Tag Archive for: Pope Leo XIII

Catholics Are Becoming the New Mainline

On my way back from Mass recently, I walked past Alex Padilla, the uber left-wing California senator, coming out of St. Joseph’s on Capitol Hill. The incident was just the latest reminder for me that the Catholic Church is increasingly functioning as the new mainline church in American politics where left, right, and center gather to receive Christ. St. Joseph’s is located about a block away from the conservative Heritage Foundation, and a friend of mine has spotted the leader of the centrist Make America Healthy Again movement, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., at the parish as well.

The development of the Catholic Church as a haven for all members of the political divide is a fulfillment of what Alexis de Tocqueville said about American Catholics, who “constitute the most republican and the most democratic class of citizens which exists in the United States.”

Since Tocqueville’s time, Catholics have percolated throughout important Washington institutions. A majority of the justices on the Supreme Court from both Democrat and Republican appointments are Catholics. They include Amy Coney Barrett, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Clarence Thomas, and Chief Justice John Roberts. Neil Gorsuch was raised Catholic and attended Catholic school, but as of 2017, he attended an Episcopalian Church. Catholics also help run major think tanks in D.C. Kevin Roberts, the president of The Heritage Foundation, is probably the most prominent example.

When I arrived in D.C., I had no idea about how preeminent Catholic para institutions had become in the nation’s capital. When you stroll around the Capitol building, it’s not uncommon to see priests in white robes walking about. That’s because the Dominican House of Studies is just a few Metro stops away. It is located across from the National Basilica and the Catholic University of America.

It’s true that the mainline is not completely dead. Tucker Carlson remains an Episcopalian. President Donald Trump was raised a Presbyterian, although now he identifies as a nondenominational Christian. Former Department of Government Efficiency head Elon Musk was baptized and brought up as an Anglican. Mark Tooley, the Jesuit-educated president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, is still fighting the good fight about the future of the mainline. Condoleezza Rice, who now heads the Hoover Institution, is the daughter of a Presbyterian minister.

And the mainline has also partially renewed its strength from converts. Jay Bhattacharya, the director of the National Institutes of Health became a Presbyterian in high school. Joshua Katz, another AEI scholar, also is a late in life convert to what was once called the Church of England (in the American colonies).

However, the election of Pope Leo XIV this year is probably the single greatest indicator that Catholics are taking over the bipartisan, cultural function once inhabited by the mainline. I was also struck by a recent picture of the pope meeting with Ben Shapiro, perhaps the most famous Orthodox Jew in the world.

The conservative political commentator said he gave the pontiff, a fellow Chicago White Sox fan, a signed baseball from the team’s 2005 World Series, and thanked him for standing for biblical values. This is a pope that gives an address to people in the White Sox stadium and dons a Villanova baseball cap. Villanova remains one of the few major American universities presided over by a Catholic priest (the vast majority of Jesuit universities are now run by lay presidents).

Time will tell if the new pope inspires American Catholics in a way never seen before. Pope Benedict XVI’s writings are still a guidepost for the newest generations of priests. Ultimately, Leo’s pontificate is a capstone to the long maturation of the Catholic faith in America. The most important Catholic is now an American, so naturally being American is becoming Catholic.

AUTHOR

Jacob Adams is a journalism fellow at The Daily Signal. Send an email to Jacob. Jacob on X: .

Of Workers and Wealth

Pope Leo XIII: Whether we have wealth or lack it makes no difference. What matters is to justly use what we have, especially if we are rich.


The great mistake made in regard to the matter now under consideration is to take up with the notion that class is naturally hostile to class, and that the wealthy and the working men are intended by nature to live in mutual conflict. So irrational and so false is this view that the direct contrary is the truth.

Just as the symmetry of the human frame is the result of the suitable arrangement of the different parts of the body, so in a State is it ordained by nature that these two classes should dwell in harmony and agreement, so as to maintain the balance of the body politic. Each needs the other: capital cannot do without labor, nor labor without capital. Mutual agreement results in the beauty of good order, while perpetual conflict necessarily produces confusion and savage barbarity.

Now, in preventing such strife as this, and in uprooting it, the efficacy of Christian institutions is marvellous and manifold. First of all, there is no intermediary more powerful than religion (whereof the Church is the interpreter and guardian) in drawing the rich and the working class together, by reminding each of its duties to the other, and especially of the obligations of justice.

Of these duties, the following bind the proletarian and the worker: fully and faithfully to perform the work which has been freely and equitably agreed upon; never to injure the property, nor to outrage the person, of an employer; never to resort to violence in defending their own cause, nor to engage in riot or disorder; and to have nothing to do with men of evil principles, who work upon the people with artful promises of great results, and excite foolish hopes which usually end in useless regrets and grievous loss.

The following duties bind the wealthy owner and the employer: not to look upon their work people as their bondsmen, but to respect in every man his dignity as a person ennobled by Christian character. They are reminded that, according to natural reason and Christian philosophy, working for gain is creditable, not shameful, to a man, since it enables him to earn an honorable livelihood; but to misuse men as though they were things in the pursuit of gain, or to value them solely for their physical powers – that is truly shameful and inhuman.

Again justice demands that, in dealing with the working man, religion and the good of his soul must be kept in mind. Hence, the employer is bound to see that the worker has time for his religious duties; that he be not exposed to corrupting influences and dangerous occasions; and that he be not led away to neglect his home and family, or to squander his earnings.

Furthermore, the employer must never tax his work people beyond their strength, or employ them in work unsuited to their sex and age. His great and principal duty is to give every one what is just. Doubtless, before deciding whether wages are fair, many things have to be considered; but wealthy owners and all masters of labor should be mindful of this – that to exercise pressure upon the indigent and the destitute for the sake of gain, and to gather one’s profit out of the need of another, is condemned by all laws, human and divine.

To defraud any one of wages that are his due is a great crime which cries to the avenging anger of Heaven. “Behold, the hire of the laborers. . .which by fraud has been kept back by you, crieth; and the cry of them hath entered into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth.”

Lastly, the rich must religiously refrain from cutting down the workmen’s earnings, whether by force, by fraud, or by usurious dealing; and with all the greater reason because the laboring man is, as a rule, weak and unprotected, and because his slender means should in proportion to their scantiness be accounted sacred. Were these precepts carefully obeyed and followed out, would they not be sufficient of themselves to keep under all strife and all its causes?

But the Church, with Jesus Christ as her Master and Guide, aims higher still. She lays down precepts yet more perfect, and tries to bind class to class in friendliness and good feeling. The things of earth cannot be understood or valued aright without taking into consideration the life to come, the life that will know no death.

Exclude the idea of futurity, and forthwith the very notion of what is good and right would perish; nay, the whole scheme of the universe would become a dark and unfathomable mystery.

The great truth which we learn from nature herself is also the grand Christian dogma on which religion rests as on its foundation – that, when we have given up this present life, then shall we really begin to live. God has not created us for the perishable and transitory things of earth, but for things heavenly and everlasting; He has given us this world as a place of exile, and not as our abiding place.

As for riches and the other things which men call good and desirable, whether we have them in abundance, or are lacking in them-so far as eternal happiness is concerned – it makes no difference; the only important thing is to use them aright. . . .

Therefore, those whom fortune favors are warned that riches do not bring freedom from sorrow and are of no avail for eternal happiness, but rather are obstacles; that the rich should tremble at the threatenings of Jesus Christ – threatenings so unwonted in the mouth of our Lord – and that a most strict account must be given to the Supreme Judge for all we possess.

– from Rerum Novarum (1891)