Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Why Socialism and Catholicism Are Incompatible

 

Part I

 

            Last summer, the Jesuit magazine “America” ran an article that raised considerable waves. Entitled “The Catholic Case for Communism”, the author tries to reconcile Communism with the Catholic Faith. Communism, and its younger sister Socialism, is continuing to make headlines as we have presidential candidates who espouse certain socialist ideas. Seventy percent of millennials said they would vote for a socialist candidate, and a November 2019 poll found that 36% of that same demographic said that they have a “favorable view” of communism. What does the Church teach about both social philosophies, and are they compatible with the Catholic Faith?

            Back in 1891, Pope Leo XIII observed a growing class struggle between the laborers and the capital, the owners and the workers. Workers had righteous grievances – their hours were long, they were underpaid, and were often forced into dangerous labor to support the luxurious lives of the rich. This tension began to foment the seeds of class warfare, and ideas had arisen which justified an outright war between the proletariat and bourgeoisie. It had been almost fifty years since the publication of the “Communist Manifesto” by Karl Marx (published in 1848) and some were anxious to try to apply this new social philosophy of communism as a way to correct the legitimate injustices and grievances that workers toiled beneath.

            But Pope Leo XIII saw that Communism was not the answer. He penned one of the most important Church documents, “Rerum Novarum” (“Of New Things”) in 1891 to address this growing call for Communism.

            In this encyclical, the Pope struck a middle ground between the current situation and the proposed solution. He supported workers’ unions and their right to strike for better pay and safer working conditions. He also was strong in his condemnation of unbridled capitalism, recognizing that greed was the root cause of such violations of human rights (after all, as St. Paul tells Timothy, “Love of money is the root of all evil” [1 Tim 6:10]).

            But he was equally clear in his unequivocal condemnation of socialism and communism. It has always and everywhere been taught by the Church that private property is one of the basic human rights – thus, to eliminate it through Communism would be a grievous error and violation of rights.

            One of the other fundamental rights from the natural law, mentioned by Pope Leo XIII, is the right of subsidiarity. This means that decisions and control should be best exercised by those “closest to the action”, as it were – if a local authority is capable of handling the decision, they should not have their authority subsumed by a higher authority. For example, parents have the authority to determine what schools their child should attend – it would be a violation of those rights if the state sought to impose their will upon a child’s education. Certainly things like speed limits and other local regulations should be regulated by the county or state government without the federal government stepping in.

            The Pope saw clearly that Communism (and Socialism) would usurp the roles proper to each authority, since communism demands that all authority be concentrated in the State. Thus, the natural human right of subsidiarity would be destroyed.

            But these condemnations of Communism and Socialism did not stop with “Rerum Novarum”. Rather, as Communism began to spread its philosophies across the globe from Russia to China to Cuba to Croatia, more recent Popes felt the need to speak out.

            Pope Pius XI in 1937 wrote an entire encyclical, “Divini Redemptoris”, on the dangers of Communism, including the following introduction: “This all too imminent danger, Venerable Brethren, as you have already surmised, is Bolshevistic and atheistic Communism, which aims at upsetting the social order and at undermining the very foundations of Christian civilization.” In 1949, another document was released, entitled “Against Communism” with many of the same objections as prior documents. But this document was even clearer insofar as Pope Pius XII declared that any Catholics who professed Communist doctrine were automatically excommunicated!

            Later popes continued the unbroken rhetoric of condemnation of Communism and Socialism, all the way up to Pope John Paul II’s “Centesimus Anni”, issued in 1991 on the hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum’s release.

            Even our Blessed Mother warned against Communism. The apparitions started six months before the Bolshevik revolution in Russia (1917), and Our Lady consistently urged for prayers and sacrifices to be made for Russia. She warned, “If Russia was not consecrated [to the Immaculate Heart of Mary], it would spread its errors throughout the world.” We can see how quickly that came to pass – China became Communist in 1949, and Cuba followed suit in 1959, before continuing to spread across the globe.

            So why, exactly, are Communism and Socialism incompatible with Catholicism?


Part II

           Last post, we took up the question of whether a Catholic could ascribe to the social philosophy of communism and socialism, and discovered that the Church has always and everywhere condemned the ideology. Today we will look at why the Church has always taught it. What are the fundamental principles of communism and socialism that make it incompatible with the Catholic Faith?

            First, let us define our terms. Communism is the social philosophy that abolishes all private property. All is (theoretically) owned by everyone, and everyone contributes to the social order. As Marx put it so succinctly, “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.” In Communism, the state owns everything (property, factories, businesses, etc) and is responsible for disbursing the goods to all people.

            Socialism is closely related. In itself, socialism is a broader term that just means that everything is owned by everybody (wealth is distributed more evenly, so there are no rich and no poor). But in its recent incarnation among certain politicians, it usually means that all social services are free and administered by government programs (social services include education – along with higher education like college, health care, federal jobs programs, and the like). Its current proponents do not seek to abolish private property. It does want to have a huge welfare state, with cradle-to-grave care provided by the State. Socialism currently still supports a democracy, while Communism seeks to abolish that.

            What could be wrong with the basic ideas of equality and justice, which are the driving force behind communism and socialism? Plenty, because their brand of “equality and justice” are not based upon a proper human anthropology (understanding of the human person). Here are several problems with communism and socialism:

1. As Pope John XXIII said, “The reason [why Catholics can’t be socialists] is that Socialism takes no account of any objective other than that of material well-being. Since, therefore, it proposes a form of social organization which aims solely at production; it places too severe a restraint on human liberty, at the same time flouting the true notion of social authority.” Socialism and Communism see the human person as nothing more than a “producer” – what can they contribute to the State? This is vastly different from our Church’s teaching that a human being has value because they are made in the Image and Likeness of God, not because they can produce or contribute anything. Communism (and to a lesser degree, Socialism) do not acknowledge the spiritual nature of the human person – they are merely material, collateral for the collective – and 100 million deaths proves this to be true.

2. As Pope John Paul II said, “A person who is deprived of something he can call “his own,” and of the possibility of earning a living through his own initiative, comes to depend on the social machine and on those who control it. This makes it much more difficult for him to recognize his dignity as a person, and hinders progress towards the building up of an authentic human community.” There is a basic human right to private property. It is not an absolute right (it can be taken away for legitimate reasons, such as taxes), but part of the dignity of being human is the gift of owning things. God gave the earth to us for our stewardship, and every son of Adam and daughter of Eve exercises that dominion in the small slice of the world they own.

3. As Pope Benedict XVI said, “We do not need a State which regulates and controls everything, but a State which, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, generously acknowledges and supports initiatives arising from the different social forces and combines spontaneity with closeness to those in need. The Church is one of those living forces.” Socialism and Communism does not respect the principle of Subsidiarity. They usurp the role that should rightfully be the local community, the Church, and the family.

4. Pope Benedict goes on to say, “The State which would provide everything, absorbing everything into itself, would ultimately become a mere bureaucracy incapable of guaranteeing the very thing which the suffering person—every person—needs: namely, loving personal concern.” This is one of the biggest issues – a lack of love and generosity. The poor remain with us so that Christians can love them. No government bureaucracy can possibly love. This is why the ideas behind socialism/communism succeed tremendously in communities such as monasteries and convents and fail utterly in the secular world – small Christian communities are motivated by love, which can be the only proper motivation for sharing our possessions.

5. In Communism/Socialism, the temptation is always to entrust the State with more and more power, which has always led to the view that any other institution needs to be suppressed if it does not correspond with the ideology of the State. In every place where Communism has been practiced, the Church has been heavily persecuted or compromised, and millions of souls have died daring to contradict the secular propaganda of the State.

6. Communism/Socialism fail to take into account that human nature is wounded by original sin. Absent of grace, why would anyone want to work harder if the fruits of their labor is only going to be given to those who didn’t work? St. Paul tells the Thessalonians, “If anyone does not work, they should not eat” (1 Thess 3:10). Each man should be compensated justly for their own work, as a matter of justice – taxation such as we have in modern socialist states (People in Denmark pay 45% of their income to the government) is unjust, as it does not respect the dignity of work or the right to benefit from one’s labor.

In conclusion, I would just cite what Vladimir Lenin (the bloodthirsty dictator of Russia) once said about Communism: “Atheism is a natural and inseparable part of Marxism, of the theory and practice of scientific socialism.”

Catholics cannot ever support Communism or Socialism. These ideologies are based upon a flawed understanding of labor, the dignity of the person, the principle of subsidiarity, and the understanding of original sin. Let us pray that such ideas never take root in America!

No comments:

Post a Comment