To hear some
people tell it, Monsignor John Augustine Ryan (1869-1945) was not only the
greatest social justice advocate who ever lived, he saved the world by
inspiring and instituting the New Deal in the 1930s. Neither claim bears up on even the most
cursory examination. As we saw in the previous posting on this subject, public, academic, and political opinion had
shifted away from an ownership system, and was firmly entrenched in the wage
system.
Msgr. John A. Ryan |
We can deal with
the claim that Msgr. Ryan somehow inspired the New Deal very easily. Even his most sympathetic biographers now back
off from the claim. Msgr. Ryan was an
enthusiastic supporter of the program, but he was continually snubbed by FDR
except when the president needed a “Catholic” voice or endorsement (especially
after FDR completely alienated Fulton Sheen after screaming at him and lying to
him, see Fulton J. Sheen, Treasure in
Clay: The Autobiography of Fulton J. Sheen.
Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1979, 82-84.) In strict fact, Father Charles Edward Coughlin (1891-1979) was far more useful to FDR until
Fr. Coughlin decided that the president had turned fascist and started
attacking him.
At that point Msgr.
Ryan with great astonishment suddenly realized that Fr. Coughlin was a
Jew-hater and began attacking him. The
debate became so acrimonious that Archbishop Michael Joseph Curley (1879-1947)
of Baltimore called on both Ryan and Coughlin to “do a great favor to the church and to the
country at large” by “retir[ing] for some time to the Carthusian order, where
perpetual silence is observed.” (“Church Organ Raps Priests: Paper Says
Coughlin And Ryan Should ‘Rest A While’,” Reading
Eagle, October 16, 1936, 2; “Coughlin and Ryan Asked to ‘Shut Up’,” The Florence Times, October 16, 1936, 1.) Cardinal Pacelli, Vatican Secretary of State,
refused to meet with either Coughlin or Ryan while on a visit to New York,
although the visit was intended primarily to investigate the ruckus. (“Cardinal
Pacelli Arrives in New York for Visit,” Lewiston
Daily Sun, October 2, 1936, 1; Joseph Alsop and Robert Kintner, “The
Capital Parade: Passage in Pope’s Encyclical Declared Rebuke for Coughlin,” The
Washington Star, November 15, 1939, A-11; Pacelli Sails for America:
Papal Secretary’s Visit Linked With Coughlin,”
The Times-News, Hendersonville, North Carolina, October 1, 1936, 1.)
Jacob Sechler Coxey |
Anyway, the New
Deal was not inspired by Msgr. Ryan or Catholic social teaching, but by the
program of Jacob Sechler Coxey, Jr. (1854-1951), who had “leanings” toward
theosophy, the principal influence on late nineteenth century New Age thought.
In 1894, when Msgr. Ryan was in his mid-twenties, “Coxey’s Army” had
marched across the country to demand inflation-financed government assistance
during the Great Depression of 1893-1898. (Carlos A. Schwantes, Coxey’s Army: An American Odyssey. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska
Press, 1985.) John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)
reinforced FDR’s adoption of Coxey’s basic program, giving it academic (and
thus political) credibility.
Then there is the
issue of Msgr. Ryan’s take on Catholic social doctrine and understanding of
natural law.
Although Msgr.
Ryan’s book, A Living Wage (1906) — a reworking of his doctoral thesis —
is taken as the last word in social justice and a ringing defense of the
dignity of labor, it just isn’t so. Inspired
by the very “new things” of socialism, modernism, and the New Age that Catholic
social teaching developed as a discrete discipline to counter, Msgr. Ryan’s
work appears to have accomplished what centuries of dissent and heterodox theology
and philosophy failed to do. The tide
may finally be turning, thanks in large measure to the groundwork laid by Pope
John Paul II and the upcoming analysis of the Just Third Way of economic
personalism (watch this space!), but the “new things” are still deeply
entrenched, thanks in large measure to the efforts of Msgr. Ryan.
But who was Msgr.
Ryan?
Ignatius Loyola Donnelly |
At the height of
Henry George’s
popularity in the 1880s, Msgr. Ryan, then in his early teens,
read George’s
Progress and Poverty (Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Ryan, D.D., L.L.D.,
Litt.D., Social Doctrine in Action: A
Personal History. New York: Harper
& Brothers, Publishers, 1941, 9). George’s book — considered one of the two top
American socialist classics of the nineteenth century — inspired Msgr. Ryan to
commit his life to what he claimed was social justice. He also became “much interested in the
proposals for economic reform advocated by Donnelly, the Farmers’ Alliance, an
agrarian reform movement founded by Ignatius Loyola Donnelly (1831-1901) that
eventually merged into the Populist Party (Ryan, Social Doctrine in Action, op. cit., 12), and the Knights of Labor.” (Ibid.)
Donnelly, whom Ryan credited with “exercis[ing] more influence upon
[his] political and economic thinking than any other factor” (ibid.), was an attorney, politician, and writer. Born a Catholic, Donnelly became a spiritualist.
(Walter Monfried, “The Astonishingly Inconsistent Ignatius Donnelly,” The Milwaukee Journal, August 19, 1974,
10.)
A populist who hated William Jennings Bryan, he advocated socialism and corresponded with and supported George. (Helen McCann White, Guide to a Microfilm Edition of the Ignatius Donnelly Papers. St. Paul, Minnesota: The Minnesota Historical Society, 1968, 24.) He has been described as “America’s ‘Prince of Cranks’.” (Walter Monfried, “America’s ‘Prince of Cranks’,” The Milwaukee Journal, May 15, 1953, 8.) (Bryan was opposed to George’s proposals, as he made clear on more than one occasion, although George never ceased trying to gain his endorsement. “Anti-Trust Leaders At Variance Over Watered Stock,” Boston Evening Transcript, February 14, 1900, 4.) Donnelly also wrote a number of books claiming that Francis Bacon wrote Shakespeare’s plays and used them to send occult messages to his followers in the future.
A populist who hated William Jennings Bryan, he advocated socialism and corresponded with and supported George. (Helen McCann White, Guide to a Microfilm Edition of the Ignatius Donnelly Papers. St. Paul, Minnesota: The Minnesota Historical Society, 1968, 24.) He has been described as “America’s ‘Prince of Cranks’.” (Walter Monfried, “America’s ‘Prince of Cranks’,” The Milwaukee Journal, May 15, 1953, 8.) (Bryan was opposed to George’s proposals, as he made clear on more than one occasion, although George never ceased trying to gain his endorsement. “Anti-Trust Leaders At Variance Over Watered Stock,” Boston Evening Transcript, February 14, 1900, 4.) Donnelly also wrote a number of books claiming that Francis Bacon wrote Shakespeare’s plays and used them to send occult messages to his followers in the future.
Madame Blavatsky |
No, really. Donnelly was also a primary source for Madame
Blavatsky’s version of theosophy, and is cited numerous times in The Secret
Doctrine (1888). Msgr. Ryan’s economic
mentor was thus a socialist, while his political guide was a socialist and a
New Ager.
Then there were
Msgr. Ryan’s shoddy attacks on Venerable Fulton John Sheen (1895-1979) when
Sheen refused to knuckle under and accept Msgr. Ryan’s destruction of Catholic
teaching. And that, as we will see in
the next posting on this subject, has very nearly eliminated rational thought
from any discussions of natural law and the Church’s social doctrine.
#30#