© Vatican Media

Pope Francis: Economic Crisis has Ethical Dimension

Address to Conference of Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share this Entry

“The current difficulties and crises within the global economic system have an undeniable ethical dimension,” Pope Francis said on May 26, 2018. “They are related to a mentality of egoism and exclusion that has effectively created a culture of waste blind to the human dignity of the most vulnerable.”
His comments came in the Sala Regia of the Vatican Apostolic Palace during an address to in members of the Centesimus Annus – Pro Pontifice Foundation on the 25th anniversary of its institution. Those present participated in the May 24-26, 2018 conference sponsored by the foundation: “New Policies and Life-Styles in the Digital Age”.
The Holy Father used the analogy of the false conflict between faith and science, noting there is a misconception that successful economics and morality are in conflict.
“All too often, a tragic and false dichotomy – analogous to the artificial rift between science and faith – has developed between the ethical teachings of our religious traditions and the practical concerns of today’s business community,” Francis explained. “But there is a natural circularity between profit and social responsibility.”
 
The Holy Father’s Address:
 
Dear Friends,
I greet all of you gathered for the 2018 International Conference of the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation.  In a particular way, in this, the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Foundation’s establishment by Saint John Paul II, I express my gratitude for your work in making known the wisdom of the Church’s social teaching with those involved in the business and economic sectors of civil society.  After a quarter-century, this task remains more necessary than ever, as the social and financial challenges faced by the international community have become increasingly complex and interrelated.
The current difficulties and crises within the global economic system have an undeniable ethical dimension: they are related to a mentality of egoism and exclusion that has effectively created a culture of waste blind to the human dignity of the most vulnerable.  We see this in the growing “globalization of indifference” before obvious moral challenges confronting our human family.  I think especially of the manifold obstacles to the integral human development of so many of our brothers and sisters, not only in materially poorer countries but increasingly amid the opulence of the developed world.  I think too of the urgent ethical issues associated with global movements of migration.
Your Foundation has a vital role to play in bringing the light of the Gospel message to these pressing humanitarian concerns, and in assisting the Church to carry out this essential aspect of her mission.  By continuing to engage with business and finance leaders, as well as union officials and others in the public sector, you seek to ensure that the intrinsic social dimension of all economic activity is adequately safeguarded and effectively promoted.
All too often, a tragic and false dichotomy – analogous to the artificial rift between science and faith – has developed between the ethical teachings of our religious traditions and the practical concerns of today’s business community.  But there is a natural circularity between profit and social responsibility.  There is, in fact, an “indissoluble connection […] between an ethics respectful of persons and the common good, and the actual functionality of every economic financial system” (Oeconomicae et pecuniariae quaestiones, 17 may 2018, 23).  In a word, the ethical dimension of social and economic interaction cannot be imported into social life and activity from without but must arise from within.  This is, of course, a long-term goal requiring the commitment of all persons and institutions within society.
Your Conference has chosen for its title this year “New Policies and Life-Styles in the Digital Age”.  One of the challenges linked to this theme is the threat families are facing from uncertain job opportunities and the impact of the digital cultural revolution.  As the preparation process for this year’s Synod on Young People has made clear, this is a vital area in which the solidarity of the Church is actively needed.  Your own contribution is a privileged expression of the Church’s concern for the future of young people and families.  Indeed this is an activity where ecumenical cooperation is of special importance and the presence of Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople at your Conference is an eloquent sign of this common responsibility.
Dear friends, by sharing your own knowledge and expertise, and by making known the richness of the Church’s social doctrine, you seek to form the consciences of leaders in the political, social and economic sectors.  I encourage you to persevere in these efforts which contribute to the building of a global culture of economic justice, equality and inclusion.  With gratitude and appreciation for what you have already accomplished, I prayerfully entrust your future commitment to the providence of Almighty God.  Upon you, your colleagues and your families I willingly invoke an abundance of the Lord’s blessings.
© Libreria Editrice Vatican

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share this Entry

Jim Fair

Jim Fair is a husband, father, grandfather, writer, and communications consultant. He also likes playing the piano and fishing. He writes from the Chicago area.

Support ZENIT

If you liked this article, support ZENIT now with a donation