A statue of St. Francis of Assisi rests outside St. Felix Church in Clifton Springs, N.Y. (CNS photo by Mike Crupi, Catholic Courier)
What is social justice? In Catholic circles, the expression
is much in use these days, but is it used correctlyused, that is, according to
its meaning in the Catholic tradition and the Magisterium of the Church? A lot
more than you might expect depends on the answer to that.
Recently I received, unsolicited, a 39-page booklet called What Is Social Justice? According to
this popularly written account, published by Acta Publications in Chicago, the essence of
social justice is expressed in collective action to reform social structures on
behalf of the common good.
In support of this understanding, the author approvingly
quotes Ronald Krietemeyer, a justice and peace executive at the United States
Catholic Conference in the ’70s and ’80s now with Catholic Charities in St.
Paul: “Social justice is not about private individual acts. It is about
collective actions aimed at transforming social institutions and structures in
order to achieve the common good.”
Krietemeyer isn’t the only one who thinks that. Along with
others who are cited in What Is Social
Justice? as sharing this point of view,
the collective-action school includes Father J. Bryan Hehir, another USCC
justice and peace guru of three decades ago, who now heads Catholic Charities
in Boston and
teaches at Harvard. In an article on social justice written for Father Richard
McBrien’s HarperCollins Encyclopedia of
Catholicism (1995), Father Hehir says:
The function of social justice is
to evaluate the essential institutions of society in terms of their ability to
satisfy the minimum needs and basic rights of the citizenry…. It is usually
expected that social justice will be accomplished through organized activity
rather than individual action.
Two things stand out in all this: collective action and
reforming social structures. According to What
Is Social Justice? the source of this vision of social justice is Father
William Ferree, SM (1905-1985), an American Marianist priest who published
several influential books on Catholic social teaching. In expounding social
justice, however, Father Ferree also had a source: Pope Pius XI. Especially
important is the landmark social encyclical Quadragesimo
Anno (On Reconstruction of the Social
Order), which he published in 1931. The question then necessarily becomes:
What did Pius XI mean by “social justice”?
Fortunately, that question receives an exhaustive discussion
in Church, State, and Society by
theologian J. Brian Benestad of the University
of Scranton (newly
published by the Catholic University of America Press). Subtitled An Introduction to Catholic Social Doctrine,
Benestad’s scholarly volume deserves to become a standard work in its field.
According to Benestad, the term itself, “social justice,”
first appears in a two-volume work on natural law published by a Jesuit
philosopher named Luigi Taparelli D’Azeglio between 1840 and 1841. The idea is,
however, much older than that. In fact, it has its roots in St. Thomas Aquinas’
concept of “legal justice,” which Pope Pius XI drew upon in his encyclical.
Benestad acknowledges that Quadragesimo Anno is less than crystal clear on the subject.
Nevertheless Pius’ definition of social justice is plain enough from his 1937
encyclical Divini Redemptoris (On Atheistic Communism). There he writes
in part: “It is of the very essence of social justice to demand from each individual [emphasis added] all
that is necessary for the common good.”
In Pius XI’s treatment of the concept, Benestad says, social
justice is understood as a virtue that inclines individuals as well as groups
to work for “the common good of the family, the professions, voluntary
associations, schools, neighborhoods, and the political community on the local,
national, or international level.” Along with the reform of social structures,
the reform of morals is central to social justice, and is required for the
restoration of society itself. All this, he demonstrates, is fully borne out in
Quadragesimo Anno.
Thus the difficulty with the understanding of social justice
propagated by Father Ferree and his disciples is not that it’s entirely wrong,
but that it’s only part of the story (“incomplete…erroneous in parts,” Benestad
says). And this, it must be borne in mind, is the conventional wisdom about
social justice that’s operative in American Catholic social justice circles
today.
Apart from its failure to match up with the Catholic
tradition, the dominant view of social justice has several other problems. The
most troubling may be the support it unwittingly lends to Hobbes’ view that
political problems are technical problems, to be solved by technical means.
Benestad quotes Leo Strauss on this aberration: “There is no evil in men which
cannot be controlled; what is required is not divine grace, morality, nor
formation of character, but institutions with teeth in them.”
By contrast to the view described by Strauss, Pius XI
insists (and Benestad seconds) that the reform of the social order can’t really
be achieved apart from the inculcation of virtue in citizens and its practice
by them. That should come as no surprise. On the contrary, it should be obvious
that a good society needs good men and women to enact good laws and good men
and women to live by them.
The neglect of such elementary truths may help account for
the persistent neglect of conscience formation by social justice advocates, in
favor of political and social activism. Among other things, too, it helps
explain why the American conference of bishops and its staff have given more
attention over the years to beingor attempting to beplayers in the political
game rather than formers of consciences.
This in turn has contributed to a tendency in those same
quarters to adopt stands on contingent questions as policy positions of the
Church. (Generally speaking, it’s easy to say what shouldn’t be donefor
example, aborting unborn children, though even here there is room for legitimate
differences about the best way to prevent it. But how to achieve good positive
outcomesthe relief of poverty, the preservation of peaceis in the nature of
things always open to diverse views. When church groups take policy stands on
contingent questions, all this gets muddled.)
A good example of the fallacy of getting too specific on how
to achieve a good outcome dates back to the 1990s. It’s welfare reform. Conservatives
criticized the welfare system as it then existed for fostering a culture of dependency
by offering de facto encouragement to people to remain unemployed. But
spokesmen for religious groups, including Catholic ones, opposed reforming the
system because supposedly that would hurt the poor.
Nevertheless, in the mid-’90s Congress enacted reform and
President Clinton signed it into law. To the surprise of opponents, it worked:
the culture of dependency was weakened and the poor were better off. Welfare
reform is now considered one of the major domestic policy achievements of that
era.
The mistake that led religious spokesmen to oppose welfare
reform back then hasn’t gone away. A variation on it was seen last May when 80
Catholic college professors, including 30 from the Catholic University of
America, released a letter criticizing the selection of Speaker of the House
John Boehner (R-Ohio) as CUA’s commencement speaker. The professors’ complaint
was that the economic policies urged by such as Boehner and his GOP colleague
Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin), both of them Catholics, would hurt the poor and were
in conflict with the social doctrine of the Church.
Just about then, happily, a letter came to light in which
Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York, president of the US Conference of
Catholic Bishops, expressed thanks to Ryan for his assurances of “continued
attention to the guidance of Catholic social justice in the current delicate
budget considerations in Congress.” Declaring that “the principles of Catholic
social teaching contain truths that need to be applied,” Archbishop Dolan
added: “One must always exercise prudential judgment in applying these
principles while never contradicting the intrinsic values that they protect.”
In other words, people like Ryan and Boehner might be right or they might be
wrong, but calling them bad Catholics doesn’t work.
With another election year at hand, it remains to be seen
whether the rest of the bishops will follow Archbishop Dolan’s lead or again
overstep the line as they sometimes have in the past by getting too specific on
contingent issues. And, that aside, the larger question remains whether and
when they will get on with the more difficultand in the long run more
productivework of forming Catholic consciences.
Eighty years ago, Pius XI put it like this: “If we look into
the matter more carefully and more thoroughly, we shall perceive that preceding
this ardently desired social restoration, there must be a renewal of the
Christian spirit, from which so many immersed in economic life have…unhappily
fallen away” (Quadragesimo Anno, no.
127).
But let us give the final word to another pope, Benedict
XVI, who just last May noted the “legitimate pluralism among Catholics in the
implementation of social doctrine.” Quoting Blessed John XXIII, he said: “When
this happens, they should be careful not to lose their respect and esteem for
each other. Instead, they should strive to find points of agreement…and not
wear themselves out in interminable arguments, and, under pretext of the better
or the best, omit to do the good that is possible and therefore obligatory.”
Even tenured professors should be able to understand
this as a working formula for social justice.