What is your worldview and where did it
come from? This is a question that few people take the time to ask. Americans
like to think that we are free thinkers but in reality we are not. There are
very few free thinkers in history. Most people get their worldview, how we look
at the world, our society and what we hold as our core principles, from other
people and other groups. This is true of Catholics as much as it is of everyone
else. As the political ideologies become more and more polarized, it has become
apparent to me that many Catholics do not get their worldview from the
teachings of the Church or even the Gospels. They get their worldview from our political
parties and our acceptance of liberal or conservative principles.
This is truly unfortunate because it
renders the “Catholic vote”, if there is such a thing, moot and unimportant. Many
Catholics run to the conservative Republicans because they at least pay lip
service to anti-abortion causes. Many others run to the liberal Democrats
because they seem to live up to, at least verbally, the corporal works of
mercy. (see Matthew 25: 31-46) A Catholic worldview is not something in the
middle of the conservatives and liberals, the Republicans and Democrats. A
Catholic, Christian, worldview will at times seem radically conservative and
other times radically liberal. A person with a Catholic, Christian, worldview
will feel uncomfortable being labeled a conservative or a liberal. Part of the
problem is that most Catholics don’t really have a firm grasp of what the Church
teaches on most social issues. There will always be Catholics who pick and
choose which teachings to adhere to, but it is a failing on the part of those
of us who are charged with resenting the teachings of the Church that so many
Catholics are not familiar with all the social teachings of the Catholic
Church.
Therefore, over the next few weeks in this
forum I will be presenting the social teachings of the Catholic Church. I will
use as my approach the seven themes of Catholic Social Teaching as presented by
the Unites States Conference of Catholic Bishops. http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/what-we-believe/catholic-social-teaching/seven-themes-of-catholic-social-teaching.cfm.
The seven themes of Catholic Social Teaching are:
Life and Dignity of the Human
Person;
Call to Family, Community, and
Participation;
Rights and Responsibilities;
Option for the Poor and Vulnerable;
The Dignity of Work and the Rights
of Workers;
Solidarity;
Care for God's Creation.
Deacon Ed
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