Pope's new encyclical asks us to re-examine foundation of the economy
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Supreme Knight Carl Anderson

.- With the release of Pope Benedict XVI's encyclical just days away, the head of the Knights of Columbus is warning people not to ask how the Pope's teaching will validate their world view but how their views should change in response to the document.

The Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus, Carl Anderson, states that those in positions of economic influence shold take notice of "Caritas in Veritate", the Holy Father's forthcoming encyclical, to be released on July 7th.

"Commentators," Anderson says, "should avoid trying to analyze the pope’s document from their own perspectives or through a political lens. Pope Benedict XVI's comments in this encyclical, like his writing on the economy previously, concern the need for an ethical underpinning in order for any economic system to be sustainable. An ethical underpinning to economic systems must transcend politics."

Another reaction that Anderson warns against is reading the encyclical and then "asking not how it validates our worldview." Instead, he suggests asking how one's worldview should change in response to the document.

"The world deserves a market economy with a conscience. We should bear in mind that Pope Benedict XVI in a 1985 paper criticized Marxism heavily for being too 'deterministic' and warned that market economies risked collapse if they too excluded or ignored the ethical component of individual decision making. Certainly, he has been proven correct, and thus all of us, and especially those in position of economic leadership, should certainly take notice of this encyclical," the Supreme Knight recommends.

The Pope's newest teaching document asks the world to re-examine the economic crisis by looking at "the very foundation of our system – and to build on the bedrock of ethics rather than the sand of determinism," he explains.

"We could sum up the pope’s thinking on the economy this way: Each of us must answer Christ’s question, “Who do you say that I am?” If we, with Peter, answer “The Messiah,” then that should direct the axis of our life. Our most important reality must be the truth of our relationships. In this, we understand how the law and prophets could be summed up in Christ’s two commandments: that we love God totally, and love our neighbors as ourselves. Thus we are able to speak of 'caritas in veritate.'"

"If we accept this, we can no longer ask Cain’s question: 'Am I my brother’s keeper?'" notes Anderson.

"Accepting this premise, we must realize that our exercise of freedom cannot take the form of simply amassing the most wealth that we can."

"Rather, all that we do in freedom must reflect that reality and all our actions must take into account the effects of those actions on others. A Christian must be a person for others. In America, most people are Christian, so it is easy to see why they intuitively understand that greed is at the root of our economic crisis, and that one can be ethical and successful. This is the message we have seen already from Pope Benedict XVI, in his writings before he became pope, and specifically in Spe Salvi and Deus Caritas Est –his two previous encyclicals," the leader of the Knights says.

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Subscriber comments:
Published by: Don Schenk
Allentown/PA/USA 07/07/2009 11:32 AM EST
The pope has already examined "liberation theology" as Cardinal Ratzinger, and condemned it as one of those attempts to abandon Christian thinking for a political ideology that he warns against.
Published by: John
Omaha, NE 07/07/2009 10:35 AM EST
I'm saddened to see these comments.

It seems that many people still wish for the Church to change her teachings, control the world in a way she is not meant to do, to point fingers at easy culprits, and/or to fail to speak because of human failings.

In other words, too many want to ignore what the Pope and the Church have said because we don't wish to struggle with life to enact the full meaning of the Church's teachings.
Published by: Tom Donovan
Phoenix, AZ 07/05/2009 01:49 AM EST
I am not a Knight, nor normally likely to listen to a Knight leader.

However, Mr. Anderson call for openness merit consideration, and I will study the Pope's letter carefully. Perhaps the Pope should be open to re-examination of Liberation Theology
Published by: Dr. W. Luckey
Front Royal, VA 07/04/2009 10:18 PM EST
I wonder if the Holy Father is going to attack the cause of this curren crisis: the expansion of the money supply by central banks, and political cronyism. Somehow, I doubt it from Mr. Andersen's remarks
Published by: robert epperly
weaverville nc usa 07/04/2009 08:51 PM EST
the pope may be the wisest man alive today and people should take heed, even if it changes your concept of reality. I by the way left the Knights when I discovered that the supreme knight makes over one mil per year.
Published by: Alan
USA 07/04/2009 05:29 PM EST
Though I agree in principle, what you are asking world forums to do is embrace the Vatican's stance on this issue. This is like America imposing its values on countries in the Middle East. Each culture sees
the world through the lense of its own value system. Catholicism, nor any other religion have the answers. It's in humanities hands to take up the mantle of Ethics on their own, and in their own time that will change the world.

Large political enterprizes like the US, and yes, even the Catholic Church, have too often imposed values that they themselves do not embrace. When leaders and the entrerprise they are in charge of begin to practice what they preach, then maybe more people will listen. But right now, neither our nation or the church do so.

Ethics, in the mind of the everyday human being, means treating those you wound through policy or principle with respect. Religion in general has never done this, and polical structures even less so.

For any type of dialogue to begin, those in power must admit their failings and embrace their own humanity. None are divine, only one can carry that mantle.

I will evaluate what the holy Father has to say only in light of how I see the church embrace the very same values the Pope's encyclical speaks of.

We must see the face of Christ in everyone, not walk around with a swagger insinuating that only through the Catholic Church can the truth be found.

Remember, Jesus came to fulfill the law, not abolish it!
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