QUADRAGESIMO
ANNO: On Reconstructing the Social Order
Decries the effects of greed and concentrated economic power on working people and society. Proposes a society based on subsidiarity. |
Issues Abuses of capitalism 1. Free competition has destroyed itself; economic power is concentrated in the hands of a few 2. The mass of propertyless wage earners and the few with superabundant riches reveal inequitable distribution of fruits of industrialism. 3. Workers do not own the means of production and receive unjust wages. 4. Public authority has become a slave to human greed. 5. Social life has lost its organic form, leaving only the individuals and the State. Abuses of communism 6. Communism seeks class warfare and the extermination of private property, |
Responses 1. Bring competition and economic domination under control of public authority. 2. Distribute goods equitably according to the demands of the common good and social justice. 3. Pay wages adequate for family support; give workers a share in profits so they can save for future. 4. Restore State's primary role of promoting the common good of all. 5. Develop intermediate organizations (based on principle of subsidiarity), leaving to smaller bodies the functions which they can efficiently perform.
6. Protect the right and extend the opportunity of ownership; affirm its social purpose and promote harmony among classes. |
To Our Venerable Brethren, the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops,
Bishops and other Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the Holy
See, and Likewise to All the Faithful of the Catholic World.
Venerable Brethren and Beloved Children, Health and Apostolic Benediction.
1. Forty years have passed since Leo XIII's peerless Encyclical,
On the Condition of Workers, first saw the light, and the whole
Catholic world, filled with grateful recollection, is undertaking
to commemorate it with befitting solemnity.
2. Other Encyclicals of Our Predecessor had in a way prepared the
path for that outstanding document and proof of pastoral care: namely,
those on the family and the Holy Sacrament of Matrimony as the source
of human society,[1] on the origin of civil authority[2] and its
proper relations with the Church,[3] on the chief duties of Christian
citizens,[4] against the tenets of Socialism[5] against false teachings
on human liberty,[6]
and others of the same nature fully expressing the mind of Leo XIII.
Yet the Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, compared with the
rest had this special distinction that at a time when it was most
opportune and actually necessary to do so, it laid down for all
mankind the surest rules to solve aright that difficult problem
of human relations called "the social question."
3. For toward the close of the nineteenth century, the new kind
of economic life that had arisen and the new developments of industry
had gone to the point in most countries that human society was clearly
becoming divided more and more into two classes. One class, very
small in number, was enjoying almost all the advantages which modern
inventions so abundantly provided; the other, embracing the huge
multitude of working people, oppressed by wretched poverty, was
vainly seeking escape from the straits wherein it stood.
4. Quite agreeable, of course, was this state of things to those
who thought it in their abundant riches the result of inevitable
economic laws and accordingly, as if it were for charity to veil
the violation of justice which lawmakers not only tolerated but
at times sanctioned, wanted the whole care of supporting the poor
committed to charity alone. The workers, on the other hand, crushed
by their hard lot, were barely enduring it and were refusing longer
to bend their necks beneath so galling a yoke; and some of them,
carried away by the heat of evil counsel, were seeking the overturn
of everything, while others, whom Christian training restrained
from such evil designs, stood firm in the judgment that much in
this had to be wholly and speedily changed.
5. The same feeling those many Catholics, both priests and laymen,
shared, whom a truly wonderful charity had long spurred on to relieve
the unmerited poverty of the non-owning workers, and who could in
no way convince themselves that so enormous and unjust an in equality
in the distribution of this world's goods truly conforms to the
designs of the all-wise Creator.
6. Those men were without question sincerely seeking an immediate
remedy for this lamentable disorganization of States and a secure
safeguard against worse dangers. Yet such is the weakness of even
the best of human minds that, now rejected as dangerous innovators,
now hindered in the good work by their very associates advocating
other courses of action, and, uncertain in the face of various opinions,
they were at a loss which way to turn.
7. In such a sharp conflict of mind, therefore, while the question
at issue was being argued this way and that, nor always with calmness,
all eyes as often before turned to the Chair of Peter, to that sacred
depository of all truth whence words of salvation pour forth to
all the world. And to the feet of Christ's Vicar on earth were flocking
in unaccustomed numbers, men well versed in social questions, employers,
and workers themselves, begging him with one voice to point out,
finally, the safe road to them.
8. The wise Pontiff long weighed all this in his mind before God;
he summoned the most experienced and learned to counsel; he pondered
the issues carefully and from every angle. At last, admonished "by
the consciousness of His Apostolic Office"[7] lest silence
on his part might be regarded as failure in his duty[8] he decided,
in virtue of the Divine Teaching Office entrusted to him, to address
not only the whole Church of Christ but all mankind.
9. Therefore on the fifteenth day of May, 1891, that long awaited
voice thundered forth; neither daunted by the arduousness of the
problem nor weakened by age but with vigorous energy, it taught
the whole human family to strike out in the social question upon
new paths.
10. You know, Venerable Brethren and Beloved Children, and understand
full well the wonderful teaching which has made the Encyclical,
On the Condition of Workers, illustrious forever. The Supreme Pastor
in this Letter, grieving that so large a portion of mankind should
"live undeservedly in miserable and wretched conditions,"[9]
took it upon himself with great courage to defend "the cause
of the workers whom the present age had handed over, each alone
and defenseless, to the inhumanity of employers and the unbridled
greed of competitors."[10] He sought no help from either Liberalism
or Socialism, for the one had proved that it was utterly unable
to solve the social problem aright, and the other, proposing a remedy
far worse than the evil itself, would have plunged human society
into great dangers.
11. Since a problem was being treated "for which no satisfactory
solution" is found "unless religion and the Church have
been called upon to aid,"[11] the Pope, clearly exercising
his right and correctly holding that the guardianship of religion
and the stewardship over those things that are closely bound up
with it had been entrusted especially to him and relying solely
upon the unchangeable principles drawn from the treasury of right
reason and Divine Revelation, confidently and as one having authority,[12]
declared and proclaimed "the rights and duties within which
the rich and the proletariat—those who furnish material
things and those who furnish work—ought to be restricted in
relation to each other,"[13] and what the Church, heads of
States and the people themselves directly concerned ought to do.
12. The Apostolic voice did not thunder forth in vain. On the contrary,
not only did the obedient children of the Church hearken to it with
marveling admiration and hail it with the greatest applause, but
many also who were wandering far from the truth, from the unity
of the faith, and nearly all who since then either in private study
or in enacting legislation have concerned themselves with the social
and economic question.
13. Feeling themselves vindicated and defended by the Supreme Authority
on earth, Christian workers received this Encyclical with special
joy. So, too, did all those noble-hearted men who, long solicitous
for the improvement of the condition of the workers, had up to that
time encountered almost nothing but indifference from many, and
even rankling suspicion, if not open hostility, from some. Rightly,
therefore, have all these groups constantly held the Apostolic Encyclical
from that time in such high honor that to signify their gratitude
they are wont, in various places and in various ways, to commemorate
it every year.
14. However, in spite of such great agreement, there were some who
were not a little disturbed; and so it happened that the teaching
of Leo XIII, so noble and lofty and so utterly new to worldly ears,
was held suspect by some, even among Catholics, and to certain ones
it even gave offense. For it boldly attacked and overturned the
idols of Liberalism, ignored long-standing prejudices, and was in
advance of its time beyond all expectation, so that the slow of
heart disdained to study this new social philosophy and the timid
feared to scale so lofty a height. There were some also who stood,
indeed, in awe at its splendor, but regarded it as a kind of imaginary
ideal of perfection more desirable then attainable.
15. Venerable Brethren and Beloved Children, as all everywhere and
especially Catholic workers who are pouring from all sides into
this Holy City, are celebrating with such enthusiasm the solemn
commemoration of the fortieth anniversary of the Encyclical On the
Condition of Workers, We deem it fitting on this occasion to recall
the great benefits this Encyclical has brought to the Catholic Church
and to all human society; to defend the illustrious Master's doctrine
on the social and economic question against certain doubts and to
develop it more fully as to some points; and lastly, summoning to
court the contemporary economic regime and passing judgment on Socialism,
to lay bare the root of the existing social confusion and at the
same time point the only way to sound restoration: namely, the Christian
reform of morals. All these matters which we undertake to treat
will fall under three main headings, and this entire Encyclical
will be devoted to their development.
16. To begin with the topic which we have proposed first to discuss,
We cannot refrain, following the counsel of St. Ambrose[14] who
says that "no duty is more important than that of returning
thanks," from offering our fullest gratitude to Almighty God
for the immense benefits that have come through Leo's Encyclical
to the Church and to human society. If indeed We should wish to
review these benefits even cursorily, almost the whole history of
the social question during the last forty years would have to be
recalled to mind. These benefits can be reduced conveniently, however,
to three main points, corresponding to the three kinds of help which
Our Predecessor ardently desired for the accomplishment of his great
work of restoration.
17. In the first place Leo himself clearly stated what ought to
be expected from the Church:[15] "Manifestly it is the Church
which draws from the Gospel the teachings through which the struggle
can be composed entirely, or, after its bitterness is removed, can
certainly become more tempered. It is the Church, again, that strives
not only to instruct the mind, but to regulate by her precepts the
life and morals of individuals, and that ameliorates the condition
of the workers through her numerous and beneficent institutions
"
18. The Church did not let these rich fountains lie quiescent in
her bosom, but from them drew copiously for the common good of the
longed-for peace. Leo himself and his Successors, showing paternal
charity and pastoral constancy always, in defense especially of
the poor and the weak,[16] proclaimed and urged without ceasing
again and again by voice and pen the teaching on the social and
economic question which On the Condition of Workers presented, and
adapted it fittingly to the needs of time and of circumstance. And
many bishops have done the same, who in their continual and able
interpretation of this same teaching have illustrated it with commentaries
and in accordance with the mind and instructions of the Holy See
provided for its application to the conditions and institutions
of diverse regions.[17]
19. It is not surprising, therefore, that many scholars, both priests
and laymen, led especially by the desire that the unchanged and
unchangeable teaching of the Church should meet new demands and
needs more effectively, have zealously undertaken to develop, with
the Church as their guide and teacher, a social and economic science
in accord with the conditions of our time.
20. And so, with Leo's Encyclical pointing the way and furnishing
the light, a true Catholic social science has arisen, which is daily
fostered and enriched by the tireless efforts of those chosen men
whom We have termed auxiliaries of the Church. They do not, indeed,
allow their science to lie hidden behind learned walls. As the useful
and well attended courses instituted in Catholic universities, colleges,
and seminaries, the social congresses and "weeks" that
are held at frequent intervals with most successful results, the
study groups that are promoted, and finally the timely and sound
publications that are disseminated everywhere and in every possible
way, clearly show, these men bring their science out into the full
light and stress of life.
21. Nor is the benefit that has poured forth from Leo's Encyclical
confined within these bounds; for the teaching which On the Condition
of Workers contains has gradually and imperceptibly worked its way
into the minds of those outside Catholic unity who do not recognize
the authority of the Church. Catholic principles on the social question
have as a result, passed little by little into the patrimony of
all human society, and We rejoice that the eternal truths which
Our Predecessor of glorious memory proclaimed so impressively have
been frequently invoked and defended not only in non-Catholic books
and journals but in legislative halls also courts of justice.
22. Furthermore, after the terrible war, when the statesmen of the
leading nations were attempting to restore peace on the basis of
a thorough reform of social conditions, did not they, among the
norms agreed upon to regulate in accordance with justice and equity
the labor of the workers, give sanction to many points that so remarkably
coincide with Leo's principles and instructions as to seem consciously
taken therefrom? The Encyclical On the Condition of Workers, without
question, has become a memorable document and rightly to it may
be applied the words of Isaias: "He shall set up a standard
to the nations."[18]
23. Meanwhile, as Leo's teachings were being widely diffused in
the minds of men, with learned investigations leading the way, they
have come to be put into practice. In the first place, zealous efforts
have been made, with active good will, to lift up that class which
on account of the modern expansion of industry had increased to
enormous numbers but not yet had obtained its rightful place or
rank in human society and was, for that reason, all but neglected
and despised—the workers, We mean—to whose improvement,
to the great advantage of souls, the diocesan and regular clergy,
though burdened with other pastoral duties, have under the leadership
of the Bishops devoted themselves. This constant work, undertaken
to fill the workers' souls with the Christian spirit, helped much
also to make them conscious of their true dignity and render them
capable, by placing clearly before them the rights and duties of
their class, of legitimately and happily advancing and even of becoming
leaders of their fellows.
24. From that time on, fuller means of livelihood have been more
securely obtained; for not only did works of beneficence and charity
begin to multiply at the urging of the Pontiff, but there have also
been established everywhere new and continuously expanding organizations
in which workers, draftsmen, farmers and employees of every kind,
with the counsel of the Church and frequently under the leadership
of her priests, give and receive mutual help and support.
25. With regard to civil authority, Leo XIII, boldly breaking through
the confines imposed by Liberalism, fearlessly taught that government
must not be thought a mere guardian of law and of good order, but
rather must put forth every effort so that "through the entire
scheme of laws and institutions . . . both public and individual
well-being may develop spontaneously out of the very structure and
administration of the State."[19] Just freedom of action must,
of course, be left both to individual citizens and to families,
yet only on condition that the common good be preserved and wrong
to any individual be abolished. The function of the rulers of the
State, moreover, is to watch over the community and its parts; but
in protecting private individuals in their rights, chief consideration
ought to be given to the weak and the poor. "For the nation,
as it were, of the rich is guarded by its own defenses and is in
less need of governmental protection, whereas the suffering multitude,
without the means to protect itself relies especially on the protection
of the State. Wherefore, since wage workers are numbered among the
great mass of the needy, the State must include them under its special
care and foresight."[20]
26. We, of course, do not deny that even before the Encyclical of
Leo, some rulers of peoples have provided for certain of the more
urgent needs of the workers and curbed more flagrant acts of injustice
inflicted upon them. But after the Apostolic voice had sounded from
the Chair of Peter throughout the world, rulers of nations, more
fully alive at last to their duty, devoted their minds and attention
to the task of promoting a more comprehensive and fruitful social
policy.
27. And while the principles of Liberalism were tottering, which
had long prevented effective action by those governing the State,
the Encyclical On the Condition of Workers in truth impelled peoples
themselves to promote a social policy on truer grounds and with
greater intensity, and so strongly encouraged good Catholics to
furnish valuable help to heads of States in this field that they
often stood forth as illustrious champions of this new policy even
in legislatures. Sacred ministers of the Church, thoroughly imbued
with Leo's teaching, have, in fact, often proposed to the votes
of the peoples' representatives the very social legislation that
has been enacted in recent years and have resolutely demanded and
promoted its enforcement.
28. A new branch of law, wholly unknown to the earlier time, has
arisen from this continuous and unwearied labor to protect vigorously
the sacred rights of the workers that flow from their dignity as
men and as Christians. These laws undertake the protection of life,
health, strength, family, homes, workshops, wages and labor hazards,
in fine, everything which pertains to the condition of wage workers,
with special concern for women and children. Even though these laws
do not conform exactly everywhere and in all respects to Leo's recommendations,
still it is undeniable that much in them savors of the Encyclical,
On the Condition of Workers, to which great credit must be given
for whatever improvement has been achieved in the workers' condition.
29. Finally, the wise Pontiff showed that "employers and workers
themselves can accomplish much in this matter, manifestly through
those institutions by the help of which the poor are opportunely
assisted and the two classes of society are brought closer to each
other."[21] First place among these institutions, he declares,
must be assigned to associations that embrace either workers alone
or workers and employers together. He goes into considerable detail
in explaining and commending these associations and expounds with
a truly wonderful wisdom their nature, purpose, timeliness, rights,
duties, and regulations.
30. These teachings were issued indeed most opportunely. For at
that time in many nations those at the helm of State, plainly imbued
with Liberalism, were showing little favor to workers' associations
of this type; nay, rather they openly opposed them, and while going
out of their way to recognize similar organizations of other classes
and show favor to them, they were with criminal injustice denying
the natural right to form associations to those who needed it most
to defend themselves from ill treatment at the hands of the powerful.
There were even some Catholics who looked askance at the efforts
of workers to form associations of this type as if they smacked
of a socialistic or revolutionary spirit.
31. The rules, therefore, which Leo XIII issued in virtue of his
authority, deserve the greatest praise in that they have been able
to break down this hostility and dispel these suspicions; but they
have even a higher claim to distinction in that they encouraged
Christian workers to found mutual associations according to their
various occupations, taught them how to do so, and resolutely confirmed
in the path of duty a goodly number of those whom socialist organizations
strongly attracted by claiming to be the sole defenders and champions
of the lowly and oppressed.
32. With respect to the founding of these societies, the Encyclical
On the Condition of Workers most fittingly declared that "workers'
associations ought to be so constituted and so governed as to furnish
the most suitable and most convenient means to attain the object
proposed, which consists in this, that the individual members of
the association secure, so far as is possible, an increase in the
goods of body, of soul, and of property," yet it is clear that
"moral and religious perfection ought to be regarded as their
principal goal, and that their social organization as such ought
above all to be directed completely by this goal."[22] For
"when the regulations of associations are founded upon religion,
the way is easy toward establishing the mutual relations of the
members, so that peaceful living together and prosperity will result."[23]
33. To the founding of these associations the clergy and many of
the laity devoted themselves everywhere with truly praiseworthy
zeal, eager to bring Leo's program to full realization. Thus associations
of this kind have molded truly Christian workers who, in combining
harmoniously the diligent practice of their occupation with the
salutary precepts of religion, protect effectively and resolutely
their own temporal interests and rights, keeping a due respect for
justice and a genuine desire to work together with other classes
of society for the Christian renewal of all social life.
34. These counsels and instructions of Leo XIII were put into effect
differently in different places according to varied local conditions.
In some places one and the same association undertook to attain
all the ends laid down by the Pontiff; in others, because circumstances
suggested or required it, a division of work developed and separate
associations were formed. Of these, some devoted themselves to the
defense of the rights and legitimate interests of their members
in the labor market; others took over the work of providing mutual
economic aid; finally still others gave all their attention to the
fulfillment of religious and moral duties and other obligations
of like nature.
35. This second method has especially been adopted where either
the laws of a country, or certain special economic institutions,
or that deplorable dissension of minds and hearts so widespread
in contemporary society and an urgent necessity of combating with
united purpose and strength the massed ranks of revolutionarists,
have prevented Catholics from founding purely Catholic labor unions.
Under these conditions, Catholics seem almost forced to join secular
labor unions. These unions, however, should always profess justice
and equity and give Catholic members full freedom to care for their
own conscience and obey the laws of the Church. It is clearly the
office of bishops, when they know that these associations are on
account of circumstances necessary and are not dangerous to religion,
to approve of Catholic workers joining them, keeping before their
eyes, however, the principles and precautions laid down by Our Predecessor,
Pius X of holy memory.[24] Among these precautions the first and
chief is this: Side by side with these unions there should always
be associations zealously engaged in imbuing and forming their members
in the teaching of religion and morality so that they in turn may
be able to permeate the unions with that good spirit which should
direct them in all their activity. As a result, the religious associations
will bear good fruit even beyond the circle of their own membership.
36. To the Encyclical of Leo, therefore, must be given this credit,
that these associations of workers have so flourished everywhere
that while, alas, still surpassed in numbers by socialist and communist
organizations, they already embrace a vast multitude of workers
and are able, within the confines of each nation as well as in wider
assemblies, to maintain vigorously the rights and legitimate demands
of Catholic workers and insist also on the salutary Christian principles
of society.
37. Leo's learned treatment and vigorous defense of the natural
right to form associations began, furthermore, to find ready application
to other associations also and not alone to those of the workers.
Hence no small part of the credit must, it seems, be given to this
same Encyclical of Leo for the fact that among farmers and others
of the middle class most useful associations of this kind are seen
flourishing to a notable degree and increasing day by day, as well
as other institutions of a similar nature in which spiritual development
and economic benefit are happily combined.
38. But if this cannot be said of organizations which Our same Predecessor
intensely desired established among employers and managers of industry—and
We certainly regret that they are so few—the condition is
not wholly due to the will of men but to far graver difficulties
that hinder associations of this kind which We know well and estimate
at their full value. There is, however, strong hope that these obstacles
also will be removed soon, and even now We greet with the deepest
joy of Our soul, certain by no means insignificant attempts in this
direction, the rich fruits of which promise a still richer harvest
in the future.[25]
39. All these benefits of Leo's Encyclical, Venerable Brethren and
Beloved Children, which We have outlined rather than fully described,
are so numerous and of such import as to show plainly that this
immortal document does not exhibit a merely fanciful, even if beautiful,
ideal of human society. Rather did our Predecessor draw from the
Gospel and, therefore, from an ever-living and life-giving fountain,
teachings capable of greatly mitigating, if not immediately terminating
that deadly internal struggle which is rending the family of mankind.
The rich fruits which the Church of Christ and the whole human race
have, by God's favor, reaped therefrom unto salvation prove that
some of this good seed, so lavishly sown forty years ago, fell on
good ground. On the basis of the long period of experience, it cannot
be rash to say that Leo's Encyclical has proved itself the Magna
Charta upon which all Christian activity in the social field ought
to be based, as on a foundation. And those who would seem to hold
in little esteem this Papal Encyclical and its commemoration either
blaspheme what they know not, or understand nothing of what they
are only superficially acquainted with, or if they do understand
convict themselves formally of injustice and ingratitude.
40. Yet since in the course of these same years, certain doubts
have arisen concerning either the correct meaning of some parts
of Leo's Encyclical or conclusions to be deduced therefrom, which
doubts in turn have even among Catholics given rise to controversies
that are not always peaceful; and since, furthermore, new needs
and changed conditions of our age have made necessary a more precise
application of Leo's teaching or even certain additions thereto,
We most gladly seize this fitting occasion, in accord with Our Apostolic
Office through which We are debtors to all,[26] to answer, so far
as in Us lies, these doubts and these demands of the present day.
41. Yet before proceeding to explain these matters, that principle
which Leo XIII so clearly established must be laid down at the outset
here, namely, that there resides in Us the right and duty to pronounce
with supreme authority upon social and economic matters.[27] Certainly
the Church was not given the commission to guide men to an only
fleeting and perishable happiness but to that which is eternal.
Indeed" the Church holds that it is unlawful for her to mix
without cause in these temporal concerns"[28]; however, she
can in no wise renounce the duty God entrusted to her to interpose
her authority, not of course in matters of technique for which she
is neither suitably equipped nor endowed by office, but in all things
that are connected with the moral law. For as to these, the deposit
of truth that God committed to Us and the grave duty of disseminating
and interpreting the whole moral law, and of urging it in season
and out of season, bring under and subject to Our supreme jurisdiction
not only social order but economic activities themselves.
42. Even though economics and moral science employs each its own
principles in its own sphere, it is, nevertheless, an error to say
that the economic and moral orders are so distinct from and alien
to each other that the former depends in no way on the latter. Certainly
the laws of economics, as they are termed, being based on the very
nature of material things and on the capacities of the human body
and mind, determine the limits of what productive human effort cannot,
and of what it can attain in the economic field and by what means.
Yet it is reason itself that clearly shows, on the basis of the
individual and social nature of things and of men, the purpose which
God ordained for all economic life.
43. But it is only the moral law which, just as it commands us to
seek our supreme and last end in the whole scheme of our activity,
so likewise commands us to seek directly in each kind of activity
those purposes which we know that nature, or rather God the Author
of nature, established for that kind of action, and in orderly relationship
to subordinate such immediate purposes to our supreme and last end.
If we faithfully observe this law, then it will follow that the
particular purposes, both individual and social, that are sought
in the economic field will fall in their proper place in the universal
order of purposes, and We, in ascending through them, as it were
by steps, shall attain the final end of all things, that is God,
to Himself and to us, the supreme and inexhaustible Good.
44. But to come down to particular points, We shall begin with ownership
or the right of property. Venerable Brethren and Beloved Children,
you know that Our Predecessor of happy memory strongly defended
the right of property against the tenets of the Socialists of his
time by showing that its abolition would result, not to the advantage
of the working class, but to their extreme harm. Yet since there
are some who calumniate the Supreme Pontiff, and the Church herself,
as if she had taken and were still taking the part of the rich against
the non-owning workers—certainly no accusation is more unjust
than that—and since Catholics are at variance with one another
concerning the true and exact mind of Leo, it has seemed best to
vindicate this, that is, the Catholic teaching on this matter from
calumnies and safeguard it from false interpretations.
45. First, then, let it be considered as certain and established
that neither Leo nor those theologians who have taught under the
guidance and authority of the Church have ever denied or questioned
the twofold character of ownership, called usually individual or
social according as it regards either separate persons or the common
good. For they have always unanimously maintained that nature, rather
the Creator Himself, has given man the right of private ownership
not only that individuals may be able to provide for themselves
and their families but also that the goods which the Creator destined
for the entire family of mankind may through this institution truly
serve this purpose. All this can be achieved in no wise except through
the maintenance of a certain and definite order.
46. Accordingly, twin rocks of shipwreck must be carefully avoided.
For, as one is wrecked upon, or comes close to, what is known as
"individualism" by denying or minimizing the social and
public character of the right of property, so by rejecting or minimizing
the private and individual character of this same right, one inevitably
runs into "collectivism" or at least closely approaches
its tenets. Unless this is kept in mind, one is swept from his course
upon the shoals of that moral, juridical, and social modernism which
We denounced in the Encyclical issued at the beginning of Our Pontificate.[29]
And, in particular, let those realize this who, in their desire
for innovation, do not scruple to reproach the Church with infamous
calumnies, as if she had allowed to creep into the teachings of
her theologians a pagan concept of ownership which must be completely
replaced by another that they with amazing ignorance call "Christian."
47. In order to place definite limits on the controversies that
have arisen over ownership and its inherent duties there must be
first laid down as foundation a principle established by Leo XIII:
The right of property is distinct from its use.[30] That justice
called commutative commands sacred respect for the division of possessions
and forbids invasion of others' rights through the exceeding of
the limits of one's own property; but the duty of owners to use
their property only in a right way does not come under this type
of justice, but under other virtues, obligations of which "cannot
be enforced by legal action."[31] Therefore, they are in error
who assert that ownership and its right use are limited by the same
boundaries; and it is much farther still from the truth to hold
that a right to property is destroyed or lost by reason of abuse
or non-use.
48. Those, therefore, are doing a work that is truly salutary and
worthy of all praise who, while preserving harmony among themselves
and the integrity of the traditional teaching of the Church, seek
to define the inner nature of these duties and their limits whereby
either the right of property itself or its use, that is, the exercise
of ownership, is circumscribed by the necessities of social living.
On the other hand, those who seek to restrict the individual character
of ownership to such a degree that in fact they destroy it are mistaken
and in error.
49. It follows from what We have termed the individual and at the
same time social character of ownership, that men must consider
in this matter not only their own advantage but also the common
good. To define these duties in detail when necessity requires and
the natural law has not done so, is the function of those in charge
of the State. Therefore, public authority, under the guiding light
always of the natural and divine law, can determine more accurately
upon consideration of the true requirements of the common good,
what is permitted and what is not permitted to owners in the use
of their property. Moreover, Leo XIII wisely taught "that God
has left the limits of private possessions to be fixed by the industry
of men and institutions of peoples."[32] That history proves
ownership, like other elements of social life, to be not absolutely
unchanging, We once declared as follows: "What divers forms
has property had, from that primitive form among rude and savage
peoples, which may be observed in some places even in our time,
to the form of possession in the patriarchal age; and so further
to the various forms under tyranny (We are using the word tyranny
in its classical sense); and then through the feudal and monarchial
forms down to the various types which are to be found in more recent
times."[33] That the State is not permitted to discharge its
duty arbitrarily is, however, clear. The natural right itself both
of owning goods privately and of passing them on by inheritance
ought always to remain intact and inviolate, since this indeed is
a right that the State cannot take away: "For man is older
than the State,"[34] and also "domestic living together
is prior both in thought and in fact to uniting into a polity."[35]
Wherefore the wise Pontiff declared that it is grossly unjust for
a State to exhaust private wealth through the weight of imposts
and taxes. "For since the right of possessing goods privately
has been conferred not by man's law, but by nature, public authority
cannot abolish it, but can only control its exercise and bring it
into conformity with the common weal."[36] Yet when the State
brings private ownership into harmony with the needs of the common
good, it does not commit a hostile act against private owners but
rather does them a friendly service; for it thereby effectively
prevents the private possession of goods, which the Author of nature
in His most wise providence ordained for the support of human life,
from causing intolerable evils and thus rushing to its own destruction;
it does not destroy private possessions, but safeguards them; and
it does not weaken private property rights, but strengthens them.
50. Furthermore, a person's superfluous income, that is, income
which he does not need to sustain life fittingly and with dignity,
is not left wholly to his own free determination. Rather the Sacred
Scriptures and the Fathers of the Church constantly declare in the
most explicit language that the rich are bound by a very grave precept
to practice almsgiving, beneficence, and munificence.
51. Expending larger incomes so that opportunity for gainful work
may be abundant, provided, however, that this work is applied to
producing really useful goods, ought to be considered, as We deduce
from the principles of the Angelic Doctor,[37] an outstanding exemplification
of the virtue of munificence and one particularly suited to the
needs of the times.
52. That ownership is originally acquired both by occupancy of a
thing not owned by any one and by labor, or, as is said, by specification,
the tradition of all ages as well as the teaching of Our Predecessor
Leo clearly testifies. For, whatever some idly say to the contrary,
no injury is done to any person when a thing is occupied that is
available to all but belongs to no one; however, only that labor
which a man performs in his own name and by virtue of which a new
form or increase has been given to a thing grants him title to these
fruits.
53. Far different is the nature of work that is hired out to others
and expended on the property of others. To this indeed especially
applies what Leo XIII says is "incontestible," namely,
that "the wealth of nations originates from no other source
than from the labor of workers."[38] For is it not plain that
the enormous volume of goods that makes up human wealth is produced
by and issues from the hands of the workers that either toil unaided
or have their efficiency marvelously increased by being equipped
with tools or machines? Every one knows, too, that no nation has
ever risen out of want and poverty to a better and nobler condition
save by the enormous and combined toil of all the people, both those
who manage work and those who carry out directions. But it is no
less evident that, had not God the Creator of all things, in keeping
with His goodness, first generously bestowed natural riches and
resources—the wealth and forces of nature— such supreme
efforts would have been idle and vain, indeed could never even have
begun. For what else is work but to use or exercise the energies
of mind and body on or through these very things? And in the application
of natural resources to human use the law of nature, or rather God's
will promulgated by it, demands that right order be observed. This
order consists in this: that each thing have its proper owner. Hence
it follows that unless a man is expending labor on his own property,
the labor of one person and the property of another must be associated,
for neither can produce anything without the other. Leo XIII certainly
had this in mind when he wrote: "Neither capital can do without
labor, nor labor without capital."[39]
Wherefore it is wholly false to ascribe to property alone or to
labor alone whatever has been obtained through the combined effort
of both, and it is wholly unjust for either, denying the efficacy
of the other, to arrogate to itself whatever has been produced.
54. Property, that is, "capital," has undoubtedly long
been able to appropriate too much to itself. Whatever was produced,
whatever returns accrued, capital claimed for itself, hardly leaving
to the worker enough to restore and renew his strength. For the
doctrine was preached that all accumulation of capital falls by
an absolutely insuperable economic law to the rich, and that by
the same law the workers are given over and bound to perpetual want,
to the scantiest of livelihoods. It is true, indeed, that things
have not always and everywhere corresponded with this sort of teaching
of the so-called Manchesterian Liberals; yet it cannot be denied
that economic social institutions have moved steadily in that direction.
That these false ideas, these erroneous suppositions, have been
vigorously assailed, and not by those alone who through them were
being deprived of their innate right to obtain better conditions,
will surprise no one.
55. And therefore, to the harassed workers there have come "intellectuals,"
as they are called, setting up in opposition to a fictitious law
the equally fictitious moral principle that all products and profits,
save only enough to repair and renew capital, belong by very right
to the workers. This error, much more specious than that of certain
of the Socialists who hold that whatever serves to produce goods
ought to be transferred to the State, or, as they say "socialized,"
is consequently all the more dangerous and the more apt to deceive
the unwary. It is an alluring poison which many have eagerly drunk
whom open Socialism had not been able to deceive.
56. Unquestionably, so as not to close against themselves the road
to justice and peace through these false tenets, both parties ought
to have been forewarned by the wise words of Our Predecessor: "However
the earth may be apportioned among private owners, it does not cease
to serve the common interests of all."[40] This same doctrine
We ourselves also taught above in declaring that the division of
goods which results from private ownership was established by nature
itself in order that created things may serve the needs of mankind
in fixed and stable order. Lest one wander from the straight path
of truth, this is something that must be continually kept in mind.
57. But not every distribution among human beings of property and
wealth is of a character to attain either completely or to a satisfactory
degree of perfection the end which God intends. Therefore, the riches
that economic-social developments constantly increase ought to be
so distributed among individual persons and classes that the common
advantage of all, which Leo XIII had praised, will be safeguarded;
in other words, that the common good of all society will be kept
inviolate. By this law of social justice, one class is forbidden
to exclude the other from sharing in the benefits. Hence the class
of the wealthy violates this law no less, when, as if free from
care on account of its wealth, it thinks it the right order of things
for it to get everything and the worker nothing, than does the non-owning
working class when, angered deeply at outraged justice and too ready
to assert wrongly the one right it is conscious of, it demands for
itself everything as if produced by its own hands, and attacks and
seeks to abolish, therefore, all property and returns or incomes,
of whatever kind they are or whatever the function they perform
in human society, that have not been obtained by labor, and for
no other reason save that they are of such a nature. And in this
connection We must not pass over the unwarranted and unmerited appeal
made by some to the Apostle when he said: "If any man will
not work neither let him eat."[41] For the Apostle is passing
judgment on those who are unwilling to work, although they can and
ought to, and he admonishes us that we ought diligently to use our
time and energies of body, and mind and not be a burden to others
when we can provide for ourselves. But the Apostle in no wise teaches
that labor is the sole title to a living or an income.[42]
58. To each, therefore, must be given his own share of goods, and
the distribution of created goods, which, as every discerning person
knows, is laboring today under the gravest evils due to the huge
disparity between the few exceedingly rich and the unnumbered propertyless,
must be effectively called back to and brought into conformity with
the norms of the common good, that is, social justice.
59. The redemption of the non-owning workers—this is the goal
that Our Predecessor declared must necessarily be sought. And the
point is the more emphatically to be asserted and more insistently
repeated because the commands of the Pontiff, salutary as they are,
have not infrequently been consigned to oblivion either because
they were deliberately suppressed by silence or thought impracticable
although they both can and ought to be put into effect. And these
commands have not lost their force and wisdom for our time because
that "pauperism" which Leo XIII beheld in all its horror
is less widespread. Certainly the condition of the workers has been
improved and made more equitable especially in the more civilized
and wealthy countries where the workers can no longer be considered
universally overwhelmed with misery and lacking the necessities
of life. But since manufacturing and industry have so rapidly pervaded
and occupied countless regions, not only in the countries called
new, but also in the realms of the Far East that have been civilized
from antiquity, the number of the non-owning working poor has increased
enormously and their groans cry to God from the earth. Added to
them is the huge army of rural wage workers, pushed to the lowest
level of existence and deprived of all hope of ever acquiring "some
property in land,"[43] and, therefore, permanently bound to
the status of non-owning worker unless suitable and effective remedies
are applied.
60. Yet while it is true that the status of non owning worker is
to be carefully distinguished from pauperism, nevertheless the immense
multitude of the non-owning workers on the one hand and the enormous
riches of certain very wealthy men on the other establish an unanswerable
argument that the riches which are so abundantly produced in our
age of "industrialism," as it is called, are not rightly
distributed and equitably made available to the various classes
of the people.
61. Therefore, with all our strength and effort we must strive that
at least in the future the abundant fruits of production will accrue
equitably to those who are rich and will be distributed in ample
sufficiency among the workers—not that these may become remiss
in work, for man is born to labor as the bird to fly— but
that they may increase their property by thrift, that they may bear,
by wise management of this increase in property, the burdens of
family life with greater ease and security, and that, emerging from
the insecure lot in life in whose uncertainties non-owning workers
are cast, they may be able not only to endure the vicissitudes of
earthly existence but have also assurance that when their lives
are ended they will provide in some measure for those they leave
after them.
62. All these things which Our Predecessor has not only suggested
but clearly and openly proclaimed, We emphasize with renewed insistence
in our present Encyclical; and unless utmost efforts are made without
delay to put them into effect, let no one persuade himself that
public order, peace, and the tranquillity of human society can be
effectively defended against agitators of revolution.
63. As We have already indicated, following in the footsteps of
Our Predecessor, it will be impossible to put these principles into
practice unless the non-owning workers through industry and thrift
advance to the state of possessing some little property. But except
from pay for work, from what source can a man who has nothing else
but work from which to obtain food and the necessaries of life set
anything aside for himself through practicing frugality? Let us,
therefore, explaining and developing wherever necessary Leo XIII's
teachings and precepts, take up this question of wages and salaries
which he called one "of very great importance."[44]
64. First of all, those who declare that a contract of hiring and
being hired is unjust of its own nature, and hence a partnership-contract
must take its place, are certainly in error and gravely misrepresent
Our Predecessor whose Encyclical not only accepts working for wages
or salaries but deals at some length with it regulation in accordance
with the rules of justice.
65. We consider it more advisable, however, in the present condition
of human society that, so far as is possible, the work-contract
be somewhat modified by a partnership-contract, as is already being
done in various ways and with no small advantage to workers and
owners. Workers and other employees thus become sharers in ownership
or management or participate in some fashion in the profits received.
66. The just amount of pay, however, must be calculated not on a
single basis but on several, as Leo XIII already wisely declared
in these words: "To establish a rule of pay in accord with
justice, many factors must be taken into account."[45]
67. By this statement he plainly condemned the shallowness of those
who think that this most difficult matter is easily solved by the
application of a single rule or measure—and one quite false.
68. For they are greatly in error who do not hesitate to spread
the principle that labor is worth and must be paid as much as its
products are worth, and that consequently the one who hires out
his labor has the right to demand all that is produced through his
labor. How far this is from the truth is evident from that We have
already explained in treating of property and labor.
69. It is obvious that, as in the case of ownership, so in the case
of work, especially work hired out to others, there is a social
aspect also to be considered in addition to the personal or individual
aspect. For man's productive effort cannot yield its fruits unless
a truly social and organic body exists, unless a social and juridical
order watches over the exercise of work, unless the various occupations,
being interdependent, cooperate with and mutually complete one another,
and, what is still more important, unless mind, material things,
and work combine and form as it were a single whole. Therefore,
where the social and individual nature of work is neglected, it
will be impossible to evaluate work justly and pay it according
to justice.
70. Conclusions of the greatest importance follow from this twofold
character which nature has impressed on human work, and it is in
accordance with these that wages ought to be regulated and established.
71. In the first place, the worker must be paid a wage sufficient
to support him and his family.[46] That the rest of the family should
also contribute to the common support, according to the capacity
of each, is certainly right, as can be observed especially in the
families of farmers, but also in the families of many craftsmen
and small shopkeepers. But to abuse the years of childhood and the
limited strength of women is grossly wrong. Mothers, concentrating
on household duties, should work primarily in the home or in its
immediate vicinity. It is an intolerable abuse, and to be abolished
at all cost, for mothers on account of the father's low wage to
be forced to engage in gainful occupations outside the home to the
neglect of their proper cares and duties, especially the training
of children. Every effort must therefore be made that fathers of
families receive a wage large enough to meet ordinary family needs
adequately. But if this cannot always be done under existing circumstances,
social justice demands that changes be introduced as soon as possible
whereby such a wage will be assured to every adult workingman. It
will not be out of place here to render merited praise to all, who
with a wise and useful purpose, have tried and tested various ways
of adjusting the pay for work to family burdens in such a way that,
as these increase, the former may be raised and indeed, if the contingency
arises, there may be enough to meet extraordinary needs.
72. In determining the amount of the wage, the condition of a business
and of the one carrying it on must also be taken into account; for
it would be unjust to demand excessive wages which a business cannot
stand without its ruin and consequent calamity to the workers. If,
however, a business makes too little money, because of lack of energy
or lack of initiative or because of indifference to technical and
economic progress, that must not be regarded a just reason for reducing
the compensation of the workers. But if the business in question
is not making enough money to pay the workers an equitable wage
because it is being crushed by unjust burdens or forced to sell
its product at less than a just price, those who are thus the cause
of the injury are guilty of grave wrong, for they deprive workers
of their just wage and force them under the pinch of necessity to
accept a wage less than fair.
73. Let, then, both workers and employers strive with united strength
and counsel to overcome the difficulties and obstacles and let a
wise provision on the part of public authority aid them in so salutary
a work. If, however, matters come to an extreme crisis, it must
be finally considered whether the business can continue or the workers
are to be cared for in some other way. In such a situation, certainly
most serious, a feeling of close relationship and a Christian concord
of minds ought to prevail and function effectively among employers
and workers.
74. Lastly, the amount of the pay must be adjusted to the public
economic good. We have shown above how much it helps the common
good for workers and other employees, by setting aside some part
of their income which remains after necessary expenditures, to attain
gradually to the possession of a moderate amount of wealth. But
another point, scarcely less important, and especially vital in
our times, must not be overlooked: namely, that the opportunity
to work be provided to those who are able and willing to work. This
opportunity depends largely on the wage and salary rate, which can
help as long as it is kept within proper limits, but which on the
other hand can be an obstacle if it exceeds these limits. For everyone
knows that an excessive lowering of wages, or their increase beyond
due measure, causes unemployment. This evil, indeed, especially
as we see it prolonged and injuring so many during the years of
Our Pontificate, has plunged workers into misery and temptations,
ruined the prosperity of nations, and put in jeopardy the public
order, peace, and tranquillity of the whole world. Hence it is contrary
to social justice when, for the sake of personal gain and without
regard for the common good, wages and salaries are excessively lowered
or raised; and this same social justice demands that wages and salaries
be so managed, through agreement of plans and wills, in so far as
can be done, as to offer to the greatest possible number the opportunity
of getting work and obtaining suitable means of livelihood.
75. A right proportion among wages and salaries also contributes
directly to the same result; and with this is closely connected
a right proportion in the prices at which the goods are sold that
are produced by the various occupations, such as agriculture, manufacturing,
and others. If all these relations are properly maintained, the
various occupations will combine and coalesce into, as it were,
a single body and like members of the body mutually aid and complete
one another. For then only will the social economy be rightly established
and attain its purposes when all and each are supplied with all
the goods that the wealth and resources of nature, technical achievement,
and the social organization of economic life can furnish. And these
goods ought indeed to be enough both to meet the demands of necessity
and decent comfort and to advance people to that happier and fuller
condition of life which, when it is wisely cared for, is not only
no hindrance to virtue but helps it greatly.[47]
76. What We have thus far stated regarding an equitable distribution
of property and regarding just wages concerns individual persons
and only indirectly touches social order, to the restoration of
which according to the principles of sound philosophy and to its
perfection according to the sublime precepts of the law of the Gospel,
Our Predecessor, Leo XIII, devoted all his thought and care.
77. Still, in order that what he so happily initiated may be solidly
established, that what remains to be done may be accomplished, and
that even more copious and richer benefits may accrue to the family
of mankind, two things are especially necessary: reform of institutions
and correction of morals.
78. When we speak of the reform of institutions, the State comes
chiefly to mind, not as if universal well-being were to be expected
from its activity, but because things have come to such a pass through
the evil of what we have termed "individualism" that,
following upon the overthrow and near extinction of that rich social
life which was once highly developed through associations of various
kinds, there remain virtually only individuals and the State. This
is to the great harm of the State itself; for, with a structure
of social governance lost, and with the taking over of all the burdens
which the wrecked associations once bore. the State has been overwhelmed
and crushed by almost infinite tasks and duties.
79. As history abundantly proves, it is true that on account of
changed conditions many things which were done by small associations
in former times cannot be done now save by large associations. Still,
that most weighty principle, which cannot be set aside or changed,
remains fixed and unshaken in social philosophy: 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 and higher association what
lesser and subordinate organizations can do. For every social activity
ought of its very nature to furnish help to the members of the body
social, and never destroy and absorb them.
80. 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.
81. First and foremost, the State and every good citizen ought to
look to and strive toward this end: that the conflict between the
hostile classes be abolished and harmonious cooperation of the Industries
and Professions be encouraged and promoted.
82. The social policy of the State, therefore, must devote itself
to the re-establishment of the Industries and Professions. In actual
fact, human society now, for the reason that it is founded on classes
with divergent aims and hence opposed to one another and therefore
inclined to enmity and strife, continues to be in a violent condition
and is unstable and uncertain.
83. Labor, as Our Predecessor explained well in his Encyclical,[48]
is not a mere commodity. On the contrary, the worker's human dignity
in it must be recognized. It therefore cannot be bought and sold
like a commodity. Nevertheless, as the situation now stands, hiring
and offering for hire in the so-called labor market separate men
into two divisions, as into battle lines, and the contest between
these divisions turns the labor market itself almost into a battlefield
where, face to face, the opposing lines struggle bitterly. Everyone
understands that this grave evil which is plunging all human society
to destruction must be remedied as soon as possible. But complete
cure will not come until this opposition has been abolished and
well-ordered members of the social body—Industries and Professions—are
constituted in which men may have their place, not according to
the position each has in the labor market but according to the respective
social functions which each performs. For under nature's guidance
it comes to pass that just as those who are joined together by nearness
of habitation establish towns, so those who follow the same industry
or profession—whether in the economic or other field—form
guilds or associations, so that many are wont to consider these
self-governing organizations, if not essential, at least natural
to civil society.
84. Because order, as St. Thomas well explains,[49] is unity arising
from the harmonious arrangement of many objects, a true, genuine
social order demands that the various members of a society be united
together by some strong bond. This unifying force is present not
only in the producing of goods or the rendering of services—in
which the employers and employees of an identical Industry or Profession
collaborate jointly— but also in that common good, to achieve
which all Industries and Professions together ought, each to the
best of its ability, to cooperate amicably. And this unity will
be the stronger and more effective, the more faithfully individuals
and the Industries and Professions themselves strive to do their
work and excel in it.
85. It is easily deduced from what has been said that the interests
common to the whole Industry or Profession should hold first place
in these guilds. The most important among these interests is to
promote the cooperation in the highest degree of each industry and
profession for the sake of the common good of the country. Concerning
matters, however, in which particular points, involving advantage
or detriment to employers or workers, may require special care and
protection, the two parties, when these cases arise, can deliberate
separately or as the situation requires reach a decision separately.
86. The teaching of Leo XIII on the form of political government,
namely, that men are free to choose whatever form they please, provided
that proper regard is had for the requirements of justice and of
the common good, is equally applicable in due proportion, it is
hardly necessary to say, to the guilds of the various industries
and professions.[50]
87. Moreover, just as inhabitants of a town are wont to found associations
with the widest diversity of purposes, which each is quite free
to join or not, so those engaged in the same industry or profession
will combine with one another into associations equally free for
purposes connected in some manner with the pursuit of the calling
itself. Since these free associations are clearly and lucidly explained
by Our Predecessor of illustrious memory, We consider it enough
to emphasize this one point: People are quite free not only to found
such associations, which are a matter of private order and private
right, but also in respect to them "freely to adopt the organization
and the rules which they judge most appropriate to achieve their
purpose."[51] The same freedom must be asserted for founding
associations that go beyond the boundaries of individual callings.
And may these free organizations, now flourishing and rejoicing
in their salutary fruits, set before themselves the task of preparing
the way, in conformity with the mind of Christian social teaching,
for those larger and more important guilds, Industries and Professions,
which We mentioned before, and make every possible effort to bring
them to realization.
88. Attention must be given also to another matter that is closely
connected with the foregoing. Just as the unity of human society
cannot be founded on an opposition of classes, so also the right
ordering of economic life cannot be left to a free competition of
forces. For from this source, as from a poisoned spring, have originated
and spread all the errors of individualist 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 which governs it much
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. Therefore, it is most necessary that
economic life be again subjected to and governed by a true and effective
directing principle. This function is one that the economic dictatorship
which has recently displaced free competition can still less perform,
since it is a headstrong power and a violent energy that, to benefit
people, needs to be strongly curbed and wisely ruled. But it cannot
curb and rule itself. Loftier and nobler principles—social
justice and social charity—must, therefore, be sought whereby
this dictatorship may be governed firmly and fully. Hence, the institutions
themselves of peoples and, particularly those of all social life,
ought to be penetrated with this justice, and it is most necessary
that it be truly effective, that is, establish a juridical and social
order which will, as it were, give form and shape to all economic
life. Social charity, moreover, ought to be as the soul of this
order, an order which public authority ought to be ever ready effectively
to protect and defend. It will be able to do this the more easily
as it rids itself of those burdens which, as We have stated above,
are not properly its own.
89. Furthermore, since the various nations largely depend on one
another in economic matters and need one another's help, they should
strive with a united purpose and effort to promote by wisely conceived
pacts and institutions a prosperous and happy international cooperation
in economic life.
90. If the members of the body social are, as was said, reconstituted,
and if the directing principle of economic-social life is restored,
it will be possible to say in a certain sense even of this body
what the Apostle says of the mystical body of Christ: "The
whole body (being closely joined and knit together through every
joint of the system according to the functioning in due measure
of each single part) derives its increase to the building up of
itself in love."[52]
91. Recently, as all know, there has been inaugurated a special
system of syndicates and corporations of the various callings which
in view of the theme of this Encyclical it would seem necessary
to describe here briefly and comment upon appropriately.
92. The civil authority itself constitutes the syndicate as a juridical
personality in such a manner as to confer on it simultaneously a
certain monopoly-privilege, since only such a syndicate, when thus
approved, can maintain the rights (according to the type of syndicate)
of workers or employers, and since it alone can arrange for the
placement of labor and conclude so-termed labor agreements. Anyone
is free to join a syndicate or not, and only within these limits
can this kind of syndicate be called free; for syndical dues and
special assessments are exacted of absolutely all members of every
specified calling or profession, whether they are workers or employers;
likewise all are bound by the labor agreements made by the legally
recognized syndicate. Nevertheless, it has been officially stated
that this legally recognized syndicate does not prevent the existence,
without legal status, however, of other associations made up of
persons following the same calling.
93. The associations, or corporations, are composed of delegates
from the two syndicates (that is, of workers and employers) respectively
of the same industry or profession and, as true and proper organs
and institutions of the State, they direct the syndicates and coordinate
their activities in matters of common interest toward one and the
same end.
94. Strikes and lock-outs are forbidden; if the parties cannot settle
their dispute, public authority intervenes.
95. Anyone who gives even slight attention to the matter will easily
see what are the obvious advantages in the system We have thus summarily
described: The various classes work together peacefully, socialist
organizations and their activities are repressed, and a special
magistracy exercises a governing authority. Yet lest We neglect
anything in a matter of such great importance and that all points
treated may be properly connected with the more general principles
which We mentioned above and with those which We intend shortly
to add, We are compelled to say that to Our certain knowledge there
are not wanting some who fear that the State, instead of confining
itself as it ought to the furnishing of necessary and adequate assistance,
is substituting itself for free activity; that the new syndical
and corporative order savors too much of an involved and political
system of administration; and that (in spite of those more general
advantages mentioned above, which are of course fully admitted)
it rather serves particular political ends than leads to the reconstruction
and promotion of a better social order.
96. To achieve this latter lofty aim, and in particular to promote
the common good truly and permanently, We hold it is first and above
everything wholly necessary that God bless it and, secondly, that
all men of good will work with united effort toward that end. We
are further convinced, as a necessary consequence, that this end
will be attained the more certainly the larger the number of those
ready to contribute toward it their technical, occupational, and
social knowledge and experience; and also, what is more important,
the greater the contribution made thereto of Catholic principles
and their application, not indeed by Catholic Action (which excludes
strictly syndical or political activities from its scope) but by
those sons of Ours whom Catholic Action imbues with Catholic principles
and trains for carrying on an apostolate under the leadership and
teaching guidance of the Church —of that Church which in this
field also that We have described, as in every other field where
moral questions are involved and discussed, can never forget or
neglect through indifference its divinely imposed mandate to be
vigilant and to teach.
97. What We have taught about the reconstruction and perfection
of social order can surely in no wise be brought to realization
without reform of morality, the very record of history clearly shows.
For there was a social order once which, although indeed not perfect
or in all respects ideal, nevertheless, met in a certain measure
the requirements of right reason, considering the conditions and
needs of the time. If that order has long since perished, that surely
did not happen because the order could not have accommodated itself
to changed conditions and needs by development and by a certain
expansion, but rather because men, hardened by too much love of
self, refused to open the order to the increasing masses as they
should have done, or because, deceived by allurements of a false
freedom and other errors, they became impatient of every authority
and sought to reject every form of control.
98. There remains to Us, after again calling to judgment the economic
system now in force and its most bitter accuser, Socialism, and
passing explicit and just sentence upon them, to search out more
thoroughly the root of these many evils and to point out that the
first and most necessary remedy is a reform of morals.
99. Important indeed have the changes been which both the economic
system and Socialism have undergone since Leo XIII's time.
100. That, in the first place, the whole aspect of economic life
is vastly altered, is plain to all. You know, Venerable Brethren
and Beloved Children, that the Encyclical of Our Predecessor of
happy memory had in view chiefly that economic system, wherein,
generally, some provide capital while others provide labor for a
joint economic activity. And in a happy phrase he described it thus:
"Neither capital can do without labor, nor labor without capital."[53]
101. With all his energy Leo XIII sought to adjust this economic
system according to the norms of right order; hence, it is evident
that this system is not to be condemned in itself. And surely it
is not of its own nature vicious. But it does violate right order
when capital hires workers, that is, the non-owning working class,
with a view to and under such terms that it directs business and
even the whole economic system according to its own will and advantage,
scorning the human dignity of the workers, the social character
of economic activity and social justice itself, and the common good.
102. Even today this is not, it is true, the only economic system
in force everywhere; for there is another system also, which still
embraces a huge mass of humanity, significant in numbers and importance,
as for example, agriculture wherein the greater portion of mankind
honorably and honestly procures its livelihood. This group, too,
is being crushed with hardships and with difficulties, to which
Our Predecessor devotes attention in several places in his Encyclical
and which We Ourselves have touched upon more than once in Our present
Letter.
103. But, with the diffusion of modern industry throughout the whole
world, the "capitalist" economic regime has spread everywhere
to such a degree, particularly since the publication of Leo XIII's
Encyclical, that it has invaded and pervaded the economic and social
life of even those outside its orbit and is unquestionably impressing
on it its advantages, disadvantages and vices, and, in a sense,
is giving it its own shape and form.
104. Accordingly, when directing Our special attention to the changes
which the capitalist economic system has undergone since Leo's time,
We have in mind the good not only of those who dwell in regions
given over to "capital" and industry, but of all mankind.
105. In the first place, it is obvious that not only is wealth concentrated
in our times but 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.
106. This dictatorship is being most forcibly exercised by those
who, since they hold the money and completely control it, control
credit also and rule the lending of money. Hence they regulate the
flow, so to speak, of the life-blood whereby the entire economic
system lives, and have so firmly in their grasp the soul, as it
were, of economic life that no one can breathe against their will.
107. 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 conscience.
108. This accumulation of might and of power generates in turn three
kinds of conflict. First, there is the struggle for economic supremacy
itself; then there is the bitter fight to gain supremacy over the
State in order to use in economic struggles its resources and authority;
finally there is conflict between States themselves, not only because
countries employ their power and shape their policies to promote
every economic advantage of their citizens, but also because they
seek to decide political controversies that arise among nations
through the use of their economic supremacy and strength.
109. The ultimate consequences of the individualist spirit in economic
life are those which you yourselves, Venerable Brethren and Beloved
Children, see and deplore: Free competition has destroyed itself;
economic dictatorship has supplanted the free market; unbridled
ambition for power has likewise succeeded greed for gain; all economic
life has become tragically hard, inexorable, and cruel. To these
are to be added the grave evils that have resulted from an intermingling
and shameful confusion of the functions and duties of public authority
with those of the economic sphere—such as, one of the worst,
the virtual degradation of the majesty of the State, which although
it ought to sit on high like a queen and supreme arbitress, free
from all partiality and intent upon the one common good and justice,
is become a slave, surrendered and delivered to the passions and
greed of men. And as to international relations, two different streams
have issued from the one fountain-head: On the one hand, economic
nationalism or even economic imperialism; on the other, a no less
deadly and accursed internationalism of finance or international
imperialism whose country is where profit is.
110. In the second part of this Encyclical where We have presented
Our teaching, We have described the remedies for these great evils
so explicitly that We consider it sufficient at this point to recall
them briefly. Since the present system of economy is founded chiefly
upon ownership and labor, the principles of right reason, that is,
of Christian social philosophy, must be kept in mind regarding ownership
and labor and their association together, and must be put into actual
practice. First, so as to avoid the reefs of individualism and collectivism.
the twofold character, that is individual and social, both of capital
or ownership and of work or labor must be given due and rightful
weight. Relations of one to the other must be made to conform to
the laws of strictest justice—commutative justice, as it is
called—with the support, however, of Christian charity. Free
competition, kept within definite and due limits, and still more
economic dictatorship, must be effectively brought under public
authority in these matters which pertain to the latter's function.
The public institutions themselves, of peoples, moreover, ought
to make all human society conform to the needs of the common good;
that is, to the norm of social justice. If this is done, that most
important division of social life, namely, economic activity, cannot
fail likewise to return to right and sound order.
111. Socialism, against which Our Predecessor, Leo XIII, had especially
to inveigh, has since his time changed no less profoundly than the
form of economic life. For Socialism, which could then be termed
almost a single system and which maintained definite teachings reduced
into one body of doctrine, has since then split chiefly into two
sections, often opposing each other and even bitterly hostile, without
either one however abandoning a position fundamentally contrary
to Christian truth that was characteristic of Socialism.
112. One section of Socialism has undergone almost the same change
that the capitalistic economic system, as We have explained above,
has undergone. It has sunk into Communism. Communism teaches and
seeks two objectives: Unrelenting class warfare and absolute extermination
of private ownership. Not secretly or by hidden methods does it
do this, but publicly, openly, and by employing every and all means,
even the most violent. To achieve these objectives there is nothing
which it does not dare, nothing for which it has respect or reverence;
and when it has come to power, it is incredible and portentlike
in its cruelty and inhumanity. The horrible slaughter and destruction
through which it has laid waste vast regions of eastern Europe and
Asia are the evidence; how much an enemy and how openly hostile
it is to Holy Church and to God Himself is, alas, too well proved
by facts and fully known to all. Although We, therefore, deem it
superfluous to warn upright and faithful children of the Church
regarding the impious and iniquitous character of Communism, yet
We cannot without deep sorrow contemplate the heedlessness of those
who apparently make light of these impending dangers, and with sluggish
inertia allow the widespread propagation of doctrine which seeks
by violence and slaughter to destroy society altogether. All the
more gravely to be condemned is the folly of those who neglect to
remove or change the conditions that inflame the minds of peoples,
and pave the way for the overthrow and destruction of society.
113. The other section, which has kept the name Socialism, is surely
more moderate. It not only professes the rejection of violence but
modifies and tempers to some degree, if it does not reject entirely,
the class struggle and the abolition of private ownership. One might
say that, terrified by its own principles and by the conclusions
drawn therefrom by Communism, Socialism inclines toward and in a
certain measure approaches the truths which Christian tradition
has always held sacred; for it cannot be denied that its demands
at times come very near those that Christian reformers of society
justly insist upon.
114. For if the class struggle abstains from enmities and mutual
hatred, it gradually changes into an honest discussion of differences
founded on a desire for justice, and if this is not that blessed
social peace which we all seek, it can and ought to be the point
of departure from which to move forward to the mutual cooperation
of the Industries and Professions. So also the war declared on private
ownership, more and more abated, is being so restricted that now,
finally, not the possession itself of the means of production is
attacked but rather a kind of sovereignty over society which ownership
has, contrary to all right, seized and usurped. For such sovereignty
belongs in reality not to owners but to the public authority. If
the foregoing happens, it can come even to the point that imperceptibly
these ideas of the more moderate socialism will no longer differ
from the desires and demands of those who are striving to remold
human society on the basis of Christian principles. For certain
kinds of property, it is rightly contended, ought to be reserved
to the State since they carry with them a dominating power so great
that cannot without danger to the general welfare be entrusted to
private individuals.
115. Such just demands and desire have nothing in them now which
is inconsistent with Christian truth, and much less are they special
to Socialism. Those who work solely toward such ends have, therefore,
no reason to become socialists.
116. Yet let no one think that all the socialist groups or factions
that are not communist have, without exception, recovered their
senses to this extent either in fact or in name. For the most part
they do not reject the class struggle or the abolition of ownership,
but only in some degree modify them. Now if these false principles
are modified and to some extent erased from the program, the question
arises, or rather is raised without warrant by some, whether the
principles of Christian truth cannot perhaps be also modified to
some degree and be tempered so as to meet Socialism half-way and,
as it were, by a middle course, come to agreement with it. There
are some allured by the foolish hope that socialists in this way
will be drawn to us. A vain hope! Those who want to be apostles
among socialists ought to profess Christian truth whole and entire,
openly and sincerely, and not connive at error in any way. If they
truly wish to be heralds of the Gospel, let them above all strive
to show to socialists that socialist claims, so far as they are
just, are far more strongly supported by the principles of Christian
faith and much more effectively promoted through the power of Christian
charity.
117. But what if Socialism has really been so tempered and modified
as to the class struggle and private ownership that there is in
it no longer anything to be censured on these points? Has it thereby
renounced its contradictory nature to the Christian religion? This
is the question that holds many minds in suspense. And numerous
are the Catholics who, although they clearly understand that Christian
principles can never be abandoned or diminished seem to turn their
eyes to the Holy See and earnestly beseech Us to decide whether
this form of Socialism has so far recovered from false doctrines
that it can be accepted without the sacrifice of any Christian principle
and in a certain sense be baptized. That We, in keeping with Our
fatherly solicitude, may answer their petitions, We make this pronouncement:
Whether considered as a doctrine, or an historical fact, or a movement,
Socialism, if it remains truly Socialism, even after it has yielded
to truth and justice on the points which we have mentioned, cannot
be reconciled with the teachings of the Catholic Church because
its concept of society itself is utterly foreign to Christian truth.
118. For, according to Christian teaching, man, endowed with a social
nature, is placed on this earth so that by leading a life in society
and under an authority ordained of God[54] he may fully cultivate
and develop all his faculties unto the praise and glory of his Creator;
and that by faithfully fulfilling the duties of his craft or other
calling he may obtain for himself temporal and at the same time
eternal happiness. Socialism, on the other hand, wholly ignoring
and indifferent to this sublime end of both man and society, affirms
that human association has been instituted for the sake of material
advantage alone.
119. Because of the fact that goods are produced more efficiently
by a suitable division of labor than by the scattered efforts of
individuals, socialists infer that economic activity, only the material
ends of which enter into their thinking, ought of necessity to be
carried on socially. Because of this necessity, they hold that men
are obliged, with respect to the producing of goods, to surrender
and subject themselves entirely to society. Indeed, possession of
the greatest possible supply of things that serve the advantages
of this life is considered of such great importance that the higher
goods of man, liberty not excepted, must take a secondary place
and even be sacrificed to the demands of the most efficient production
of goods. This damage to human dignity, undergone in the "socialized"
process of production, will be easily offset, they say, by the abundance
of socially produced goods which will pour out in profusion to individuals
to be used freely at their pleasure for comforts and cultural development.
Society, therefore, as Socialism conceives it, can on the one hand
neither exist nor be thought of without an obviously excessive use
of force; on the other hand, it fosters a liberty no less false,
since there is no place in it for true social authority, which rests
not on temporal and material advantages but descends from God alone,
the Creator and last end of all things.[55]
120. If Socialism, like all errors, contains some truth (which,
moreover, the Supreme Pontiffs have never denied), it is based nevertheless
on a theory of human society peculiar to itself and irreconcilable
with true Christianity. Religious socialism, Christian socialism,
are contradictory terms; no one can be at the same time a good Catholic
and a true socialist.
121. All these admonitions which have been renewed and confirmed
by Our solemn authority must likewise be applied to a certain new
kind of socialist activity, hitherto little known but now carried
on among many socialist groups. It devotes itself above all to the
training of the mind and character. Under the guise of affection
it tries in particular to attract children of tender age and win
them to itself, although it also embraces the whole population in
its scope in order finally to produce true socialists who would
shape human society to the tenets of Socialism.
122. Since in Our Encyclical, The Christian Education of Youth,[56]
We have fully taught the principles that Christian education insists
on and the ends it pursues, the contradiction between these principles
and ends and the activities and aims of this socialism that is pervading
morality and culture is so clear and evident that no demonstration
is required here. But they seem to ignore or underestimate the grave
dangers that it carries with it who think it of no importance courageously
and zealously to resist them according to the gravity of the situation.
It belongs to Our Pastoral Office to warn these persons of the grave
and imminent evil: let all remember that Liberalism is the father
of this Socialism that is pervading morality and culture and that
Bolshevism will be its heir.
123. Accordingly, Venerable Brethren, you can well understand with
what great sorrow We observe that not a few of Our sons, in certain
regions especially, although We cannot be convinced that they have
given up the true faith and right will, have deserted the camp of
the Church and gone over to the ranks of Socialism, some to glory
openly in the name of socialist and to profess socialist doctrines,
others through thoughtlessness or even, almost against their wills
to join associations which are socialist by profession or in fact.
124. In the anxiety of Our paternal solicitude, We give Ourselves
to reflection and try to discover how it could happen that they
should go so far astray and We seem to hear what many of them answer
and plead in excuse: The Church and those proclaiming attachment
to the Church favor the rich, neglect the workers and have no concern
for them; therefore, to look after themselves they had to join the
ranks of socialism .
125. It is certainly most lamentable, Venerable Brethren, that there
have been, nay, that even now there are men who, although professing
to be Catholics, are almost completely unmindful of that sublime
law of justice and charity that binds us not only to render to everyone
what is his but to succor brothers in need as Christ the Lord Himself,[57]
and—what is worse— out of greed for gain do not scruple
to exploit the workers. Even more, there are men who abuse religion
itself, and under its name try to hide their unjust exactions in
order to protect themselves from the manifestly just demands of
the workers. The conduct of such We shall never cease to censure
gravely. For they are the reason why the Church could, even though
undeservedly, have the appearance of and be charged with taking
the part of the rich and with being quite unmoved by the necessities
and hardships of those who have been deprived, as it were, of their
natural inheritance. The whole history of the Church plainly demonstrates
that such appearances are unfounded and such charges unjust. The
Encyclical itself, whose anniversary we are celebrating, is clearest
proof that it is the height of injustice to hurl these calumnies
and reproaches at the Church and her teaching.
126. Although pained by the injustice and downcast in fatherly sorrow,
it is so far from Our thought to repulse or to disown children who
have been miserably deceived and have strayed so far from the truth
and salvation that We cannot but invite them with all possible solicitude
to return to the maternal bosom of the Church. May they lend ready
ears to Our voice, may they return whence they have left, to the
home that is truly their Father's, and may they stand firm there
where their own place is, in the ranks of those who, zealously following
the admonitions which Leo promulgated and We have solemnly repeated,
are striving to restore society according to the mind of the Church
on the firmly established basis of social justice and social charity.
And let them be convinced that nowhere, even on earth, can they
find full happiness save with Him who, being rich, became poor for
our sakes that through His poverty we might become rich,[58] Who
was poor and in labors from His youth, Who invited to Himself all
that labor and are heavily burdened that He might refresh them fully
in the love of His heart,[59] and Who, lastly, without any respect
for persons will require more of them to whom more has been given[60]
and "will render to everyone according to his conduct."[61]
127. Yet, if we look into the matter more carefully and more thoroughly,
we shall clearly perceive that, preceding this ardently desired
social restoration, there must be a renewal of the Christian spirit,
from which so many immersed in economic life have, far and wide,
unhappily fallen away, lest all our efforts be wasted and our house
be builded not on a rock but on shifting sand.[62]
128. And so, Venerable Brethren and Beloved Sons, having surveyed
the present economic system, We have found it laboring under the
gravest of evils. We have also summoned Communism and Socialism
again to judgment and have found all their forms, even the most
modified, to wander far from the precepts of the Gospel.
129. "Wherefore," to use the words of Our Predecessor,
"if human society is to be healed, only a return to Christian
life and institutions will heal it."[63] For this alone can
provide effective remedy for that excessive care for passing things
that is the origin of all vices; and this alone can draw away men's
eyes, fascinated by and wholly fixed on the changing things of the
world, and raise them toward Heaven. Who would deny that human society
is in most urgent need of this cure now?
130. Minds of all, it is true, are affected almost solely by temporal
upheavals, disasters, and calamities. But if we examine things critically
with Christian eyes, as we should, what are all these compared with
the loss of souls? Yet it is not rash by any means to say that the
whole scheme of social and economic life is now such as to put in
the way of vast numbers of mankind most serious obstacles which
prevent them from caring for the one thing necessary; namely, their
eternal salvation .
131. We, made Shepherd and Protector by the Prince of Shepherds,
Who Redeemed them by His Blood, of a truly innumerable flock, cannot
hold back Our tears when contemplating this greatest of their dangers.
Nay rather, fully mindful of Our pastoral office and with paternal
solicitude, We are continually meditating on how We can help them;
and We have summoned to Our aid the untiring zeal of others who
are concerned on grounds of justice or charity. For what will it
profit men to become expert in more wisely using their wealth, even
to gaining the whole world, if thereby they suffer the loss of their
souls?[64] What will it profit to teach them sound principles of
economic life if in unbridled and sordid greed they let themselves
be swept away by their passion for property, so that "hearing
the commandments of the Lord they do all things contrary."[65]
132. The root and font of this defection in economic and social
life from the Christian law, and of the consequent apostasy of great
numbers of workers from the Catholic faith, are the disordered passions
of the soul, the sad result of original sin which has so destroyed
the wonderful harmony of man's faculties that, easily led astray
by his evil desires, he is strongly incited to prefer the passing
goods of this world to the lasting goods of Heaven. Hence arises
that unquenchable thirst for riches and temporal goods, which has
at all times impelled men to break God's laws and trample upon the
rights of their neighbors, but which, on account of the present
system of economic life, is laying far more numerous snares for
human frailty. Since the instability of economic life, and especially
of its structure, exacts of those engaged in it most intense and
unceasing effort, some have become so hardened to the stings of
conscience as to hold that they are allowed, in any manner whatsoever,
to increase their profits and use means, fair or foul, to protect
their hard-won wealth against sudden changes of fortune. The easy
gains that a market unrestricted by any law opens to everybody attracts
large numbers to buying and selling goods, and they, their one aim
being to make quick profits with the least expenditure of work,
raise or lower prices by their uncontrolled business dealings so
rapidly according to their own caprice and greed that they nullify
the wisest forecasts of producers. The laws passed to promote corporate
business, while dividing and limiting the risk of business, have
given occasion to the most sordid license. For We observe that consciences
are little affected by this reduced obligation of accountability;
that furthermore, by hiding under the shelter of a joint name, the
worst of injustices and frauds are penetrated; and that, too, directors
of business companies, forgetful of their trust, betray the rights
of those whose savings they have undertaken to administer. Lastly,
We must not omit to mention those crafty men who, wholly unconcerned
about any honest usefulness of their work, do not scruple to stimulate
the baser human desires and, when they are aroused, use them for
their own profit.
133. Strict and watchful moral restraint enforced vigorously by
governmental authority could have banished these enormous evils
and even forestalled them; this restraint, however, has too often
been sadly lacking. For since the seeds of a new form of economy
were bursting forth just when the principles of rationalism had
been implanted and rooted in many minds, there quickly developed
a body of economic teaching far removed from the true moral law,
and, as a result, completely free rein was given to human passions.
134. Thus it came to pass that many, much more than ever before,
were solely concerned with increasing their wealth by any means
whatsoever, and that in seeking their own selfish interests before
everything else they had no conscience about committing even the
gravest of crimes against others. Those first entering upon this
broad way that leads to destruction[66] easily found numerous imitators
of their iniquity by the example of their manifest success, by their
insolent display of wealth, by their ridiculing the conscience of
others, who, as they said, were troubled by silly scruples, or lastly
by crushing more conscientious competitors.
135. With the rulers of economic life abandoning the right road,
it was easy for the rank and file of workers everywhere to rush
headlong also into the same chasm; and all the more so, because
very many managements treated their workers like mere tools, with
no concern at all for their souls, without indeed even the least
thought of spiritual things. Truly the mind shudders at the thought
of the grave dangers to which the morals of workers (particularly
younger workers) and the modesty of girls and women are exposed
in modern factories; when we recall how often the present economic
scheme, and particularly the shameful housing conditions, create
obstacles to the family bond and normal family life; when we remember
how many obstacles are put in the way of the proper observance of
Sundays and Holy Days; and when we reflect upon the universal weakening
of that truly Christian sense through which even rude and unlettered
men were wont to value higher things, and upon its substitution
by the single preoccupation of getting in any way whatsoever one's
daily bread. And thus bodily labor, which Divine Providence decreed
to be performed, even after original sin, for the good at once of
man's body and soul, is being everywhere changed into an instrument
of perversion; for dead matter comes forth from the factory ennobled,
while men there are corrupted and degraded.
136. No genuine cure can be furnished for this lamentable ruin of
souls, which, so long as it continues, will frustrate all efforts
to regenerate society, unless men return openly and sincerely to
the teaching of the Gospel, to the precepts of Him Who alone has
the words of everlasting life,[67] words which will never pass away,
even if Heaven and earth will pass away.[68] All experts in social
problems are seeking eagerly a structure so fashioned in accordance
with the norms of reason that it can lead economic life back to
sound and right order. But this order, which We Ourselves ardently
long for and with all Our efforts promote, will be wholly defective
and incomplete unless all the activities of men harmoniously unite
to imitate and attain, in so far as it lies within human strength,
the marvelous unity of the Divine plan. We mean that perfect order
which the Church with great force and power preaches and which right
human reason itself demands, that all things be directed to God
as the first and supreme end of all created activity, and that all
created good under God be considered as mere instruments to be used
only in so far as they conduce to the attainment of the supreme
end. Nor is it to be thought that gainful occupations are thereby
belittled or judged less consonant with human dignity; on the contrary,
we are taught to recognize in them with reverence the manifest will
of the Divine Creator Who placed man upon the earth to work it and
use it in a multitude of ways for his needs. Those who are engaged
in producing goods, therefore, are not forbidden to increase their
fortune in a just and lawful manner; for it is only fair that he
who renders service to the community and makes it richer should
also, through the increased wealth of the community, be made richer
himself according to his position, provided that all these things
be sought with due respect for the laws of God and without impairing
the rights of others and that they be employed in accordance with
faith and right reason. If these principles are observed by everyone,
everywhere, and always, not only the production and acquisition
of goods but also the use of wealth, which now is seen to be so
often contrary to right order, will be brought back soon within
the bounds of equity and just distribution. The sordid love of wealth,
which is the shame and great sin of our age, will be opposed in
actual fact by the gentle yet effective law of Christian moderation
which commands man to seek first the Kingdom of God and His justice,
with the assurance that, by virtue of God's kindness and unfailing
promise, temporal goods also, in so far as he has need of them,
shall be given him besides.[69]
137. But in effecting all this, the law of charity, "which
is the bond of perfection,"[70] must always take a leading
role. How completely deceived, therefore, are those rash reformers
who concern themselves with the enforcement of justice alone—and
this, commutative justice—and in their pride reject the assistance
of charity! Admittedly, no vicarious charity can substitute for
justice which is due as an obligation and is wrongfully denied.
Yet even supposing that everyone should finally receive all that
is due him, the widest field for charity will always remain open.
For justice alone can, if faithfully observed, remove the causes
of social conflict but can never bring about union of minds and
hearts. Indeed all the institutions for the establishment of peace
and the promotion of mutual help among men, however perfect these
may seem, have the principal foundation of their stability in the
mutual bond of minds and hearts whereby the members are united with
one another. If this bond is lacking, the best of regulations come
to naught, as we have learned by too frequent experience. And so,
then only will true cooperation be possible for a single common
good when the constituent parts of society deeply feel themselves
members of one great family and children of the same Heavenly Father;
nay, that they are one body in Christ, "but severally members
one of another,"[71] so that "if one member suffers anything,
all the members suffer with it."[72] For then the rich and
others in positions of power will change their former indifference
toward their poorer brothers into a solicitous and active love,
listen with kindliness to their just demands, and freely forgive
their possible mistakes and faults. And the workers, sincerely putting
aside every feeling of hatred or envy which the promoters of social
conflict so cunningly exploit, will not only accept without rancor
the place in human society assigned them by Divine Providence, but
rather will hold it in esteem, knowing well that everyone according
to his function and duty is toiling usefully and honorably for the
common good and is following closely in the footsteps of Him Who,
being in the form of God, willed to be a carpenter among men and
be known as the son of a carpenter.
138. Therefore, out of this new diffusion throughout the world of
the spirit of the Gospel, which is the spirit of Christian moderation
and universal charity, We are confident there will come that longed-for
and full restoration of human society in Christ, and that "Peace
of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ," to accomplish which, from
the very beginning of Our Pontificate, We firmly determined and
resolved within Our heart to devote all Our care and all Our pastoral
solicitude,[73] and toward this same highly important and most necessary
end now, you also, Venerable Brethren, who with Vs rule the Church
of God under the mandate of the Holy Ghost,[74] are earnestly toiling
with wholly praiseworthy zeal in all parts of the world, even in
the regions of the holy missions to the infidels. Let well-merited
acclamations of praise be bestowed upon you and at the same time
upon all those, both clergy and laity, who We rejoice to see, are
daily participating and valiantly helping in this same great work,
Our beloved sons engaged in Catholic Action, who with a singular
zeal are undertaking with Us the solution of the social problems
in so far as by virtue of her divine institution this is proper
to and devolves upon the Church. All these We urge in the Lord,
again and again, to spare no labors and let no difficulties conquer
them, but rather to become day by day more courageous and more valiant.[75]
Arduous indeed is the task which We propose to them, for We know
well that on both sides, both among the upper and the lower classes
of society, there are many obstacles and barriers to be overcome.
Let them not, however, lose heart; to face bitter combats is a mark
of Christians, and to endure grave labors to the end is a mark of
them who, as good soldiers of Christ,[76] follow Him closely.
139. Relying therefore solely on the all-powerful aid of Him "Who
wishes all men to be saved,"[77] let us strive with all our
strength to help those unhappy souls who have turned from God and,
drawing them away from the temporal cares in which they are too
deeply immersed, let us teach them to aspire with confidence to
the things that are eternal. Sometimes this will be achieved much
more easily than seems possible at first sight to expect. For if
wonderful spiritual forces lie hidden, like sparks beneath ashes,
within the secret recesses of even the most abandoned man—certain
proof that his soul is naturally Christian—how much the more
in the hearts of those many upon many who have been led into error
rather through ignorance or environment.
140. Moreover, the ranks of the workers themselves are already giving
happy and promising signs of a social reconstruction. To Our soul's
great joy, We see in these ranks also the massed companies of young
workers, who are receiving the counsel of Divine Grace with willing
ears and striving with marvelous zeal to gain their comrades for
Christ. No less praise must be accorded to the leaders of workers'
organizations who, disregarding their own personal advantage and
concerned solely about the good of their fellow members, are striving
prudently to harmonize the just demands of their members with the
prosperity of their whole occupation and also to promote these demands,
and who do not let themselves be deterred from so noble a service
by any obstacle or suspicion. Also, as anyone may see, many young
men, who by reason of their talent or wealth will soon occupy high
places among the leaders of society, are studying social problems
with deeper interest, and they arouse the joyful hope that they
will dedicate themselves wholly to the restoration of society.
141. The present state of affairs, Venerable Brethren, clearly indicates
the way in which We ought to proceed. For We are now confronted,
as more than once before in the history of the Church, with a world
that in large part has almost fallen back into paganism. That these
whole classes of men may be brought back to Christ Whom they have
denied, we must recruit and train from among them, themselves, auxiliary
soldiers of the Church who know them well and their minds and wishes,
and can reach their hearts with a tender brotherly love. The first
and immediate apostles to the workers ought to be workers; the apostles
to those who follow industry and trade ought to be from among them
themselves.
142. It is chiefly your duty, Venerable Brethren, and of your clergy,
to search diligently for these lay apostles both of workers and
of employers, to select them with prudence, and to train and instruct
them properly. A difficult task, certainly, is thus imposed on priests,
and to meet it, all who are growing up as the hope of the Church,
must be duly prepared by an intensive study of the social question.
Especially is it necessary that those whom you intend to assign
in particular to this work should demonstrate that they are men
possessed of the keenest sense of justice, who will resist with
true manly courage the dishonest demands or the unjust acts of anyone,
who will excel in the prudence and judgment which avoids every extreme,
and, above all, who will be deeply permeated by the charity of Christ,
which alone has the power to subdue firmly but gently the hearts
and wills of men to the laws of justice and equity. Upon this road
so often tried by happy experience, there is no reason why we should
hesitate to go forward with all speed.
143. These Our Beloved Sons who are chosen for so great a work,
We earnestly exhort in the Lord to give themselves wholly to the
training of the men committed to their care, and in the discharge
of this eminently priestly and apostolic duty to make proper use
of the resources of Christian education by teaching youth, forming
Christian organizations, and founding study groups guided by principles
in harmony with the Faith. But above all, let them hold in high
esteem and assiduously employ for the good of their disciples that
most valuable means of both personal and social restoration which,
as We taught in Our Encyclical, Mens Nostra,[78] is to be found
in the Spiritual Exercises. In that Letter We expressly mentioned
and warmly recommended not only the Spiritual Exercises for all
the laity, but also the highly beneficial Workers' Retreats. For
in that school of the spirit, not only are the best of Christians
developed but true apostles also are trained for every condition
of life and are enkindled with the fire of the heart of Christ.
From this school they will go forth as did the Apostles from the
Upper Room of Jerusalem, strong in faith, endowed with an invincible
steadfastness in persecution, burning with zeal, interested solely
in spreading everywhere the Kingdom of Christ.
144. Certainly there is the greatest need now of such valiant soldiers
of Christ who will work with all their strength to keep the human
family safe from the dire ruin into which it would be plunged were
the teachings of the Gospel to be flouted, and that order of things
permitted to prevail which tramples underfoot no less the laws of
nature than those of God. The Church of Christ, built upon an unshakable
rock, has nothing to fear for herself, as she knows for a certainty
that the gates of hell shall never prevail against her.[79] Rather,
she knows full well, through the experience of many centuries, that
she is wont to come forth from the most violent storms stronger
than ever and adorned with new triumphs. Yet her maternal heart
cannot but be moved by the countless evils with which so many thousands
would be afflicted during storms of this kind, and above all by
the consequent enormous injury to spiritual life which would work
eternal ruin to so many souls redeemed by the Blood of Jesus Christ.
145. To ward off such great evils from human society nothing, therefore,
is to be left untried; to this end may all our labors turn, to this
all our energies, to this our fervent and unremitting prayers to
God! For with the assistance of Divine Grace the fate of the human
family rests in our hands.
146. Venerable Brethren and Beloved Sons, let us not permit the
children of this world to appear wiser in their generation than
we who by the Divine Goodness are the children of the light.[80]
We find them, indeed, selecting and training with the greatest shrewdness
alert and resolute devotees who spread their errors ever wider day
by day through all classes of men and in every part of the world.
And whenever they undertake to attack the Church of Christ more
violently, We see them put aside their internal quarrels, assembling
in fully harmony in a single battle line with a completely united
effort, and work to achieve their common purpose.
147. Surely there is not one that does not know how many and how
great are the works that the tireless zeal of Catholics is striving
everywhere to carry out, both for social and economic welfare as
well as in the fields of education and religion. But this admirable
and unremitting activity not infrequently shows less effectiveness
because of the dispersion of its energies in too many different
directions. Therefore, let all men of good will stand united, all
who under the Shepherds of the Church wish to fight this good and
peaceful battle of Christ; and under the leadership and teaching
guidance of the Church let all strive according to the talent, powers,
and position of each to contribute something to the Christian reconstruction
of human society which Leo XIII inaugurated through his immortal
Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, seeking not themselves
and their own interests, but those of Jesus Christ,[81] not trying
to press at all costs their own counsels, but ready to sacrifice
them, however excellent, if the greater common good should seem
to require it, so that in all and above all Christ may reign, Christ
may command to Whom be "honor and glory and dominion forever
and ever."[82]
148. That this may happily come to pass, to all of you, Venerable
Brethren and Beloved Children, who are members of the vast Catholic
family entrusted to Us, but with the especial affection of Our heart
to workers and to all others engaged in manual occupations, committed
to us more urgently by Divine Providence, and to Christian employers
and managements, with paternal love We impart the Apostolic Benediction.
149. Given at Rome, at Saint Peter's, the fifteenth day of May,
in the year 1931, the tenth year of Our Pontificate.
REFERENCES:
1. Encyclical, Arcanum, Feb. 10, 1880.
2. Encyclical, Diuturnum, June 20, 1881.
3. Encyclical, Immortale Dei, Nov. 1, 1885.
4. Encyclical, Sapientiae Christianae, Jan. 10, 1890.
5. Encyclical, Ouod Apostolici Muneris, Dec. 28, 1878.
6. Encyclical, Libertas, June 20, 1888.
7. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, May 15, 1891, 3.
8. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, cf. 24.
9. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, cf. 15.
10. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, cf. 6.
11. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 24.
12. Cf. Matt. 7:29.
13. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 4.
14. St. Ambrose, De excessu fratris sui Satyri 1, 44.
15. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 25.
16. Let it be sufficient to mention some of these only: Leo XIII's
Apostolic Letter Praeclara, June 20, 1894, and Encyclical Graves
de Communi, Jan. 18, 1901; Pius X's Motu Proprio De Actione Populari
Christiana, Dec. 8, 1903; Benedict XV's Encyclical Ad Beatissimi,
Nov. 1, 1914; Pius IX's Encyclical Ubi Arcano, Dec. 23, 1922, and
Encyclical Rite Expiatis, Apr. 30, 1926.
17. Cf. La Hierarchie catholique et le probleme social depuis l'Encyclique
"Rerum Novarum," 1891-1931, pp. XVI-335; ed. "Union
internationale d'Etudes sociales fondee a Malines, en 1920, sous
la presidence du Card. Mercier." Paris, Editions "Spes,"
1931.
18. Isa. 11:12.
19. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 48.
20. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 54.
21. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 68.
22. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 77.
23. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 78.
24. Pius X, Encyclical, Singulari Ouadam, Sept. 24, 1912.
25. Cf. the Letter of the Sacred Congregation of the Council to
the Bishop of Lille, June 5, 1929.
26. Cf. Rom. 1:14.
27. Cf. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 24-25.
28. Pius Xl, Encyclical, Ubi Arcano, Dec. 23, 1922.
29. Encyclical, Ubi Arcano, Dec. 23, 1922.
30. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 35.
31. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 36.
32. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 14.
33. Allocation to the Convention of Italian Catholic Action, May
16, 1926.
34. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 12.
35. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 20.
36. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 67.
37. Cf. St. Thomas, Summa theologica, II-II, Q. 134.
38. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 51.
39. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 28.
40. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 14.
41. II Thess. 3:10.
42. Cf. II Thess. 3:8-10.
43. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 66.
44. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 61.
45. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 31.
46. Cf. Encyclical, Casti Connubii, Dec. 31, 1930.
47. Cf. St. Thomas, De regimine principum 1, 15; Encyclical, On
the Condition of Workers, 49-51.
48. Cf. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 31. Art. 2.
49. St. Thomas, Contra Gentiles, III, 71; cf. Summa theologica,
50. Encyclical, Immortale Dei, Nov. 1, 1885.
51 Cf Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 76.
52. Eph. 4:16.
53. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 28
54. Cf. Rom. 13:1.
55. Cf. Encyclical, Diuturnum illud, June 29, 1881.
56 Encyclical, Divini illius Magistri Dec 31 1929
57. Cf. Jas. 2.
58. II Cor. 8:9.
59. Matt. 11:28.
60. Cf. Luke 12:48.
61. Matt. 16:27.
62. Cf. Matt. 7:24ff.
63. Encyclical, On the Condition of Workers, 41.
64. Cf. Matt. 16:26.
65. Cf. Judg. 2:17.
66. Cf. Matt. 7:13.
67. Cf. John 6:69.
68. Cf. Matt. 24:35.
69. Cf. Matt. 6:33.
70. Col. 3:14.
71. Rom. 12:5.
72. I Cor. 12:26.
73. Encyclical, Ubi Arcano, Dec. 23, 1922.
74. Cf. Act. 20:28.
75. Cf. Deut. 31:7.
76. Cf. II Tim. 2:3.
77. I Tim. 2:4.
78. Encyclical, Mens Nostra, Dec. 20, 1929.
79. Cf. Matt. 16:18.
80. Cf. Luke 16:8.
81. Cf. Phil. 2:21.
82. Apoc. 5:13.
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