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papal encyclicals - some extracts: on socialism and liberalism a briefing document
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papal encyclicals and marx - some extracts: on socialism and liberalism gives extracts from papal encyclicals that are critical of its competing religion, socialism. This page is one in a series of supporting resources for other briefing documents that analyse dysfunctional social, or group, behaviour in modern society. |
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précis of the communist manifesto and extracts from Das Capital |
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papal encyclicals and marx - some extracts: on socialism and liberalism |
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Index |
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Papal encyclicals The Church of Rome has long been an implacable foe of ‘liberalism’, or independent thought. It has tended to identify liberalism with freemasonry. It has also, with good cause, disparaged socialism from early in the development of Marxist socialism. I shall place my comments on papal encyclicals, published from the mid-1800s onwards, into three groups:
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Pope Pius IX June 16, 1846 – February 7, 1878 This was the Pope who, in 1870, declared the Pope (himself!) to be infallible. 1849: nostis
et nobiscum Pope Pius IX
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1864: the syllabus of errors / syllabus errorum Pope Pius IX Remember, these attitudes are condemned as errors!
In the jargon of the Church of the time, ‘rationalism’ was reason without faith; whereas ‘fideism’ was faith without reason and identified with fundamentalism. The Church tended to identify ‘rationalists’ and freemasons as the hated ‘liberals’. ‘Rationalism’, together with ‘fideism’, were determined upon as the errors of ‘modernism’. |
1870: the Pope is declared infallible [see also Pius IX] Pastor aeternus, which was approved by Vatican I on July 18, 1870, defined the extent and limits of papal infallibility. Chapter 4, section 9 states:
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Leo XIII February 20, 1878 - July 20, 1903 1879: on socialism / quod apostolici muneris —‘the deadly plague’
The Roman Catholic Church is, of course, a major long term enemy of freedom, but it has not proven nearly as dangerous as socialism. Socialism dehumanises, and that is what Rome recognised from very early on. Socialism has also been responsible for ginormous amounts of social disruption (and for deaths by the 10s of millions). This again was recognised, and even predicted, very early on by Rome. But the Church has also been a major enemy of liberalism, a dire fault it shares with socialism. On balance, however, socialism has proven to be a much greater enemy of humanity. The major enemy identified by the Church, in its fight
against liberalism, was freemasonry rather than socialism. Socialism is more
authoritarian even than the Church.
The Church has also however responded to the real concerns regarding the conditions of workers often expressed by socialism 1891: on capital and labour / rerum novarum, Pope Leo XIII Rerum Novarum is regarded among catholic apologists, with almost overweening pride, as showing the deep concerns of the Church for the poor and oppressed. A tract that is vaunted as ‘modern’. It is from Rerum Novarum and later, that the idea of the corporative state was developed. The corporative state is supposed to work from the bottom of society upwards, with unions and business organisations regarded as legitimate expressions of the individual. The theory tends to assume that, by working together, individuals, families and such organisations can be part of the state without serious conflict. Of course, this does not prove so, as various individuals and interests jockey for advantage. The corporative state is often confused with the corporate state of socialism. Individuals in the socialist corporate state are its creatures, and the state is a beehive where individuals and their interests must be strictly subject to the state. In both cases, the reality tends to end at similar points with top-down government, lack of freedom, and predictable poverty. But the dogma behind these models is seriously different. The Church is far
more humanity-oriented and tends to kill far less. Socialism is essentially
collectivist where the individual has no intrinsic place, individuality or
value. Rerum novarum was developed further
in 1931.
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Pius X August 4, 1903 – August 20, 1914
Again remember carefully, these attitudes are condemned as errors!
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This remained in force until recently (I am unsure of the dates, as sources give different dates ranging from 1967 to 1989) when a brief “Profession of Faith” and an “oath of fidelity” was substituted. A modern short and somewhat diluted form, including a short form of the creed, was issued in 1989. A copy can be found here.
It begins:
After a couple of long paragraphs, it ends thus:
This oath amounts to swearing to obey orders and never to think independently. |
Benedict XV September 3, 1914 – January 22, 1922 Pius XI February 6, 1922 – February 10, 1939 [1] Quadragesimo Anno / on reconstruction of the social order 1931 Pius XII March 2, 1939 – October 9, 1958 John XXIII October 28, 1958 – June 3, 1963 Pope Paul VI June 21, 1963 – Aug. 6, 1978
Pope John Paul II Oct. 16, 1978 – |
end notes | |
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