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1 posted on 07/25/2012 8:12:36 AM PDT by marshmallow
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To: marshmallow

Without reading between the lines I’m pretty sure my 1937 Sunday Missal rails against the New Deal with its frequent calls for true “Catholic Action” in the end pages. They seemed to know then that an expansionist state was bad for the church and the faithful.


2 posted on 07/25/2012 8:27:31 AM PDT by Oratam
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To: marshmallow

As usual, Weigel makes great sense.


3 posted on 07/25/2012 8:28:28 AM PDT by karnage
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To: marshmallow

Jesus charged us to love and serve one another. Jesus did not tell us to love and serve the government. He did not ask us to vote in a government that will take away our neighbor’s money at the point of a gun.

The Good Samaritan gave what he could of his time, talent, and treasure out of free will. That is love, that is compassion.

Government is not, has never been, and never will be compassionate.


5 posted on 07/25/2012 8:34:14 AM PDT by jimfree (In Nov 2012 my 12 y/o granddaughter will have more relevant executive experience than Barack Obama)
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To: marshmallow

Read the comments at the site.


6 posted on 07/25/2012 8:46:59 AM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: marshmallow
Have one of those “blue book” of Rosary Novenas. New version that includes the “Mysteries of Light”

On one of them is a petition for the “virtue of working for social justice”

I crossed out “social justice” and penciled in “liberty”.

7 posted on 07/25/2012 8:54:08 AM PDT by chrisser (Starve the Monkeys!)
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To: marshmallow

Before the Social Security Act of 1935, many US counties hosted “poor farms”, that were in effect, farms for the poor, based on their labor, growing some crops and engaging in animal husbandry to reduce their costs. It was expected that those able to work would work.

However, as government entities, they were prone to corruption and abuse, often mistreating their charges.

Yet with this as an “honest model”, the Catholic church, perhaps in cooperation with other faiths, could offer a “religious poor farm” that could offer a host of services based in faith, not bureaucratic expediency.

Here are some possibilities:

1) (Assuming the oppressive USDA has been told to “back off” of its overregulation and controls over private farms), such a farm could grow crops not for sustenance, but for profit, growing high value crops that could be sold or traded for their food. This would mean a better diet as well as needs like electricity, running water and sewage, new clothing and amenities.

2) The offering of a “nursing home and hospice of faith”, neither oriented to “expedient euthanasia” nor “unnatural technological extension of life”, instead offering caring medicine, pain relief, and natural death.

3) A continual emphasis on faith and spirituality, family and friendship, respect and remembrance. That the elderly and invalid deserve respect and involvement in life.

4) Perhaps even a home for unwed and poor mothers and their children, along with an orphanage.

Setting up such places would address a host of social problems, it would raise the public profile of the Catholic and other churches considerably, significantly increase faithful membership (if not CINOs), and provide an alternative to atheistic, secularist, and the often anti-human government mechanisms that exist today.


12 posted on 07/25/2012 9:45:39 AM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy
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To: marshmallow

Bttt


16 posted on 07/25/2012 1:26:45 PM PDT by kalee (The offenses we give, we write in the dust; Those we take, we engrave in marble. J Huett 1658)
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To: marshmallow

Bttt


17 posted on 07/25/2012 1:26:58 PM PDT by kalee (The offenses we give, we write in the dust; Those we take, we engrave in marble. J Huett 1658)
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To: marshmallow; netmilsmom; thefrankbaum; Tax-chick; GregB; saradippity; Berlin_Freeper; Litany; ...
Since Crisis Magazine does not need to be excerpted, here is the rest of the article.


It is dying, in both Europe and the United States, because it is unaffordable. Shaky economic models and a demographic winter throughout the western world have combined to drive the social welfare state as we have known it into a fiscal wall (or over a fiscal cliff; choose your image). As my colleague Yuval Levin has put it, neither Europe or the United States can rationally or responsibly go where the long-term trends suggest we’re heading: “to debts that utterly overwhelm [our] productive capacities, governments that do almost nothing but support the elderly, and economies with no room for dynamism, for growth, or for youth.”

The social welfare state is also dying because it is grossly inefficient. The Progressive movement’s claim that government agencies run by specialists highly-trained in the social sciences could be compassionate, responsive and efficient has been falsified by reality. Social welfare bureaucracies just don’t work that way. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t good men and women doing noble work in government social welfare agencies; it means that the system itself is incapable of responding to the churnings of our times, the variety of human problems our culture creates, or the moral defects that underlie so many contemporary social pathologies.

And that, from a Catholic social doctrine point of view, is the key to understanding the demise of the post-World War II social welfare state: it’s eroded the moral culture that makes free and responsible citizenship in self-governing democracies possible. Yuval Levin again: “The attempt to rescue the citizen from the burdens of responsibility has undermined the family, self-reliance and self-government”–and it has done this, not from a lack of compassion or resources, but because the social welfare state by its nature creates dependencies that erode the virtues necessary for genuine human flourishing.

Rather than expending fruitless energies defending the social welfare state as we know it–in the first few months of 2012, the bishops’ conference (as represented by its domestic policy committee) issued letters urging renewed or expanded funding for some 20 federal social welfare programs–the Catholic Church in the United States should be at the forefront of exploring the path beyond the welfare state, stressing the moral and cultural dimensions of that necessary journey.

The Church has no special expertise in the technicalities of public policy; and in any event, the Church ought never have measured “social justice” by budget line-items. What the Church knows is the truth about the human person, and that truth includes the importance of responsibility, honesty, self-reliance and solidarity. Those just happen to be virtues essential to the free, dynamic and compassionate societies that moral reason and Catholic social doctrine call us to build in the post-welfare state future.


“The attempt to rescue the citizen from the burdens of responsibility has undermined the family, self-reliance and self-government”–and it has done this, not from a lack of compassion or resources, but because the social welfare state by its nature creates dependencies that erode the virtues necessary for genuine human flourishing.

In other words:

Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day; show him how to catch fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.

Glad the new bishops are on board.

18 posted on 07/25/2012 3:27:50 PM PDT by NYer (Without justice, what else is the State but a great band of robbers? - St. Augustine)
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