Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 reasons China is not ‘best implementing’ Catholic social teaching
5 reasons China is not ‘best implementing’ Catholic social teaching
Jan 30, 2026 3:37 AM

“Right now, those who are best implementing the social doctrine of the Church are the Chinese,”said Bishop Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, the chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. He contrasted China, which has a “positive national conscience,” favorably with U.S. President Donald Trump, whom he believes is overly influenced by “liberal [read: free market] thought.”

One could quibble with this description of President Trump. However, China violates the most fundamental pillars of Catholic social doctrine:

1. Denying the freedom of religion. “Curtailment of the religious freedom of individuals,” wrote Pope John Paul II in Redemptor Hominis, “is above all an attack on man’s very dignity, independently of the religion professed.” China has been an equal opportunity represser, making the suppression of faith an ecumenical experience. As I wrote at Providence magazine, “China persecutes itsUighurMuslims,TibetanBuddhists, and agrowing shareof its Christian population.” This excludes members of the Falun Gong, who are “subject to widespread and severe human rights violations,” according to Freedom House.

Chief among the persecuted is China’s Catholic population. Beijing recognizes only the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, not the official hierarchy loyal to the Vatican. Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI once deemed this patible with Catholic doctrine.” The New York Times reports that Pope Francis is considering a plan to replace two underground bishops with hierarchs selected by Beijing, one of whom has been municated, provoking widespread backlash.

2. Denying human dignity, especially through forced abortion. “Social justice can be obtained only in respecting the transcendent dignity of man,” according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church. “The person represents the ultimate end of society, which is ordered to him.” Furthermore, Pope John Paul II wrote that “unconditional respect for the right to life of every innocent person – from conception to natural death –is one of the pillars on which every civil society stands.”

China continues to practice forced abortion, if expectant parents cannot pay fines that run as high as $39,000 (U.S.). Although the Communist Party modified its one child policy to allow most people to have a second child, “Officials continue to pliance with population planning targets using methods including heavy fines, job termination, arbitrary detention, and coerced abortion,” according to the Congressional-Executive Commission on China’s 2017 report. “China’s two child policy continues the human rights abuses and gender-based violence of the one child policy,” said Reggie Littlejohn, a human rights advocate with Women’s Rights Without Frontiers.

3. Denying the rule of law. Pope Paul VI wrote that “government is to see to it that equality of citizens before the law, which is itself an element of mon good, is never violated.” While he specified religious discrimination, the Holy See has testified at the UN that “although the rule of law is not in itself sufficient, it remains nevertheless an indispensable instrument for the protection of human dignity.”

However, the Congressional-Executive Commission on China has reported an ongoing and “significant discrepancy between official [Chinese] statements that affirm the importance of law-based governance … and the actual ability of citizens to access justice.” Events observed in 2017 “continued to demonstrate that individuals and groups who attempt to help citizens advocate for their rights do so at significant professional and personal risk.”

4. Denying private property rights. “Every man has by nature the right to possess property as his own,” wrote Pope Leo XIII in the groundbreaking encyclical on social justice, Rerum Novarum. “It must be within his right to possess things not merely for temporary and momentary use, as other living things do, but to have and to hold them in stable and permanent possession.”

Since 1978, China has implemented free market reforms that have lifted 800 million people out of extreme poverty. Yet neither personal nor intellectual property rights remain “stable.” A 2012 study found that the government had confiscated land from 43 percent of Chinese villages. Farmers received an pensation of $17,850 an acre, “a fraction of the mean price authorities themselves received for the land (778,000 yuan per mu or $740,000 per acre, mostly in cases mercial projects).” Chinese violations of intellectual property rights are notorious, costing American firms $48 billion in 2009 alone.

5. Denying political freedom. While the Magisterium allows the existence of different forms of government, the Compendium on the Social Doctrine of the Church holds that a “source of concern is found in those countries ruled by totalitarian or dictatorial regimes, where the fundamental right to participate in public life is denied at its origin.” (Emphasis in original.) The USCCB adds, “We believe people have a right and a duty to participate in society.” China ranked among the 10 nations with the least amount of electoral freedom, in a new report by theFoundation for the Advancement of Liberty. Beijing restricts political freedom to the cadre of Communist Party members, whom President Xi Jinping has said must be “unyielding Marxist atheists.” Political participation has narrowed further under Xi, whom some have described as being in the “early stages of a personality cult.”

These are but a few of many reasons China is not an exemplar of Catholic social teaching. Additional grounds are presented by Religion & Liberty Transatlantic contributor Philip Booth in his Catholic Herald article, “Don’t look to China for an example of Catholic social teaching.”

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
What is a Christian to think about health care?
Brad Green, who teaches theology at Union University in Jackson, Tenn., published mentary on health care in The Jackson Sun. Green, an alum of Acton’s Toward a Free and Virtuous Society program, is also a co-founder of Augustine School in Jackson. So, what would Jesus do? Jesus would (and mand people to repent of their sins, care for the poor, the sick, the lame and the down-trodden. And Christians manded to do the same. But is a Christian then obligated...
Public schools flunk the test on black males
My latest mentary: Do at-risk black males need to be emancipated en masse from America’s public plex? A new study released about high school dropout and incarceration rates among blacks raises the question. Nearly 23 percent of all American black men ages 16 to 24 who have dropped out of high school are in jail, prison, or a juvenile justice institution, according to a new report from the Center for Labor Markets at Northeastern University, “Consequences of Dropping Out of...
Machiavelli, the Prince, and the Tradition of Liberty
Machiavelli’s succinct and semi-diabolical advice to the prince is one of the most enduring works of political philosophy in the world. This man, writing in a time roughly contemporaneous with the Reformation, was less concerned with seeking the will of God than with winning at all costs. I wrote about him in my book The End of Secularism. He is famous for advising the prince that it is important to appear honest, humane, religious, faithful, and charitable, but that it...
The Market, School of Virtue
This week’s Acton Commentary: Does the market inspire people to greater practical virtue, or does it eviscerate what little virtue any of us have? Far from draining moral goodness out of us—as many think—the free market serves as a “school of the practical virtues.” Rather than elevating greed and self-sufficiency, the market fosters interdependence and cooperation. Its rewards do not go to those who are the most isolated, self-absorbed, or cut off from society, but to those who sustain mutually...
Green Patriarch’s ‘web of life’ has a gaping hole in it
In yesterday’s Wall Street Journal, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I offered mentary related to his recently closed environmental symposium in New Orleans. He said this: For if all life is sacred, so is the entire web that sustains it … no one doubts that there is a connection and balance among all things animate and inanimate on this third planet from the Sun, and that there is a cost or benefit whenever we tamper with that balance. Words pleasing to the...
Finding the Right Charity
The Dave Ramsey Show appears on Fox Business Network and is also available for live streaming via Hulu. In last Thursday’s episode (at about the 18:00 mark), a Twitter follower of @ramseyshow asked, “I want to start giving. How do I find the right charity for me and how do I find out if the charity is legit?” Dave’s short answer: “You have to spend time on it.” He expands a bit, but that’s a great starting point. You need...
Earned Success = Happiness
David Bahnsen reflects on last night’s annual dinner: (Acton’s) co-founder, Father Sirico, is a friend and patriot. He is a scholar in Catholic social thought, and perhaps as good of an orator as I have ever heard. He and I shared the podium at an event I did in Newport Beach earlier in the year. Fortunately for me, I spoke before him that evening! The talk tonight was challenging and inspiring. He reminded us that the greatest victim in this...
Recommended Post-Reformation Day Reading
In connection with the worldwide celebrations of the quincentenary of John Calvin’s birth in 2009, the Acton Institute BookShoppe recently made available a limited stock of the hard-to-find Light for the City: Calvin’s Preaching, Source of Life and Liberty (Eerdmans, 2004). In this brief and accessible work, Lester DeKoster examines the interaction between the Word proclaimed and the development of Western civilization. “Preached from off the pulpits for which the Church is divinely made and sustained, God’s biblical Word takes...
Tocqueville at IU
The Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University has announced the launch of a new initiative focused on the thought of Alexis de Tocqueville. The Tocqueville Program aims “to foster an understanding of the central importance of principles of freedom and equality for democratic government and moral responsibility, as well as for economic and cultural life.” The program’s first event will be held next month (November 6), and is titled, “What’s Wrong with Tocqueville Studies, and What...
The Hidden Tithe
Recently I got a phone call from an engineering manager I’ve known for over ten years. He informed me that he’d been laid off last spring, but before I could offer condolences he added that he’d been hired by pany in the same industry for a consulting assignment. That temporary work had lasted over six months but was winding down. He hadn’t been a contract “consultant” before and after some additional small talk told me, “… and I’ve discovered something...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved