Yesterday we
began an examination of “The ABC’s of Catholic Economics,” which the author of
an article in Regina Magazine claimed
was realized in the “distributism” of G.K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc. The goal was to determine whether it is
correct to say that what was presented in the article as “Catholic Economics” was,
in fact, the case, or if what was presented was a distorted version of what the
Catholic Church teaches.
The results so
far have not been encouraging. Going through the letters A through F we even found some discrepancies between
Chesterton’s and Belloc’s concept of distributism and what the author of the
article claimed was their system, to say nothing of what the Catholic Church
actually teaches as opposed to what the author claimed the Catholic Church
teaches.
Hilaire Belloc baffled at what people have done to distributism. |
To continue our
commentary, we remind the reader to keep two things in mind. One, Chesterton’s and Belloc’s definition of
distributism (which appears to be consistent with what the Catholic Church
teaches), and, two, the first principle of Catholic social doctrine:
Distributism: a loose theory of socio-economics based on the natural law assumption
that it is better to be an owner than not to own, with a preference for small,
family owned farms and artisan businesses and enterprises. When enterprises must be large, workers
should own the company through equity shares, presumably that carry the vote
and pay dividends.
First Principle of Catholic Social Doctrine:
Everything in human society, including any program of social betterment, must
be subject to the precepts of the natural law.
With that
definition and that principle in mind, then, we continue our commentary:
G is for Guild, the traditional way of organizing workers
and employers in an harmonious, mutually supportive system. The Medieval guilds
worked to care for their members, create self-sustaining economic systems, and
give even the poorest members a voice in municipal government.
No. Guilds were organizations for the benefit of
masters (owners and employers), not workers.
Everything was stacked in favor of the Master. Yes, the guilds cared for their members (up
to a point) and filled a number of social roles that today have been taken over
by the State. Guild Masters might be
permitted to sit on a city council, and sometimes (as with the Hanseatic
League) even be the government, but ordinary workers were often in a worse
position than many today, with little or no legal protection. When the final remnants of the guilds were
being dissolved in the early nineteenth century, Journeymen and Apprentices led
the fight to abolish them. The Catholic
Church has recommended the formation of organizations similar to the guilds, but the idea is not some kind of “Catholic
labor union.” Rather, it is to provide a
framework for organization that (unlike the guilds) empowers all the members of an organization so they can work on reforming institutions that inhibit or
prevent the realization of essential human dignity. We advocate the formation of “ownership
unions” to fill the economic function of the guild, bringing together everyone
as owners, not employer/employee.
H is for Home,
the well-kept, safe, and holy environment for the educating and nurturing of
children. If Distributism is the economic system of saints, then the home is
where those saints are made.
Commentary:
The logic here is
a little suspect, but not worth arguing about.
It is expressed as a matter of opinion, not fact, and doesn’t really
have anything to do with the subject.
I is for Idolatry,
the worship of that other than God. The idols of liberalism are false freedom
and the omnipotent invisible hand of the market. The idols of socialism are the
State and false progress. Both worship the great evil of untruth that the
Church stands against.
Commentary:
Collective Man is the New God. |
No. The idols of liberalism and socialism are the
same thing: Collective Man himself. This
is based on the assumption that the collective created by man has rights that
human beings created by God do not have.
Consequently, for the liberal and the socialist, everything — everything — including the natural law
must be subordinated to the general betterment of society. The way to discern true freedom and progress
from the false notions of liberalism and socialism is to realize that, in
Catholic teaching everything — everything
— including social betterment must be subordinated to the natural law. Further, the Catholic Church understands “the
natural law” as based on God’s Nature, self-realized in His Intellect,
reflected in each human being, and therefore discernible by the force and light
of human reason alone; “law is reason” (lex
ratio). By “the natural law” the Catholic
Church does not mean a private
interpretation based on someone’s personal understanding of something he takes
as “God’s Will.” Law is not will (lex voluntas). If something asserted as God’s Will violates
or contradicts the natural law based on reason — regardless how strong the
faith of the one asserting — it is wrong.
The natural law is based on God’s unchanging Nature, and cannot be
tailored to suit someone’s convenience.
J is for Justice, Social, the phrase coined by Pope
Leo XIII in the Nineteenth century. True social justice lies in peaceful class
relations, natural law, and hierarchy.
Commentary:
"No, I opposed the new things. I did not promote them. |
No. Leo XIII never used the term “social
justice.” In his day, it meant a vague
program of social betterment that relied on serious, sometimes extreme
distortions of Christian principles. It was associated with the New Christian/Neo Catholic movement and the Occult. The
first pope to use the term was Pius XI in his 1923 encyclical on St. Thomas
Aquinas, Studiorum Ducem, when he
distinguished legal justice (a general virtue) from social justice (a
particular virtue). Prior to this,
“social justice” had simply been a euphemism for socialism, a meaning it
retains in many circles even today. In Quadragesimo Anno (1931) Pius XI
explained the problems with “religious socialism,” while in Divini Redemptoris he explained the
problems with “scientific socialism” . . . and was immediately and widely
misunderstood. Leo XIII had addressed
both in Rerum Novarum, and was also
immediately misunderstood. Properly
understood, as presented by Pius XI, social justice is the particular virtue
directed to the common good, the common good being understood as that vast
network of institutions (social habits) within which people typically realize
their individual good. Social justice
does not replace individual justice and charity, but makes individual justice
and charity possible.
Why was Bishop von Ketteler ignored? |
For some reason
the article did not have anything for K or L, although mentioning Bishop Wilhelm
Emmanuel, Freiherr von Ketteler (1811-1877) of Mainz or Chesterton’s
friend Msgr. Ronald A. Knox for K, and the dignity of labor for L, would seem
obvious.
M is for Maurin, Peter, who was Dorothy Day’s mentor and
the co-founder of the Catholic Worker. Maurin was a living example of
blessed Franciscan poverty, having once slept in an abandoned coke oven while
preaching and working as a miner. Maurin’s radical street preaching constantly
stressed the need to live simpler, self-sufficient lives on the land.
Commentary:
No. As is evident from the reading list that he
provided Day, Maurin’s orientation, like that of Day, was that all things,
including the natural law, were to be subordinated to the need for social
betterment. Paradoxically, his
understanding of “blessed Franciscan poverty” was essentially a carbon copy of
that of the Fraticelli, who, in his
1923 book, Saint Francis of Assisi, Chesterton
claimed completely misunderstood the “testament of St. Francis.”
We will continue
our commentary on Monday.
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