Michael Sean Winters writes:
Last year, I debated Father Robert Sirico, Founder of the Acton Institute.
During the debate, Fr. Sirico suggested that while I might be a heretic on other grounds, my economic views may be wrong, but they were not, indeed could not be, heretical.
Last year, I debated Father Robert Sirico, Founder of the Acton Institute.
During the debate, Fr. Sirico suggested that while I might be a heretic on other grounds, my economic views may be wrong, but they were not, indeed could not be, heretical.
Strictly speaking, economic ideas
are not the stuff of heresy. But, it is also the case that our Catholic
doctrinal beliefs yield a particular Christian anthropology, an understanding
of the human person, and that understanding must shape our economic views.
There are political, economic and legal systems of thought that do, or do not,
cohere with Catholic anthropology. That is why we call the social doctrine of
the Church a doctrine.
The Church’s long history of statements about economics
and political and culture are, at their core, doctrinal.
Gaudium et spes #22 is the foundation
stone for our post-conciliar understanding of Catholic anthropology:
The truth is that only in the
mystery of the incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light.
For Adam, the first man, was a figure of Him Who was to come,(20) namely Christ the Lord.
Christ, the final Adam, by the revelation of the mystery of the Father and His love, fully reveals man to man himself and makes his supreme calling clear.
It is not surprising, then, that in Him all the aforementioned truths find their root and attain their crown.
For Adam, the first man, was a figure of Him Who was to come,(20) namely Christ the Lord.
Christ, the final Adam, by the revelation of the mystery of the Father and His love, fully reveals man to man himself and makes his supreme calling clear.
It is not surprising, then, that in Him all the aforementioned truths find their root and attain their crown.
This passage was the conciliar text most cited by St. Pope
John Paul II in his many authoritative writings. It is the hermeneutical key to
understanding the Church’s social doctrine.
And, as Professor
David Schindler has convincingly argued, this hermeneutical key
locks the door on any kind of laissez-faire economics of the kind peddled by
the Acton Institute.
Pope Francis has been a breath of fresh air in so many ways, but nowhere more so than in his consistent, accessible, repeated application of the social doctrine of the Church to the current reality of the world.
Pope Francis has been a breath of fresh air in so many ways, but nowhere more so than in his consistent, accessible, repeated application of the social doctrine of the Church to the current reality of the world.
For him, this is clearly and foremost a pastoral
concern, but as I have consistently argued in these pages, on this and other
matters, the Church’s pastoral concerns are, and must be, seen through a
theological lens.
What we believe about Jesus Christ must shape what we believe
about humankind.
Christ is all the Church has to bring to discussions of human
import, and He is enough, He is the answer to all the problems that beset the
human race, He is the measure by which we judge our lives and our thoughts and
our systems.
So, it is unsurprising that libertarians, including those
associated with the Acton Institute, have been quick to punch a hole in
Pope Francis’ balloon whenever he speaks about economics.
The most appalling
critique is the meme that poor Pope Francis is a benighted Argentine, incapable
of recognizing the virtues of capitalism because of his experience.
In the
first place, insofar as capitalism is now a global system – and recall that the
libertarians tend to be great champions of globalization – Pope Francis’
experience of it is as valid as anyone else’s.
But, more alarmingly, I do not
recall any of my conservative or libertarian friends objecting to anything that
came from the mouth or pen of St. Pope John Paul II because he was a Pole, or
raising the concern that a doctrinal statement by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI must
be dismissed, or minimized, or so heavily contextualized as to be dismissed,
because of the narrow vision he brought with him from Bavaria.
There is a
condescension at work in the critiques of Pope Francis that is new and it is
wrong and it has no place within a conversation among Catholics.
Next week, Catholic University’s
Institute for Policy Research & Catholic Studies, where I am a visiting
fellow, will be hosting an important conference entitled: “Erroneous Autonomy:
The Catholic Case Against Libertarianism.”
We have assembled a top-flight group
of scholars, from across the ideological spectrum, to examine the ways
libertarian ideas do, and do not, cohere with Catholic belief in the areas of
economics, politics and culture.
The keynote address will be delivered by
Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga with a response from Bishop Blase Cupich.
Cardinal Rodriguez, in addition to being the longtime Archbishop of Tegucigalpa
and a past president of CELAM, is the chairman of the Council of Cardinals that
advises Pope Francis on the universal governance of the Church and the reform
of the Roman curia. Bishop Cupich has one of the finest minds in the American
hierarchy.
It should be a fascinating day and when the video is posted at the
IPRCS website, I will be sure to link to it.
This conference comes at a time
when Acton and groups like it are trying to carve out a place of influence for
themselves within the Church.
And, their influence is not negligible. Two years
ago, at the annual USCCB plenary, Bishop Boyea of Lansing suggested that Acton
become an official consultant to the USCCB. Acton recently held a conference in
Rome.
They fly in bishops from around the world to attend their events at their
home base in Michigan. They are trying to make the case that American
capitalism is a thing so different from the crony capitalism found in much of
the global south, we need to defend our U.S. brand of capitalism in Catholic
terms.
Setting aside the fact that there is plenty of cronyism in U.S.
capitalism, I think that Acton is really a very dangerous organization insofar
as their attempts to justify laissez-faire capitalism undermine the very
foundations of Catholic social doctrine.
When Fr. Sirico says that the market
is “morally neutral,” and that it depends on the values that are brought to it,
his ideas necessarily result in a hyper-individualized understanding of the
moral import of the economy that does not do justice to the economic injustices
wrought by the system, nor to the Catholic theology that critiques it.
We Americans have long believed ourselves to be
exceptional. But, the Holy See has long believed that no national
exceptionalism should run counter to the core doctrinal understandings of the
Catholic faith.
In 1899, Pope Leo XIII issued the apostolic letter Testem benevolentiae which
condemned the heresy of “Americanism.”
The history of that letter is
complicated, and many Americans blamed the bias against Americanism on French
misunderstandings of the American situation.
There was a particularly fervent and influential French cleric, the Abbe Maignen, whose book “Le Pere Hecker: est-il un saint?” questioned various American ways of viewing society and religious life that apparently spawned the debate in Rome that led to the condemnation from Leo.
There was a particularly fervent and influential French cleric, the Abbe Maignen, whose book “Le Pere Hecker: est-il un saint?” questioned various American ways of viewing society and religious life that apparently spawned the debate in Rome that led to the condemnation from Leo.
It was a fascinating moment in the life of the Church.
Cardinal James Gibbons and Archbishop John Ireland considered Americanism a
“phantom heresy” because no one believed the propositions that had been
condemned.
There is no doubt that Fr. Sirico and his friends at the
Acton Institute do believe that their libertarian economic ideas are consistent
with Catholic social doctrine. Fr. Sirico even went so far as to
suggest that Ayn Rand’s hero John Galt was
a Christ-figure.
Their economic ideas bleed into the culture, celebrating a
view of human freedom that has more in common with Locke than Luke, with von
Mises than von Ketteler, pushing the central Catholic virtue of solidarity to
the side and replacing it with the golden calf of “the laws of the market.”
They warn about “collectivism” as if President Obama was out relocating kulaks.
They sniff at efforts to ameliorate human poverty as “dirigiste.”
They may not
intend it, but their writings and their conferences are undermining Catholic
social doctrine and it behooves the authorities in the Catholic Church to take
note and, potentially, take action.
In this free country of ours, every man and
woman is free to believe whatever he or she wishes, but a Catholic is called to
think with the Church, not with the Austrian school of economics.
Next week’s
conference will explore the degree to which libertarian ideas can be baptized.
Spoiler alert: They can’t. And, it is time for Catholics to admit as much.
Obvious to all non-American Catholics except a few weird wannabes, and for the very good reason that this is what every Pope has always said. The only thing that any Pope, being the Pope, possibly could say.
ReplyDeletePrecisely.
ReplyDeleteAnd therefore obvious to many American Catholics, too. We might finally be about to hear from that, the orthodox section of the Church in that country.