Blessing
Venerable Brothers and Dear Sons and Daughters,
Greetings and apostolic Blessing
THROUGH WORK man
must earn his daily bread1 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. And work means any activity by
man, whether manual or intellectual, whatever its nature or
circumstances; it means any human activity that can and must
be recognized as work, in the midst of all the many
activities of which man is capable and to which he is
predisposed by his very nature, by virtue of humanity
itself. Man is made to be in the visible universe an image
and likeness of God himself2, and he is placed in it in
order to subdue the earth3. From the beginning therefore he
is called to work. Work is one of the characteristics that
distinguish man from the rest of creatures, whose activity
for sustaining their lives cannot be called work. Only man
is capable of work, and only man works, at the same time by
work occupying his existence on earth. Thus work bears a
particular mark of man and of humanity, the mark of a person
operating within a community of persons. And this mark
decides its interior characteristics; in a sense it
constitutes its very nature.
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Human Work on the Ninetieth Anniversary of Rerum
Novarum
Since 15 May of the present year was the ninetieth
anniversary of the publication by the great Pope of the
"social question", Leo XIII, of the decisively important
Encyclical which begins with the words Rerum Novarum, I wish
to devote this document to human work and, even more, to man
in the vast context of the reality of work. As I said in the
Encyclical Redemptor Hominis, published at the beginning of
my service in the See of Saint Peter in Rome, man "is the
primary and fundamental way for the Church"4,precisely
because of the inscrutable mystery of Redemption in Christ;
and so it is necessary to return constantly to this way and
to follow it ever anew in the various aspects in which it
shows us all the wealth and at the same time all the toil of
human existence on earth.
Work is one of these aspects, a perennial and fundamental
one, one that is always relevant and constantly demands
renewed attention and decisive witness. Because fresh
questions and problems are always arising, there are always
fresh hopes, but also fresh fears and threats, connected
with this basic dimension of human existence: man's 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. While it is true that man eats the bread produced by
the work of his hands5 - and this means not only the daily
bread by which his body keeps alive but also the bread of
science and progress, civilization and culture - it is also
a perennial truth that he eats this bread by "the sweat of
his face"6, that is to say, not only by personal effort and
toil but also in the midst of many tensions, conflicts and
crises, which, in relationship with the reality of work,
disturb the life of individual societies and also of all
humanity.
We are celebrating the ninetieth anniversary of the
Encyclical Rerum Novarum on the eve of new developments in
technological, economic and political conditions which,
according to many experts, will influence the world of work
and production no less than the industrial revolution of the
last century. There are many factors of a general nature:
the widespread introduction of automation into many spheres
of production, the increase in the cost of energy and raw
materials, the growing realization that the heritage of
nature is limited and that it is being intolerably polluted,
and the emergence on the political scene of peoples who,
after centuries of subjection, are demanding their rightful
place among the nations and in international
decision-making. These new conditions and demands will
require a reordering and adjustment of the structures of the
modern economy and of the distribution of work.
Unfortunately, for millions of skilled workers these changes
may perhaps mean unemployment, at least for a time, or the
need for retraining. They will very probably involve a
reduction or a less rapid increase in material well-being
for the more developed countries. But they can also bring
relief and hope to the millions who today live in conditions
of shameful and unworthy poverty.
It is not for the Church to analyze scientifically the
consequences that these changes may have on human society.
But the Church considers it her task always to call
attention to the dignity and rights of those who work, to
condemn situations in which that dignity and those rights
are violated, and to help to guide the above-mentioned
changes so as to ensure authentic progress by man and
society.
2. In the Organic Development of the Church's Social
Action
It is certainly true that work, as a human issue, is at the
very centre of the "social question" to which, for almost a
hundred years, since the publication of the above-mentioned
Encyclical, the Church's teaching and the many undertakings
connected with her apostolic mission have been especially
directed. The present reflections on work are not intended
to follow a different line, but rather to be in organic
connection with the whole tradition of this teaching and
activity. At the same time, however, I am making them,
according to the indication in the Gospel, in order to bring
out from the heritage of the Gospel "what is new and what is
old"7. Certainly, work is part of "what is old"- as old as
man and his life on earth. Nevertheless, the general
situation of man in the modern world, studied and analyzed
in its various aspects of geography, culture and
civilization, calls for the discovery of the new meanings of
human work. It likewise calls for the formulation of the new
tasks that in this sector face each individual, the family,
each country, the whole human race, and, finally, the Church
herself.
During the years that separate us from the publication of
the Encyclical Rerum Novarum, the social question has not
ceased to engage the Church's attention. Evidence of this
are the many documents of the Magisterium issued by the
Popes and by the Second Vatican Council, pronouncements by
individual Episcopates, and the activity of the various
centres of thought and of practical apostolic initiatives,
both on the international level and at the level of the
local Churches. It is difficult to list here in detail all
the manifestations of the commitment of the Church and of
Christians in the social question, for they are too
numerous. As a result of the Council, the main coordinating
centre in this field is the Pontifical Commission Justice
and Peace, which has corresponding bodies within the
individual Bishops' Conferences. The name of this
institution is very significant. It indicates that the
social question must be dealt with in its whole complex
dimension. Commitment to justice must be closely linked with
commitment to peace in the modern world. This twofold
commitment is certainly supported by the painful experience
of the two great world wars which in the course of the last
ninety years have convulsed many European countries and, at
least partially, countries in other continents. It is
supported, especially since the Second World War, by the
permanent threat of a nuclear war and the prospect of the
terrible self-destruction that emerges from it.
If we follow the main line of development of the documents
of the supreme Magisterium of the Church, we find in them an
explicit confirmation of precisely such a statement of the
question. The key position, as regards the question of world
peace, is that of John XXIII's Encyclical Pacem in Terris.
However, 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. This is the
direction of the teaching in John XXIII's Encyclical Mater
et Magistra, in the Pastoral Constitution Gaudium et Spes of
the Second Vatican Council, and in Paul VI's Encyclical
Populorum Progressio.
This trend of development of the Church's teaching and
commitment in the social question exactly corresponds to the
objective recognition of the state of affairs. 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. A complete analysis of the
situation of the world today shows in an even deeper and
fuller way the meaning of the previous analysis of social
injustices; and it is the meaning that must be given today
to efforts to build justice on earth, not concealing thereby
unjust structures but demanding that they be examined and
transformed on a more universal scale.
3. The Question of Work, the Key to the Social Question
In the midst of all these processes-those of the diagnosis
of objective social reality and also those of the Church's
teaching in the sphere of the complex and many-sided social
question-the question of human work naturally appears many
times. This issue is, in a way, a constant factor both of
social life and of the Church's teaching. Furthermore, in
this teaching attention to the question goes back much
further than the last ninety years. In fact the Church's
social teaching finds its source in Sacred Scripture,
beginning with the Book of Genesis and especially in the
Gospel and the writings of the Apostles. From the beginning
it was part of the Church's teaching, her concept of man and
life in society, and, especially, the social morality which
she worked out according to the needs of the different ages.
This traditional patrimony was then inherited and developed
by the teaching of the Popes on the modern "social
question", beginning with the Encyclical Rerum Novarum. In
this context, study of the question of work, as we have
seen, has continually been brought up to date while
maintaining that Christian basis of truth which can be
called ageless.
While in the present document we return to this question
once more-without however any intention of touching on all
the topics that concern it-this is not merely in order to
gather together and repeat what is already contained in the
Church's teaching. It is rather in order to
highlight-perhaps more than has been done before-the fact
that human work is a key, probably the essential key, to the
whole social question, if we try to see that question really
from the point of view of man's good. And if the solution-or
rather the gradual solution-of the social question, which
keeps coming up and becomes ever more complex, must be
sought in the direction of "making life more human"8, then
the key, namely human work, acquires fundamental and
decisive importance.
II. WORK AND MAN
4. In the Book of Genesis
The Church is convinced that work is a fundamental dimension
of man's existence on earth. She is confirmed in this
conviction by considering the whole heritage of the many
sciences devoted to man: anthropology, palaeontology,
history, sociology, psychology and so on; they all seem to
bear witness to this reality in an irrefutable way. But the
source of the Church's conviction is above all the revealed
word of God, and therefore what is a conviction of the
intellect is also a conviction of faith. The reason is that
the Church-and it is worthwhile stating it at this
point-believes in man: she thinks of man and addresses
herself to him not only in the light of historical
experience, not only with the aid of the many methods of
scientific knowledge, but in the first place in the light of
the revealed word of the living God. Relating herself to
man, she seeks to express the eternal designs and
transcendent destiny which the living God, the Creator and
Redeemer, has linked with him.
The Church finds in the very first pages ofthe Book of
Genesis the source of her conviction that work is a
fundamental dimension of human existence on earth. An
analysis of these texts makes us aware that they
express-sometimes in an archaic way of manifesting
thought-the fundamental truths about man, in the context of
the mystery of creation itelf. These truths are decisive for
man from the very beginning, and at the same time they trace
out the main lines of his earthly existence, both in the
state of original justice and also after the breaking,
caused by sin, of the Creator's original covenant with
creation in man. When man, who had been created "in the
image of God.... male and female"9, hears the words: "Be
fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it"10,
even though these words do not refer directly and explicitly
to work, beyond any doubt they indirectly indicate it as an
activity for man to carry out in the world. Indeed, they
show its very deepest essence. Man is the image of God
partly through the mandate received from his Creator to
subdue, to dominate, the earth. In carrying out this
mandate, man, every human being, reflects the very action of
the Creator of the universe.
Work understood as a "transitive" activity, that is to say
an activity beginning in the human subject and directed
towards an external object, presupposes a specific dominion
by man over "the earth", and in its turn it confirms and
develops this dominion. It is clear that the term "the
earth" of which the biblical text speaks is to be understood
in the flrst place as that fragment of the visible universe
that man inhabits. By extension, however, it can be
understood as the whole of the visible world insofar as it
comes within the range of man's influence and of his
striving to satisfy his needs. The expression "subdue the
earth" has an immense range. It means all the resources that
the earth (and indirectly the visible world) contains and
which, through the conscious activity of man, can be
discovered and used for his ends. And so these words, placed
at the beginning of the Bible, never cease to be relevant.
They embrace equally the past ages of civilization and
economy, as also the whole of modern reality and future
phases of development, which are perhaps already to some
extent beginning to take shape, though for the most part
they are still almost unknown to man and hidden from him.
While people sometimes speak of periods of "acceleration" in
the economic life and civilization of humanity or of
individual nations, linking these periods to the progress of
science and technology and especially to discoveries which
are decisive for social and economic life, at the same time
it can be said that none of these phenomena of
"acceleration" exceeds the essential content of what was
said in that most ancient of biblical texts. As man, through
his work, becomes more and more the master of the earth, and
as he confirms his dominion over the visible world, again
through his work, he nevertheless remains in every case and
at every phase of this process within the Creator's original
ordering. And this ordering remains necessarily and
indissolubly linked with the fact that man was created, as
male and female, "in the image of God". This process is,at
the same time, universal: it embraces all human beings,
every generation, every phase of economic and cultural
development, and at the same time it is a process that takes
place within each human being, in each conscious human
subject. Each and every individual is at the same time
embraced by it. Each and every individual, to the proper
extent and in an incalculable number of ways, takes part in
the giant process whereby man "subdues the earth" through
his work.
5. Work in the Objective Sense: Technology
This universality and, at the same time, this multiplicity
of the process of "subduing the earth" throw light upon
human work, because man's dominion over the earth is
achieved in and by means of work. There thus emerges the
meaning of work in an objective sense, which finds
expression in the various epochs of culture and
civilization. Man dominates the earth by the very fact of
domesticating animals, rearing them and obtaining from them
the food and clothing he needs, and by the fact of being
able to extract various natural resources from the earth and
the seas. But man "subdues the earth" much more when he
begins to cultivate it and then to transform its products,
adapting them to his own use. Thus agriculture constitutes
through human work a primary field of economic activity and
an indispensable factor of production. Industry in its turn
will always consist in linking the earth's riches-whether
nature's living resources, or the products of agriculture,
or the mineral or chemical resources-with man's work,
whether physical or intellectual. This is also in a sense
true in the sphere of what are called service industries,
and also in the sphere of research, pure or applied.
In industry and agriculture man's work has today in many
cases ceased to be mainly manual, for the toil of human
hands and muscles is aided by more and more highly perfected
machinery. Not only in industry but also in agriculture we
are witnessing the transformations made possible by the
gradual development of science and technology. Historically
speaking, this, taken as a whole, has caused great changes
in civilization, from the beginning of the "industrial era"
to the successive phases of development through new
technologies, such as the electronics and the microprocessor
technology in recent years.
While it may seem that in the industrial process it is the
machine that "works" and man merely supervises it, making it
function and keeping it going in various ways, it is also
true that for this very reason industrial development
provides grounds for reproposing in new ways the question of
human work. Both the original industrialization that gave
rise to what is called the worker question and the
subsequent industrial and post-industrial changes show in an
eloquent manner that, even in the age of ever more
mechanized "work", the proper subject of work continues to
be man.
The development of industry and of the various sectors
connected with it, even the most modern electronics
technology, especially in the fields of miniaturization,
communications and telecommunications and so forth, shows
how vast is the role of technology, that ally of work that
human thought has produced, in the interaction between the
subject and object of work (in the widest sense of the
word). Understood in this case not as a capacity or aptitude
for work, but rather as a whole set of instruments which man
uses in his work, technology is undoubtedly man's ally. It
facilitates his work, perfects, accelerates and augments it.
It leads to an increase in the quantity of things produced
by work, and in many cases improves their quality. However,
it is also a fact that, in some instances, technology can
cease to be man's ally and become almost his enemy, as when
the mechanization of work "supplants" him, taking away all
personal satisfaction and the incentive to creativity and
responsibility, when it deprives many workers of their
previous employment, or when, through exalting the machine,
it reduces man to the status of its slave.
If the biblical words "subdue the earth" addressed to man
from the very beginning are understood in the context of the
whole modern age, industrial and post-industrial, then they
undoubtedly include also a relationship with technology,
with the world of machinery which is the fruit of the work
of the human intellect and a historical confirmation of
man's dominion over nature.
The recent stage of human history, especially that of
certain societies, brings a correct affirmation of
technology as a basic coefficient of economic progress; but,
at the same time, this affirmation has been accompanied by
and continues to be accompanied by the raising of essential
questions concerning human work in relationship to its
subject, which is man. These questions are particularly
charged with content and tension of an ethical and an
ethical and social character. They therefore constitute a
continual challenge for institutions of many kinds, for
States and governments, for systems and international
organizations; they also constitute a challenge for the
Church.
6. Work in the Subjective Sense: Man as the Subject of
Work
In order to continue our analysis of work, an analysis
linked with the word of the Bible telling man that he is to
subdue the earth, we must concentrate our attention on work
in the subjective sense, much more than we did on the
objective significance, barely touching upon the vast range
of problems known intimately and in detail to scholars in
various fields and also, according to their specializations,
to those who work. If the words of the Book of Genesis to
which we refer in this analysis of ours speak of work in the
objective sense in an indirect way, they also speak only
indirectly of the subject of work; but what they say is very
eloquent and is full of great significance.
Man has to subdue the earth and dominate it, because as the
"image of God" he is a person, that is to say, a subjective
being capable of acting in a planned and rational way,
capable of deciding about himself, and with a tendency to
self-realization. As a person, man is therefore the subject
ot work. As a person he works, he performs various actions
belonging to the work process; independently of their
objective content, these actions must all serve to realize
his humanity, to fulfil the calling to be a person that is
his by reason of his very humanity. The principal truths
concerning this theme were recently recalled by the Second
Vatican Council in the Constitution Gaudium et Spes,
especially in Chapter One, which is devoted to man's
calling.
And so this "dominion" spoken of in the biblical text being
meditated upon here refers not only to the objective
dimension of work but at the same time introduces us to an
understanding of its subjective dimension. Understood as a
process whereby man and the human race subdue the earth,
work corresponds to this basic biblical concept only when
throughout the process man manifests himself and confirms
himself as the one who "dominates". This dominion, in a
certain sense, refers to the subjective dimension even more
than to the objective one: this dimension conditions the
very ethical nature of work. In fact there is no doubt that
human work has an ethical value of its own, which clearly
and directly remain linked to the fact that the one who
carries it out is a person, a conscious and free subject,
that is to say a subject that decides about himself.
This truth, which in a sense constitutes the fundamental and
perennial heart of Christian teaching on human work, has had
and continues to have primary significance for the
formulation of the important social problems characterizing
whole ages.
The ancient world introduced its own typical differentiation
of people into dasses according to the type of work done.
Work which demanded from the worker the exercise of physical
strength, the work of muscles and hands, was considered
unworthy of free men, and was therefore given to slaves. By
broadening certain aspects that already belonged to the Old
Testament, Christianity brought about a fundamental change
of ideas in this field, taking the whole content of the
Gospel message as its point of departure, especially the
fact that the one who, while being God, became like us in
all things11 devoted most of the years of his life on earth
to manual work at the carpenter's bench. This circumstance
constitutes in itself the most eloquent "Gospel of work",
showing that the basis for determining the value of human
work is not primarily the kind of work being done but the
fact that the one who is doing it is a person. The sources
of the dignity of work are to be sought primarily in the
subjective dimension, not in the objective one.
Such a concept practically does away with the very basis of
the ancient differentiation of people into classes according
to the kind of work done. This does not mean that, from the
objective point of view, human work cannot and must not be
rated and qualified in any way. It only means that the
primary basis of tbe value of work is man himself, who is
its subject. This leads immediately to a very important
conclusion of an ethical nature: however true it may be that
man is destined for work and called to it, in the first
place work is "for man" and not man "for work". Through this
conclusion one rightly comes to recognize the pre-eminence
of the subjective meaning of work over the objective one.
Given this way of understanding things, and presupposing
that different sorts of work that people do can have greater
or lesser objective value, let us try nevertheless to show
that each sort is judged above all by the measure of the
dignity of the subject of work, that is to say the person,
the individual who carries it out. On the other hand:
independently of the work that every man does, and
presupposing that this work constitutes a purpose-at times a
very demanding one-of his activity, this purpose does not
possess a definitive meaning in itself. In fact, in the
final analysis it is always man who is the purpose of the
work, whatever work it is that is done by man-even if the
common scale of values rates it as the merest "service", as
the most monotonous even the most alienating work.
7. A Threat to the Right Order of Values
It is precisely these fundamental affirmations about work
that always emerged from the wealth of Christian truth,
especially from the very message of the "Gospel of work",
thus creating the basis for a new way of thinking, judging
and acting. In the modern period, from the beginning of the
industrial age, the Christian truth about work had to oppose
the various trends of materialistic and economistic thought.
For certain supporters of such ideas, work was understood
and treated as a sort of "merchandise" that the
worker-especially the industrial worker-sells to the
employer, who at the same time is the possessor of the
capital, that is to say, of all the working tools and means
that make production possible. This way of looking at work
was widespread especially in the first half of the
nineteenth century. Since then, explicit expressions of this
sort have almost disappeared, and have given way to more
human ways of thinking about work and evaluating it. The
interaction between the worker and the tools and means of
production has given rise to the development of various
forms of capitalism - parallel with various forms of
collectivism - into which other socioeconomic elements have
entered as a consequence of new concrete circumstances, of
the activity of workers' associations and public autorities,
and of the emergence of large transnational enterprises.
Nevertheless, the danger of treating work as a special kind
of "merchandise", or as an impersonal "force" needed for
production (the expression "workforce" is in fact in common
use) always exists, especially when the whole way of looking
at the question of economics is marked by the premises of
materialistic economism.
A systematic opportunity for thinking and evaluating in this
way, and in a certain sense a stimulus for doing so, is
provided by the quickening process of the development of a
onesidedly materialistic civilization, which gives prime
importance to the objective dimension of work, while the
subjective dimension-everything in direct or indirect
relationship with the subject of work-remains on a secondary
level. In all cases of this sort, in every social situation
of this type, there is a confusion or even a reversal of the
order laid down from the beginning by the words of the Book
of Genesis: man is treated as an instrument of production12,
whereas he-he alone, independently of the work he does-ought
to be treated as the effective subject of work and its true
maker and creator. Precisely this reversal of order,
whatever the programme or name under which it occurs, should
rightly be called "capitalism"-in the sense more fully
explained below. Everybody knows that capitalism has a
definite historical meaning as a system, an economic and
social system, opposed to "socialism" or "communism". But in
the light of the analysis of the fundamental reality of the
whole economic process-first and foremost of the production
structure that work is-it should be recognized that the
error of early capitalism can be repeated wherever man is in
a way treated on the same level as the whole complex of the
material means of production, as an instrument and not in
accordance with the true dignity of his work-that is to say,
where he is not treated as subject and maker, and for this
very reason as the true purpose of the whole process of
production.
This explains why the analysis of human work in the light of
the words concerning man's "dominion" over the earth goes to
the very heart of the ethical and social question. This
concept should also find a central place in the whole sphere
of social and economic policy, both within individual
countries and in the wider field of international and
intercontinental relationships, particularly with reference
to the tensions making themselves felt in the world not only
between East and West but also between North and South. Both
John XXIII in the Encyclical Mater et Magistra and Paul VI
in the Encyclical Populorum Progressio gave special
attention to these dimensions of the modern ethical and
social question.
8. Worker Solidarity
When dealing with human work in the fundamental dimension of
its subject, that is to say, the human person doing the
work, one must make at least a summary evaluation of
developments during the ninety years since Rerum Novarum in
relation to the subjective dimension of work. Although the
subject of work is always the same, that is to say man,
nevertheless wide-ranging changes take place in the
objective aspect. While one can say that, by reason of its
subject, work is one single thing (one and unrepeatable
every time), yet when one takes into consideration its
objective directions one is forced to admit that there exist
many works, many different sorts of work. The development of
human civilization brings continual enrichment in this
field. But at the same time, one cannot fail to note that in
the process of this development not only do new forms of
work appear but also others disappear. Even if one accepts
that on the whole this is a normal phenomenon, it must still
be seen whether certain ethically and socially dangerous
irregularities creep in, and to what extent.
It was precisely one such wide-ranging anomaly that gave
rise in the last century to what has been called "the worker
question", sometimes described as "the proletariat question"
. This question and the problems connected with it gave rise
to a just social reaction and caused the impetuous emergence
of a great burst of solidarity between workers, first and
foremost industrial workers. The call to solidarity and
common action addressed to the workers-especially to those
engaged in narrowly specialized, monotonous and
depersonalized work in industrial plants, when the machine
tends to dominate man - was important and eloquent from the
point of view of social ethics. It was the reaction against
the degradation of man 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. This reaction united the working world in a
community marked by great solidarity.
Following tlle lines laid dawn by the Encyclical Rerum
Novarum and many later documents of the Church's Magisterium,
it must be frankly recognized that the reaction against the
system of injustice and harm that cried to heaven for
vengeance13 and that weighed heavily upon workers in that
period of rapid industrialization was justified from the
point of view of social morality. This state of affairs was
favoured by the liberal socio-political system, which, in
accordance with its "economistic" premises, strengthened and
safeguarded economic initiative by the possessors of capital
alone, but did not pay sufficient attention to the rights of
the workers, on the grounds that human work is solely an
instrument of production, and that capital is the basis,
efficient factor and purpose of production.
From that time, worker solidarity, together with a clearer
and more committed realization by others of workers' rights,
has in many cases brought about profound changes. Various
forms of neo-capitalism or collectivism have developed.
Various new systems have been thought out. Workers can often
share in running businesses and in controlling their
productivity, and in fact do so. Through appropriate
associations, they exercise influence over conditions of
work and pay, and also over social legislation. But at the
same time various ideological or power systems, and new
relationships which have arisen at various levels of
society, have allowed flagrant injustices to persist or have
created new ones. On the world level, the development of
civilization and of communications has made possible a more
complete diagnosis of the living and working conditions of
man globally, but it has also revealed other forms of
injustice, much more extensive than those which in the last
century stimulated unity between workers for particular
solidarity in the working world. This is true in countries
which have completed a certain process of industrial
revolution. It is also true in countries where the main
working milieu continues to be agriculture or other similar
occupations.
Movements of solidarity in the sphere of work-a solidarity
that must never mean being closed to dialogue and
collaboration with others- can be necessary also with
reference to the condition of social groups that were not
previously included in such movements but which, in changing
social systems and conditions of living, are undergoing what
is in effect "proletarianization" or which actually already
find themselves in a "proletariat" situation, one which,
even if not yet given that name, in fact deserves it. This
can be true of certain categories or groups of the working "
intelligentsia", especially when ever wider access to
education and an ever increasing number of people with
degrees or diplomas in the fields of their cultural
preparation are accompanied by a drop in demand for their
labour. This unemployment of intellectuals occurs or
increases when the education available is not oriented
towards the types of employment or service required by the
true needs of society, or when there is less demand for work
which requires education, at least professional education,
than for manual labour, or when it is less well paid. Of
course, education in itself is always valuable and an
important enrichment of the human person; but in spite of
that, "proletarianization" processes remain possible.
For this reason, 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. This
solidarity must be present whenever it is called for by the
social degrading of the subject of work, by exploitation of
the workers, and by the growing areas of poverty and even
hunger. 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". And the "poor" appear under various forms; they
appear in various places and at various times; in many cases
they appear as a result of the violation of the dignity of
human work: either because the opportunities for human work
are limited as a result of the scourge of unemployment, or
because a low value is put on work and the rights that flow
from it, especially the right to a just wage and to the
personal security of the worker and his or her family.
9. Work and Personal Dignity
Remaining within the context of man as the subject of work,
it is now appropriate to touch upon, at least in a summary
way, certain problems that more closely define the dignity
of human work, in that they make it possible to characterize
more fully its specific moral value. In doing this we must
always keep in mind the biblical calling to "subdue the
earth"14, in which is expressed the will of the Creator that
work should enable man to achieve that "dominion" in the
visible world that is proper to him.
God's fundamental and original intention with regard to man,
whom he created in his image and after his likeness15, was
not withdrawn or cancelled out even when man, having broken
the original covenant with God, heard the words: "In the
sweat of your face you shall eat bread"16. These words refer
to the sometimes heavy toil that from then onwards has
accompanied human work; but they do not alter the fact that
work is the means whereby man achieves that "dominion" which
is proper to him over the visible world, by "subjecting" the
earth. Toil is something that is universally known, for it
is universally experienced. It is familiar to those doing
physical work under sometimes exceptionally laborious
conditions. It is familiar not only to agricultural workers,
who spend long days working the land, which sometimes "bears
thorns and thistles"17, but also to those who work in mines
and quarries, to steel-workers at their blast-furnaces, to
those who work in builders' yards and in construction work,
often in danger of injury or death. It is likewise familiar
to those at an intellectual workbench; to scientists; to
those who bear the burden of grave responsibility for
decisions that will have a vast impact on society. It is
familiar to doctors and nurses, who spend days and nights at
their patients' bedside. It is familiar to women, who,
sometimes without proper recognition on the part of society
and even of their own families, bear the daily burden and
responsibility for their homes and the upbringing of their
children. It is familiar to all workers and, since work is a
universal calling, it is familiar to everyone.
And yet, in spite of all this toil-perhaps, in a sense,
because of it-work is a good thing for man. Even though it
bears the mark of a bonum arduum, in the terminology of
Saint Thomas18, this does not take away the fact that, as
such, it is a good thing for man. It is not only good in the
sense that it is useful or something to enjoy; it is also
good as being something worthy, that is to say, something
that corresponds to man's dignity, that expresses this
dignity and increases it. If one wishes to define more
clearly the ethical meaning of work, it is this truth that
one must particularly keep in mind. Work is a good thing for
man-a good thing for his humanity-because through work man
not only transforms nature, adapting it to his own needs,
but he also achieves fulfilment as a human being and indeed,
in a sense, becomes "more a human being".
Without this consideration it is impossible to understand
the meaning of the virtue of industriousness, and more
particularly it is impossible to understand why
industriousness should be a virtue: for virtue, as a moral
habit, is something whereby man becomes good as man19. This
fact in no way alters our justifiable anxiety that in work,
whereby matter gains in nobility, man himself should not
experience a lowering of his own dignity20. Again, it is
well known that it is possible to use work in various ways
against man, that it is possible to punish man with the
system of forced labour in concentration camps, that work
can be made into a means for oppressing man, and that in
various ways it is possible to exploit human labour, that is
to say the worker. All this pleads in favour of the moral
obligation to link industriousness as a virtue with the
social order of work, which will enable man to become, in
work, "more a human being" and not be degraded by it not
only because of the wearing out of his physical strength
(which, at least up to a certain point, is inevitable), but
especially through damage to the dignity and subjectivity
that are proper to him.
10. Work and Society: Family and Nation
Having thus conflrmed the personal dimension of human work,
we must go on to the second sphere of values which is
necessarily linked to work. Work constitutes a foundation
for the formation of family life, which is a natural right
and something that man is called to. These two spheres of
values-one linked to work and the other consequent on the
family nature of human life-must be properly united and must
properly permeate each other. In a way, work is a condition
for making it possible to found a family, since the family
requires the means of subsistence which man normally gains
through work. Work and industriousness also influence the
whole process of education in the family, for the very
reason that everyone "becomes a human being" through, among
other things, work, and becoming a human being is precisely
the main purpose of the whole process of education.
Obviously, two aspects of work in a sense come into play
here: the one making family life and its upkeep possible,
and the other making possible the achievement of the
purposes of the family, especially education. Nevertheless,
these two aspects of work are linked to one another and are
mutually complementary in various points.
It must be remembered and affirmed that the family
constitutes one of the most important terms of reference for
shaping the social and ethical order of human work. The
teaching of the Church has always devoted special attention
to this question, and in the present document we shall have
to return to it. In fact, the family is simultaneously a
community made possible by work and the first school of
work, within the home, for every person.
The third sphere of values that emerges from this point of
view-that of the subject of work-concerns the great society
to which man belongs on the basis of particular cultural and
historical links. This society-even when it has not yet
taken on the mature form of a nation-is not only the great
"educator" of every man, even though an indirect one
(because each individual absorbs within the family the
contents and values that go to make up the culture of a
given nation); it is also a great historical and social
incarnation of the work of all generations. All of this
brings it about that man combines his deepest human identity
with membership of a nation, and intends his work also to
increase the common good developed together with his
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.
These three spheres are always important for human work in
its subjective dimension. And this dimension, that is to
say, the concrete reality of the worker, takes precedence
over the objective dimension. In the subjective dimension
there is realized, first of all, that "dominion" over the
world of nature to which man is called from the beginning
according to the words of the Book of Genesis. The very
process of "subduing the earth", that is to say work, is
marked in the course of history, and especially in recent
centuries, by an immense development of technological means.
This is an advantageous and positive phenomenon, on
condition that the objective dimension of work does not gain
the upper hand over the subjective dimension, depriving man
of his dignity and inalienable rights or reducing them.
III. CONFLICT BETWEEN LABOUR AND CAPITAL IN THE PRESENT
PHASE OF HISTORY
11. Dimensions of the Conflict
The sketch of the basic problems of work outlined above
draws inspiration from the texts at the beginning of the
Bible and in a sense forms the very framework of the
Church's teaching, which has remained unchanged throughout
the centuries within the context of different historical
experiences. However, the experiences preceding and
following the publication of the Encyclical Rerum Novarum
form a background that endows that teaching with particular
expressiveness and the eloquence of living relevance. In
this analysis, work is seen as a great reality with a
fundamental influence on the shaping in a human way of the
world that the Creator has entrusted to man; it is a reality
closely linked with man as the subject of work and with
man's rational activity. In the normal course of events this
reality fills human life and strongly affects its value and
meaning. Even when it is accompanied by toil and effort,
work is still something good, and so man develops through
love for work. This entirely positive and creative,
educational and meritorious character of man's work must be
the basis for the judgments and decisions being made today
in its regard in spheres that include human rights, as is
evidenced by the international declarations on work and the
many labour codes prepared either by the competent
legislative institutions in the various countries or by
organizations devoting their social, or scientific and
social, activity to the problems of work. One organization
fostering such initiatives on the international level is the
International Labour Organization, the oldest specialized
agency of the United Nations Organization.
In the following part of these considerations I intend to
return in greater detail to these important questions,
recalling at least the basic elements of the Church's
teaching on the matter. I must however first touch on a very
important field of questions in which her teaching has taken
shape in this latest period, the one marked and in a sense
symbolized by the publication of the Encyclical Rerum
Novarum.
Throughout this period, which is by no means yet over, the
issue of work has of course been posed on the basis of the
great conflict that in the age of, and together with,
industrial development emerged between "capital" and "labour",
that is to say between the small but highly influential
group of entrepreneurs, owners or holders of the means of
production, and the broader multitude of people who lacked
these means and who shared in the process of production
solely by their labour. The conflict originated in the fact
that the workers put their powers at the disposal of the
entrepreneurs, and these, following the principle of maximum
profit, tried to establish the lowest possible wages for the
work done by the employees. In addition there were other
elements of exploitation, connected with the lack of safety
at work and of safeguards regarding the health and living
conditions of the workers and their families.
This conflict, interpreted by some as a socioeconomic class
conflict, found expression in the ideological conflict
between liberalism, understood as the ideology of
capitalism, and Marxism, understood as the ideology of
scientiflc socialism and communism, which professes to act
as the spokesman for the working class and the worldwide
proletariat. Thus the real conflict between labour and
capital was transformed into a systematic class struggle,
conducted not only by ideological means but also and chiefly
by political means. We are familiar with the history of this
conflict and with the demands of both sides. The Marxist
programme, based on the philosophy of Marx and Engels, sees
in class struggle the only way to eliminate class injustices
in society and to eliminate the classes themselves. Putting
this programme into practice presupposes the
collectivization of the means of production so that,through
the transfer of these means from private hands to the
collectivity, human labour will be preserved from
exploitation.
This is the goal of the struggle carried on by political as
well as ideological means. In accordance with the principle
of "the dictatorship of the proletariat", the groups that as
political parties follow the guidance of Marxist ideology
aim by the use of various kinds of influence, including
revolutionary pressure, to win a monopoly of power in each
society, in order to introduce the collectivist system into
it by eliminating private ownership of the means of
production. According to the principal ideologists and
leaders of this broad international movement, the purpose of
this programme of action is to achieve the social revolution
and to introduce socialism and, finally, the communist
system throughout the world.
As we touch on this extremely important field of issues,
which constitute not only a theory but a whole fabric of
socioeconomic, political, and international life in our age,
we cannot go into the details, nor is this necessary, for
they are known both from the vast literature on the subject
and by experience. Instead, we must leave the context of
these issues and go back to the fundamental issue of human
work, which is the main subject of the considerations in
this document. It is clear, indeed, that this issue, which
is of such importance for man-it constitutes one of the
fundamental dimensions of his earthly existence and of his
vocation-can also be explained only by taking into account
the full context of the contemporary situation.
12. The Priority of Labour
The structure of the present-day situation is deeply marked
by many conflicts caused by man, and the technological means
produced by human work play a primary role in it. We should
also consider here the prospect of worldwide catastrophe in
the case of a nuclear war, which would have almost
unimaginable possibilities of destruction. In view of this
situation we must first of all recall a principle that has
always been taught by the Church: the principle ot the
priority of labour over capital. This principle directly
concerns the process of production: in this process labour
is always a primary efficient cause, while capital, the
whole collection of means of production, remains a mere
instrument or instrumental cause. This principle is an
evident truth that emerges from the whole of man's
historical experience.
When we read in the first chapter of the Bible that man is
to subdue the earth, we know that these words refer to all
the resources contained in the visible world and placed at
man's disposal. However, these resources can serve man only
through work. From the beginning there is also linked with
work the question of ownership, for the only means that man
has for causing the resources hidden in nature to serve
himself and others is his work. And to be able through his
work to make these resources bear fruit, man takes over
ownership of small parts of the various riches of nature:
those beneath the ground, those in the sea, on land, or in
space. He takes all these things over by making them his
workbench. He takes them over through work and for work.
The same principle applies in the successive phases of this
process, in which the first phase always remains the
relationship of man with the resources and riches of nature.
The whole of the effort to acquire knowledge with the aim of
discovering these riches and specifying the various ways in
which they can be used by man and for man teaches us that
everything that comes from man throughout the whole process
of economic production, whether labour or the whole
collection of means of production and the technology
connected with these means (meaning the capability to use
them in work), presupposes these riches and resources of the
visible world, riches and resources that man finds and does
not create. In a sense man finds them already prepared,
ready for him to discover them and to use them correctly in
the productive process. In every phase of the development of
his work man comes up against the leading role of the gift
made by "nature", that is to say, in the final analysis, by
the Creator At the beginning of man's work is the mystery of
creation. This affirmation, already indicated as my starting
point, is the guiding thread of this document, and will be
further developed in the last part of these reflections.
Further consideration of this question should confirm our
conviction of the priority of human labour over what in the
course of time we have grown accustomed to calling capital.
Since the concept of capital includes not only the natural
resources placed at man's disposal but also the whole
collection of means by which man appropriates natural
resources and transforms them in accordance with his needs
(and thus in a sense humanizes them), it must immediately be
noted that all these means are the result of the historical
heritage of human labour. All the means of production, from
the most primitive to the ultramodern ones-it is man that
has gradually developed them: man's experience and
intellect. In this way there have appeared not only the
simplest instruments for cultivating the earth but also,
through adequate progress in science and technology, the
more modern and complex ones: machines, factories,
laboratories, and computers. Thus everything that is at the
service of work, everything that in the present state of
technology constitutes its ever more highly perfected
"instrument", is the result of work.
This gigantic and powerful instrument-the whole collection
of means of production that in a sense are considered
synonymous with "capital"- is the result of work and bears
the signs of human labour. At the present stage of
technological advance, when man, who is the subjectof work,
wishes to make use of this collection of modern instruments,
the means of production, he must first assimilate
cognitively the result of the work of the people who
invented those instruments, who planned them, built them and
perfected them, and who continue to do so. Capacity for
work-that is to say, for sharing efficiently in the modern
production process-demands greater and greater preparation
and, before all else, proper training. Obviously, it remains
clear that every human being sharing in the production
process, even if he or she is only doing the kind of work
for which no special training or qualifications are
required, is the real efficient subject in this production
process, while the whole collection of instruments, no
matter how perfect they may be in themselves, are only a
mere instrument subordinate to human labour.
This truth, which is 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 man in the production process,
the primacy of man over things. Everything contained in the
concept of capital in the strict sense is only a collection
of things. Man, as the subject of work, and independently of
the work that he does-man alone is a person. This truth has
important and decisive consequences.
13. Economism and Materialism
In the light of the above truth we see clearly, first of
all, that capital cannot be separated from labour; in no way
can labour be opposed to capital or capital to labour, and
still less can the actual people behind these concepts be
opposed to each other, as will be explained later. A labour
system can be right, in the sense of being in conformity
with the very essence of the issue, and in the sense of
being intrinsically true and also morally legitimate, if in
its very basis it overcomes the opposition between labour
and capital through an effort at being shaped in accordance
with the principle put forward above: the principle of the
substantial and real priority of labour, of the subjectivity
of human labour and its effective participation in the whole
production process, independently of the nature of the
services provided by the worker.
Opposition between labour and capital does not spring from
the structure of the production process or from the
structure of the economic process. In general the latter
process demonstrates that labour and what we are accustomed
to call capital are intermingled; it shows that they are
inseparably linked. Working at any workbench, whether a
relatively primitive or an ultramodern one, a man can easily
see that through his work he enters into two inheritances:
the inheritance of what is given to the whole of humanity in
the resources of nature, and the inheritance of what others
have already developed on the basis of those resources,
primarily by developing technology, that is to say, by
producing a whole collection of increasingly perfect
instruments for work. In working, man also "enters into the
labour of others"21. Guided both by our intelligence and by
the faith that draws light from the word of God, we have no
difficulty in accepting this image of the sphere and process
of man's labour. It is a consistent image, one that is
humanistic as well as theological. In it man is the master
of the creatures placed at his disposal in the visible
world. If some dependence is discovered in the work process,
it is dependence on the Giver of all the resources of
creation, and also on other human beings, those to whose
work and initiative we owe the perfected and increased
possibilities of our own work. All that we can say of
everything in the production process which constitutes a
whole collection of "things", the instruments, the capital,
is that it conditions man's work; we cannot assert that it
constitutes as it were an impersonal "subject" putting man
and man's work into a position of dependence.
This consistent image, in which the principle of the primacy
of person over things is strictly preserved, was broken up
in human thought, sometimes after a long period of
incubation in practical living. The break occurred in such a
way that labour was separated from capital and set in
opposition to it, and capital was set in opposition to
labour, as though they were two impersonal forces, two
production factors juxtaposed in the same "economistic"
perspective. This way of stating the issue contained a
fundamental error, what we can call the error of economism,
that of considering human labour solely according to its
economic purpose. This fundamental error of thought can and
must be called an error of materialism, in that economism
directly or indirectly includes a conviction of the primacy
and superiority of the material, and directly or indirectly
places the spiritual and the personal (man's activity, moral
values and such matters) in a position of subordination to
material reality. This is still not theoretical materialism
in the full sense of the term, but it is certainly practical
materialism, a materialism judged capable of satisfying
man's needs, not so much on the grounds of premises derived
from materialist theory, as on the grounds of a particular
way of evaluating things, and so on the grounds of a certain
hierarchy of goods based on the greater immediate
attractiveness of what is material.
The error of thinking in the categories of economism went
hand in hand with the formation of a materialist philosophy,
as this philosophy developed from the most elementary and
common phase (also called common materialism, because it
professes to reduce spiritual reality to a superfluous
phenomenon) to the phase of what is called dialectical
materialism. However, within the framework of the present
consideration, it seems that economism had a decisive
importancefor the fundamental issue of human work, in
particular for the separation of labour and capital and for
setting them up in opposition as two production factors
viewed in the above mentioned economistic perspective; and
it seems that economism influenced this non-humanistic way
of stating the issue before the materialist philosophical
system did. Nevertheless it is obvious that materialism,
including its dialectical form, is incapable of providing
sufficient and definitive bases for thinking about human
work, in order that the primacy of man over the capital
instrument, the primacy of the person over things, may find
in it adequate and irrefutable confirmation and support. In
dialectical materialism too man is not first and foremost
the subject of work and the efficient cause of the
production process, but continues to be understood and
treated, in dependence on what is material, as a kind of
"resultant" of the economic or production relations
prevailing at a given period.
Obviously, the antinomy between labour and capital under
consideration here-the antinomy in which labour was
separated from capital and set up in opposition to it, in a
certain sense on the ontic level, as if it were just an
element like any other in the economic process-did not
originate merely in the philosophy and economic theories of
the eighteenth century; rather it originated in the whole of
the economic and social practice of that time, the time of
the birth and rapid development of industrialization, in
which what was mainly seen was the possibility of vastly
increasing material wealth, means, while the end, that is to
say, man, who should be served by the means, was ignored. It
was this practical error that struck a blow first and
foremost against human labour, against the working man, and
caused the ethically just social reaction already spoken of
above. The same error, which is now part of history, and
which was connected with the period of primitive capitalism
and liberalism, can nevertheless be repeated in other
circumstances of time and place, if people's thinking starts
from the same theoretical or practical premises. The only
chance there seems to be for radically overcoming this error
is through adequate changes both in theory and in practice,
changes in line with the definite conviction of the primacy
of the person over things, and of human labour over capital
as a whole collection of means of production.
PART
II