Modern Catholic social
doctrine is officially 130-years old. It dates from Pope Leo XIII’s May 1891
encyclical, On the Condition of Labor.
Subsequent popes (as will be mentioned) advance social doctrine, often on
anniversaries of On the Condition of
Labor.
Doctrines
are derived from reflection on the accumulated experience of Christians in many
societies and from an application of reason or science, particularly the social
sciences. Doctrines are in harmony with God’s revealed Scripture. Dogma, by
contrast, comes to us directly from revelation; it cannot be figured out only
through study of nature. The dogma of the Trinity, for example, fits an
understanding of nature but God had to reveal the Trinity to us. Dogma is not
irrational; it is not opposed to science. It is true but not empirical, like a
spouse’s love.
Western
Europe in the time of Leo XIII (1810-1903) was experiencing industrialization
which in turn attracted thousands of families to urban centers. This industrial
era held forth many promises including a higher standard of living and
conveniences. However, Leo XIII among others saw that industry and urban life
came with a paradox: degrading working conditions and great poverty amid
concentrated wealth. The Communist
Manifesto of 1848 addressed the paradox and named a resolution: proletariat
revolution. Leo XIII countered Marxism with Christian principles.
The
bedrock principle of Catholic social doctrine is the intrinsic dignity of each
person. Humanists all agree that modern individuals are free and can exercise
appropriate agency. Jews, Christians and Muslims know that this doctrine is additionally
supported in Scripture; that each person is created in the image and likeness
of God. (Genesis 1:27 & Qur’an 17:70)
The
modifier intrinsic is important
because the term dignity is sometimes
used carelessly. Intrinsic means built-in. For example, a husband does not give
his wife dignity. She has it long before they meet. An employer does not give
employees dignity. It comes with them in the morning and stays with them after
they punch the clock. God put dignity into each person.
A
negligent husband or an exploitative boss can, of course, degrade a person’s
dignity. Thus an obligation to improve degrading situations follows from the
principle of basic dignity. To that end On
the Condition of Labor advocates for safe and humane working conditions, a
family wage and the right of workers to collectively bargain. To achieve these
and other improvements, Leo XIII says government’s role includes restraint on
laissez-faire capitalism.
A
subsequent column will discuss other social encyclicals—specifically St. John
Paul II’s On Human Work on its 40th
anniversary and the recent encyclicals of Pope Francis, one on
inequality/environment and one on public friendship.
Officialdom
uses the term Catholic social teaching
for these encyclicals and a few other Church documents. I prefer the term Catholic social thought and action. This includes the official
teaching but it also includes reflection on the teaching and its implementation
in worldly settings. Doctrine is principles that tell us what to do. But, they have to be applied with prudence. As the
principles hit the streets or corridors, right-minded people can disagree on
the how to implement the doctrine in
fluid situations. Here’s one small example: Catholic social doctrine says
employees have a right to bargain collectively without the maternal or paternal
meddling of their boss. The application, however, is more complex. Do we necessarily
want a union at this workplace? If so, do we want this union or a different
union or an independent union of our own making? If we do not want a union,
what is our alternative mechanism for improving conditions at our workplace?
Sincere employees can respectfully disagree with one another. This example
becomes more complex if unfortunately the employer violates the starting principle
or skirts the law. To be continued…
Obtain Droel’s booklet Catholic Administrators and Labor Unions
from National Center for the Laity (PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629; $1.50).
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