Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Catholic social teaching is for all of life
Catholic social teaching is for all of life
Mar 13, 2026 6:01 AM

Senator Marco Rubio’s interest in Catholic social teaching is exciting even if confused in its economic analysis and public policy mendations. On the Acton Line Podcast released today I discuss with Fr. Robert Sirico the promise and peril of politicians looking to Catholic social teaching for guidance. The promise is in grounding questions of politics in the true nature of the human person and society while the peril is in reducing Catholic social teaching to a mere set of public policy prescriptions.

Russell Hittinger, Professor Emeritus of Religion at the University of Tulsa, in his article “Social Pluralism and Subsidiarity in Catholic Social Doctrine,” points out that since the middle of the 19th century Catholic social teaching has, like the liberal tradition, focused on the need to limit the powers of the modern state:

Once the popes came to grips with the new state-making regimes which emerged after the Napoleonic Wars, they vigorously defended a principle of social pluralism. To this extent, and by virtue of having mon enemy, Catholic social thought and (what used to be called) Liberalism both called attention to the importance of civil society vis-à-vis the state; both developed rights-based arguments in defense of civil society.

The reason for this interest in civil society beyond the state is not merely grounded in its power to limit the state but because:

In the first place… Catholic social thought emphasized the intrinsic value of social forms like the family, the private school, churches, and labor unions. In the second place, Catholic social thought has always been suspicious of the market model of social pluralism. Though Catholic thinkers would have no difficulty defending the economic market against Socialism, they remained wary of any effort to make society itself conform to a market.

When discussing mon good it is not enough merely to orient public policy towards it:

Let us recall that at the time of Pius XI’s pontificate, the overriding issue of social doctrine was not merely whether man is a social animal, naturally ordered to mon good, but more exactly, the status of societies and social roles other than the state… In fact, arguments to mon good can prove counter-productive in the face of the modern state, which is more than happy to mon the entire range of goods.

Various institutions, both formal and informal, including the family, the church, business, munity groups exercise a particular social function (munus). The roles, duties, and gifts of the various spheres of human life (munera) are all necessary for the attainment of social justice:

According to Pius XI, social justice ensues «when each individual member is given what it needs for the exercise of its proper function….all that is necessary for the exercise of his social munus…» Social justice, therefore, should not be confused with distributive justice. On the assumption that men and women already have munera, indeed, that they are already performing acts which redound to mon good, the role of the munity is facilitative. All issues of social justice encounter munera already established in and ordered to mon good.

According to Catholic social teaching the reign of social and divine justice is then not merely a question of politics or economics but of human persons carrying out their vocations in all avenues of life:

This social doctrine interweaves social theory, anthropology, political and moral philosophy, and several branches of theology with the ancient metaphysical theme of participation. It is extraordinarily synthetic. But there is a reason for the synthetic approach. By the time of the Second Vatican Council it was clear that Catholicism and Liberalism provided converging lines of support for the external organization of liberty: constitutionally limited government, human rights, and the role of free markets (provided that the market be subject to considerations of mon good).

The broad political outlines of Catholic social teaching regarding the best institutional context for human virtue largely overlap with the liberal tradition. This is a necessary but not sufficient condition for social justice which must be the pursuit of every human person and the orientation of all the various forms of our social life. This involves grounding ourselves in a Christian understanding of the human person and society.

It is this task, the recovery of a Christian understanding of the person and society within our existing political context which is most urgent. Reducing Catholic social teaching to a set of public policy initiatives crafted to address contemporary, often mistaken, economic analysis of our present social problems is not enough. The treasures of Catholic social teaching are for all of life.

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
Judge Neil Gorsuch: Defender of religious liberty
Upon the announcement of President Donald Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, originalists quickly came to a warm consensus, hailing Judge Neil Gorsuch as a strong defender of the Constitution and a fitting replacement for Justice Antonin Scalia. In addition to the wide-ranging, bipartisan testimonials testifying to his character, intellectual heft, and various credentials, Gorsuch has demonstrated mitment to the Constitution and the freedoms it seeks to protect, whether in weighing issues of executive power, regulatory overreach, or, quite literally,...
Thousands protest against returning cathedral to Russian Orthodox Church
St. Isaac’s Cathedral in St. Petersburg is one of the tens of thousands of churches seized, shuttered, or destroyedfollowing theBolshevik Revolution of 1917. Instead of leveling it – the fate of so many other houses of worship – muniststurned the architectural wonder into a Museum of Atheism, then a museum in its own right. It has e a UNESCO World Heritage Site visited by 3.5 million people last year. In January,Governor Georgy Poltavchenko announced that he would transfer ownership of...
5 facts about Frederick Douglass
February 14 is the chosen birthday of Frederick Douglass (1818-1895), one of America’s greatest champions of individual liberty. Here are five facts you should know about this writer, orator, statesman, and abolitionist: 1. Douglas was born into slavery in Maryland circa 1818. (Like many slaves, he never knew his actual date of birth and so chose February 14 as his birthday.) He was given the name Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey but decided to change it when he became a free...
How can Americans support the citizens of North Korea?
Update: The full interview is now available online. — The situation in North Korea may seem hopeless. This closed-off nation sits more than 6,000 miles away from the United States and is hidden by a cloud of misinformation. Sometimes it’s hard to filter the news out of the nation—what’s real, what’s propaganda, and what’s entirely false? Despite this difficulty, one thing is certain: North Koreans are suffering. Suzanne Scholte, president of the Defense Forum Foundation, has dedicated the last twenty...
How an outdoor adventure gear company is bridging the sacred vs. secular divide
To really serve God, a Christian should go into ministry, right? That’s what Greg McEvilly thought. But then he founded Kammok, an outdoor adventure pany. ...
When Nixon tried to control prices
Note: This is post #21 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. President Nixon had a problem—inflation was out of control. So in 1971 he attempted to implement a drastic solution: he declared price increases illegal. Because prices couldn’t increase, they began hitting a ceiling. With a price ceiling, buyers are unable to signal their increased demand by bidding prices up, and suppliers have no incentive to increase quantity supplied because they can’t raise the price. This video by...
New Issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (19.2)
The most recent issue of theJournal of Markets & Morality, vol. 19, no. 2, has been published online and print copies are in the mail. This issue features the publication of Acton’s 2015 Novak Award winner Catherine Pakaluk’s lecture, “Dependence on God and Man: Toward a Catholic Constitution of Liberty,” in addition to our regular slate of peer-reviewed articles. As a special feature, this issue contains two symposia of conference papers: The Evangelical Theological Society Theology of Work Symposium and...
The myth of ‘economic man’: How love holds society together
Despite the predictable flurry of sugary clichés and hedonistic consumerism, Valentine’s Day is as good an opportunity as any to reflect on the nature of human love and consider how we might further it across society. For those of us interested in the study of economics, or, if you prefer,the study of human action, what drives such action — love or otherwise —is the starting point for everything. For the Christian economist, such questions get a bit plicated. Although love...
Lord Acton’s judgment on pope and king
“Acton’s ideal of the historian as judge, as the upholder of the moral standard, is the most noble ideal ever proposed for the historian,” says Josef L. Altholz in this week’s Acton Commentary, “and it is an ideal that has been rejected, perhaps with grudging respect, by all historians, including myself.” We workaday historians can have no higher ideal than Acton’s second choice, impartiality or objectivity. In this sense, as also in his relative lack of publications, Acton was somewhat...
Prosperity matters more than social mobility or income inequality
Social mobility is the ability of an individual or family to improve (or lower) their economic status. The two main types of social mobility are intergenerational (i.e., a person is better off than their parents or grandparents) or intragenerational (i.e., e changes within a person or group’s lifetime).For years I’ve argued that social mobility—specifically getting people out of poverty—is infinitely more important than e inequality. But it’s easy for supporters of social mobility to forget that’s it’s a means, not...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved