2016-12-29T16:51:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Dec 29, 2016 / 09:51 am (CNA/EWTN News).- “To defraud anyone of wages that are his due is a great crime which cries to the avenging anger of Heaven.” This statement from Pope Leo XIII's 1891 encyclical “Rerum Novarum” is jarring, especially in an economy that appears to have as much to do with Church teaching as spiders do with spelling bees. But the Church's view on wages and compensation has a long history reaching back centuries – and remains relevant today to employers and employees alike – say businesspeople and theologians seeking to find a moral response to today's changing economic landscape. “The Church starts really from the perspective of the human person, and wants to see why the relationship between the employer and the employee is more than just an exchange of money for a certain part of time,” said Fr. Dominic Legge, OP, who teaches systematic theology at the Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate Conception. “It’s a personal relationship, and that means that there are rights and duties on both sides of that.” The Church's stance on wages as bound to the concept of justice reaches back centuries. Teachings against defrauding workers of wages can be found in Catholic Catechisms for families as far back as the 1600s, and the principles of justice within Catholic teaching reach back even further, to the Bible itself. The development of Catholic thought on how wages and compensation for work should be considered is rooted not in laws of supply and demand, but in the human person and natural law. “It’s not just reducible to the market. Just because the market would allow you to pay someone less does not mean that you have a right in justice to do that. Nor does it mean that it is just, for a laborer, to charge an extravagant amount of money for his work,” Fr. Legge told CNA. He explained that the teaching surrounding the just payment of workers received substantial attention as part of St. Thomas Aquinas’s work elaborating upon the nature of justice. What's striking, he said, is that St. Thomas Aquinas uses just wages as the first “and most obvious” example of what justice actually is.   However, the the concept of just compensation is clearly not the most obvious example of justice to contemporary thinkers, “which is a way of telling us that the way we think about wages now is very different from the way that someone like Aquinas in the Middle Ages thought about it,” Fr. Legge said. Instead of viewing it as a situation where the employee, the business and the state were the only parties involved in making a person’s livelihood, the Church’s thought on just wages also incorporated all of the relationships and institutions an employer and employee interacted with. “There’s a much richer texture to human life, and the Church has always respected the place of family, private organizations, the family, local organizations, the Church.” Fr. Legge said that until the 19th century, “you often had people who were tied to their employment, their employer through lots of bonds – family, community, history.” In many circumstances, employees were incorporated into their employer’s family structure and physical needs were taken care of both by their employer as well as by community supports, such as the parish. “We wouldn’t imagine that the person providing daycare would be lodged in the family home, and would remain there even after the children are grown,” he said.How the nature of work changed This interplay of different supports for workers, however, is largely absent from contemporary approaches to work. “Once you get to the Industrial Revolution, work changes radically for the worker,” said Fr. Thomas Petri, OP, Dean of the Pontifical Faculty of the Immaculate conception. Shifts in labor and mass-production made it more difficult for some to see the dignity of work and the importance of the worker as a person. “There’s a problem in markets when workers are depersonalized,” he told CNA. “It takes away in some way the dignity of the worker and makes work into some sort of a monotonous, humdrum thing.” In part as a response to the changes facing the world during the Industrial Revolution, Pope Leo XIII wrote “Rerum Novarum,” outlining the Church’s teaching on the proper relationships between people, the state, labor and capital. Along with discussing the role of private property, unions, and a worker’s duties to their employer, Pope Leo XIII emphasized the importance of an employer’s duties to their employees. The document, Fr. Petri said, aims “to remind people that work still has dignity,” as well as to serve as a reminder to all that business should serve the common good. It also states that while “the state has to be involved in the adjudication of just wages,” Fr. Petri said, “there has to be communal support for the person.” The Pope emphasizes that institutions like the family, the Church, other institutions along with the state can help provide a living for workers. “Minimum wage isn’t the only thing that can help support families,” Fr. Petri said. While the state has a role in making sure all its citizens receive what they need for a good and virtuous life, “it seems to me that the Church’s social justice teaching suggests that this should also work in business,” he said. Fr. Petri pointed to examples of company towns that provided housing, the provision of healthcare or education benefits, or employee-ownership of companies as examples of ways a business could expand its provision for its employees. However, while the Church’s teaching, both in “Rerum Novarum” and other documents, does not provide strict prescriptions for all the ways employers can provide for their employees, not all contracts or forms of payment are morally acceptable.   “Just because an employee agrees to work for a certain wage does not therefore make the wage inherently just,” Fr. Petri said. “Sometimes people work for a pittance because they’re socially forced to or they have no other opportunities for a greater income. Leo XIII speaks about that as an evil.” He pointed to many companies' practice of hiring of undocumented workers for very low wages as an example of this kind of mistreatment. To compound the issue, Fr. Petri said, illegal immigrants can't speak up about their mistreatment without fearing for deportation or other consequences. In cases were businesses are acting immorally, “I think the government has a right to exert legislative authority in those cases where it’s clear that they are mistreating their workers,” Fr. Petri said. “That’s what unions were supposed to do, that's why unions were started.” He added that citizens can both approach legislators to take action as well as avoid patronizing companies that do not provide just compensation for their workers.What should things look like now? And business leaders themselves can and should put these principles into practice today, said Bill Bowman, Dean of the Busch School of Business and Economics at the Catholic University of America. “The purpose of business is the human person. It's not to trade the human person like any other commodity,” he told CNA. Bowman said that the Church shies away from a “one-size-fits-all” approach, instead setting principles around which an employer can balance people’s needs – such as a city's expensiveness or an employee’s family size, with the needs of the company is able to sustain itself. The result is that all businesspeople should be able to provide their workers with a just wage if they look towards innovative solutions. He suggested that every businessperson should look carefully at what “a just wage really look like for this particular city where we're working. What would it look like for this employee, with a big family or a person with no family at all. If what we really want to do is provide enough money so that you can live a life and maybe put a little away on the side.” “To just say 'well I can't afford it,' is, to me, to unnecessarily give yourself a 'get out of jail free' card.” For entrepreneurs or startups facing tight budgets, Bowman noted that employers could work with employees to step up base pay with a company's growth or other “innovative” solutions he has seen from employers such as incorporating family size into bonuses or covering certain expenses like college tuition.   He directed business leaders to look to the Church's “rich doctrine” and writings on wages and business, such as in the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, papal encyclicals, and a short document called “The Vocation of the Business Leader,” put out by the Church's Pontifical Council on Justice and Peace, among other sources of Church teaching on the topic. “As a Catholic business man or woman, he or she should really be challenging themselves to orient their businesses in this way,” he said. Bowman also criticized companies who avoid considering how they can better provide just wages to their employees. He said that companies, particularly large ones with shareholders, should not frame paying their employees a just wage as a “competitive disadvantage.” “If a company clearly can afford to pay it, its idea of a 'competitive disadvantage' is largely nonsense,” he said. “What it generally translates to is 'my share price might go down a bit and that's going to hit me in the wallet. Well, the Church has completely rejected the idea that a business is about shareholder returns.” In addition to it being the right thing to do, providing just compensation to workers is a sound business strategy, Bowman said. He's found in practice that providing employees with the compensation they need to take care of their families properly decreases both an employee’s likeliness to leave and their sloppiness on the job, which are “enormous” costs to business. “The return on investment of these programs is enormous,” he said, adding that within a year in some cases, the programs “paid for itself.” Above all, employers should keep in mind the role the Church has laid out for laypeople in prescribing its moral directions on wages and work, Bowman said: to figure out how to implement Church teaching in daily life. By taking to heart this approach, businesses and their employees can focus back on virtues and the goal of business in the first place.   “We understand that the purpose of business and the purpose of everything else in life is really the human person.”  This article was originally published on CNA June 22, 2016. Read more

2016-06-22T17:54:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Jun 22, 2016 / 11:54 am (CNA/EWTN News).- With relics of two English martyrs currently touring the U.S., the Archbishop of Baltimore implored Catholics to follow their example by defending religious freedom. Speaking at the opening Ma... Read more

2016-06-22T12:02:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 22, 2016 / 06:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In just two days in early September of 1792, approximately 1,200 people were slaughtered by revolutionaries in France. Of the dead, approximately 200 were Roman Catholic priests and religious, mo... Read more

2016-06-22T11:22:00+00:00

Vatican City, Jun 22, 2016 / 05:22 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Joined closely by just over a dozen refugees at his weekly public audience, Pope Francis said that in following Jesus’ example, the Christian excludes no one. “Jesus teaches us not to... Read more

2016-06-22T06:54:00+00:00

Abuja, Nigeria, Jun 22, 2016 / 12:54 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After the sorrow of an April massacre in southeastern Nigeria, a Catholic bishop said the killers of dozens of people must still be forgiven. “Although we may find it hard to forgive the violent attack that has brought us so much grief, we know that an unforgiving spirit will never bring us peace,” Bishop Godfrey Igwebuike Onah of Nsukka said at a burial service for nine of the victims. In April, invaders suspected to be Fulani herdsmen attacked the Nimbo community in the locality of Uzo-Uwani in southeastern Nigeria’s Enugu State. They killed scores of people, slaughtered livestock and destroyed several properties, including a Catholic church. The bishop encouraged mourners to “turn to God in gratitude, with faith, hope and charity,” the Catholic News Agency of Africa reports. He prayed that the region will never witness a similar tragedy. “Our faith assures us that those who die in the Lord are freed from the sorrows of this life and rest forever in the calm security of God's love in heaven,” he said. His comments came at a June 17 burial service held for nine of the victims at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Nimbo. Attendees at the memorial service included Anglican pastors and scores of Catholic clergy, “Since that dark and terrible Monday, April 25, 2016, we have been in tears and in sorrow,” Bishop Onah continued. “How often have we wished the whole thing were just a bad dream from which we would soon wake?” He prayed that the charity and solidarity of the community will “help us to overcome our bitterness.” “We are grateful to God, our merciful Father, that some of us are still alive today to bury and mourn our dead,” he said. He suggested that if the attackers had their way, they would have killed everyone. “We also thank God for the way in which he has shown us his love in these months of pain and sorrow, through the constant presence and help of persons, institutions and organizations from far and near,” the bishop added. “May he continue to bless all those who have allowed themselves to be used as instruments of his love and consolation.” Bishop Onah called on the government not to consider laws that would deprive farmers of their farmland and sustenance to provide grazing grounds for Fulani cattle herdsmen. He also warned that criminal elements appear to be using the cattle herdsmen “as a cover for penetrating many villages and perpetrating heinous crimes.” Enugu State’s Gov. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi attended the burial service. He told mourners that such killings will never happen again.   Read more

2016-06-21T23:04:00+00:00

Washington D.C., Jun 21, 2016 / 05:04 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- A relic tour currently taking place in the United States highlights the virtues of two English saints who stood up for conscience and paid the ultimate price. The “Witness to Freedom&rdq... Read more

2016-06-21T21:38:00+00:00

Dublin, Ireland, Jun 21, 2016 / 03:38 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The Fighting Irish are headed to the Emerald Isle, with plans to establish a new center for dialogue between faith and reason in Dublin. The Archbishop of Dublin made the announcement June 20 ... Read more

2016-06-21T20:57:00+00:00

Aleppo, Syria, Jun 21, 2016 / 02:57 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- For children growing up in Aleppo, Syria, life is anything but easy. In a city devastated civil war, bombings are common and death is never far away. But for some 350 Christian children in the city, there is a light amid the chaos: Vacation Bible School. The children gather under the motto “Be merciful as our Father is merciful” to pray for their country and to pray for the conversion of the jihadists. “We're not afraid because every day we challenge the bombs and death with our joy of living,” Father Firas Lutfi told Avvenire, the newspaper of the Italian Bishops' Conference. The priest is in charge of the Vacation Bible School at Saint Francis Roman rite parish in Aleppo. The Vacation Bible School is made of up children from different Christian confessions, both Catholics and Orthodox. They range in age from 3 to 15. During school time they also sing, play and make friends. <blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="it" dir="ltr">Una luce bambina nella notte di <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Aleppo?src=hash">#Aleppo</a> un oratorio estivo in <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Siria?src=hash">#Siria</a> <a href="https://t.co/9jBS9919ef">https://t.co/9jBS9919ef</a> <a href="https://t.co/1fqClyG2iN">pic.twitter.com/1fqClyG2iN</a></p>&mdash; Avvenire (@Avvenire_NEI) <a href="https://twitter.com/Avvenire_NEI/status/739150340331819008">June 4, 2016</a></blockquote> <script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> Fr. Lutfi said the initiative is “a light for a martyr city of the Syrian civil war.” Over 250,000 have died in the war and millions of people have been displaced. This year, the Pro Terra Sancta Association, which serves the Franciscan Custos of the Holy Land, asked Italian parishes to join the efforts. They can hold similar “Vacation Bible School” as a work of mercy so the Syrian children feel they are not alone. Organizers hope that through this initiative, Italian children will learn what life is like for Christians in the Middle East. Fr. Lutfi reflected on the outreach to Italy, saying “we need this communion with you.” Father Ibrahim Alsbagh, the pastor at Saint Francis church, said that even in a partially destroyed Aleppo, Christians can manage to overcome their circumstances with the joy of being together and through an experience of life and friendship in the name of Jesus.   Read more

2016-06-21T12:02:00+00:00

Juba, South Sudan, Jun 21, 2016 / 06:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Reconciliation and work for the common good, not assumptions of perpetual doom, are necessary to overcome the problems facing South Sudan, the country’s bishops have said. “We regret the amount of negativity and pessimism that we hear – from South Sudanese who are still steeped in the old ways of power and tribalism; from the international community; on the internet; in the media; on social media; within the diaspora. We say very clearly: No More Negativity!” the bishops wrote in a June 16 pastoral statement. They said constant negativity can be a self-fulfilling prophecy, citing St. Paul’s remarks against unwholesome words and his praise for edification. “Stop assuming that South Sudan and South Sudanese are doomed always to fail, and instead give support and encouragement. Stop disseminating hate speech and tribalism on the internet and social media, and instead spread constructive peaceful messages. Stop propagating rumors, gossip, misinformation and disinformation.” They called on South Sudanese not to attack and accuse one another and urged them to compromise for peace and work for the common good. “Stop preparing for war; move with the times into the new culture of peace and reconciliation,” they urged. The bishops’ comments came in their June 16 pastoral letter “Do Not Be Afraid: Rise above Adversity,” released at the end of their three-day meeting in Juba, the nation's capital. South Sudan became independent from its northern neighbor Sudan in 2011, six years after the end of a decades-long civil war. In December 2013, civil war broke out in the new country. The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people and an estimated 1.7 million. A peace deal was reached in August 2015, but this was complicated in October when President Salvaa Kiir announced the formation of 28 states from the 10 that had existed before. Rebels objected that this favored members of Kiir’s Dinka ethnic group, the New York Times reports. Opposition leader Riek Machar was sworn in as vice president in April as part of a transitional untity government leading up to elections in 30 months. Despite this, some fighting has continued in the country. The bishops asked for understanding for South Sudan’s leaders, noting that they too suffer “the trauma of a lifetime of conflict.” “They need healing. Let us treat them with love and mercy, not hatred and condemnation,” the bishops said. “The priority now is reforming and rebuilding our shattered nation.” The Year of Mercy is a chance for South Sudan to “begin the long journey of peace and reconciliation,” they maintained. “We are called upon to show mercy and forgiveness, even in the face of great evil and suffering, but we are also called upon to repent and do penance,” the bishops said. They noted the South Sudanese Catholic participation in the April 2016 non-violence conference co-sponsored by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace and Pax Christi International. They repeated their statements that civil war in South Sudan has no moral justification. The bishops voiced support for the transitional government and asked those with reservations about a conflict resolution agreement to overcome them. “Reservations are not grounds for rejecting the agreement. Only when we have stopped killing ourselves can we sit down together to rebuild the nation,” they said. They encouraged the transitional government’s efforts to secure a comprehensive ceasefire, to improve basic services and the economy, and to resolve the humanitarian crisis. The bishops also thanked the international community for assistance. In their letter, the bishops especially remembered Sister Veronika Theresia Rackova, a Slovakian nun who died after being shot by soldiers of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army. “In the eyes of the people whom she served she is already a martyr. May she rest in peace,” they said, adding that she is only one of the thousands of victims killed in “this senseless conflict.” They warned that the SPLA is different from the army that had defended the country in its efforts to secure independence from Sudan. They said the army had poor discipline, training, and leadership, and that it preys upon the population, rather than protecting them. The bishops also expressed concern about robberies of churches and church personnel. Pope Francis’ apostolic exhortation Amoris laetitia was also a topic. The bishops cited its comments on problems that families face in countries like South Sudan: a lack of decent housing, a lack of work and possibilities for the young, the violence of war, terrorism, organized crime, youth homelessness and forced migration. The Pope praised various African countries’ traditional values and strong marriages that bind families together, the bishops noted. “May the strength of our South Sudanese families be a resource for peace and reconciliation in our nation,” the bishops concluded. Read more

2016-06-21T06:04:00+00:00

Philadelphia, Pa., Jun 21, 2016 / 12:04 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Bishop Francis Patrick Kenrick, the third bishop of Philadelphia, started St. Charles Borromeo seminary out of his home on Fifth Street in the center of the city in 1832. There were just five... Read more




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