Catholic Social Teaching is Not Liberal or Conservative
by CAPP-USA
NOT LIBERAL OR CONSERVATIVE, JUST CATHOLIC
Just as “Christian charitable activity must be independent of parties and ideologies” (Pope Benedict XVI, 31) it must be reiterated and acknowledged that Catholic social teaching is not an endorsement of or for any political teaching.
The Church is clear that none of the magisterial documents are teachings to or for the right or the left. Catholic social teaching is not liberal or conservative.
However, there are warnings to both sides of the political spectrum.
A WARNING FOR CONSERVATIVES
Individuals of the right may latch on to the endorsement of free markets as the only economic principle that seems to promote affluence and draw great comfort from that fact – while forgetting about the evils of consumerism, improper business activities and the fact that their brothers and sisters are in dire economic straits.
A WARNING FOR LIBERALS
Individuals of the left might focus primarily or only on the principle of solidarity and the Church’s endorsement of the “preferential option for the poor”. These are individuals who have been enamored of government responses to the social problems, ignoring the clear call of Catholic social teaching for free markets and Subsidiarity.
A DANGER
Catholic social teaching is about principles not positions and these principles (human dignity, solidarity, subsidiarity) are often lost in political wrangling over “positions”. By overlooking the principles of Catholic social teaching, governments fail to consider all aspects of policy decisions to the detriment of the common good.
There is also a ‘personal’ risk: individuals of the right, people in business and the professions, proponents of capitalism if you wish, may fail to be evangelized by Catholic social teaching; individuals of the left will miss the chance to properly utilize Catholic social teaching to evangelize.
THE BOTTOM LINE – FOR LIBERALS AND CONSERVATIVES
In any event, individuals of both left and right may fail to implement Catholic social teaching through their lives. And both run the risk of forgetting the key message of Catholic social teaching: “It is clear that no economic, social or political project can replace the gift of self to another…He who does not give God gives too little”. (Pope Benedict XVI)