The John Paul II Catholic
University of Lublin (www.kul.pl/21.html)
just published The Catholic Social Ethic
by St. John Paul II (1920-2005). This two-volume text of 500+ pages dates from
the 1950s, when Fr. Karol Wojtyla was a young parish priest/teacher. Scholars
have long known about the text. In fact, about 300 copies were circulated among
students and others in the 1950s. Jonathan Luxmoore, an expert on Catholicism
in Eastern Europe, reported on the text a dozen years ago. He recently
summarized the new book for Catholic News
Service (1/19/19) and for The Tablet
of London (2/2/19).
Just as
there are Biblical fundamentalists who selectively invoke one or another
Scripture verse to support their preconceived opinion, so too there are some papal
fundamentalists among Catholics. For example, a small but influential number of
Catholics in the U.S. and elsewhere pull a phrase from John Paul II or from
Pope Benedict XVI to claim that Catholicism is in harmony with unrestricted
capitalism (also called neoliberalism). Similarly, a few Catholics pull out one
another phrase to say that Catholicism gives unqualified approval to Marxism.
This new book by John Paul II got caught up in this pick-and-choose
controversy, causing the long delay in publication.
The Catholic Social Ethic, along with John Paul II’s other
writing and talks, shows that he never was a big fan of free market capitalism.
He repeatedly rejected “individualistic liberalism.” Nor of course did John
Paul II ever mount a defense of communism. Yet through study and experience of
the communist regime in Poland, he was well-versed in Marxist themes.
John
Paul II, Luxmoore says, recognized that Marxism appealed to young workers
because of injustices in their situations. To connect with young adults,
Catholicism must have a sophisticated alternative to Marxism. It cannot merely
condemn a mistaken ideology. Catholicism must furnish an approach to social
justice and peace that fits the daily comings-and-goings of young adults. John
Paul II, along with several other Polish theologians including Cardinal Stefan
Wyszynski (1901-1981), set about crafting an accessible theology of work.
In
contrast to materialistic capitalism, John Paul II popularized the principle of
the priority of labor over capital.
That is, the worker is the subject of work; not the investment of money. Yes,
investments are part of production and service delivery. But the purpose of the
enterprise is the worker. According to John Paul II, the word worker is inclusive--managers, owners on
the scene, shop hands, janitors, truck drivers, clerks, all those who in some
way fashion and distribute the service or the product.
In
contrast to materialistic communism, John Paul II outlined a spirituality of
work which integrates business, family life, civic involvement and more with
fidelity to Jesus’ gospel.
Young
adults are familiar with today’s materialisms and other empty ideologies:
careerism, cost-benefit analysis, consumerism, conspiracy theories, extreme
individualism in economics and culture, relativism (or what the White House
calls alternative facts), and more.
Some
Catholic leaders say they are interested in young adults. Maybe so. But does a
young adult ever come upon ideas and experiences within Catholicism that
suggest an alternative to the harshness of work, to the arbitrariness in
society or to our vacuous culture? Would a young adult ever hear themes about
work expressed in spiritual terms? John Paul II’s theology of work project is
suggestive, but not enough. Other theologians and particularly interested young
Catholics have to take the matter a few steps further: More sources, more
reflections, more conversations and for sure more focused action for justice
and peace within the workaday world.
At the
moment, The Catholic Social Ethic is
available in Polish. Perhaps a condensed English version can be published soon.
Perhaps it could include a few pastoral comments and top out at let’s say 200
pages.
Droel is editor of John Paul II’s Gospel of Work (National Center for the Laity, PO
Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629; $7)
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