Yesterday, consistent with our claim that socialism is one
thing under many names, we explained how, by constantly changing definitions,
socialists change the outward form of socialism, but leave the substance — the
abolition of private property — absolutely inviolate. The problem is that by constantly changing
definitions, we have a hard time pinning down the basic theory that makes
socialism ultimately an in- or non-human system.
Leo XIII: the chief tenet of socialism: common ownership. |
The fundamental error of socialism — the substance that
trumps its many forms — is the fixed belief that the collective (by whatever
name you choose to call it) has rights that individual human beings do not. In atheistic socialism, rights that the
collective have are either self-generated, or are created by the members of the
collective as expedients. In religious
socialism, God grants rights to the collective.
We’ll deal with the atheists first. Can anything or anyone self-generate
anything? No. We realize that’s a bit short, but we’ve
never seen any argument or proof advanced that anything created itself. Even God is described as “uncreated” and thus
not “self-created.” Efforts of atheists
to be witty by saying that man created God in man’s own image acknowledge the principle
that nothing — not even God — can create itself. Something can only be created, or be
uncreated. There is no middle ground.
What about the theory that the members of the collective
joined together and created rights that they then vested in the
collective? The same problem
exists. Where did the members of the
collective get the rights that they then vested in the collective? They couldn’t self-generate or create them,
for nothing can generate itself, not even God.
"Your argument is circular. Stop it." |
The deist socialist claim is a little (okay, a lot) more
complex to refute, because it does acknowledge the fundamental truth that all
things ultimately come from God. This is
true . . . ultimately.
To refute religious socialism, we start with the assumption
that God is the Supreme Being, omnipotent and omniscient. He knows everything. Yes, everything.
Ponder that for a moment.
As the Creator, God. Knows. Everything.
He knows it in such minute detail that no human being could ever even
approach God’s level of knowing. He
knows everything — except Himself — fully, completely, and objectively from
direct observation. He doesn’t have to
say to Himself, “This is a chair. It has
these general characteristics. Therefore
I can include in the class of ‘chair’ all things that have these general
characteristics.” No, God doesn’t have
to stop and figure out whether a thing is a thing. He already knows with a certainty that no
human being can ever approach.
There is only one thing of which God does not have full and
objective knowledge: Himself. Even
there, however, His “speculative knowledge” (that which is attained by the use
of reason) is absolutely perfect and full, and is indistinguishable from
objective knowledge. God is not like
us. He is perfect and cannot make
mistakes in His reasoning (speculative knowledge) or anything else.
"Cheese whiz, guys, can't you get it? I made you, I know you!" |
Not being infinitely perfect (but infinitely perfectible),
we human beings need a crutch to grasp even a working knowledge of things that
God knows without having to bother with reason.
This “crutch” is called “abstraction.”
We human beings observe, form ideas, experiment, correct those ideas,
and finally create an “ideal,” an abstraction or generalization that allows us
to function in a world that we can never fully understand or know.
Again, God does not do this.
He doesn’t have to. He is a
“necessary being,” and all that He does is, by definition, necessary. He does nothing that is not necessary. Since He does not need to abstract — keep in
mind that even His speculative knowledge of Himself is absolutely perfect and
indistinguishable from objective knowledge — God, of course, does not
abstract. Period. End of story.
Are you ready for the obvious conclusion? Religious socialists claim that God grants
rights to the collective that He does not grant to individual human beings.
But the collective is an abstraction, a human creation! It is not made by God. It is made by man. If God did not create the collective — which
is an entirely unnecessary thing for Him to do — then He obviously cannot grant
the collective any rights!
Pius XI: "[Socialism] is based...on a theory of human society ...irreconcilable with true Christianity." |
That is why Pope Pius XI declared,
“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.” (Quadragesimo Anno, § 120.)
After all, if you’re going to declare that, to all intents
and purposes, God is subordinate to man, don’t expect the head of a religion
that teaches that God is the Supreme Being to give you any kind of endorsement.
#30#