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Title: John Paul II Conference


1
John Paul II Conference
  • Diocese of Yakima
  • October 13, 2007

2
The Struggle for Justice John Paul II
  • Sister Sharon Park, O.P.
  • Executive Director
  • Washington State Catholic Conference

3
Definitions of Justice
  • What is Justice?
  • What does it mean in your life?

4
Dictionary Definition Justice
  • 1 a the maintenance or administration of what is
    just especially by the impartial adjustment of
    conflicting claims or the assignment of merited
    rewards or punishments b judge c the
    administration of law especially the
    establishment or determination of rights
    according to the rules of law or equity.
  • 2 a the quality of being just, impartial, or
    fair b(1) the principle or ideal of just
    dealing or right action (2) conformity to this
    principle or ideal righteousness c the quality
    of conforming to law.
  • 3 conformity to truth, fact, or reason
    correctness.
  • --From the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary

5
Catechism of the Catholic Church Definitions
  • JUSTICE is the moral virtue that consists in the
    constant and firm will to give their due to God
    and neighbor. Justice toward God is called the
    "virtue of religion." Justice toward (others)
    disposes one to respect the rights of each and to
    establish in human relationships the harmony that
    promotes equity with regard to persons and to the
    common good. Just (persons), often mentioned in
    the Sacred Scriptures, are distinguished by
    habitual right thinking and the uprightness of
    their conduct toward their neighbors.
  • --From the Catechism of the Catholic Church
    1807

6
Catechism of the Catholic Church Definitions (sl.
2)
  • COMMUTATIVE JUSTICE
  • Contracts are subject to commutative
    justice which regulates exchanges between persons
    and between institutions in accordance with a
    strict respect for their rights. Commutative
    justice obliges strictly it requires
    safeguarding property rights, paying debts, and
    fulfilling obligations freely contracted. Without
    commutative justice, no other form of justice is
    possible.
  • -From the Catechism of the Catholic Church
    2411

7
Catechism of the Catholic Church Definitions (sl.
3)
  • DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE
  • The virtue that regulates those actions which
    involve the rights that an individual may claim
    from society. According to distributive justice,
    the state has three basic duties to distribute
    the common burdens and privileges equitably to
    make it possible for each citizen to exercise
    natural and acquired rights without undue
    hindrance to foster mutual relations among the
    citizens for living together peacefully.
  • -- from Fr. John Hardon's Modern Catholic
    Dictionary, Eternal Life.

8
Why is justice important?
  • Why study it?
  • How can it influence
  • My life?
  • Our society?
  • The world?

9
Pope John Paul IIs Writings on Justice
  • On Human Work (Laborem Exercens), 1981
  • On Social Concern (Sollicitudo Rei Socialis),
    1987
  • On the 100th Anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centisimus Annus), 1991

10
PEACE (sl. 1)
  • "Development is the new name for peace.
  • .In fact, if the social question has acquired a
    worldwide dimension, this is because the demand
    for justice can only be satisfied on that
    level.
  • To ignore this demand could encourage the
    temptation among the victims of injustice to
    respond with violence, as happens at the origin
    of many wars. Peoples excluded from the fair
    distribution of the goods originally destined for
    all could ask themselves why not respond with
    violence to those who first treat us with
    violence? Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 10

11
PEACE (sl. 2)
  • .how can one justify the fact that huge sums of
    money, which could and should be used for
    increasing the development of peoples, are
    instead utilized for the enrichment of
    individuals or groups, or assigned to the
    increase of stockpiles of weapons, both in
    developed countries and in the developing ones,
    thereby upsetting the real priorities?
  • If "development is the new name for peace," war
    and military preparations are the major enemy of
    the integral development of peoples. Pope
    John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec.
    30, 1987. Section 10

12
PEACE (sl. 3)
  • On the contrary, in a different world, ruled by
    concern for the common good of all humanity, or
    by concern for the spiritual and human
    development of all instead of by the quest for
    individual profit, peace would be possible as the
    result of a more perfect justice among
    people. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo
    rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987. Section 10
  • If arms production is a serious disorder in the
    present world with regard to true human needs and
    the employment of the means capable of satisfying
    those needs, the arms trade is equally to
    blame. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei
    socialis), Dec. 30, 1987. Section 24

13
PEACE (sl. 4)
  • Today perhaps more than in the past, people are
    realizing that they are linked together by a
    common destiny, which is to be constructed
    together, if catastrophe for all is to be
    avoided. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 26.
  • Commitment to justice must be closely linked with
    commitment to peace in the modern world. Pope
    John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem
    exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section 2.

14
PEACE (sl. 5)
  • .it must not be forgotten that at the root of
    war there are usually real and serious
    grievances injustices suffered, legitimate
    aspirations frustrated, poverty, and the
    exploitation of multitudes of desperate people
    who see no real possibility of improving their
    lot by peaceful means. Pope John Paul II, On
    the hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 52.
  • For this reason, another name for peace is
    development. Just as there is a collective
    responsibility for avoiding war, so too there is
    a collective responsibility for promoting
    development. Pope John Paul II, On the
    hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 52.

15
SOLIDARITY (sl. 1)
  • it is a firm and persevering determination to
    commit oneself to the common good that is to say
    to the good of all and of each individual,
    because we are all really responsible for
    all. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 38.
  • Positive signs in the contemporary world are the
    growing awareness of the solidarity of the poor
    among themselves, their efforts to support one
    another, and their public demonstrations on the
    social scene. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 39.

16
SOLIDARITY (sl. 2)
  • Solidarity helps us to see the other-whether a
    person, people or nation-not just as some kind of
    instrument, with a work capacity and physical
    strength to be exploited at low cost and then
    discarded when no longer useful, but as our
    neighbor, a helper. Pope John Paul II, ON
    SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis),
    Dec. 30, 1987. Section 39.
  • In this way, the solidarity which we propose is
    the path to peace and at the same time to
    development. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 39.
  • Solidarity is undoubtedly a Christian virtue. In
    what has been said so far it has been possible to
    identify many points of contact between
    solidarity and charity, which is the
    distinguishing mark of Christ's
    disciples. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 40.

17
SOLIDARITY (sl. 3)
  • ..if one studies the development of the
    question of social justice, one cannot fail to
    note that, whereas during the period between
    Rerum Novarum and Pius XI's Quadragesimo Anno the
    Church's teaching concentrates mainly on the just
    solution of the labour question within
    individual nations, in the next period the
    Church's teaching widens its horizon to take in
    the whole world. The disproportionate
    distribution of wealth and poverty and the
    existence of some countries and continents that
    are developed and of others that are not call for
    a levelling out and for a search for ways to
    ensure just development for all. Pope John
    Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens),
    Sept. 14, 1981. Section 2.

18
SOLIDARITY (sl. 4)
  • While in the past the class question was
    especially highlighted as the centre of this
    issue, in more recent times it is the world
    question that is emphasized. Thus, not only the
    sphere of class is taken into consideration but
    also the world sphere of inequality and
    injustice, and as a consequence, not only the
    class dimension but also the world dimension of
    the tasks involved in the path towards the
    achievement of justice in the modern world.
    Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem
    exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section 2.

19
POVERTY (sl. 1)
  • There are many millions who are deprived of hope
    due to the fact that, in many parts of the world,
    their situation has noticeably worsened.
    Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 13.
  • We are therefore faced with a serious problem of
    unequal distribution of the means of subsistence
    originally meant for everybody, and thus also an
    unequal distribution of the benefits deriving
    from them. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 9.

20
POVERTY (sl. 2)
  • The first negative observation to make is the
    persistence and often the widening of the gap
    between the areas of the so-called developed
    North and the developing South. Pope John Paul
    II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei
    socialis), Dec. 30, 1987. Section 14.   
  • As we observe the various parts of the world
    separated by this widening gap, and note that
    each of these parts seems to follow its own path
    with its own achievements, we can understand the
    current usage which speaks of different worlds
    within our one world the First World, the Second
    World, the Third World and at times the Fourth
    World. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 14.

21
POVERTY (sl. 3)
  • Among the specific signs of underdevelopment
    which increasingly affect the developed countries
    also, there are two in particular that reveal a
    tragic situation. The first is the housing
    crisis. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 17.
  • Another indicator common to the vast majority of
    nations is the phenomenon of unemployment and
    underemployment. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 18.
  • A third phenomenon is the question of the
    international debt Pope John Paul II, ON
    SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis),
    Dec. 30, 1987. Section 19.

22
POVERTY (sl. 4)
  • If a nation were to succumb more or less
    deliberately to the temptation to close in upon
    itself and failed to meet the responsibilities
    following from its superior position in the
    community of nations, it would fall seriously
    short of its clear ethical duty. Pope John
    Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei
    socialis), Dec. 30, 1987. Section 23.
  • If Pope Leo XIII calls upon the State to remedy
    the condition of the poor in accordance with
    justice, he does so because of his timely
    awareness that the State has the duty of watching
    over the common good and of ensuring that every
    sector of social life, not excluding the economic
    one, contributes to achieving that good, while
    respecting the rightful autonomy of each sector.
    Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 11.
  • The Church is firmly committed to this cause, for
    she considers it her mission, her service, a
    proof of her fidelity to Christ, so that she can
    truly be the "Church of the poor". Pope John
    Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens),
    Sept. 14, 1981. Section 8.

23
ENVIRONMENT (sl. 1)
  • Among today's positive signs we must also
    mention a greater realization of the limits of
    avail able resources, and of the need to respect
    the integrity and the cycles of nature and to
    take them into account when planning for
    development, rather than sacrificing them to
    certain demagogic ideas about the latter. Today
    this is called ecological concern. Pope John
    Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei
    socialis), Dec. 30, 1987. Section 26.
  • .the experience of recent years shows that
    unless all the considerable body of resources and
    potential at (our) disposal is guided by a moral
    understanding and by an orientation towards the
    true good of the human race, it easily turns
    against (us) to oppress (us). Pope John Paul
    II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis),
    Dec. 30, 1987. Section 28.
  • The first consideration is the appropriateness
    of acquiring a growing awareness of the fact that
    one cannot use with impunity the different
    categories of beings, whether living or inanimate
    - animals, plants, the natural elements - simply
    as one wishes, according to one s own economic
    needs. On the contrary, one must take into
    account the nature of each being and of its
    mutual connection in an ordered system, which is
    precisely the cosmos. Pope John Paul II, ON
    SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec.
    30, 1987. Section 34.

24
ENVIRONMENT (sl. 2)
  • The second consideration is based on the
    realization - which is perhaps more urgent - that
    natural resources are limited some are not, as
    it is said, renewable. Using them as if they were
    inexhaustible, with absolute dominion, seriously
    endangers their availability not only for the
    present generation but above all for generations
    to come. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 34.
  • The third consideration refers directly to the
    consequences of a certain type of development on
    the quality of life in the industrialized zones.
    We all know that the direct or indirect result of
    industrialization is, ever more frequently, the
    pollution of the environment, with serious
    consequences for the health of the population.
    Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 34.

25
ENVIRONMENT (sl. 3)
  • Equally worrying is the ecological question which
    accompanies the problem of consumerism and which
    is closely connected to it. In (the) desire to
    have and to enjoy rather than to be and to grow,
    (the human person) consumes the resources of the
    earth and his own life in an excessive and
    disordered way. Pope John Paul II, On the
    hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 37.
  • (Human persons) think that they can make
    arbitrary use of the earth, subjecting it without
    restraint to his will, as though it did not have
    its own requisites and a prior God-given purpose,
    which (humans) can indeed develop but must not
    betray. Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 37.

26
ENVIRONMENT (sl. 4)
  • The first and fundamental structure for "human
    ecology" is the family, in which (human persons)
    receive (their) first formative ideas about truth
    and goodness, and learns what it means to love
    and to be loved, and thus what it actually means
    to be a person. Pope John Paul II, On the
    hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 39.

27
HUMAN DIGNITY (sl. 1)
  • But the Church is an "expert in humanity," and
    this leads her necessarily to extend her
    religious mission to the various fields in which
    men and women expend their efforts in search of
    the always relative happiness which is possible
    in this world, in line with their dignity as
    persons. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN
    (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30, 1987.
    Section 41.
  • The Church respects the legitimate autonomy of
    the democratic order and is not entitled to
    express preferences for this or that
    institutional or constitutional solution. Her
    contribution to the political order is precisely
    her vision of the dignity of the person revealed
    in all its fullness in the mystery of the
    Incarnate Word. Pope John Paul II, On the
    hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 47.

28
HUMAN DIGNITY (sl. 2)
  • Faithful to the mission received from Christ her
    Founder, the Church has always been present and
    active among the needy, offering them material
    assistance in ways that neither humiliate nor
    reduce them to mere objects of assistance, but
    which help them to escape their precarious
    situation by promoting their dignity as
    persons. Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 49.
  • .it is very alarming to see governments in many
    countries launching systematic campaigns against
    birth, contrary not only to the cultural and
    religious identity of the countries themselves
    but also contrary to the nature of true
    development. Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 25.

29
OPTION FOR THE POOR (sl. 1)
  • Here I would like to indicate one of them the
    option or love of preference for the poor. This
    is an option, or a special form of primacy in the
    exercise of Christian charity, to which the whole
    tradition of the Church bears witness. It affects
    the life of each Christian inasmuch as he or she
    seeks to imitate the life of Christ, but it
    applies equally to our social responsibilities
    and hence to our manner of living, and to the
    logical decisions to be made concerning the
    ownership and use of goods. Pope John Paul
    II, ON SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei
    socialis), Dec. 30, 1987. Section 42.

30
OPTION FOR THE POOR (sl. 2)
  • Today, furthermore, given the worldwide dimension
    which the social question has assumed, this love
    of preference for the poor, and the decisions
    which it inspires in us, cannot but embrace the
    immense multitudes of the hungry, the needy, the
    homeless, those without medical care and, above
    all, those without hope of a better future. It is
    impossible not to take account of the existence
    of these realities. To ignore them would mean
    becoming like the "rich man" who pretended not to
    know the beggar Lazarus lying at his gate (cf. Lk
    1619-31). Pope John Paul II, ON SOCIAL
    CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis), Dec. 30,
    1987. Section 42.

31
OPTION FOR THE POOR (sl. 3)
  • The motivating concern for the poor - who are, in
    the very meaningful term, "the Lord's poor" -
    must be translated at all levels into concrete
    actions, until it decisively attains a series of
    necessary reforms. Pope John Paul II, ON
    SOCIAL CONCERN (Sollicitudo rei socialis),
    Dec. 30, 1987. Section 43.
  • "When there is question of defending the rights
    of individuals, the defenceless and the poor have
    a claim to special consideration. Pope John
    Paul II, On the hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 10.
  • The content of the text is an excellent testimony
    to the continuity within the Church of the
    so-called "preferential option for the poor", an
    option which I defined as a "special form of
    primacy in the exercise of Christian
    charity". Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 11.

32
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 1)
  • Through work (human persons) must earn (their)
    daily bread and contribute to the continual
    advance of science and technology and, above all,
    to elevating unceasingly the cultural and moral
    level of the society within which he lives in
    community with those who belong to the same
    family. Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981.
    Blessing.
  • .. life is built up every day from work, from
    work it derives its specific dignity, but at the
    same time work contains the unceasing measure of
    human toil and suffering, and also of the harm
    and injustice which penetrate deeply into social
    life within individual nations and on the
    international level. Pope John Paul II, ON
    HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14,
    1981. Section 1.

33
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 2)
  • The call to solidarity and common action
    addressed to the workers.was the reaction
    against the degradation of (the human person) as
    the subject of work, and against the unheard-of
    accompanying exploitation in the field of wages,
    working conditions and social security for the
    worker. Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section
    8.
  • .there must be continued study of the subject
    of work and of the subject's living conditions.
    In order to achieve social justice in the various
    parts of the world, in the various countries, and
    in the relationships between them, there is a
    need for ever new movements of solidarity of the
    workers and with the workers. Pope John Paul
    II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept.
    14, 1981. Section 8.

34
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 3)
  • .(Human persons) combine (their) deepest human
    identity with membership of a nation, and intend
    (their) work also to increase the common good
    developed together with (their) compatriots, thus
    realizing that in this way work serves to add to
    the heritage of the whole human family, of all
    the people living in the world. Pope John Paul
    II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14,
    1981. Section 10.
  • .part of the abiding heritage of the Church's
    teaching, must always be emphasized with
    reference to the question of the labour system
    and with regard to the whole socioeconomic
    system. We must emphasize and give prominence to
    the primacy of (the human person) in the
    production process, the primacy of (the human
    person) over things. Pope John Paul II, ON
    HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981.
    Section 12.
  • .the principle of the priority of labour over
    capital is a postulate of the order of social
    morality. Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section 15.

35
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 4)
  • While work, in all its many senses, is an
    obligation, that is to say a duty, it is also a
    source of rights on the part of the worker. These
    rights must be examined in the broad context of
    human rights as a whole.. Respect for this broad
    range of human rights constitutes the fundamental
    condition for peace in the modern world peace
    both within individual countries and societies
    and in international relations.. The human
    rights that flow from work are part of the
    broader context of those fundamental rights of
    the person. Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section
    16.

36
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 5)
  • labour became a commodity to be freely bought
    and sold on the market, its price determined by
    the law of supply and demand, without taking into
    account the bare minimum required for the support
    of the individual and his family. Pope John
    Paul II, On the hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 4.
  • At the height of this clash, when people finally
    began to realize fully the very grave injustice
    of social realities in many places and the danger
    of a revolution fanned by ideals which were then
    called "socialist", Pope Leo XIII intervened with
    a document which dealt in a systematic way with
    the "condition of the workers". Pope John
    Paul II, On the hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 4.

37
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 6)
  • The key problem of social ethics in this case is
    that of just remuneration for work done. In the
    context of the present there is no more important
    way for securing a just relationship between the
    worker and the employer than that constituted by
    remuneration for work. Pope John Paul II, ON
    HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981.
    Section 19.
  • Just remuneration for the work of an adult who is
    responsible for a family means remuneration which
    will suffice for establishing and properly
    maintaining a family and for providing security
    for its future.Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section 19.

38
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 7)
  • Besides wages, various social benefits intended
    to ensure the life and health of workers and
    their families play a part here. The expenses
    involved in health care, especially in the case
    of accidents at work, demand that medical
    assistance should be easily available for
    workers, and that as far as possible it should be
    cheap or even free of charge. Pope John Paul
    II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept.
    14, 1981. Section 19.
  • The Pope immediately adds another right which the
    worker has as a person. This is the right to a
    "just wage". Pope John Paul II, On the
    hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 8.

39
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 8)
  • A workman's wages should be sufficient to enable
    him to support himself, his wife and his
    children. Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 8.
  • To these rights Pope Leo XIII adds another right
    regarding the condition of the working class, one
    which I wish to mention because of its
    importance namely, the right to discharge freely
    one's religious duties. Pope John Paul II, On
    the hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 9.

40
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS (sl. 9)
  • Agricultural Worker
  • The world of agriculture, which provides society
    with the goods it needs for its daily sustenance,
    is of fundamental importance. Pope John Paul
    II, ON HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept.
    14, 1981. Section 21.
  • This depends not only on the level of development
    of agricultural technology but also, and perhaps
    more, on the recognition of the just rights of
    agricultural workers and, finally, on the level
    of awareness regarding the social ethics of work.
    Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section
    21.

41
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS(sl. 10)
  • Disabled Worker
  • Disabled people are fully human subjects with
    corresponding innate, sacred and inviolable
    rights, and, in spite of the limitations and
    sufferings affecting their bodies and faculties,
    they point up more clearly the dignity and
    greatness of man. Since disabled people are
    subjects with all their rights, they should be
    helped to participate in the life of society in
    all its aspects and at all the levels accessible
    to their capacities. Pope John Paul II, ON
    HUMAN WORK (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14,
    1981. Section 21.

42
DIGNITY OF WORK/WORKERS(sl. 11)
  • Immigrant Worker
  • Emigration in search of work must in no way
    become an opportunity for financial or social
    exploitation. As regards the work relationship,
    the same criteria should be applied to immigrant
    workers as to all other workers in the society
    concerned. Pope John Paul II, ON HUMAN WORK
    (Laborem exercens), Sept. 14, 1981. Section
    21.

43
ACTION ON BEHALF OF JUSTICE(sl. 1)
  • As far as the Church is concerned, the social
    message of the Gospel must not be considered a
    theory, but above all else a basis and a
    motivation for action. Pope John Paul II, On
    the hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 57.
  • Today more than ever, the Church is aware that
    her social message will gain credibility more
    immediately from the witness of actions than as a
    result of its internal logic and consistency.
    This awareness is also a source of her
    preferential option for the poor, which is never
    exclusive or discriminatory towards other groups.
    Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 57.

44
ACTION ON BEHALF OF JUSTICE(sl. 2)
  • The Church's love for the poor, which is
    essential for her and a part of her constant
    tradition, impels her to give attention to a
    world in which poverty is threatening to assume
    massive proportions in spite of technological and
    economic progress. Pope John Paul II, On the
    hundredth anniversary of Rerum Novarum
    (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991. Section 57.
  • Love for others, and in the first place love for
    the poor, in whom the Church sees Christ himself,
    is made concrete in the promotion of justice.
    Justice will never be fully attained unless
    people see in the poor person, who is asking for
    help in order to survive, not an annoyance or a
    burden, but an opportunity for showing kindness
    and a chance for greater enrichment. Pope John
    Paul II, On the hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 58.

45
ACTION ON BEHALF OF JUSTICE(sl. 3)
  • It is not merely a matter of "giving from one's
    surplus", but of helping entire peoples which are
    presently excluded or marginalized to enter into
    the sphere of economic and human development.
    Pope John Paul II, On the hundredth
    anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
    annus), May 1, 1991. Section 58.
  • Today we are facing the so-called "globalization"
    of the economy, a phenomenon which is not to be
    dismissed, since it can create unusual
    opportunities for greater prosperity. Pope
    John Paul II, On the hundredth anniversary of
    Rerum Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1,
    1991. Section 58.

46
ACTION ON BEHALF OF JUSTICE(sl. 4)
  • Therefore, in order that the demands of justice
    may be met, and attempts to achieve this goal may
    succeed, what is needed is the gift of grace, a
    gift which comes from God. Pope John Paul II,
    On the hundredth anniversary of Rerum
    Novarum (Centesimus annus), May 1, 1991.
    Section 59.

47
ADVOCACY
  • Catholic Advocacy Network
  • Catholic Advocacy Day February 22, 2008 In
    Olympia
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