I.
ORDER BETWEEN MEN
8. We must devote our
attention first of all to that order which should prevail among men.
9. Any well-regulated and
productive association of men in society demands the acceptance of one
fundamental principle: that each individual man is truly a person. His is a
nature, that is, endowed with intelligence and free will. As such he has rights
and duties, which together flow as a direct consequence from his nature. These
rights and duties are universal and inviolable, and therefore altogether
inalienable.7
10. When, furthermore, we
consider man's personal dignity from the standpoint of divine revelation,
inevitably our estimate of it is incomparably increased. Men have been ransomed
by the blood of Jesus Christ. Grace has made them sons and friends of God, and
heirs to eternal glory.
Rights
11. But first We must
speak of man's rights. Man has the right to live. He has the right to bodily integrity
and to the means necessary for the proper development of life, particularly
food, clothing, shelter, medical care, rest, and, finally, the necessary social
services. In consequence, he has the right to be looked after in the event of
illhealth; disability stemming from his work; widowhood; old age; enforced
unemployment; or whenever through no fault of his own he is deprived of the
means of livelihood.8
Rights
Pertaining to Moral and Cultural Values
12. Moreover, man has a
natural right to be respected. He has a right to his good name. He has a right
to freedom in investigating the truth, and-within the limits of the moral order
and the common good-to freedom of speech and publication, and to freedom to
pursue whatever profession he may choose. He has the right, also, to be
accurately informed about public events.
13. He has the natural
right to share in the benefits of culture, and hence to receive a good general
education, and a technical or professional training consistent with the degree
of educational development in his own country. Furthermore, a system must be
devised for affording gifted members of society the opportunity of engaging in
more advanced studies, with a view to their occupying, as far as possible,
positions of responsibility in society in keeping with their natural talent and
acquired skill.9
The
Right to Worship God According to One's Conscience
14. Also among man's
rights is that of being able to worship God in accordance with the right
dictates of his own conscience, and to profess his religion both in private and
in public. According to the clear teaching of Lactantius, "this is the
very condition of our birth, that we render to the God who made us that just homage
which is His due; that we acknowledge Him alone as God, and follow Him. It is
from this ligature of piety, which binds us and joins us to God, that religion
derives its name.''10
Hence, too, Pope Leo XIII declared that
"true freedom, freedom worthy of the sons of God, is that freedom which
most truly safeguards the dignity of the human person. It is stronger than any
violence or injustice. Such is the freedom which has always been desired by the
Church, and which she holds most dear. It is the sort of freedom which the
Apostles resolutely claimed for themselves. The apologists defended it in their
writings; thousands of martyrs consecrated it with their blood.''11
The
Right to Choose Freely One's State in Life
15. Human beings have also
the right to choose for themselves the kind of life which appeals to them:
whether it is to found a family-in the founding of which both the man and the
woman enjoy equal rights and duties-or to embrace the priesthood or the
religious life.12
16. The family, founded
upon marriage freely contracted, one and indissoluble, must be regarded as the
natural, primary cell of human society. The interests of the family, therefore,
must be taken very specially into consideration in social and economic affairs,
as well as in the spheres of faith and morals. For all of these have to do with
strengthening the family and assisting it in the fulfilment of its mission.
17. Of course, the support
and education of children is a right which belongs primarily to the
parents.13
Economic
Rights
18. In the economic
sphere, it is evident that a man has the inherent right not only to be given
the opportunity to work, but also to be allowed the exercise of personal
initiative in the work he does.14
19. The conditions in
which a man works form a necessary corollary to these rights. They must not be
such as to weaken his physical or moral fibre, or militate against the proper
development of adolescents to manhood. Women must be accorded such conditions
of work as are consistent with their needs and responsibilities as wives and
mothers.15
20. A further consequence
of man's personal dignity is his right to engage in economic activities suited
to his degree of responsibility.16 The worker is likewise entitled to a
wage that is determined in accordance with the precepts of justice. This needs
stressing. The amount a worker receives must be sufficient, in proportion to
available funds, to allow him and his family a standard of living consistent
with human dignity. Pope Pius XII expressed it in these terms:
"Nature imposes work upon man as a
duty, and man has the corresponding natural right to demand that the work he
does shall provide him with the means of livelihood for himself and his
children. Such is nature's categorical imperative for the preservation of
man.''17
21. As a further
consequence of man's nature, he has the right to the private ownership of
property, including that of productive goods. This, as We have said elsewhere,
is "a right which constitutes so efficacious a means of asserting one's
personality and exercising responsibility in every field, and an element of
solidity and security for family life, and of greater peace and prosperity in
the State.''18
22. Finally, it is
opportune to point out that the right to own private property entails a social
obligation as well.19
The
Right of Meeting and Association
23. Men are by nature
social, and consequently they have the right to meet together and to form
associations with their fellows. They have the right to confer on such
associations the type of organization which they consider best calculated to
achieve their objectives. They have also the right to exercise their own
initiative and act on their own responsibility within these associations for
the attainment of the desired results ,20
24. As We insisted in Our
encyclical Mater et Magistra, the founding of a great many such
intermediate groups or societies for the pursuit of aims which it is not within
the competence of the individual to achieve efficiently, is a matter of great urgency.
Such groups and societies must be considered absolutely essential for the
safeguarding of man's personal freedom and dignity, while leaving intact a
sense of responsibility.21
The
Right to Emigrate and Immigrate
25. Again, every human
being has the right to freedom of movement and of residence within the confines
of his own State. When there are just reasons in favor of it, he must be
permitted to emigrate to other countries and take up residence there.22
The fact that he is a citizen of a particular State does not deprive him of
membership in the human family, nor of citizenship in that universal society,
the common, world-wide fellowship of men.
Political
Rights
26. Finally, man's
personal dignity involves his right to take an active part in public life, and
to make his own contribution to the common welfare of his fellow citizens. As
Pope Pius XII said, "man as such, far from being an object or, as it were,
an inert element in society, is rather its subject, its basis and its purpose;
and so must he be esteemed."23
27. As a human person he
is entitled to the legal protection of his rights, and such protection must be
effective, unbiased, and strictly just. To quote again Pope Pius XII: "In
consequence of that juridical order willed by God, man has his own inalienable
right to juridical security. To him is assigned a certain, well-defined sphere
of law, immune from arbitrary attack."24
Duties
8. The natural rights of
which We have so far been speaking are inextricably bound up with as many
duties, all applying to one and the same person. These rights and duties derive
their origin, their sustenance, and their indestructibility from the natural
law, which in conferring the one imposes the other.
9. Thus, for example, the
right to live involves the duty to preserve one's life; the right to a decent
standard of living, the duty to live in a becoming fashion; the right to be
free to seek out the truth, the duty to devote oneself to an ever deeper and
wider search for it.
Reciprocity
of Rights and Duties Between Persons
30. Once this is admitted,
it follows that in human society one man's natural right gives rise to a corresponding
duty in other men; the duty, that is, of recognizing and respecting that right.
Every basic human right draws its authoritative force from the natural law,
which confers it and attaches to it its respective duty. Hence, to claim one's
rights and ignore one's duties, or only half fulfill them, is like building a
house with one hand and tearing it down with the other.
Mutual
Collaboration
31. Since men are social
by nature, they must live together and consult each other's interests. That men
should recognize and perform their respective rights and duties is imperative
to a well ordered society. But the result will be that each individual will
make his whole-hearted contribution to the creation of a civic order in which
rights and duties are ever more diligently and more effectively observed.
32. For example, it is
useless to admit that a man has a right to the necessities of life, unless we
also do all in our power to supply him with means sufficient for his livelihood.
33. Hence society must not
only be well ordered, it must also provide men with abundant resources. This
postulates not only the mutual recognition and fulfillment of rights and
duties, but also the involvement and collaboration of all men in the many
enterprises which our present civilization makes possible, encourages or indeed
demands.
An
Attitude of Responsibility
34. Man's personal dignity
requires besides that he enjoy freedom and be able to make up his own mind when
he acts. In his association with his fellows, therefore, there is every reason
why his recognition of rights, observance of duties, and many-sided
collaboration with other men, should be primarily a matter of his own personal
decision. Each man should act on his own initiative, conviction, and sense of
responsibility, not under the constant pressure of external coercion or
enticement. There is nothing human about a society that is welded together by
force. Far from encouraging, as it should, the attainment of man's progress and
perfection, it is merely an obstacle to his freedom.
Social
Life in Truth, Justice, Charity and Freedom
35. Hence, before a
society can be considered well-ordered, creative, and consonant with human dignity,
it must be based on truth. St. Paul expressed this as follows: "Putting
away lying, speak ye the truth every man with his neighbor, for we are members
one of another."25 And so will it be, if each man acknowledges
sincerely his own rights and his own duties toward others.
Human society, as We here picture it,
demands that men be guided by justice, respect the rights of others and do
their duty. It demands, too, that they be animated by such love as will make
them feel the needs of others as their own, and induce them to share their
goods with others, and to strive in the world to make all men alike heirs to
the noblest of intellectual and spiritual values. Nor is this enough; for human
society thrives on freedom, namely, on the use of means which are consistent
with the dignity of its individual members, who, being endowed with reason,
assume responsibility for their own actions .
36. And so, dearest sons
and brothers, we must think of human society as being primarily a spiritual
reality. By its means enlightened men can share their knowledge of the truth,
can claim their rights and fulfill their duties, receive encouragement in their
aspirations for the goods of the spirit, share their enjoyment of all the wholesome
pleasures of the world, and strive continually to pass on to others all that is
best in themselves and to make their own the spiritual riches of others. It is
these spiritual values which exert a guiding influence on culture, economics,
social institutions, political movements and forms, laws, and all the other
components which go to make up the external community of men and its continual
development.
God
and the Moral Order
37. Now the order which
prevails in human society is wholly incorporeal in nature. Its foundation is
truth, and it must be brought into effect by justice. It needs to be animated
and perfected by men's love for one another, and, while preserving freedom
intact, it must make for an equilibrium in society which is increasingly more
human in character.
38. But such an
order-universal, absolute and immutable in its principles-finds its source in
the true, personal and transcendent God. He is the first truth, the sovereign
good, and as such the deepest source from which human society, if it is to be
properly constituted, creative, and worthy of man's dignity, draws its genuine
vitality.26 This is what St. Thomas means when he says: "Human
reason is the standard which measures the degree of goodness of the human will,
and as such it derives from the eternal law, which is divine reason . . . Hence
it is clear that the goodness of the human will depends much more on the
eternal law than on human reason."27
Characteristics
of the Present Day
39. There are three things
which characterize our modern age.
40. In the first place we
notice a progressive improvement in the economic and social condition of
working men. They began by claiming their rights principally in the economic
and social spheres, and then proceeded to lay claim to their political rights
as well. Finally, they have turned their attention to acquiring the more
cultural benefits of society.
Today, therefore, working men all over the
world are loud in their demands that they shall in no circumstances be
subjected to arbitrary treatment, as though devoid of intelligence and freedom.
They insist on being treated as human beings, with a share in every sector of human
society: in the socio-economic sphere, in government, and in the realm of
learning and culture.
41. Secondly, the part
that women are now playing in political life is everywhere evident. This is a
development that is perhaps of swifter growth among Christian nations, but it
is also happening extensively, if more slowly, among nations that are heirs to
different traditions and imbued with a different culture. Women are gaining an
increasing awareness of their natural dignity. Far from being content with a
purely passive role or allowing themselves to be regarded as a kind of
instrument, they are demanding both in domestic and in public life the rights
and duties which belong to them as human persons.
42. Finally, we are
confronted in this modern age with a form of society which is evolving on
entirely new social and political lines. Since all peoples have either attained
political independence or are on the way to attaining it, soon no nation will
rule over another and none will be subject to an alien power.
43. Thus all over the
world men are either the citizens of an independent State, or are shortly to
become so; nor is any nation nowadays content to submit to foreign domination.
The longstanding inferiority complex of certain classes because of their
economic and social status, sex, or position in the State, and the
corresponding superiority complex of other classes, is rapidly becoming a thing
of the past.
Equality
of Men
44. Today, on the contrary
the conviction is widespread that all men are equal in natural dignity; and so,
on the doctrinal and theoretical level, at least, no form of approval is being
given to racial discrimination. All this is of supreme significance for the
formation of a human society animated by the principles We have mentioned
above, for man's awareness of his rights must inevitably lead him to the
recognition of his duties. The possession of rights involves the duty of
implementing those rights, for they are the expression of a man's personal
dignity. And the possession of rights also involves their recognition and
respect by other people.
45. When society is formed
on a basis of rights and duties, men have an immediate grasp of spiritual and
intellectual values, and have no difficulty in understanding what is meant by
truth, justice, charity and freedom. They become, moreover, conscious of being
members of such a society. And that is not all. Inspired by such principles,
they attain to a better knowledge of the true God-a personal God transcending
human nature. They recognize that their relationship with God forms the very
foundation of their life-the interior life of the spirit, and the life which
they live in the society of their fellows.
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