THE
COMMON GOOD
Preface by Cardinal Basil Hume, Archbishop of Westminster
It is the task of bishops of the Church to preach and teach the
Gospel; to point people in the direction of Christ. Religion is
always personal, but never just a private affair. Discipleship involves
seeking God in this world, as well as preparing to meet Him in the
next. The Gospel imperative to love our neighbour entails not only
that we should help those in need, but also address the causes of
destitution and poverty. The deepening of the spiritual life must
go hand in hand with practical concern for our neighbour, and thus
with social action.
Many Catholics and indeed others too may well be surprised to discover
how over the centuries the Catholic Church has reflected on the
social dimension of the Gospel; that is, the way society helps or
hinders people to live out the command to love God and our neighbour.
In recent times the Church's social teaching has been emphasised
and further developed by Popes Paul VI and John Paul II.
The Church in each country, under the pastoral guidance of the local
bishops, has a continuing duty to apply the values of the Gospel
to the problems of society, and so help all members of the church,
lay, religious and ordained, to play an active part in striving
to build a just and compassionate social order. Over the past year
the bishops of England and Wales have been considering some of these
issues with a view to presenting them to the Catholic community
as a fundamental part of the teaching of the Church. This document,
The Common Good and the Catholic Church's Social Teaching is the
result. Below is a brief elaboration of some of its themes. The
foundation of this teaching is the dignity of the human person.
In virtue simply of our shared humanity, we must surely respect
and honour one another. Each individual has a value that can never
be lost and must never be ignored. Moreover, each of us is made
in the image and likeness of God. Society must therefore first of
all respect and protect human life itself - at all its stages from
conception to its natural end. This is the bedrock of our civilisation,
and it is why abortion virtually on demand is one of the greatest
scandals of our time.
Our human dignity also consists in our being made free by God; free,
that is, to do His will by choosing to live and act within the framework
of His law. Society should therefore respect human freedom by enabling
men and women to assume responsibility for their own lives, and
encouraging them to co-operate with each other to pursue the common
good. This means that the functions of government, though important,
must always be subsidiary; that is, government should help men and
women to be free to realise their own destiny.
The Church has the right and the duty to advocate a social order
in which the human dignity of all is fostered, and to protest when
it is in any way threatened. Thus the Church opposes totalitarianism
because it oppresses people and deprives them of their freedom.
While recognising the importance of wealth creation, the Church
denounces any abuses of economic power such as those which deprive
employees of what is needed for a decent standard of living.
The Church also rejects the view that human happiness consists only
in material well-being, and that achieving this alone is the goal
of any government. If a government pays too much attention to material
welfare at the expense of other values, it may advocate policies
which reduce people to a passive state of dependency on welfare.
Equally, if a government gives too little priority to tackling poverty,
ill-health, poor housing and other social ills, the human dignity
of those who suffer these afflictions is denied. In every society
respect for human dignity requires that, so far as possible, basic
human needs are met. The systematic denial of compassion by individuals
or public authorities can never be a morally justified political
option.
The Church does not present a political programme, still less a
party political one. The social teaching of the Church, as expounded
in this document, provides a set of consistent and complementary
principles, values and goals. We recognise, of course, that many
people of other faiths or even none would be able to accept much
that this teaching has to offer, whether it is described as Catholic
or not. Every public policy should be judged by the effect it has
on human dignity and the common good. We accept that in many cases
there will often be much scope for debate about the best way to
achieve these.
The Church's social teaching places the political within the larger
context of humanity's relationship with God. Social and political
action is important, but realising our full human dignity as children
of God, made in his image and likeness, also requires each of us
to undertake an inner spiritual journey. The future of humanity
does not depend on political reform, social revolution or scientific
advance. Something else is needed. It starts with a true conversion
of mind and heart.
Cardinal Basil Hume
Archbishop of Westminster
President of the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales
Introduction and Guide to this Document
Can
managers treat employees any way they like?
Is the law of the jungle the right one for human beings?
Is there really "no such thing as society"?
Does the secret of success in life have to be "each for himself
and the devil take the hindmost"?
Such questions worry almost everybody. The whole world sometimes
seems to be getting less and less user-friendly. Even politicians
cannot offer us much comfort. Talking about the moral rules at
the basis of society has never been more difficult, nor more necessary.
But it is not impossible. There exists a set of ideas that tries
to answer questions like these. They are based on firm Christian
principles. But they are just as likely to appeal to people with
no belief. They come from the Roman Catholic Church, which is
why we call them Catholic Social Teaching. But they are not about
imposing Catholicism on other people. Indeed, these very principles
forbid such an approach.
This document has been prepared by a working party set up by the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales. The text has
been agreed by the bishops, and is published in their name. It
explains the Church's social teaching in general, and then goes
on to apply it to present-day British society.
Catholic Social Teaching is something all Catholics ought to know
about. In the first instance, therefore, this document is aimed
at them. Catholic parishes and Catholic schools are being urged
to spread the word by whatever means they can.
It is not a list of Dos and Don'ts for politicians. It is not
a blueprint for a perfect society. It is more like a set of signposts,
suggesting the way forward, or a set of questions, by which we
can examine the way we live.
Anyone who studies the document will quickly see that these ideas
are not solely Catholic property. Their aim is to bring about
a good and fair society, for the benefit of everyone. Most people
feel that society ought to be organised in such a way as to improve
the lot of all its members. They will find much to agree with
in this document. Anybody who doesn't feel that way, won't.
This is what social teaching calls the idea of "the common
good". It is an expression that appears time and again in
this document. Like many ideas in Catholic Social Teaching, it
is something that many British people will find familiar but may
not have had a name for, before. Once you name a thing, you start
to get a grip on it.
These are issues about which many people feel strongly. If they
misunderstand what is intended, they might resent an intervention
by the Catholic bishops or any other religious body. People do
not want to be told how to vote. That is not what this document
does.
We have taken great care to set out clearly the terms under which
we are working, including the limits to our role. We do not want
avoidable misunderstandings. For instance, we are not involved
in party politics. In the first part of the document, we explain
what kind of thing Catholic Social Teaching is.
Popes have taken the lead in expounding Catholic Social Teaching.
As we explain, many of the key documents are papal documents,
called encyclical letters. As social conditions have developed
over the last century, so the application of these ideas has developed
too.
In our Appendix I (page 28) there is an extensive selection of
quotations from the official documents of Catholic Social Teaching
over more than a century. The selection is not meant to be a comprehensive
account of the teaching, but enough to offer a flavour of it.
These extracts reinforce the teaching that members of the Catholic
Bishops' Conference of England and Wales are putting forward here.
The present Pope's last encyclical in this series was in 1991.
In it he talked about the benefits and limits of a market economy.
He was well aware of Thatcherism and Reaganomics, and of the criticisms
of those systems. He was thoroughly familiar, too, with the collapse
of Communism in Eastern Europe.
Pope John Paul II is often credited with playing a major part
in that collapse. He attributed this influence partly to the way
he had promoted Catholic Social Teaching in the final years of
Communist rule, most of all in his native Poland. There and elsewhere
in Eastern Europe - as in many parts of Western Europe after the
war - it seemed to offer people a way out of an impasse. It still
does today.
In the opening paragraphs, (Part I, 1 to 6), we state that we
want to be open in our approach. We are eager to listen to ideas
from other churches and indeed anyone who wants to contribute,
Catholics or others.
We go on to show many ways in which the Catholic Church is already
contributing to the good of society (7 to 11) and Appendix II,
(page 34). This gives it considerable experience of conditions
in Britain. In particular it is a major player in welfare and
education. It has earned a voice.
The poor, whether Catholic or not, have always had a special place
in the Church's concerns. The document takes up the story of why
this is so. It stresses that all Christians, individually and
collectively, have a duty to take seriously what is called the
"option for the poor" (12 to 15).
In the following paragraphs, (16 to 23) we argue on the basis
of Christian theology that "what it means to be human"
includes being a social animal, with social responsibilities.
Then we look at the different kinds of community, from the individual
family (the most important community of all) to the national and
international level.
In so doing we briefly introduce two more basic ideas from Catholic
Social Teaching, subsidiarity and solidarity. They are closely
linked.
Subsidiarity means decisions being taken as close to the grass
roots as good government allows. Solidarity means we are all responsible
for each other.
Where does Catholic Social teaching come from? In paragraphs 24
to 32 we recall how the industrial revolution of the 19th century
had caused deep divisions in society between rich and poor.
Communist revolution threatened. The Church felt an urgent duty
to respond. It drew on its ancient wisdom, including the Bible
and the writings of learned saints and scholars of the Church's
history. And it spoke out on behalf of the poor and defenceless,
especially exploited workers. The Church attacked economic determinism,
whether on the left in the form of Marxism, or on the right in
the doctrine of the unlimited free market, or laissez-faire economics.
In modern times, the document explains, the Church has updated
its teaching as conditions have changed. It has become global
in its scope. But poverty and stark inequality remain. The task
is nowhere complete.
Next (33 to 38) we deal with democracy. We are concerned about
its limitations. Human rights, which have now been incorporated
into Catholic thinking on social questions, are also not plain
sailing. The document explains how both democracy and human rights
are necessary for the common good. But neither of them can be
taken for granted.
These lead us (39 to 40) to a brief reflection on the relationship
between the preaching of the Gospel and political activity. Putting
right injustice may sometimes be a form of evangelisation. There
is no hard dividing line between politics and religion. Nor (paragraphs
41 to 43) is Catholic Social Teaching less important than other
branches of the Church's moral teaching.
It is not by chance that many aspects of the Church's teaching
appeal to the intuition people have about what is right and wrong
in society. We believe this is because the teaching has been shaped
by "natural law" (44 to 47).
In paragraphs 48 to 50, the document takes up Pope John Paul II's
own redefinition of the Church's social teaching. The common good
appears again, in a new form. In the light of this the document
begins to set the scene for some applications of that teaching.
The defeat of Marxism in Eastern Europe was a significant moment.
Is Catholic Social Teaching an "idea whose time has come"?
Next, our document (51 to 53) gives a fuller account of the two
ideas introduced earlier, subsidiarity and solidarity. The common
good cannot exist without them, nor without human rights and the
option for the poor. These ideas are the basic building blocks
of Catholic Social Teaching. Leave out any one of them and the
balance is upset. The result is no longer recognisable.
But they still have to be applied. This can be a controversial
process. It is much easier to grasp the essential ideas of Catholic
Social Teaching when there are concrete examples before us. Then
the ideas take on a vitality and strength that can be missing
in the abstract. As at the end of the 19th century, Catholic Social
Teaching is concerned to protect the poor and vulnerable from
the chill winds of economic forces. The defeat of Communism should
not mean the triumph of unbridled capitalism.
In the following paragraphs (Part II, 54 onwards) we apply these
ideas to some of the major questions in contemporary British society.
Although our document is produced in the light of the coming general
election, the teaching in it is meant to endure beyond that.
The declining status of politicians (57 to 61).
We believe the poor regard in which politicians are held is unjustified.
But we think some politicians have contributed to this by their
own behaviour. What to look for in a candidate (62 to 65). Character
is often as important as a candidate's policy on a particular
issue. A general election is not the same as a single issue referendum.
The "right to life" issues and medical ethics (66 to
68).
As a result of the casual approach to abortion, respect for human
life is being lost and fundamental moral principles are being
undermined. The common good and the plight of the poor (69 to
75).
Severe inequality leaves those at the bottom excluded from the
community; it is not enough to hope that wealth will "trickle
down". What is the morality of the market place? (76 to 80).
Pros and cons of market forces.
They can drive wealth creation, but they are not infallible.
Free markets, the poor and the common good (81 to 85).
A market system needs a supervision and regulation, otherwise
the poor and vulnerable can be squeezed out.
Public taste at risk in the mass media (86 to 89).
Broadcasting and newspapers are a test case for market forces.
How much has competition served the common good?
Labour markets, wages and trade unions (90 to 98).
A worker has rights, and should not be treated merely as a commodity
to be bought and sold at the lowest possible price. Unions must
respect the common good.
Europe (99 to 101).
Solidarity as well as subsidiarity should shape Britain's relations
with the rest of Europe.
Rich and poor nations and the debt crisis (102 to 105).
Third World nations with overwhelming debt need a way out, otherwise
poverty will increase. Overseas aid remains a vital commitment.
The environment is a sacred trust (106 to 108).
Each generation must pass on what it has received in good order
to the next.
Expanding ownership of wealth and property (109 to 112).
The right to own property is a basic human freedom but it may
be curtailed in the name of the common good. Companies have social
responsibilities.
In conclusion, we say what we think are the real challenges to
British society at the end of the 20th century. We suggest how
a sense of vision and purpose might be restored to the national
consciousness. We are convinced Catholic Social Teaching has something
very important to offer (113 to 120).
David Konstant,
Bishop of Leeds,
Chairman of the working party.
Bishops' Conference of England and Wales
October 1996
Part I Christian Citizens in Modern Britain
1 As bishops of the Catholic Church we have a duty to proclaim
the Christian Gospel and to set out its implications for human
society. An understanding of these implications can help members
of the Church make more informed and reasoned political choices.
2 The inseparable links between the spiritual, moral and political
aspects of society are complex and profound. Leaders of the Church
have to be careful not to step outside the limits of their own
competence nor to infringe the proper autonomy of lay people.
It is not for bishops to tell people how to vote. Bishops, clergy
and lay people need to work together, each partner respecting
the appropriate competence and experience of others.
3 As Catholics we are not without resources in trying to meet
the need for moral guidance in the social and political sphere.
There is an abundance of wisdom in Scripture, in the teachings
of the early Fathers of the Church and the writings of numerous
Christian thinkers down the ages. Furthermore, we have at our
disposal the corpus of official doctrine known as Catholic Social
Teaching. Together with the relevant documents of the Second Vatican
Council (1962-65) and the statements of local and regional conferences
of bishops, the "social encyclicals" of various popes
since 1891 represent a formidable body of insight and guidance.
For Catholics it carries special authority. But it is available
to all people of whatever religious persuasion, as they engage
in the democratic process in their own societies.
4 The Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales is convinced
that the social teaching of the Church is more relevant than it
has ever been to the complex problems faced by advanced Western
countries such as modern Britain. We welcome discussion and collaboration
in the application and development of this teaching, and would
not want to exclude from dialogue anyone who has expertise or
responsibility in the political field, whether Catholic or not.
There will be some who find a particular expression of this teaching
unsatisfactory, or who wish to bring to attention considerations
which may have been neglected in the past. Their contribution
is also important.
5 We have great respect for other traditions of Christian social
teaching in Britain, such as those exemplified by Wesley, Elizabeth
Fry, Wilberforce, Shaftesbury, Kingsley, Booth, Temple, and many
others. We have been appreciative of formal opportunities for
dialogue in this area, which we wish to continue developing with
the leaders and members of all Christian churches in England and
Wales, especially those with expertise in political and social
theory. We also wish to co-operate with other national and regional
Catholic Bishops' Conferences in the future development of Catholic
Social Teaching. We are especially grateful for the leadership
shown by Pope John Paul II in this area. During his pontificate
the Church's understanding of the moral principles upon which
a healthy society should be based has been considerably deepened.
6 It is in this spirit of openness, and of listening as well as
teaching, that the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and
Wales looks ahead to the general election that is expected in
the coming months. This document is issued with our authority
as bishops, "teachers of the faith" of the Catholic
Church, both as a contribution to the common good of our society
and a contribution to the general development of Catholic teaching.
As political feelings inevitably become more heated and partisan,
we judge this to be an opportune moment to try to maintain or
even seek to raise the level of public debate. A national political
debate conducted at the level of soundbites and slogans would
not serve the national interest.
The Church's presence 7 The Catholic Church already has a deep
involvement in the public life of Britain, with a great range
of institutions directly or indirectly working under Catholic
auspices for the betterment of individuals and society. It has
a major stake in welfare and educational provision, equivalent
to an investment of many millions of pounds, and the time and
energy of tens of thousands of dedicated people. The Church's
presence in the country is seen first of all through the countless
individuals who bring their Catholic vision to bear in their secular
work.
8 In partnership with central government and local education authorities,
the Catholic bishops have responsibility for approximately one
in ten schools in the State sector, as well as for institutions
engaged in the training of teachers. We also have oversight of
numerous schools in the independent sector, and of various academic
institutions engaged in undergraduate and postgraduate education.
All those institutions draw their Catholic character from their
attention to Catholic doctrine (including Catholic Social Teaching),
their regular collective worship, and the moral and spiritual
content of the ethos that underlies their daily life.
9 The Catholic Church is a significant employer of professional
social workers and people in other related professions, as well
as having numerous members of male and female religious orders
engaged in these fields. There are also many thousands of Catholic
volunteers working unpaid in various welfare organisations throughout
the country. The range of work covered by these Catholic welfare
institutions (in some places now in partnership with similar bodies
from other Christian Churches, and in collaboration with secular
agencies) stretches from prison chaplaincy and the "befriending"
of young offenders to working with the mentally handicapped, from
hospices to marriage guidance, from adoption and fostering to
night shelters for the homeless and accommodation for refugees.
The list is almost inexhaustible.
10 Much of this educational and social provision preceded what
we now call the Welfare State, and expressed the Church's commitment
to those experiencing any sort of hardship or suffering, especially
the disadvantages caused by poverty, social exclusion or lack
of education. The Catholic Church in these islands is no stranger
to the desperately poor.
11 It is this long experience, probably equal to that of any other
non-government organisation in Britain, that the Catholic Church
in England and Wales draws upon in responding to contemporary
social conditions. Indeed, it does not regard as separate from
its own tradition the ecclesiastical and monastic institutions
of pre-Reformation England and Wales, which made immeasurable
contributions to the welfare of society and the relief of distress.
The Catholic Church now sees itself as working alongside and often
in alliance with other bodies, secular and religious, state and
voluntary, on behalf of the common good. It brings to this task
its own moral and spiritual priorities and vision, and it therefore
approaches social problems in distinctive ways. We believe this
distinctiveness can be of benefit to the whole community.
The dignity of the human person 12 The Catholic social vision
has as its focal point the human person, the clearest reflection
of God among us. Scripture tells us that every human being is
made in the image of God. God became flesh when he entered the
human race in the person of Jesus Christ, true God and true man.
Christ challenges us to see his presence in our neighbour, especially
the neighbour who suffers or who lacks what is essential to human
flourishing. In relieving our neighbour's suffering and meeting
our neighbour's needs, we are also serving Christ. For the Christian,
therefore, there can be no higher privilege and duty.
13 We believe each person possesses a basic dignity that comes
from God, not from any human quality or accomplishment, not from
race or gender, age or economic status. The test therefore of
every institution or policy is whether it enhances or threatens
human dignity and indeed human life itself. Policies which treat
people as only economic units, or policies which reduce people
to a passive state of dependency on welfare, do not do justice
to the dignity of the human person.
14 People who are poor and vulnerable have a special place in
Catholic teaching: this is what is meant by the "preferential
option for the poor". Scripture tells us we will be judged
by our response to the "least of these", in which we
see the suffering face of Christ himself. Humanity is one family
despite differences of nationality or race. The poor are not a
burden; they are our brothers and sisters. Christ taught us that
our neighbourhood is universal: so loving our neighbour has global
dimensions. It demands fair international trading policies, decent
treatment of refugees, support for the UN and control of the arms
trade. Solidarity with our neighbour is also about the promotion
of equality of rights and equality of opportunities; hence we
must oppose all forms of discrimination and racism.
15 It is time we reminded ourselves that in the spirit of good
citizenship all members of the Catholic Church must accept their
full share of responsibility for the welfare of society. We should
regard the discharge of those responsibilities as no less important
than fulfilling our religious duties and indeed as part of them.
As bishops of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, however,
we do not seek to engage in party politics in any form. We claim
whatever rights and opportunities are available to us only in
order to exercise an influence on behalf of whatever we believe
to be true and good, especially in solidarity with people everywhere
who are on low incomes, disabled, ill or infirm, homeless or poorly
housed, in prison, refugees, or who are otherwise vulnerable,
powerless and at a disadvantage.
The social dimension of faith 16 Christians believe that God is
the creator of all things, visible and invisible. Every corner
of creation is sustained by God's creative will; the laws of nature,
including the laws of human nature, are laws made by God. There
is no part of creation, therefore, that cannot be examined with
the eye of faith, the better to understand its relation to the
rest and its ultimate purposes.
17 Nothing is beyond the scope of faith, even though faith must
often join hands with secular disciplines in order to explore
and understand the issues fully and accurately. This applies especially
to human society, which is a special part of God's creative activity.
The Church does not reject the findings of economics, sociology
and anthropology, but welcomes them, in so far as they are true,
as valuable aids to a deeper understanding of how society works.
18 An insight of Christian faith in the Trinity is the knowledge
that the desire to belong to human society is God-given. Human
beings are made in the image of God, and within the one God is
a divine society of three Persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Communities are brought into being by the participation of individual
men and women, responding to this divine impulse towards social
relationships - essentially, the impulse to love and to be loved
- which was implanted by the God who created them. 19 It is a
distortion of human nature, therefore, to suppose that individuals
can exist independently of society, as if it had no demand on
them. Members of society are individually subject to moral principles
in their own lives, and these implicit and explicit moral demands
are not of their own invention. The same is true of societies.
They too have demands and those demands are not arbitrary. There
are ways of structuring society which are inimical to human progress
and personal development. The Church calls them "structures
of sin".
20 Pope John Paul II defined the concept of "structures of
sin" in his encyclical Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (1987) in
the following terms: "If the present situation can be attributed
to difficulties of various kinds, it is not out of place to speak
of 'structures of sin' which=8A are rooted in personal sin, and
thus always linked to the concrete acts of individuals who introduce
these structures, consolidate them and make them difficult to
remove. And thus they grow stronger, spread, and become the source
of other sins, and so influence people's behaviour. One cannot
easily gain a profound understanding of the reality that confronts
us unless we give a name to the root of the evils which afflict
us" (paragraph 36.2).
21 There are other ways of structuring society which facilitate
true human development and correspond to moral principles and
demands. Such structures can enable people to realise their dignity
and achieve their rights. The human race itself is a "community
of communities", existing at international, national, regional
and local level. The smallest such community is the individual
family, the basic cell of human society. A well constructed society
will be one that gives priority to the integrity, stability and
health of family life. It should be a principle of good government,
therefore, that no law should be passed with possible social consequences
without first considering what effect it would have on family
life and especially on children.
22 The principle behind the relationships between the different
layers of this "community of communities" should be
that of subsidiarity. In a centralised society, subsidiarity will
mainly mean passing powers downwards; but it can also mean passing
appropriate powers upwards, even to an international body, if
that would better serve the common good and protect the rights
of families and of individuals.
23 If subsidiarity is the principle behind the organisation of
societies from a vertical perspective, solidarity is the equivalent
horizontal principle. Solidarity means the willingness to see
others as another "self", and so to regard injustice
committed against another as no less serious than an injustice
against oneself. Solidarity expresses the moral truth that "no
man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the
continent, a part of the main" (John Donne).
Origins of social teaching
24 The tradition of Catholic Social Teaching represents a sustained
attempt to understand how societies function and what principles
should guide them. The fashioning of social teaching is a task
the Church has undertaken down the ages. But it began afresh towards
the end of the nineteenth century, when European nations had experienced
the impact of industrialisation and the severe and rapid disruption
it caused in hitherto relatively stable patterns of community.
25 The Church noted the conflict between the opposing theories
of laissez-faire capitalism and Marxist Communism for governing
the progress of industrial societies, and in the name of social
justice found much to object to in each of them. Each regarded
human society as being subject to inevitable economic laws, the
consequences of which were sometimes very harsh. 26 The subordination
of human well-being to economic principles, whether of left or
right, was widely recognised in the Catholic Church as resulting
from a distorted perception of reality. It was resistance to this
economic determinism which prompted Pope Leo XIII to issue the
encyclical letter Rerum Novarum in 1891. It became the first of
a series of "social encyclicals", on the basis of which
the Church set out to restore in contemporary industrial society
the priority of the human over the economic, and the spiritual
and moral over the material.
27 The general purpose of the Church's social teaching is to contribute
to the formation of conscience as a basis for specific action.
The Church's teaching authority is comprehensive in its scope,
but limited in its immediate practical application. It is for
individuals and groups to decide how best to apply it in particular
circumstances. There will not always be agreement. Debate will
often be necessary, controversy inevitable. There are some elements
in this teaching, however, which are direct applications of the
moral law and therefore strictly binding on consciences. Examples
would be the Church's condemnation of genocide or the deliberate
encouragement of racial hatred. They are not debatable.
28 Social teaching is not limited to a collection of official,
mainly papal, texts. It is an oral tradition as well as a written
one, and it is a lived and living tradition. Many Catholics whose
lives are dedicated to the service and welfare of others make
this teaching present by their very activity, even if they have
never read a social encyclical.
29 The writing of these encyclicals was not done in isolation,
as if the Pope alone had exclusive access to knowledge about the
just and proper ordering of society that was not available to
anyone else. The encyclicals' insights into human nature and human
community have arisen in response to current crises, often on
the Church's own doorstep. It is noticeable, however, that in
the course of the last hundred years the focus of attention of
these documents has gradually extended from Western Europe to
the whole globe. The theology behind them has also undergone a
continuous evolution: the earlier encyclicals concentrated more
on a natural law basis while those since the Second Vatican Council
(1962-65), including those by Pope John Paul II, have moved to
a more Christ-centred and hence more person-centred approach.
30 The offices which support the Pope's work supply him with a
continuous flow of reports and opinions from all parts of the
Church, and several Vatican departments follow the development
of ideas in these matters by all available means. The Holy See's
worldwide diplomatic service has been given the duty to monitor,
report on and, where possible, correct human rights abuses. The
international oversight of the Holy See enables it to see how
similar social problems can arise in different societies, and
it can also see which solutions to such problems prove most successful
in advancing the true interests of humanity.
31 From time to time controversies arise about some aspect of
this teaching, and serious attention is given to the criticisms
made at such times. As bishops, we hope to see more participation
in the future development of Catholic Social Teaching, so that
it is properly owned by all Catholics, especially those who have
positions of influence in our society.
32 The development of Catholic teaching in the past has inevitably
reflected particular historical circumstances, and this needs
to be kept in mind in interpreting it today. At certain times
it has even been wrongly invoked in support of oppressive regimes
or governments perpetrating social injustice. One of the reasons
for the progressive evolution of Catholic Social Teaching over
the years has been the need to correct these misinterpretations.
=46undamental features of our society 33 We wish to express our
support and respect for the political institutions of this country,
and our pride in the way these institutions have been admired
all over the world. Britain has a mature political culture and
democratic tradition. Many insights of British political and constitutional
theory have evolved along lines parallel to Catholic Social Teaching,
and the interaction of these two bodies of political wisdom is
stimulating and enriching for both of them.
34 The Church's teaching now fully embraces two fundamental features
of modern society about which it once had some difficulties: democracy
and human rights. In the case of democracy, the Church has been
able to make its own contribution to political theory by exploring
the limitations of the democratic process, for instance by warning
that democracy can never be a self-fulfilling justification for
policies that are intrinsically immoral. Democracy is not a self-sufficient
moral system. Democracy, if it is to be healthy, requires more
than universal suffrage: it requires the presence of a system
of common values.
35 If democracy is not to become a democratic tyranny in which
the majority oppresses the minority, it is necessary for the public
to have an understanding of the common good and the concepts that
underlie it. Otherwise, they will be unlikely to support actions
by public authority that are not to the immediate advantage of
the majority. Furthermore, public confidence is undermined, and
democracy subverted, when the members of public authorities responsible
for the common good are not appointed democratically or on objective
merit but in order to ensure that the authority in question has
a political complexion favourable to the government of the day.
36 We repeat the warning the Church has given in the past, that
human rights are sometimes advanced to support claims to individual
autonomy which are morally inappropriate. Not everything said
to be a "right" really is one. There is no "right
to choose" to harm another, for instance. The proliferation
of alleged "rights" can devalue the very concept. So
can the amplification of rights without equivalent stress on duties,
and without some concept of the common good to which all have
an obligation to contribute. However, that reservation must not
be allowed to destroy the value of the principle itself: that
individuals have a claim on each other and on society for certain
basic minimum conditions without which the value of human life
is diminished or even negated. Those rights are inalienable, in
that individuals and societies may not set them at nought: in
Catholic terms those rights derive from the nature of the human
person made in the image of God, and are therefore in no way dependent
for their existence on recognition by the state by way of public
legislation.
37 These rights are universal. The study of the evolution of the
idea of human rights shows that they all flow from the one fundamental
right: the right to life. From this derives the right to those
conditions which make life more truly human: religious liberty,
decent work, housing, health care, freedom of speech, education,
and the right to raise and provide for a family. Catholic moral
theology tells us that it is the destiny and duty of each human
being to become more fully human. A society which observes human
rights will be a society in which this true human growth is encouraged.
Every member of the community has a duty to the common good in
order that the rights of others can be satisfied and their freedoms
respected. Those whose rights and freedoms are being denied should
be helped to claim them. Indeed, human rights have come to represent
that striving for freedom from tyranny and despotism for which
the human spirit has always yearned.
38 We are aware that there are various proposals afoot to strengthen
the protection of human rights in Great Britain, such as the framing
of a Bill of Rights or the incorporation of the European Convention
on Human Rights into British domestic law. Some strengthening
seems necessary, whatever the method chosen. This necessity is
related to the need for a system of common values if our democratic
society is indeed to be healthy.
39 Catholic Social Teaching sees an intimate relationship between
social and political liberation on the one hand, and on the other,
the salvation to which the Church calls us in the name of Jesus
Christ. The spreading of that message of salvation is the task
of evangelisation. Evangelisation means bringing the Good News
of the Gospel into every stratum of humanity, and through its
influence transforming humanity from within and making it new.
40 That must include liberating humanity from all forces and structures
which oppress it, though political liberation cannot be an end
in itself. Evangelisation always requires the transformation of
an unjust social order; and one of its primary tasks is to oppose
and denounce such injustices. All Catholics who engage in the
political life of the nation are entitled to regard themselves
as engaging in evangelisation, provided they do so in accordance
with the principles of Catholic teaching. One of the most important
steps in the evangelisation of the social order is the freeing
of individuals from the inertia and passivity that comes from
oppression, hopelessness or cynicism, so that they discover how
they can exert greater control over their own destinies and contribute
to the well-being of others. This has particular relevance today.
Not an optional teaching 41 All Catholic citizens need an informed
"social conscience" that will enable them to identify
and resist structures of injustice in their own society. This
will especially be the case at the time of heightened political
activity, for instance when as now a general election is in prospect.
Attention to Catholic Social Teaching, both its general principles
and its application in specific circumstances, will enable the
traditional Catholic custom of "examination of conscience"
to be extended into the social and political realm, an extension
which we would strongly encourage.
42 All who preach and teach in the Church must as far as possible
avoid giving the impression that observance of this teaching is
optional for Catholics, or somehow less important than other aspects
of the Church's moral guidance. Certainly, disregard for social
teaching in some serious aspect would be an occasion for repentance,
penance and, if necessary, appropriate restitution. It is not
the fear of sin and its punishment, however, but the love of God
and of one's neighbour which should inspire Catholics to follow
this teaching.
43 The current tendency in social teaching, under the influence
of the Second Vatican Council and the present Pope, is to integrate
it with the rest of the Church's moral teaching. The Council included
as evils which it described as "infamies indeed" such
practices as "subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment,
deportation, slavery=8A disgraceful working conditions, where
men are treated as mere tools for profit rather than as free and
responsible persons" in exactly the same list as "murder,
genocide, abortion and euthanasia". Similarly, Pope John
Paul II has placed the issue of abortion within the context of
social injustice, especially the poor economic circumstances of
many women and their families. This makes it clearer that situations
of personal sin are often related to situations of structural
sin.
Natural law 44 One of the primary sources of Catholic Social Teaching
is natural law. Knowledge of natural law is possible by the use
of human reason, even without faith, and this is therefore a source
of moral guidance which is open to everyone. Catholics and non-Catholics
can make common cause in response to the insights of natural law.
Indeed, in defending and upholding human rights (which are an
expression of natural law) Catholics and others all over the world
have discovered how much they have in common. The Catholic Church
believes that its insight into natural law, contained in its tradition
of social teaching, is one of the contributions it can make to
the rest of the community, for the welfare of all.
45 Natural law is closely related to natural justice: a set of
principles by which people deserve to be treated when, rightly
or wrongly, they are confronted by public authority and made to
answer for some act or omission. We would regard the Common Law
principles of natural justice as appropriate to be incorporated
into the Catholic Social Teaching tradition. Common Law emerged
in the Middle Ages in England as an expression of the existing
social consensus of the difference between right and wrong. It
was strongly influenced both by natural law and by the jurisdiction
of the church courts before the Reformation.
46 Natural law also has a close relationship to Revelation. The
moral teachings of the Ten Commandments themselves, revealed by
God to Moses on Mount Sinai, were already present implicitly in
the hearts and minds of the Israelites, by virtue of natural law.
The teachings of natural law can also be found implicitly present
in the moral teachings of other great world faiths.
47 The Church frequently uses natural law and Biblical sources
alongside each other, for mutual elucidation. Nevertheless the
interpretation and application of natural law is rarely straightforward
and often controversial. It is easier to say that natural law
points to the need for a harmonious and balanced order than to
say in any particular case exactly where that balance is to be
found. That becomes a matter for political judgement, though it
will be a better political judgement if it is made in the light
of first principles. On the other hand, to ignore natural law,
for instance by organising society so that in effect it serves
the interests of a few rather than the common good, is to collaborate
with the structures of sin.
The development of Catholic Social Teaching 48 The present Pope
has contributed to the development of Catholic Social Teaching
as much as any of his predecessors. He has defined the religious
heart of this teaching as "the need for conversion to one's
neighbour, at the level of community as well as of the individual."
This conversion affects attitudes which determine each person's
relationship with neighbours, human communities, and "with
nature itself": the ordered mutually connected system, including
animals, which makes up the natural world. All of these elements
are involved in the common good. That common good is the whole
network of social conditions which enable human individuals and
groups to flourish and live a fully, genuinely human life, otherwise
described as "integral human development". All are responsible
for all, collectively, at the level of society or nation, not
only as individuals.
49 At the same time as the Pope has expanded the general horizons
of the Church's social teaching, regional and local conferences
of bishops have begun to issue their own commentaries on social
issues of current concern to their communities. The Bishops' Conference
of England and Wales has decided that the time is right to respond
to a growing interest in Catholic Social Teaching in our countries.
50 The ascendancy of market-based economic models over collective
or command economic models has increased the importance of Catholic
Social Teaching in the modern day, especially because its own
critical analysis of free-market capitalism has in no way been
discredited. The Catholic Church has a long history of resistance
to Marxist Communism, both as an ideology and as a power structure.
But it recognises that the very existence of this ideological
opposition to capitalism, however flawed, tended in the past to
act as a balancing factor or crude brake on some of the excesses
of which capitalism is capable. In the light of such considerations
as these, it is more necessary than ever to explain, promote and
apply the Church's social teaching in the communities for which
we share responsibility.
Subsidiarity and solidarity 51 The word subsidiarity has entered
secular political language via Catholic Social Teaching in connection
with the Maastricht Treaty, where its application was a British
initiative. The principle of subsidiarity was defined by Pope
Pius XI in his encyclical Quadragesimo Anno (1931) in the following
terms:
"Just as it is gravely wrong to take from individuals what
they can accomplish by their own initiative and industry and give
it to the community, so also it is an injustice and at the same
time a grave evil and disturbance of right order to assign to
a greater or higher association what lesser and subordinate organisations
can do. For every social activity ought of its very nature to
furnish help to the members of the body social, and never destroy
or absorb them.
"The supreme authority of the State ought, therefore, to
let subordinate groups handle matters and concerns of lesser importance,
which would otherwise dissipate its efforts greatly. Thereby the
State will more freely, powerfully and effectively do all those
things that belong to it alone because it alone can do them: directing,
watching, urging, restraining, as occasion requires and necessity
demands. Therefore those in power should be sure that the more
perfectly a graduated order is kept among the various associations,
in observance of the principle of subsidiary function, the stronger
social authority and effectiveness will be, the happier and more
prosperous the condition of the State" (paragraph 80).
52 It will be seen that the principle of subsidiarity is no ally
of those who favour the maximisation of State power, or centralisation
of the State at the expense of more local institutions. It supports
a dispersal of authority as close to the grass roots as good government
allows, and it prefers local over central decision-making. Subsidiarity
also implies the existence of a range of institutions below the
level of the State: some of these bodies are for the making of
decisions affecting individuals, some are for influencing the
way those decisions are made. Throughout Pius XI's teaching there
is an implicit and intimate relationship between subsidiarity
and the common good. Society as envisaged by Catholic Social Teaching
should be made up of many layers, which will be in complex relationships
with one another but which will be ordered as a whole towards
the common good, in accordance with the principle of solidarity.
53 In the context of constitutional reforms, we would draw attention
to the importance of retaining the connection between subsidiarity
and solidarity, two fundamental and inseparable principles of
this body of teaching. Subsidiarity should never be made an excuse
for selfishness nor promoted at the expense of the common good
or to the detriment of the poorest and most vulnerable sections
of the community. Pope John Paul II defined the concept of solidarity
in Sollicitudo Rei Socialis in the following terms:
"The fact that men and women in various parts of the world
feel personally affected by the injustices and violations of human
rights committed in distant countries, countries which perhaps
they will never visit, is a further sign of a reality transformed
into awareness, thus acquiring a moral connotation.
"It is above all a question of interdependence, sensed as
a system determining relationships in the contemporary world in
its economic, cultural, political and religious elements, and
accepted as a moral category. When interdependence becomes recognised
in this way, the correlative response as a moral and social attitude,
as a 'virtue', is solidarity. This then is not a feeling of vague
compassion or shallow distress at the misfortunes of so many people,
both near and far. On the contrary it is a firm and persevering
determination to commit oneself to the common good; that is to
say, to the good of all and of each individual because we are
all really responsible for all" (paragraphs 38.3-38.4).
Part II Application to contemporary questions
54 The Church would be failing in moral courage if its social
teaching were allowed to remain at the level of broad generalities
in order to avoid controversy. As bishops, we have a particular
responsibility to discern and interpret the signs of the times,
even at the risk of sometimes being mistaken. There are trends
in British society and political life which seem to us to be contrary
to Catholic teaching, as well as features of public and private
morality which are commendable. Committed as we are to the promotion
of the Church's social teaching, we believe there are many aspects
of present British society which merit critical examination in
the light of it.
55 We do not do this critical examination in a detached way, for
we are part of British society and subject to the same examination.
Nor do we do it any partisan spirit, for while none of the main
political parties merits unqualified support from Catholics, none
of them is excluded from that support in principle. We note with
approval the commitment to the common good which has often been
expressed in Conservatism, the special place that Labour has traditionally
given to the alleviation of poverty and the defence of workers'
rights, and the stress placed by Liberal Democrats on local democracy.
56 Some of the papal encyclicals on social teaching, especially
those of Leo XIII and Pius XI, described socialism as containing
a philosophy of humanity which was incompatible with Catholic
teaching. For generations now, bishops of the Catholic Church
in England and Wales have judged that the Labour Party, though
it has described itself as having a commitment to socialism, does
not correspond to those continental socialist movements which
the popes decried. Nor does the papal condemnation of unlimited
free-market, or laissez-faire, capitalism apply indiscriminately
to the Conservative Party.
The political vocation 57 There is a strong Christian tradition
of public service in all the major British parties which we wish
to applaud, and we particularly wish to declare our respect and
gratitude towards all those who undertake the responsibilities
of political life, whatever party they belong to. We are especially
grateful to Catholic citizens who join and play an active part
in the political party of their choice, provided they take their
Catholic principles, including those set out in this document,
with them. We offer them every possible encouragement.
58 Not the least of the concerns we have at this time is the low
status of politicians in public estimation, which is neither justified
by the evidence nor good for the health of democracy. Politics
is an honourable vocation, which often exacts great personal cost
from those who engage in it, and from their families. The fact
that some politicians from time to time fall short of the highest
standards is not grounds for dismissing the whole class of politician
as unworthy of respect.
59 An attitude of cynicism towards those engaged in public life
is one of those tendencies against which we feel we must speak
out. Not the least of its harmful consequences could be the discouragement
of those contemplating a political career. It is the teaching
of the Church that all rightful authority comes from God, and
therefore those who exercise legitimate political authority are
worthy of respect. It is not ignoble to want a successful political
career, nor dishonourable for politicians to seek political power.
60 At the same time politicians must be especially careful not
to use, or to appear to use, their privileged position for personal
gain. Those politicians who have, by their behaviour, contributed
to a climate of distrust must bear some considerable responsibility.Part
of the responsibility must also lie with the highly partisan quality
of public political debate, where it has become almost customary
to attribute the worst motives to one's political opponents. Politicians
of one party should show more respect towards those of other parties.
Those who engage in political abuse can expect retaliation in
kind, and they are inviting the public to believe the worst about
all politicians of every political persuasion.
61 This climate of mutual personal distrust and abuse has at times
been fostered quite recklessly by the mass media. It is a constant
theme of Christ's teaching in the Gospels that one should be more
conscious of one's own sinfulness than of the sins of others.
Political debate in Britain badly needs re-moralising and the
injection into it of an element of sincere humility, if people
are to regain faith in it. If they do not regain faith in it,
the outlook for the future of democracy in Britain is not good.
Specific issues in a general election 62 We find quite compatible
with Catholic Social Teaching the British constitutional doctrine
that while a general election is the election of individuals to
act on behalf of their constituents in Parliament, those elected
are not mere delegates. That is to say the political allegiance
of the candidate is only one of various considerations it is proper
to take into account.
63 Many of the issues that an MP has to face in the life of a
Parliament are not known at the time of an election. One of the
most important questions an elector has to enquire into at an
election is therefore about the attitude and character of each
candidate. It is relevant to take into account what is known about
a candidate's personal morality, although this does not condone
intrusion into individual privacy. The question must be: can an
elector be confident that the person for whom he or she is voting
is the best of those offering themselves - the best to make judgements
on behalf of the elector on matters not yet conceived of, as well
as those which are being aired in the election?
64 This consideration will discourage the making of a choice solely
on the basis of one policy issue alone, even where the attitudes
of a candidate on such an issue are at variance with Catholic
teaching. On the other hand, the attitude of a candidate on that
one issue may indicate a general philosophy or personal bias,
for instance contempt for those who uphold the sacredness of human
life, which Catholics will find deeply objectionable.
65 These are matters to be explored within an election campaign,
examining both the policies advanced by the candidates and the
reasoning behind those policies. And it is an important part of
British constitutional doctrine that even after an election, MPs
have a duty to represent all their constituents, not just those
who voted for them. There are many ways that argument, persuasion
and legitimate pressure can be brought to bear on an MP by constituents
who object to that MP's performance in a particular respect, yet
a general election must never be confused with a single-issue
referendum. It is legitimate for an individual elector to say
to a candidate: "I disagree with you totally on this one
issue, but I may vote for you, and in return I shall want to come
and talk to you further about the issue over which we disagree."
It is most unlikely a candidate would decline a voter's offer
of support on that basis.
The right to life 66 Taking into account all these considerations,
we would nevertheless remind Catholic electors of the alarming
extent to which Britain has become a particular example of what
the present Pope called a "culture of death". In the
three decades since the passage of the Abortion Act, human life
has been devalued to the extent where abortion is widely regarded
as a remedy for any social or personal difficulties. We have to
raise our voices in protest against all destruction of human life
in the womb, and to the widespread blunting of consciences that
has taken place since the Act was passed. Even casual abortion,
often for the sake of mere personal convenience, now seems increasingly
acceptable.
67 Too often the same mentality is brought to bear on other ethical
issues raised by developments in medical technology, such as the
treatment of those judged to be brain-dead and permanently unconscious,
or elderly patients with a terminal illness, or human embryos
conceived outside the womb as part of fertility treatment. The
prevalence of abortion, as well as being an evil in itself, has
led to the widespread abandonment of fundamental moral principles,
even in areas where their influence is most needed.
68 New ethical challenges in the field of medical treatment will
not be satisfactorily resolved unless the foundations of medical
ethics are securely rooted in respect for human life at all its
stages. Everything involving the use or disposal of human life,
as a means to another end, must be categorically rejected. The
Catholic community has to renew its efforts to awaken the conscience
of the majority of fellow citizens in these matters, and should
draw encouragement from the widespread evidence of unease in the
public mind. But we emphasise once again that all forms of public
campaigning, especially on "life" issues, must be conducted
non-violently and with respect for the law.
The common good and human welfare 69 A central concept of Catholic
Social Teaching is the common good, whose meaning is close to
the traditional term "common weal". At times in the
past the common good has been presented as an idea in opposition
to the rights of individuals, therefore as a "collectivist"
or "corporatist" political theory. But more recent social
teaching has seen the common good as a guarantor of individual
rights, and as the necessary public context in which conflicts
of individual rights and interests can be adjudicated or reconciled.
70 Public authorities have the common good as their prime responsibility.
The common good stands in opposition to the good of rulers or
of a ruling (or any other) class. It implies that every individual,
no matter how high or low, has a duty to share in promoting the
welfare of the community as well as a right to benefit from that
welfare. "Common" implies "all-inclusive":
the common good cannot exclude or exempt any section of the population.
If any section of the population is in fact excluded from participation
in the life of the community, even at a minimal level, then that
is a contradiction to the concept of the common good and calls
for rectification.
71 If that exclusion comes about from poverty, even if only "relative
poverty", then that poverty demands attention. Governments
cannot be satisfied with provision for poor people designed only
to prevent absolute poverty, such as actual starvation or physical
homelessness. What level of social security provision is adequate
to meet the criteria of the common good is a political judgement,
and may indeed involve trial and error. But there must come a
point at which the scale of the gap between the very wealthy and
those at the bottom of the range of income begins to undermine
the common good. This is the point at which society starts to
be run for the benefit of the rich, not for all its members.
72 There are some ideological thinkers who advocate this approach.
We would question their proposition that the further enrichment
of the already wealthy must, as the inevitable result of economic
laws, eventually also improve the lot of the less well-off and
the poor. This proposition is contrary to common sense as well
as to actual experience. Some of those who employ it may merely
be seeking justification for the pursuit of their own economic
interests. Even from the point of view of the wealthy this is
self-defeating. Jesus in the Gospels repeatedly warns about the
dangers of over-attachment to material riches. Those dangers are
not just to the individual, but also to the community.
73 The Church's social teaching can be summed up as the obligation
of every individual to contribute to the good of society, in the
interests of justice and in pursuit of the "option for the
poor". This is the context most likely to foster human fulfilment
for everyone, where each individual can enjoy the benefit of living
in an orderly, prosperous and healthy society. A society with
insufficient regard for the common good would be unpleasant and
dangerous to live in, as well as unjust to those it excluded.
74 Catholic Social Teaching recognises the fundamental and positive
value of business, the market, private property and free human
creativity in the economic sector. But sometimes market forces
cannot deliver what the common good demands, and other remedies
have to be sought. The real "poor" in a relatively prosperous
Western society are those without sufficient means to take part
in the life of the community. This means they cannot participate
in the formation of public policies that might protect them from
the adverse consequences of market forces. By poverty they are
excluded from the community, and they are denied the rights of
membership. Their choices are circumscribed; they have little
personal freedom.
75 In a developed democratic society such as ours, this is one
area in which electors in a general election and members of all
political parties can make good their individual "option
for the poor". The first duty of the citizen towards the
common good is to ensure that nobody is marginalised in this way
and to bring back into a place in the community those who have
been marginalised in the past. The alternative is the creation
of an alienated "underclass", bereft of any sense of
participation in or belonging to the wider community. The existence
of such an "underclass" can never be regarded as a price
worth paying in return for some other social advantages to be
enjoyed by the majority.
Morality in the market place
76 The Catholic doctrine of the common good is incompatible with
unlimited free-market, or laissez-faire, capitalism, which insists
that the distribution of wealth must occur entirely according
to the dictates of market forces. This theory presupposes that
the common good will take care of itself, being identified with
the summation of vast numbers of individual consumer decisions
in a fully competitive, and entirely free, market economy. Its
central dogma (as expressed by Adam Smith, the founding father
of capitalist theory, in his The Wealth of Nations 1776) is the
belief that in an entirely free economy, each citizen, through
seeking his own gain, would be "led by an invisible hand
to promote an end which was not part of his intention", namely
the prosperity of society. This does sometimes happen; but to
say that it invariably must happen, as if by a God-given natural
law, is a view which can amount to idolatry or a form of economic
superstition. Smith himself did not appear to think the rule was
invariable, for he also observed "By pursuing his own interest
he frequently promotes that of society=8A" (italics added).
77 The Catholic Church, in its social teaching, explicitly rejects
belief in the automatic beneficence of market forces. It insists
that the end result of market forces must be scrutinised and if
necessary corrected in the name of natural law, social justice,
human rights, and the common good. Left to themselves, market
forces are just as likely to lead to evil results as to good ones.
It is often overlooked that Adam Smith himself did not envisage
markets operating in a value-free society, but assumed that individual
consumer choices would be governed by moral considerations, not
least the demands of justice.
78 The Church recognises that market forces, when properly regulated
in the name of the common good, can be an efficient mechanism
for matching resources to needs in a developed society. No other
system has so far shown itself superior in encouraging wealth
creation and hence in advancing the prosperity of the community,
and enabling poverty and hardship to be more generously relieved.
Centrally commanded economies, in contrast, have been seen to
be inefficient, wasteful, and unresponsive to human needs. Nor
have they fostered a climate of personal liberty. In a market
economy the existence of a wide variety of consumer choice means
that individual decisions can be made according to individual
wants and needs, thus respecting certain aspects of human freedom
and following the principle of subsidiarity. Moreover the good
functioning of the market requires ethical behaviour and the embodiment
of certain ethical principles within a regulatory and legal framework.
This reflects the corresponding principle of solidarity. There
is no doubt, too, that competition can often harness creative
energy and encourage product innovation and improvement.
79 The distinction has always to be kept in mind between a technical
economic method and a total ideology or world view. Catholic Social
Teaching has constantly been aware of the tendency of free market
economic theory to claim more for itself than is warranted. In
particular, an economic creed that insists the greater good of
society is best served by each individual pursuing his or her
own self-interest is likely to find itself encouraging individual
selfishness, for the sake of the economy. Christian teaching that
the service of others is of greater value than the service of
self is sure to seem at odds with the ethos of a capitalist economy.
80 As a result of that ethos there is bound to be a general discouragement
and devaluing of unselfish actions, and the cultivation of the
cynical assumption that those engaged in unselfish actions do
in fact have hidden selfish motives. This attitude is one of the
causes of the general discredit in which politicians and other
public servants are held. It has wide implications for the moral
health of society generally. Those who advocate unlimited free-market
capitalism and at the same time lament the decline in public and
private morality, to which the encouragement of selfishness is
a prime contributing factor, must ask themselves whether the messages
they are sending are in fact mutually contradictory. People tend
to need more encouragement to be unselfish than to be selfish,
so it is not difficult to imagine which of these two messages
will have most influence. A wealthy society, if it is a greedy
society, is not a good society.
Option against the poor? 81 These are among the reasons why the
Catholic Church has remained cautious and on guard towards free
market economics for more than a hundred years, and why we think
it is time to re-emphasise in our society the concept of the common
good. It provides the criteria by which public authorities can
distinguish between those economic activities that can safely
be left to market forces, and those that require regulation, state
intervention, or full provision by the public sector. The dividing
line will be different at different periods. But Catholic Social
Teaching, while it recognises that there are at times merits in
the market principle, resists the conclusion that that principle
should be extended wherever possible. It is always the business
of public authority to arbitrate between the sometimes conflicting
demands of a market economy and the common good.
82 Public authorities must maintain a critical distance from an
ideological view that free markets can do no wrong. The concept
of competition implies that there will be failures as well as
successes, and under market conditions early signs of failure
may cause more rapid collapse. Therefore, where such social provisions
as health and education are concerned, the common good requires
a supervising authority that can step in with remedies as soon
as deficiencies become apparent, rather than waiting until the
logic of the market causes failing institutions to close, harming
those who must still rely on them. There are, of course, circumstances
in which, after due consideration, deliberate closure and the
making of alternative arrangements will serve the common good.
83 Furthermore social services in general need other incentives
than pure profit, and the introduction of market forces in this
area has sometimes demeaned or damaged the sense of vocation and
dedication to others that has traditionally been a hallmark of
the professions involved. The ethos of public service, in the
public sector and especially in local and national government,
is an important public asset that must be safeguarded by every
possible means.
84 The search for profit must not be allowed to override all other
moral considerations. For instance the creation and stimulation
of markets by advertising is in danger of producing a society
where the satisfaction of real or artificial needs takes priority
over all else. It leads to an ideology of consumerism. The individual
is reduced to the status of an isolated economic agent, whose
life has meaning only as a consumer.
85 Those most likely to suffer from over-reliance on competition
to the detriment of the common good are the poor, vulnerable,
powerless and defenceless. To promote the idea that the individual
is primarily to be considered by society as a consumer - that
is to say when an individual's greatest significance is as a possessor
of wealth and purchaser of goods and services - is both contrary
to the Gospel and to any rational idea of what a human being really
is. It gravely disadvantages those who do not have wealth to spend.
Unlimited free markets tend to produce what is in effect an "option
against the poor".
The mass media 86 The mass media have a particular responsibility,
which needs redefining in this context. While Britain continues
to enjoy standards of broadcasting which are rightly admired elsewhere,
those standards cannot be taken for granted. There is, for instance,
a constant drift towards more screen violence, greater use of
obscene language and ever more explicit depictions of intimate
sexual activity. It cannot be argued that broadcasters are merely
responding to changes in public taste, as they play a major part
in shaping that taste.
87 We must point out that it is always easier to drive taste in
these matters downwards rather than upwards. Each step is a small
one, by itself. If nobody takes responsibility for each incremental
movement, however, the eventual result will be the decay of public
standards of decency to the point where they no longer exist,
yet without at any time a deliberate decision having been made
by society that this is what it wants. This is one more domain
where a large number of individual consumer choices, exercised
under the supposed sovereignty of free market forces, can have
a markedly deleterious effect on the common good.
88 This is even more the case in the domain of newspapers. There
seems to be a decline in regard for the common good in this industry,
and an assumption that "giving readers what readers want"
is more often than not the only justification necessary for publication.
Proprietors and editors, answerable to nobody, have never had
more editorial skill and talent available to them, but never have
they used them to such poor moral advantage.
89 Journalists and their editors need constant reminding of the
requirement to separate the reporting of fact from the presentation
of speculation and comment, the need for fairness in handling
allegations damaging to individuals, and above all of a general
sense of moral responsibility for the good of society. But moral
responsibility does not always sell newspapers. We are concerned
about the dangerous consequences for the common good when market
forces in the mass media are pushed to their logical conclusion,
a process of which we see some evidence. Contrary to the optimistic
expectations of the beneficial fruits of competition that were
made by Adam Smith, there are signs that it is a characteristic
principle of newspaper economics that bad journalism will drive
out good.
The world of work 90 Work is more than a way of making a living:
it is a vocation, a participation in God's creative activity.
Work increases the common good. The creation of wealth by productive
action is blessed by God and praised by the Church, as both a
right and a duty. When properly organised and respectful of the
humanity of the worker, it is also a source of fulfilment and
satisfaction. At best, workers should love the work they do. The
treatment of workers must avoid systematically denying them that
supreme measure of satisfaction. We would oppose an unduly negative
view of work even from a Christian perspective, which would regard
it purely as a burden of drudgery; or even worse, a curse consequent
upon the Fall. On the contrary, even before the Fall human work
was the primary means whereby humanity was to co-operate with
and continue the work of the Creator, by responding to God's invitation
to "subdue the earth".
91 Workers have rights which Catholic teaching has consistently
maintained are superior to the rights of capital. These include
the right to decent work, to just wages, to security of employment,
to adequate rest and holidays, to limitation of hours of work,
to health and safety protection, to non-discrimination, to form
and join trade unions, and, as a last resort, to go on strike.
The Catholic Church has always deplored the treatment of employment
as nothing more than a form of commercial contract. This leads
to a sense of alienation between a worker and his or her labour.
Instead, forms of employment should stress the integration of
work and worker, and encourage the application of creative skills.
92 The Church insists that an employed person is a full human
being, not a commodity to be bought and sold according to market
requirements. Recognition of the humanity of the employee should
persuade managements to bring their workforce into creative partnership,
and to regard employees as entitled to a fair share in any rewards
as a result of increased profits. Profits should not be regarded
as solely of interest to managers or shareholders, but as a source
of a social dividend in which others have a right to benefit.
The Church recognises that co-ownership and worker shareholding
schemes can sometimes offer more human ways of running business
and industry than the traditional sharp separation of employees
from employers. 93 The Church's social teaching has always deplored
an "us and them" attitude between managers and workforce.
Industrial relations should not be organised in a way that fosters
such confrontational attitudes. On the one hand, it is possible
for employers to be unfairly disadvantaged by an imbalance in
the relative economic strength of each side in negotiation, for
instance when a trade union exploits a monopoly control of the
supply of labour. On the other hand, trade union activity is sometimes
a necessary corrective to managerial policies which are devoted
purely to profit, regardless of the interests of workers. There
can be a substantial imbalance of economic power between an isolated
individual employee and a large employer, and this imbalance is
not corrected merely by the fact that the employee has entered
into a contract. Contracts between unequal parties are a potent
source of structural injustice.
94 Trade unions have a role in correcting this imbalance, and
membership of a union is a right the Church upholds as a manifestation
of the principle of solidarity and of the right of association.
The Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales has reminded
Catholics that where possible they should join an appropriate
trade union. We do not think the decline in union membership in
recent years is necessarily a healthy sign, and we note that it
is paralleled by a high degree of dissatisfaction with their working
lives that many ordinary people express. We must repeat, however,
the consistent warnings given in Catholic Social Teaching against
trade unions being too closely associated with political parties.
95 Employers are not entitled to negate the right to join a trade
union by refusing to have any dealings with union representatives.
Where a majority of employees in a particular work group opt to
be represented by their union for collective bargaining, it is
unreasonable of an employer to refuse that demand. In certain
circumstances the law may have to intervene to protect these rights.
96 At the same time, unions which are granted legal protection
or a special legal status have a duty to conduct their affairs
in accordance with the common good. Workers contemplating a strike
have a duty to take account of the likely effects of their action
on other groups, whether workers, users or consumers. It is unfair
for those taking part in an industrial dispute to use the inflicting
of hardship or serious inconvenience on such third parties as
deliberate tactics. Their dispute is with their employer, not
the public. They must also take a responsible view of the profitability
and financial viability of their employer.
97 Employers, meanwhile, have a duty to pay a just wage, the level
of which should take account of the needs of the individual and
not just his or her value on the so-called labour market. If employers
do not do this voluntarily, Catholic Social Teaching would allow
the State to make them do so by means of a statutory minimum wage,
either nationally or in some sectors. It is not morally acceptable
to seek to reduce unemployment by letting wages fall below the
level at which employees can sustain a decent standard of living.
98 Employers who pay only the level of wage that the labour market
demands, however low, are avoiding their moral responsibilities
for the welfare of their employees. Where wages do fall below
the level necessary for maintaining an appropriate standard of
living, the state may step in. Nevertheless Catholic Social Teaching,
in the light of the principle of subsidiarity, does not regard
State welfare provision as a desirable substitute for payment
of a just wage. Nor is this an acceptable excuse for employers
to pay inadequate wages, thereby adding a further burden to the
taxpayer. It is much to be preferred that employers should understand
their duties to their employees correctly, so that they should
want to pay a just wage regardless of whether they are obliged
by law to do so. This is not of course to disparage social benefits
to support family life for those in employment as well as for
those unemployed.
Europe 99 The Church's social teaching also applies internationally.
One of the most important issues facing this country is its future
relationship with the rest of Europe - and not just with the European
Union. The history of the whole continent is intimately tied up
with the history of Christianity. Although all European states
are pluralist societies, the churches still have a crucial role
in safeguarding and promoting the moral and spiritual values which
gave Europe its soul. Those values, which Christians share with
other faiths, are essential if the continent is to regain its
moral health and spiritual vitality.
100 Solidarity and subsidiarity are two principles which should
govern relations between individual states and the wider international
community. Solidarity is expressed at many levels - family, neighbourhood,
region, nation, the continent itself, and the whole planet. Local
loyalties and commitments are important and should be fostered,
but they should not be set in opposition to these wider expressions
of solidarity. It is possible to be both British and European.
101 The principle of subsidiarity applies particularly to Britain's
relations with the European Union, especially the extent to which
social, financial and monetary decisions ought to be made at European
Union level or national level, or devolved further to regional
or local assemblies. There may well be legitimate differences
over which arrangements are most likely to respect the principles
of solidarity and subsidiarity, and promote the European common
good. But those principles cannot be set aside in this current
debate.
The global common good
102 In an increasingly global society, the unit of human community
to which the term "common good" applies moves from the
national to the international level. Hence solidarity has an inescapable
universal dimension. Solidarity requires action to protect the
common good at this level, where it can only be safeguarded by
the collaboration of all. The universal common good is violated
if there are places anywhere in the world where basic needs like
clean water, food, shelter, health care, education and livelihood
are not available to all or if the rights and dignity of all are
not respected. The concept of an international or global common
good demands that no nation should be left incapable of participation
in the global economy because it is too poor or too much in debt.
103 The Catholic Church has repeatedly emphasised that an international
economic order that condemns large sections of the world population
to a permanent state of abject poverty is grossly unjust. Yet
in recent years there has been a steady decline in overseas development
assistance from the wealthier to the poorer countries. Some aid
flows have been dissipated through corruption or civil strife,
but there has also been a retreat from solidarity between richer
and poorer societies. This must be resisted. Catholic Social Teaching
affirms the vital role of overseas aid which is properly managed
and effectively targeted, to enable the poor to participate in
grassroots development. We recall that the Bishops' Conference
of England and Wales has urged successive governments to work
towards the long-standing United Nations target for overseas aid
of 0.7 per cent of Gross National Product.
104 The debt burden is a major factor in perpetuating poverty.
Development has been halted and reversed by the debt service obligations
of some of the poorest countries to their foreign creditors. Fortunately,
most of those responsible for managing the international economic
system have realised the ultimate futility of forcing repayment
of unpayable debt as the price of continuing international assistance.
We would encourage public opinion to support the British government
in maintaining a leading role in resolving the international debt
crisis. Without a comprehensive solution, the necessary conditions
for aid, trade and investment for poor countries are missing.
The major industrial countries and the international institutions
they largely control need to act in solidarity with the poorer
countries to achieve an outcome based on justice.
105 The Church has consistently warned of the dangers of too great
a reliance on free market principles alone in economic relations
between very unequal international partners. Under free trade
the strong compete with the weak, the developed with the underdeveloped.
International co-operation and regulation are needed to protect
weak and vulnerable countries in their transition to full participation
in the global economy. Solidarity of the human family will also
require the developed world to restrict the promotion of arms
sales to poor countries, to open further their own markets to
the products of the developing world, actively to support the
establishment of appropriate regional security structures, and
to refrain from imposing harsh economic adjustment programmes
on the poorest countries which curtail essential social expenditure
on health and education, especially for women.
The environmental common good 106 The Church recognises that care
for the environment is part of care for the common good - the
environment is one of the "common goods" which are the
shared responsibility of the human race. We have to reject some
of the easy assumptions of an earlier stage of industrialisation,
such as that the human race, because God had given it dominion
over the world, had an unlimited freedom to despoil the natural
environment for its own purposes. Those who feel moved to a loving
care for the internal balances of nature are responding to a deep
religious instinct implanted within them by God. Their intuition
tells them that the human race takes its place on this planet
as a gift and privilege, and needs to cultivate what the new Catechism
of the Catholic Church calls a "religious respect for the
integrity of creation" (paragraph 2415).
107 Our environmental "common goods" are not only available
for careful use and enjoyment today, but are held in trust for
the use and enjoyment of future generations. Public authorities
must never treat them as having no intrinsic worth, nor commercial
concerns see them merely as sources of profit or loss. Regarded
in those terms, the environment is a great repository of natural
wealth, belonging to all humanity, present and future, freely
and equally. Because of this environmental mortgage that the future
holds over the present, none of this natural wealth can be owned
outright, as if nobody but the owner had any say in its disposal.
Each generation takes the natural environment on loan, and must
return it after use in as good or better condition as when it
was first borrowed.
108 In recent years one of the prime duties of public authorities
has become the careful conservation of this environmental dimension
of the "common good". Damage to the environment is no
respecter of frontiers, and damage done by one generation has
the capacity to damage future generations: these are among the
most powerful reasons for desiring the creation of effective global
authorities responsible for the common good at international level.
Ownership and property 109 The ownership of wealth is a right
the Church protects, and regards as an essential ingredient and
safeguard of human freedom. Measures designed to increase the
spread of ownership are desirable, subject to the common good.
But the ownership is governed by a "social mortgage",
and past abuses of the ownership of wealth have led Catholic Social
Teaching to accept significant restrictions on the rights of wealth
owners.
110 On the other hand we note with approval the greatly increased
distribution of ownership of capital assets in Britain, through
investment trusts, pension funds, insurance companies and the
like. This has given a much larger share of the population an
indirect stake in the profitability of companies in the private
sector. It is no longer a feature of the British economy that
the means for the production of wealth are largely concentrated
in the hands of a few. However, this does not absolve institutional
investors from all responsibility for the way their shareholdings
are used. It cannot be right that all the moral responsibilities
of ownership are ended when ownership is channelled through shareholding,
nor can it be right that the managers of such shareholdings should
feel their only obligation to the owners is to maximise their
returns, within the limits set by law. Both managers and shareholders
have a social responsibility, which the law in Britain needs to
recognise.
111 The economy exists for the human person, not the other way
round. Any economic enterprise has a range of "stakeholders":
shareholders, suppliers, managers, workers, consumers, the local
community, even the natural environment. None of these interests
should prevail to the extent that it excludes the interests of
the others. A manager in one enterprise may be the consumer of
the products of another, the neighbour of a third, the supplier
of a fourth, a shareholder in a fifth; and may subsequently become
a redundant ex-employee, the victim of the very policies that
as a manager he or she may have helped to create.
112 Employers need reminding that their employees as a body constitute
a form of "social capital", a reservoir of human effort,
wisdom and experience. Accountancy methods which have to disregard
such assets in the valuation of a commercial concern or in drawing
up a balance sheet are inevitably guilty of false accounting,
for they fail to make visible the resources of human skill and
judgement which that company has at its disposal. This dumping
of human "social capital", which the Catholic Church
must deplore, is a prevalent cause of social injustice in modern
society. It often occurs in company "downsizing" operations
associated with takeovers, closures and mergers.
Crisis in the social dimension 113 The British people are not
alone in facing the problems to which we have drawn attention.
But they should beware of the tendency, which seems more marked
in Britain than elsewhere, to look to the future not for solutions
but for more problems. To reduce this tendency to a partisan debate
about whether or not the so-called "feel-good" factor
is returning, and to reduce that question in turn to one of purely
economic expectations, is to fail to see that the nation's real
crisis is not economic, but moral and spiritual.
114 This crisis concerns loss of individual belief and confusion
over personal moral behaviour. But the social dimension is no
less in crisis. Surveys and studies of the national mood display
a nation ill at ease with itself. Such surveys tell us that the
British do not look forward to their society becoming fairer or
more peaceful. They no longer expect security, either in employment
or in personal relationships. They accept fatefully but without
enthusiasm the prospect of their lives being increasingly dominated
by impersonal economic forces which leave little room for morality.
They seem to be losing faith in the possibility of a better future.
115 As a result of this loss of confidence in the public arena,
people seek space for personal fulfilment by turning increasingly
to their private world. There is a retreat from the public level
of community involvement to the domestic and individual sphere.
This process of privatisation may well throw more weight than
it can bear upon a fragile personal relationship, often a marriage
relationship. Thus the very place where satisfaction and security
is sought becomes the place where it is less likely to be obtainable.
116 The British have always had a feeling for "the common
good" even if they have not expressed it in those terms.
They are no longer sure that that principle can be relied upon.
They hear it questioned in theory and ignored in practice. It
increasingly appears to be an illusion. This loss of confidence
in the concept of the common good is one of the primary factors
behind the national mood of pessimism. It betrays a weakening
of the sense of mutual responsibility and a decline in the spirit
of solidarity - the crumbling of the cement that binds individuals
into a society. The prospect of the new Millennium just ahead
has so far failed to stir the national imagination to a new sense
of vision and purpose, precisely for these reasons. We view with
particular concern the danger that our young people will turn
their backs on the political process because they see it as selfish,
empty and corrupt. At the same time young people often show remarkable
generosity and commitment to particular causes. It is important
that they be encouraged to build on that generosity and see that
the good of society as a whole deserves their commitment and idealism.
117 We believe the principles we have outlined in this document
are the necessary minimum conditions for a fair and prosperous
society. A society without those conditions will show many of
the symptoms which are present in British society now. The present
Pope, in his encyclical Redemptor Hominis (1979), made this comment
on the present stage of history:
"If therefore our time, the time of our generation, the time
that is approaching the end of the second millennium of the Christian
era, shows itself to be a time of great progress, it is also seen
as a time of threat to humanity in many forms. The Church must
speak of this threat to all people of goodwill and must always
carry on a dialogue with them about it. Humanity's situation in
the modern world seems indeed to be far removed from the objective
demands of the moral order, from the requirements of justice,
and even more of social love" (paragraph 16).
118 Pope John Paul goes on to speak of the eloquent teaching of
the Second Vatican Council concerning humanity's sharing in the
kingship of Christ, and adds: "The essential meaning of this
'kingship' and 'dominion' of man over the visible world, which
the Creator himself gave man for his task, consists in the priority
of ethics over technology, in the primacy of the person over things,
and the superiority of spirit over matter." We believe that
it is in the growing priority of technology over ethics, in the
growing primacy of things over persons, and in the growing superiority
of matter over spirit, that the most serious threats to British
society now lie.
119 For these threats to be resisted, the political arena has
to be reclaimed in the name of the common good. Public life needs
rescuing from utilitarian expediency and the pursuit of self-interest.
Society must not turn its back on poor people nor on the stranger
at the gate. The twin principles of solidarity and subsidiarity
need to be applied systematically to the reform of the institutions
of public life. The protection of human rights must be reinforced,
the mechanisms of democracy repaired, the integrity of the environment
defended. The common good must be made to prevail, even against
strong economic forces that would deny it.
120 The Catholic Church knows from its social teaching that all
this is possible, and that no social trend, however negative,
is beyond reversal. We urge the Catholic people of England and
Wales to take up the challenge of applying to our society all
the principles of Catholic Social Teaching that we have outlined,
and thus to advance the common good in collaboration with likeminded
citizens of every political and religious allegiance.
Appendix I
Extracts from Catholic Social Teaching Pope Leo XIII (Rerum Novarum,
1891): A tiny group of extravagantly rich men have been able to
lay upon the great multitude of unpropertied workers a yoke little
better than that of slavery itself. (2)
When socialists endeavour to transfer privately owned goods into
common ownership they worsen the condition of all wage-earners.
By taking away from them freedom to dispose of their wages they
rob them of all hope and opportunity of increasing their possessions
and bettering their conditions. (4)
[As a result=8A] all incentives for individuals to exercise their
ingenuity and skill would be removed and the very founts of wealth
dry up. The dream of equality would become the reality of equal
want and degradation for all. (12)
What is truly shameful and inhuman is to misuse men as instruments
for gain and to value them only as so much mere energy and strength.
(16)
The one purpose for which the State exists is common to the highest
and lowest within it. By nature, the right of the unpropertied
men to citizenship is equal to that of the wealthy owners of the
means of production, for they through their families are among
the true and living parts which go to form the body of the State.
It is evident that the public authorities ought to take proper
care to safeguard the lives and well-being of the unpropertied
class. (34) Private means must not be exhausted by excessive taxation...
To take from private citizens under the guise of taxation more
than is equitable is unjust and inhuman. (35)
The first task is to save the wretched workers from the brutality
of those who make use of human beings as mere instruments for
the unrestrained acquisition of profits. (43)
The wage ought not to be in any way insufficient for the bodily
needs of a temperate and well-behaved worker. If having no alternative
and fearing a worse fate, a workman is forced to accept harder
conditions imposed by an employer or contractor, he is the victim
of violence against which justice cries out. (45)
The condition of the workers is the question of the hour. It will
be answered one way or another, rationally or irrationally, and
which way it goes is of the greatest importance to the state.
(58.1)
Pope Pius XI (Quadragesimo Anno, 1931): The amount of pay must
be adjusted to the public economic good=8A The opportunity to
work [must] be provided t= o those who are able and willing to
work=8A An excessive lowering of wages, o= r their increase beyond
due measure, causes unemployment. Hence it is contrary to the
common good when, for the sake of personal gain and without regard
for the common good, wages and salaries are excessively lowered
or raised. (74)
Labour=8A is not a mere commodity. On the contrary, the worker's
human dignity in it must be recognised. It therefore cannot be
bought and sold like a commodity. (83)
The right ordering of economic life cannot be left to a free competition
of forces. From this source as from a poisoned spring have originated
and spread all the errors of individualistic economic teaching.
Destroying through forgetfulness or ignorance the social and moral
character of economic life, it held that economic life must be
considered and treated as altogether free from and independent
of public authority, because in the market, i.e. in the free struggle
of competitors, it would have a principle of self-direction that
governs it more perfectly than would the intervention of any created
intellect. But free competition, while justified and certainly
useful provided it is kept within certain limits, clearly cannot
direct economic life - a truth which the outcome of the application
in practice of the tenets of this evil individualistic spirit
has more than sufficiently demonstrated. (88)
An immense power and despotic economic dictatorship is consolidated
in the hands of a few, who often are not owners but only the trustees
and managing directors of invested funds which they administer
according to their own arbitrary will and pleasure. (105)
This concentration of power and might, the characteristic mark,
as it were, of contemporary economic life, is the fruit that the
unlimited freedom of struggle among competitors has of its own
nature produced, and which lets only the strongest survive, and
this is often the same as saying, those who fight the most violently,
those who give least heed to their consciences. (107)
=8Aa no less deadly and accursed internationalism of finance=8A
whose count= ry is where profit is. (109)
Pope John XXIII (Pacem in Terris, 1963): One of the fundamental
duties of civil authorities=8A is so to co-ordinate and regulate
social relations tha= t the exercise of one person's right does
not threaten others in the exercise of their own rights. (62)
The common good requires that civil authorities maintain a careful
balance between co-ordinating and protecting the rights of the
citizens on the one hand, and promoting them, on the other. It
should not happen that certain individuals or social groups derive
special advantage from the fact that their rights have received
preferential protection. (65)
A ruling authority is indispensable to civil society=8A authority
must be exercised for the promotion of the common good. (83,84)
The universal common good requires the encouragement in all nations
of every kind of reciprocation between citizens and their intermediate
societies. There are many parts of the world where we find groupings
of people of more or less different ethnic origin. Nothing must
be allowed to prevent reciprocal relations between them. (100)
The deep feelings of paternal love for all of humanity which God
has implanted in our heart make it impossible for us to view without
bitter anguish of spirit the plight of those who for political
reasons have been exiled from their own homelands. There are a
great number of such refugees at the present time, and many are
the sufferings - the incredible sufferings - to which they are
constantly exposed. (103)
Second Vatican Council (Gaudium et Spes, 1965): It cannot be denied
that people are often diverted from doing good and spurred towards
evil by the social circumstances in which they live and were immersed
from their birth. The disturbances which so frequently occur in
the social order result in part from the natural tensions of economic,
political and social forms. But at a deeper level they flow from
pride and selfishness, which contaminate even the social sphere.
When the social structure is flawed by the consequences of sin,
the human being, already born with a bent towards evil, finds
there new inducements to sin, which cannot be overcome without
strenuous efforts and the assistance of grace. (25.2) There is
a growing awareness of the exalted dignity proper to the human
person, since he stands above all things, and his rights and duties
are universal and inviolable. Therefore, there must be made available
to all men and women everything necessary for leading a life truly
human, such as food, clothing, and shelter; the right to choose
a state of life freely and to found a family; the right to education
and employment, to a good reputation, to respect, to appropriate
information, to activity in accord with the upright norms of one's
own conscience, to protection of privacy and to rightful freedom,
even in matters religious. (26.1)
This Council lays stress on reverence for humanity; everyone must
consider his every neighbour without exception as another self,
taking into account first of all his life and the means necessary
to living it with dignity, so as not to imitate the rich man who
had no concerns for the poor man Lazarus. (27)
Excessive economic and social inequalities within the one human
family, between individuals and between peoples, give rise to
scandal and are contrary to social justice, to equity, and to
the dignity of the human person, as well as to peace within society
and at the international level. (29.2)
God destined the earth and all that it contains for the use of
all human beings and all peoples... Furthermore, the right to
have a share of earthly goods, sufficient for oneself and one's
family, belongs to everyone. (69)
The Church does not rest its hopes on privileges offered to it
by civil authorities; indeed it will even give up the exercise
of certain legitimately acquired rights in situations where it
has been established their use calls in question the sincerity
of its witness=8A (76.4)
Peace is not merely the absence of war, nor can it be reduced
solely to the balance of power between enemies, nor is it brought
about by dictatorship. (78)
Peace on earth cannot be obtained unless personal well-being is
safeguarded and men and women freely and trustingly share with
one another the riches of their inner spirits and their talent.
A firm determination to respect the dignity of other individuals
and peoples, as well as the studied practice of brotherhood, are
absolutely necessary for the establishment of peace. (78.1)
Pope Paul VI (Populorum Progressio, 1967): Certain concepts have
somehow arisen=8A that present profit as the chief spur to economic
progress, free competition as the guiding norm of economics, and
private ownership of the means of production as an absolute right,
having no limits or concomitant social obligations. This unbridled
liberalism paves the way for a particular type of tyranny. (26)
It is evident that the principle of free trade, by itself, is
no longer adequate for regulating international agreements. It
certainly can work when both parties are about equal... But the
case is quite different when the nations involved are far from
equal. Market prices that are freely agreed upon can turn out
to be quite unfair. It must be avowed openly that in this case
the fundamental tenet of liberalism as it is so called, as the
norm for market dealings, is open to serious question=8A When
two parties are in very unequal positions, their mutual consent
does not alone guarantee a fair contract; the rule of free consent
remains subservient to the demands of the natural law. (58)
Pope Paul VI (Evangelii Nuntiandi, 1975): At the main point and
very centre of his Good News, Christ proclaims salvation; this
is the great gift of God which is liberation from everything that
oppresses people, particularly liberation from sin and from the
Evil One, together with the joy experienced when one knows God
and is known by him, when one sees God and entrusts oneself to
him. (9)
Evangelising means bringing the good news into all the strata
of humanity, and through its influence transforming humanity from
within and making it new... But there is no new humanity if there
are not first of all new persons renewed... The Church evangelises
when she seeks to convert, solely through the divine power of
the message she proclaims, both the personal and the collective
consciences of people, the activities in which they engage, and
the lives and concrete milieux which are theirs. (18)
Pope John Paul II (Laborem Exercens, 1981): It is certainly true
that work, as a human issue, is at the very centre of the 'social
question' to which, for almost a hundred years, the Church's teaching
and the many undertakings connected with her apostolic mission
have been especially directed. (2)
We must emphasise and give prominence to the primacy of human
beings in the production process, the primacy of human beings
over things. Everything contained in the concept of capital in
the strict sense is only a collection of things. The human being
- as the subject of work, and independently of the work he does
- and only the human being, is a person. (12.5)
The right to private property is subordinated to the right to
common use, to the fact that goods are meant for everyone=8A They
cannot be possessed against labour, they cannot even be possessed
for possession's sake, because the only legitimate title to their
possession, whether in the form of private ownership or in the
form of public or collective ownership, is that they should serve
labour and thus by serving labour that they should make possible
the achievement of the first principle of this order, namely the
universal destination of goods and the right to common use of
them. (14.1,2)
Pope John Paul II (Reconciliatio et Paenitentia, 1984): Social
sins are the result of the accumulation and concentration of many
personal sins. It is a case of the very personal sins of those
who cause or support evil or who exploit it, of those who are
in a position to avoid, eliminate or at least limit certain social
evils but who fail to do so out of laziness, fear or the conspiracy
of silence, through secret complicity or indifference, or those
who take refuge in the supposed impossibility of changing the
world and also those who sidestep the effort and sacrifice required,
producing spurious reasons of a higher order. (16)
Pope John Paul II (Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 1987): Super-development
consists in an excessive availability of every kind of material
goods for the benefit certain social groups, [which] easily makes
people slaves of 'possession' and of immediate gratification,
with no other horizon than the multiplication or continual replacement
of the things already owned with others still better. This is
the so-called civilisation of 'consumption' and 'consumerism'=8A
One quickly learns that the more one possesses the more one wants.
(28.1)
The sum total of the negative factors working against a true awareness
of the universal common good and the need to further it gives
the impression of creating, in persons and institutions, an obstacle
that is difficult to overcome. If the present situation can be
attributed to difficulties of various kinds, it is not out of
place to speak of structures of sin. (36.1)
Among the actions and attitudes opposed to the will of God, the
good of neighbour and the structures created by them, two are
very typical: on the one hand, the all consuming desire for profit,
and on the other, the thirst for power, with the intention of
imposing one's will on others. (37)
Not only individuals fall victim to this double attitude of sin:
nations and blocs can do so too. And this favours even more the
introduction of the structures of sin. Behind certain decisions,
apparently inspired only by economics or politics, are real forms
of idolatry: of money, ideology, class, technology. (37.2)
Pope John Paul II (Centesimus Annus, 1991): There are many human
needs that find no place in the market. It is a strict duty of
justice and truth not to allow fundamental human needs to remain
unsatisfied=8A (34)
In his desire to have and to enjoy rather than to be and to grow,
man consumes the resources of the earth and his own life in an
excessive and disordered way. At the root of the senseless destruction
of the natural environment lies an anthropological error, which
unfortunately is widespread in our day. Man, who discovers his
capacity to transform and in a certain sense create the world
through his own work, forgets that this is always based on God's
prior and original gift of the things that are. Man thinks that
he can make arbitrary use of the earth, subjecting it without
restraint to his will, as though the earth did not have its own
requisites and a prior God-given purpose, which man can indeed
develop but must not betray. Instead of carrying out his role
as a co-operator with God in the work of creation, man sets himself
up in place of God and thus ends up provoking a rebellion on the
part of nature, which is more tyrannized than governed by him.
(37)
Although people are rightly worried - though much less than theyshould
be - about preserving the natural habitats of the various animal
species threatened with extinction because they realise that each
of these species makes its particular contribution to the balance
of nature in general, too little effort is made to safeguard the
moral conditions for an authentic 'human ecology'. Not only has
God given the earth to man, who must use it with respect for the
original good purpose for which it was given, but man too is God's
gift to man. (38)
The first and fundamental structure for 'human ecology' is the
family, in which man receives his first formative ideas about
truth and goodness, and learns what it means to love and to be
loved, and thus what it actually means to be a person=8A It is
necessary to go back to seeing the family as the sanctuary of
life. (39)
Certainly the mechanisms of the market offer secure advantages:
they help to utilise resources better, they promote the exchange
of products, above all they give central place to the person's
desires and preferences, which, in a contract, meet the desires
and preferences of another person. Nevertheless these mechanisms
carry the risk of idolatry of the market, an idolatry which ignores
the existence of goods which by their nature are not and cannot
be mere commodities. (40)
Can it be said, after the failure of Communism, that capitalism
is the victorious social system, and that capitalism should be
the goal of the countries now making efforts to rebuild their
economy and society? If by capitalism is meant an economic system
which recognises the fundamental and positive value of business,
the market, private property and the resulting responsibility
for the means of production, as well as free human creativity
in the economic sector, then the answer is certainly in the affirmative
though it would be perhaps more appropriate to speak of a business
economy, market economy, or simply a free economy. But if by capitalism
is meant a system in which freedom in the economic sector is not
circumscribed within a strong juridical framework which places
it at the service of human freedom in its totality, and which
sees it as a particular aspect of that freedom, the core of which
is ethical and religious, then the reply is certainly negative.
(42)
The obligation to earn one's bread by the sweat of one's brow
also presumes the right to do so. A society in which this right
is systematically denied, in which economic policies do not allow
workers to reach satisfactory levels of employment, cannot be
justified from an ethical point of view, nor can that society
attain social peace. (43)
The Church has no models to present: models that are real and
truly effective can only arise within the framework of different
historical situations, through the efforts of all those who responsibly
confront concrete problems in all their social, economic and cultural
aspects as these interact with one another. (43)
The State has the duty to sustain business activities by creating
conditions which will ensure job opportunities, by stimulating
those activities where they are lacking or by supporting them
in moments of crisis. (48)
Excesses and abuses, especially in recent years, have provoked
very harsh criticism of the welfare state, dubbed the "Social
Assistance State"=8A By intervening directly and depriving
society of its responsibility, the Social Assistance State leads
to a loss of human energies and an inordinate increase of public
agencies, which are dominated more by bureaucratic ways of thinking
than by concern for serving their clients, and which are accompanied
by an enormous increase in spending. (48)
The individual today is often suffocated between two poles represented
by the State and the marketplace. At times it seems as though
he exists only as a producer and consumer of goods, or as an object
of State administration. (49)
Another name for peace is development. Just as there is a collective
responsibility for avoiding war, so too there is a collective
responsibility for promoting development. Just as within individual
societies it is possible and right to organise a solid economy
which will direct the functioning of the market to the common
good, so too there is a similar need for adequate interventions
on the international level. For this to happen, a great effort
must be made to enhance mutual understanding and knowledge and
to increase the sensitivity of consciences. (52)
Pope John Paul II (Veritatis Splendor, 1993): In the political
sphere, it must be noted that truthfulness in the relations between
those governing and those governed, openness in public administration,
impartiality in the service of the body politic, respect for the
rights of accused against summary trials and convictions, the
just and honest use of public funds, the rejection of equivocal
or illicit means in order to gain, preserve or increase power
at any cost - all these are principles which are primarily rooted
in, and in fact derive their singular urgency from, the transcendental
value of the human person and the objective moral demands of the
functioning of the State. (101)
Appendix II Catholic resources
The Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales recently
set up a new co-ordinating body, the Catholic Agency for Social
Concern (CASC). It is intended to help Catholic welfare agencies,
groups, networks and local initiatives to come together to discuss
priorities, to share support services, and to provide links with
CARITAS Europe and with the relevant European Union social funding
structures.
One of its first projects is a thorough "social audit"
of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, to give for the first
time an accurate overall picture of the Church's welfare resources
and to see how they are being deployed at local level.
In the past, Catholic welfare agencies and similar bodies have
generally not been centrally organised but based on local and
diocesan needs. The survey which follows is therefore provisional,
and is not intended to be comprehensive. In particular, it can
take no account of ad hoc local initiatives.
The Catholic Church in England and Wales is divided into twenty-two
dioceses. It has eighteen diocesan welfare agencies to cover them,
with more than 1,500 staff and a turnover of at least £30
million per annum. The agencies vary in resources, size and activities,
being most substantial where there are concentrations of Catholic
population to support them as well as to make demands on their
services. They also aim to serve the whole community regardless
of race or creed.
The agencies supply fostering and adoption services, and social
work with children and families; some provide child protection
services, school counselling, family centres, and case work; some
provide services for adults including those with learning disabilities,
impairment of hearing or sight; some work for older people; some
for the homeless. There are also numerous community projects.
Many of these agencies also receive financial support from local
and national government.
The national network of Catholic schools in the state sector is
also carried out mainly through the diocesan system. The Catholic
Church has a total of 2,000 primary schools, 450 secondary schools,
with 746,000 pupils, 35,000 teachers, 17 sixth-form colleges and
six colleges of higher education.
The Catholic community contributes nearly £20 million annually
towards the maintenance and improvement of school buildings. This
Catholic financial contribution represents a direct saving of
public expenditure - it is money which would have to be raised
in taxes if there were no Catholic school system. Catholic Education
Services is the agency set up by the Bishops' Conference to provide
common support services to these schools, and assist with representation
to central government.
One of the best known agencies of the Catholic Church in England
and Wales is CAFOD (Catholic Agency for Overseas Development).
It is one of the United Kingdom's major relief and development
agencies. CAFOD's £9.4 million in voluntary income in 1995
represented just over half its total income.
CAFOD runs more than a thousand projects in Africa, Asia, the
Pacific, Latin America, the Caribbean and Eastern Europe. CAFOD
works in co-operation with the international Catholic network
of relief agencies (CARITAS) and development agencies (CIDSE).
Catholic Youth Services is the youth work agency of the Bishops'
Conference. It serves a number of diocesan youth officers and
residential diocesan youth centres.
In 1991 the Bishops' Conference set up an office for refugee work
to monitor policy and practice in the UK and European Union. The
Refugee Advisor convenes the Catholic Refugee Forum which brings
together organisations, groups and individuals working for refugees
including two diocesan refugee officers and three religious congregations
(communities of members of religious orders) responding to the
needs of refugees.
There are numerous agencies and organisations at national level
which are not directly dependent on the Bishops' Conference, but
which at times are asked to assist the bishops' advisory committees
on relevant social issues.
Catholic Marriage Care has a network of approximately 70 centres
in England and Wales as well as a national headquarters. It provides
marriage counselling for individuals or couples, marriage preparation
courses, a service to support teachers in schools, and a natural
family planning service. Its services are available to all.
Catholic Housing Aid Society (CHAS) is a national network of ten
branches providing free professional advice to people who are
homeless and in acute housing need. It also campaigns to improve
policies on housing. It is entirely dependent on voluntary contributions.
The Bourne Trust (formerly Catholic Social Service for Prisoners)
provides counselling and advice, assistance and support to those
in prison and their families.
The Catholic Association for Racial Justice (CARJ) is a national
membership organisation concerned to promote racial justice in
Church and society. It was responsible for organising in 1990
the National Congress of Black Catholics.
The St Vincent de Paul Society has over 18,000 volunteers who
make 1.5 million visits per year to needy people in their homes,
hospitals, prisons and other institutions. Special projects include
holidays for the needy, furniture stores, charity shops, children's
camps, day centres, and hostels for the homeless, mentally afflicted,
and young women at risk. It provides probation/bail hostels, support
for refugees, unemployed people, and people with alcohol or drug
problems. It has founded a housing association which is now a
separate enterprise.
Justice and Peace Groups, of which there are 200 groups around
the country, campaign on domestic and overseas issues of social
justice. The groups are linked by a national liaison committee,
and there are some paid workers at diocesan level.
There are nearly 300 communities of male and female members of
religious orders, many of which are wholly or partly engaged in
education and welfare work. The total number of members of religious
orders in Britain exceeds 10,000. While some remain committed
to their original mission - running hospitals and nursing homes,
caring for children and elderly people in residential homes -
there has been expansion into the field of day care, short-stay
respite homes, special schools and hospitals, and hospices for
terminally and chronically ill people.
Other religious communities have redefined their work to provide
services to the most needy, for instance working in local communities,
especially in depressed areas, and with marginalised people.
Through its membership of the Council of Churches for Britain
and Ireland (CCBI), The Churches Together in England and CYTUN
(Wales), the Catholic Church in Britain now shares responsibility
with other British Churches for the work of bodies which come
under their auspices, and it supports them financially.
This
summary gives a very incomplete picture and is by way of illustration
of the Catholic community's range of commitments. Any omissions
are not intended to represent a judgement on the worth of any
activity not here mentioned. The Catholic Directory, published
annually, has a more comprehensive list of local, regional, national
and specialist agencies supported by the Catholic community, as
well as numerous other Catholic voluntary bodies and societies.
In due course the results of the national audit of Catholic services
and facilities being carried out by CASC will be published.