Most examples of Capitalism today are actually bad.
On the other hand, free enterprise, moderation, temperance, private ownership, serving the common good, are what is actually good. While Capitalism necessitates free enterprise and private ownership, there is nothing in the system that necessitates moderation, temperance, or serving the common good. You can have Capitalism without those. Hence in most implementations of Capitalism, these other goods are missing.
So I think you are causing confusion and even stating something incorrect when you say that Capitalism is good/not immoral/neutral etc. It would be better to simply emphasize the importance and goodness of each of the elements that the Church has promoted. Only a system that acknowledges and promotes all these goods will truly serve humanity.
The falsehood that free enterprise (Marx’s “capitalism”) rejects virtues and the common good is exposed by the fact that the first examples of free enterprise appeared in the great Catholic monasteries, about the ninth century. (John Gilchrist, The Church and Economic Activity in the Middle Ages, St Martin’s Press1969, I; cf. op. cit (Stark) p xii, 55-58), and the virtue of work, gleaned from St Paul and the esteem in which Jesus held work, were “evident in the sixth century by St Benedict, who wrote in his famous rule: ‘Idleness is the enemy of the soul. Therefore the brothers should have specified periods for manual labour as well as prayerful reading’…” (Rodney Stark, The Victory of Reason, Random House, 2005, p 62). It is very much Catholic teaching, therefore, as based on faith and reason.passer_by #228
Capitalism includes free enterprise, private ownership PLUS rejection of ideas like temperance, moderation, sharing etc……there is nothing in the system that necessitates moderation, temperance, or serving the common good. You can have Capitalism without those.
I think you need to refresh us by providing a definition of capitalism. At least as you understand capitalism.I think you are proving my point here exactly. Free Enterprise is the element that is good. Not Capitalism. Capitalism merely necessitates Free Enterprise. In that sense, sure it is relatively better than Communism or Socialism which have anti-goods built in to them.
BUT, this does not mean Capitalism is good or has no faults. All you have shown above is that “Free enterprise is good”. I agree and many others agree. But you make a logical error when you say Capitalism essentially promotes Free-Enterprise so therefore it is good. Capitalism promotes a lot of other things depending on which implementation you talk about.
Now I think you are trying to say “Well if Capitalism incorporates strict individualism, its not Capitalism but the implementers fault”. But what you have to realize is that having “strict individualism” is not against Capitalism either. Nothing in Capitalism is opposed to such a concept of selfishness or individualism. In fact, in a society where such values are in place, Capitalism works quiet well. So for some thinkers, albeit not you, greed, individualism, consumerism seems like an important part of Capitalism.
So for you to go and say “well you are mistaken” or “you are not using reason properly” seems to show more of a fault in you not trying to understand what the other party is saying. What is even more problematic is that it is unnecessary. People don’t need to agree that Capitalism is good/nice/neutral etc. What people need to agree is that Free-Enterprise, Private ownership, Temperance, serving the common good, are GOOD. As long as people agree to that, I think that is all that matters.