Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
A Century of Catholic Social Thought
A Century of Catholic Social Thought
Oct 29, 2025 10:30 AM

This year marks the centenary of the promulgation of Leo XIII’s encyclical Rerum Novarum. Over the next several months there will be a myriad of scholarly conferences, lectures, sermons, masses, memorating the anniversary of this seminal Church document and the tradition of social thought that it inaugurated. Collections of essays celebrating this anniversary are already beginning to find their way out of publishing houses and into stores and catalogs. More promise to follow as conferences conclude and their proceedings are published.

A Century of Catholic Social Thought is one of the first collections mentaries memorating this year’s anniversary. This volume considers both the historical development of Catholic social teaching and its continuing significance, especially in light of the dramatic economic and political changes taking place in today’s world. The editors make clear at the outset that they are taking the opportunity the occasion presents to “reflect on the enduring and developing contribution that modern Catholic social thought has made, and is making, to the debate over the right-ordering of public life in our society and, indeed, throughout the world.”

This particular collection reflects, then, not only on Rerum Novarum, but on virtually all of the formative papal documents that over the last one-hundred years have so profoundly affected the world in which we live. Virtually all the major anniversaries of Rerum Novarum have memorated with further papal pronouncements on social matters. Commentaries on those encyclicals, Quadragesimo Anno (1931), Mater et Magistra (1961), Octogesima Adveniens (1971) and John Paul II’s Laborem Exercens (1981) are included and authored by such capable scholars as Msgr. William Murphy, Thomas C. Kohler, Robert A. Sirico, James Finn and Robert A. Destro. Also included mentaries on Pacem in Terris (1963—George Weigel), Gaudium et Spes (1965— Mary Eberstadt), Dignitatis Humane (1965— Kenneth L. Grasso), Populorum Progressio (1967— Robert Royal), and Sollicitudo Rei Socialis (1987—William McGurn).

Please, don’t let all the Latin titles scare you away from this provocative volume. These essays were put together so that interested persons, whether introducing themselves to the tradition of Catholic social thought for the first time or simply looking for fresh insights into familiar documents, might be enriched by this set of reflections. Indeed, it was the hope of the editors that this volume would be something more than a set of textual exegesis’. Rather, they strove to “put the encyclical and conciliar documents into conversation with the ‘joys and hopes, the griefs and anxieties’ of people today.” They succeeded brilliantly.

What makes this volume even more valuable is the forward by renowned theologian Richard John Neuhaus and the ecumenical afterword by the Very Reverend Leonid Kishkovsky, president of the National Council of Churches. Both essays add considerable depth and perspective to the remarkable tradition of social thinking that this collection of scholarly, yet prayerful, memorates. All in all, A Century of Catholic Social Thought is must reading for all who seek a moral and just solution to society’s social ills.

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
Redemption through His Blood (John 11:25)
  Redemption through His Blood   By Lynette Kittle   “In Him, we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace.”– John 11:25   I love the picture Revelation 1:5 describes Jesus as “Him who loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood.”   It reminds me of how as a young...
The Secret Side of Facebook
  In 2021, Facebook insiders began to leak internal documents that revealed the company’s executives knew its platform was being widely misused. Pornographers, human traffickers, pedophiles, drug cartels, and other unscrupulous users found a home on Facebook. Yet, time and time again, Facebook executives chose to ignore or minimize these problems.   The leaks, however, became the source for a series of...
Christianity Before Christendom
  In our current public discourse, there are growing concerns about the relationship between church and state. The extreme versions on the right and left either supplant religion for other moral preferences or hope to return to some golden age of Christian Nationalism or Integralism. Living in a pagan world, the early church walked a different path, maintaining a positive vision...
After Taiwan’s 7.4 Earthquake, Christian Aid Groups Work to Rebuild Lives
  When a 7.4-magnitude earthquake hit the east coast of Taiwan Wednesday morning, Carissa Wang, branding communication director of World Vision Taiwan, was on the Taipei subway on her way to work. She felt the carriage sway more than usual, and then it stopped at the next station as an announcement alerted passengers that service had ended due to an earthquake....
Loving the Labor
  I read David Bahnsen’s Full-Time: Work and the Meaning of Life with no small amount of skepticism: What could a hedge fund manager teach about the theology of work? The answer is: a lot. Spending time with Full-Time is worthwhile; in addition to delivering information, the book prompts readers to reflect on their own lives. Full-Time is also fun: Bahnsen’s...
A Prayer for a Pure Heart to See God
  A Prayer for a Pure Heart to See God   By Emma Danzey   “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” - Matthew 5:8   As Jesus began His longest recorded sermon, He started with the Beatitudes. Each of the eight statements says, “Blessed are…” Following the sixth beatitude is blessed are thepure in heart.What does it mean to...
Is There a “Post” in Post
  Liberalism has faced strong intellectual headwinds since 2008. The collapse of the financial system did not just rock consumer confidence but the political system on which it was founded. Ever since, we have witnessed rising concern about the state of liberalism in America, creating a genuine fear of backsliding. Could a political order again emerge that sees inequality between peoples...
A Turning Point in the Battle of the Bulge
  We’re still processing the pandemic. Covid-19 did odd things to people. Or, rather, government responses to Covid-19 did odd things to people as much as the disease itself. I was one of those people.   At the same time, new drugs emerged which are starting to do odd things to civilisation. That they emerged as the world seemed to come unmoored...
Record
  The odds are bringing little favor to college athletes, who are facing more pressure over their performance from bettors.   South Carolinas defeat of Iowa for the womens NCAA championship on Sunday drew record-breaking betting numbers. BetMGM announced that the game had drawn the most bets of any womens sporting event ever.   Last year, bettors placed more than $15 billion in...
God Will Give You Rest
  “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” Matthew 11:28   Every year, I take a silent retreat. The retreat center is located in a beautiful area on a bay. During this time, I get closer to God and seek to become more in tune with the Holy Spirit. I take a blank...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved