Georgist “legend” today has it that James Cardinal Gibbons (1834-1921),
“quasi-primate” of the United States,
did not put Progress and Poverty
(1879) by agrarian socialist Henry George (1839-1897) on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum (“List of
Prohibited Books”) because the Catholic Church found nothing wrong with George’s
theory that individual people cannot own land.
A Georgist View of Religious Authority |
Not quite. The
Catholic Church had serious problems with George’s theories, as Archbishop
Michael Corrigan of New York had made clear, and as Leo XIII would make even
clearer in Rerum Novarum.
So why did Cardinal Gibbons not “prohibit” Progress and Poverty? Because forbidding Catholics to read it
without special permission would give George’s theories credibility. As a newspaper article from 1888 makes clear,
Gibbons thought George’s thought really wasn’t worth bothering about:
The Lewiston Wednesday Journal
Lewiston, Maine
February 1, 1888, p. 1
HENRY GEORGE.
Cardinal Gibbons
Does Not Believe His Writings Call for Any Action on the Part of the Catholic
Church.
New York, Feb. 1.
Giovanni Cardinal Simeoni |
The
Herald has received from Rome by cable, copious extracts from Cardinal Gibbons’
letter to Cardinal Simeoni on the question of condemning the works of Henry
George. The Cardinal states that in his opinion the condemnation would be
inopportune and useless. He points out that Herbert Spencer, John Stuart Mill
and others had advocated substantially the doctrines urged by Mr. George, long
before the latter put them forth. It would be though [sic] singular if the church should ignore the works of those great
thinkers and attack the comparatively unknown American.
Cardinal
Gibbons then refers to doctrine [sic]
set forth in Steecanellas treaties published by the propaganda in 1882 to show
that Catholic writers regard land as subject to different treatment by state [sic] than other private property. He also points out that Mr. George does not
attack private property in things which are the results of human exertion but
only wishes to extend the principle of eminent domain, which has always been a
complicated question.
So far
as Mr. George proposes to carry his theory into immediate practice, concludes
the Cardinal, he is a mere visionary and the practical sense of the American
people can be relied upon to reject his proposals. It is therefore prudent to let such
absurdities die a natural death and not incur the risk of giving them an
artificial importance by the intervention of church tribunals.
James Cardinal Gibbons |
Try as we might, there is nothing in that report to suggest
that Cardinal Gibbons regarded Henry George’s theories either in a serious
light, or as a threat to the Church.
They were not, in fact, really worth bothering about at all.
#30#