Editor’s note: The following
is support material for the article at left. It comes from
the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).
The Catholic approach to faithful citizenship begins with
moral principles and not with party platforms. The directions
for our public witness are found in Scripture and Catholic
social teaching. Here are some key themes at the heart of
our Catholic social tradition.
Life and Dignity of the Human Person
Every human person is created in the image and likeness of
God. Therefore, each person’s life and dignity must
be respected, whether that person is an unborn child in a
mother’s womb, whether that person worked in the World
Trade Center or a market in Baghdad, or even whether that
person is a convicted criminal on death row. We believe that
every human life is sacred from conception to natural death,
that people are more important than things and that the measure
of every institution is whether it protects and respects the
life and dignity of the human person.
A recent Vatican statement says, “The Church recognizes
that while democracy is the best expression of the direct
participation of citizens in political choices, it succeeds
only to the extent that it is based on a correct understanding
of the human person. Catholic involvement in political life
cannot compromise on this principle.”
Call to Family, Community, and Participation
The human person is not only sacred but also social. The God-given
institutions of marriage, a lifelong commitment between a
man and a woman, and family are central and serve as the foundations
for social life. Marriage and family should be supported and
strengthened, not undermined. Every person has a right to
participate in social, economic and political life, and a
corresponding duty to work for the advancement of the common
good and the well-being of all, especially the poor and weak.
Rights and Responsibilities
Every person has a fundamental right to life, the right that
makes all other rights possible. Each person also has a right
to the conditions for living a decent life, faith and family
life, food and shelter, education and employment, health care
and housing. We also have a duty to secure and respect these
rights not only for ourselves but for others and to fulfill
our responsibilities to our families, to each other and to
the larger society.
Option for the Poor and Vulnerable
Scripture teaches that God has a special concern for the poor
and vulnerable. The prophets denounced injustice toward the
poor as a lack of fidelity to the God of Israel. Jesus, who
identified himself with “the least of these,”
came to preach “good news to the poor, liberty to captives...
and to set the downtrodden free.” The Church calls on
all of us to embrace this preferential option for the poor
and vulnerable, to embody it in our lives and to work to have
it shape public policies and priorities. A fundamental measure
of our society is how we care for and stand with the poor
and vulnerable.
Dignity of Work and the Rights of Workers
The economy must serve people, not the other way around. Work
is more than a way to make a living; it is a form of continuing
participation in God’s act of creation. If the dignity
of work is to be protected, then the basic rights of workers,
owners and others must be respected, the right to productive
work, to decent and fair wages, to organize and choose to
join a union, to economic initiative, and to ownership and
private property. These rights must be exercised in ways that
advance the common good.
Solidarity
We are one human family. We are our brothers’ and sisters’
keepers, wherever they may be. Pope John Paul II said, “We
are all really responsible for all”. Loving our neighbor
has global dimensions in a shrinking world. At the core of
the virtue of solidarity is the pursuit of justice and peace.
Pope Paul VI taught that “if you want peace, work for
justice.” The Gospel calls us to be “peacemakers.”
Our love for all our sisters and brothers demands that we
be “sentinels of peace” in a world wounded by
violence and conflict.
Caring for God’s Creation
The world that God created has been entrusted to us. Our use
of it must be directed by God’s plan for creation and
not simply for our own benefit. Our stewardship of the Earth
is a form of participation in God’s act of creating
and sustaining the world. In our use of creation, we must
be guided by a concern for generations to come. We show our
respect for the Creator by our care for creation.
© 2004, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.
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