Thursday, November 7, 2013

SOCIAL DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH: TODAY

The Social Doctrine of the Church, since the issuance of Rerum Novarum in 1891, had a share of scorn and contempt, of applause and recognition. It had faced a lot of challenges from within and without of the Church. Time and again, it managed to survive and find new forms of application in relation to the developments in the society. Today, it faces a new system, a new world order. At the advent of technological advance on communications, it is again challenged to muddle through change.

At the turn of the 21st century, the world is transformed into a full blown global village. What was formerly separated by territorial and natural boundaries, is now connected by electrical technology. What Marshall McLuhan coined in his books The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man (1962), is now a reality: a world where communication and the flow of information know no boundaries, where a collective unconscious exists.[1]


In the context of this global village and the collective unconscious, the Social Doctrine of the Church is set today, challenged to exist anew in a new and more relevant form. These teachings of the Church that have existence for over a century are now being tried by the phenomenon of globalization, in terms of their role to play and relevance to attain.    

This article aims to present the role of the Catholic Social Doctrine in the globalized world. It will briefly discuss the phenomenon of globalization and relate it with the said Doctrine. In the end, it will attempt to present the future of the Church social teaching.

The Role of Catholic Social Doctrine in the Globalized World Today

John Allen in his article entitled ‘Ten mega-trends shaping the Catholic Church,’ named globalization as one among the ten mega-trends that the church have to face today. It is so-called mega-trend because of the great influence it give to the church, a deep impulse shaping Catholic thought and life at the universal level, a sort of "tectonic plate" whose shifts lie beneath the fault lines and upheavals of the present.[2] The phenomenon of globalization, in a macro-scale, is the integration of global economy, and finance and culture. This is made possible through the development in the international relationship and understanding among nations. In a micro-scale, globalization can be described as the inflow of information and knowledge from one end of the globe to another; so much so that the world becomes a village, a global village. This can be attributed to the advance of communication technology such as the World Wide Web, social communication, and technological communication devices. Today, in the globalized world, there is a torrent of information accessible through the technology available to many. These information come from various sources, can be traced from different traditions and cultures. These can be further described as voices coming from different sources. All these economic-cultural integration among nations, and the torrent information and voices are laid before the globalized man.

In the midst of these million voices placed before the globalized man, the Catholic Social Doctrine stands as one among the many voices in a global village that tackles the social issues of the globalized man. It offers not only an alternative voice, but an essential, for an authentic existence of the globalized man. The Catholic Social Doctrine puts forward answers to the questions and problems posited by the globalized world, answers with the transcendent and yet imminent dimension. It offers ideo-realistic answers to concrete situations where the globalized man finds himself; idealistic in aspiration and yet realistic in the means to achieve such.  

The phenomenon of globalization ushers in seemingly boundless economic progress. Through economic integration of nations, opportunities for growth and progress in livelihood flourishes. However, this development towards affluence and comfort is available only to few nations, most are the so-called developed nations. This progress is attained and enjoyed with a great disregard to the suffering of the other nations, especially the so-called developing countries. Despite the promising potentiality of a global village, the globalized man is yet to actualize such for all. Globalization became advantageous only for few but not to all.

The Catholic Social Doctrine as a ideo-realistic voice, transcendent and yet imminent, offers a response in the face of injustices due to globalization. It neither condemn globalization per se nor call for its cessation. In its wisdom, this ideo-realistic voice calls for globalization of solidarity. Through the father of Catholic Social Teaching, John Paul II, it calls for the solidarity in humanity to be placed in a global scale, in the same way that economic progress is placed on the pedestal. For solidarity to become global, one must effectively take into account all peoples of all regions of the world.[3] This voice of the Church does not call for an opposition against a social reality. It rather encourages the use of it in a Catholic and Christian way. To globalize solidarity also calls for working in close and constant relation with international organizations, which guarantee law and legality, to balance in a new way relations between rich and poor countries, so that aid relations in just one direction will cease, which too often contribute to the increase of the imbalance through a mechanism of permanent debt.[4] It is a movement not away from the world but rather to be in the world where the problem is, to find the rightful solution in the same context. And yet, the action aims to end not in this world but to the Kingdom of the Father. Globalization of solidarity is above all a response to the pressing appeals of the Gospel of Christ. For us Christians, and for all men and women, this demands a true spiritual path, the conversion of minds and of persons.[5]

The Catholic Social Doctrine of Church is a voice in the global village. It one among the many voices that the globalized man hear every day. However, this voice differs from the rest in its ends and means. It does not aim simply to inform man but to transform him. It does not employ anything that is foreign in man, but that which is closest to him; the imminent reality to lead him to the transcendental, to the Kingdom of Father.

The Future of the Catholic Social Doctrine

We continue to live in a world full of flagrant inequalities, and despite the production and the wealth, the latter is increasingly concentrated in fewer hands.  Actually, a world is being created where the greediness of a few is leaving the majority on the margin of history.[6]

The Catholic Social Doctrine of the Church today faces a great crisis; crisis of authenticity; a crisis of relevance. How can the voice of an institution that have existed for two millennia be relevant to the Post-Modern world? Why would the globalized man listen to the voice of an institution often describe as medieval if not ancient in world view?  How would the Church be effective in her preaching of justice, equality, human dignity, solidarity, etc. when in her own backyard these very issues tribe? Indeed, there exist a crisis in the Church Social Doctrine. But crisis can opportunity too!

Now, more than ever, is the opportune time for the Church to be more just as she preaches justice, to be more poor as she invites her faithful to be poor, to be more respectful as she teaches equality in dignity, to be more loving as she condemns hatred and evil. Now is the time for the Church to be more really the Church of Christ; Church that is more selfless, Church that does not simply speaks of love but indeed loves much. In the midst of crisis, the Church can size this as an opportunity to be more true to her name, to be more true to the Word she received and preach about. The crisis that the Social Doctrine of the Church faces today can be an opportunity for her to be more authentic to the command of Christ of love. Should the Church fails to address this crisis of authenticity and relevance, the Church will cease to be the Church founded by Christ.      

This crisis can be successfully addressed by the Church only with the help of the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete. The Church should remain faithful and open to the workings ad promptings of the Holy Spirit. It is neither the human mind nor the human hands that kept this Church for two millennia. It is the Holy Spirit, who guided her throughout her existence. It is the Holy Spirit who sustained her. And the Church can not continue to exist in this Post-Modern world without the Holy Spirit, without being opened to the Paraclete. By providing a space for the Holy Spirit, indeed, the Church can and will continue to be true to her foundation and relevant to this ever changing world.  



Conclusion

The Church’s Social doctrine faces a crisis of authenticity and relevance in today’s Globalized and Post-Modern world. However, this crisis can be an opportunity for the Church to reflect upon herself; her voice that cries in the urban jungles, in the cyber space, through the modern media, in midst of economic and social injustices. Her ideo-realistic voice can be of great tool for her to utter the Word she received, and use the resources entrusted to her stewardship. In all these, She should not forget that it is the Holy Spirit that brought her this far, and it is the same Spirit that will bring her to the completion of her vocation, in the end of time, in God’s time.




[1] The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man. By MarshallMcLuhan. Routledge & Kegan Paul. Retrieved from http://innovationwatch.com/the-gutenberg-galaxy-the-making-of-typographic-man-by-marshall-mcluhan-routledge-kegan-paul/ on October 8, 2013. 
[2] John L. Allen Jr., Ten mega-trends shaping the Catholic Church, retrieved from http://ncronline.org/blogs/all-things-catholic/ten-mega-trends-shaping-catholic-church, on October 7, 2013.
[3] John Paul II, in a message written for the 17th General Assembly of Caritas International, retrieved from http://www.zenit.org/en/articles/globalization-of-solidarity-requires-a-change-of-mentality-says-pope on October 7, 2013.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriquez, The Catholic Church and the Globalization of Solidarity, retrieved from http://www.caritas.org/activities/economic_justice/the_catholic_church_and_the_globalization
_of_solidarity.html, on October 7, 2013. 

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