Personal
Sin and Social Sin
16.
Sin, in the proper sense, is always a personal act, since it is an act of
freedom on the part of an individual person and not properly of a group or
community. This individual may be conditioned, incited and influenced by
numerous and powerful external factors. He may also be subjected to tendencies,
defects and habits linked with his personal condition. In not a few cases such
external and internal factors may attenuate, to a greater or lesser degree, the
person's freedom and therefore his responsibility and guilt. But it is a truth
of faith, also confirmed by our experience and reason, that the human person is
free. This truth cannot be disregarded in order to place the blame for
individuals' sins on external factors such as structures, systems or other
people. Above all, this would be to deny the person's dignity and freedom,
which are manifested-even though in a negative and disastrous way-also in this
responsibility for sin committed. Hence there is nothing so personal and
untransferable in each individual as merit for virtue or responsibility for
sin.
As
a personal act, sin has its first and most important consequences in the sinner
himself: that is, in his relationship with God, who is the very foundation of
human life; and also in his spirit, weakening his will and clouding his
intellect.
At
this point we must ask what was being referred to by those who during the
preparation of the synod and in the course of its actual work frequently spoke
of social sin.
The
expression and the underlying concept in fact have various meanings.
To
speak of social sin means in the first place to recognize that, by virtue of
human solidarity which is as mysterious and intangible as it is real and
concrete, each individual's sin in some way affects others. This is the other
aspect of that solidarity which on the religious level is developed in the
profound and magnificent mystery of the communion of saints, thanks to which it
has been possible to say that "every soul that rises above itself, raises
up the world." To this law of ascent there unfortunately corresponds the
law of descent. Consequently one can speak of a communion of sin, whereby a
soul that lowers itself through sin drags down with itself the church and, in
some way, the whole world. In other words, there is no sin, not even the most
intimate and secret one, the most strictly individual one, that exclusively
concerns the person committing it. With greater or lesser violence, with
greater or lesser harm, every sin has repercussions on the entire ecclesial
body and the whole human family. According to this first meaning of the term,
every sin can undoubtedly be considered as social sin.
Some
sins, however, by their very matter constitute a direct attack on one's
neighbor and more exactly, in the language of the Gospel, against one's brother
or sister. They are an offense against God because they are offenses against
one's neighbor. These sins are usually called social sins, and this is the
second meaning of the term. In this sense social sin is sin against love of
neighbor, and in the law of Christ it is all the more serious in that it
involves the Second Commandment, which is "like unto the
first."(72) Likewise, the term social applies to every sin against
justice in interpersonal relationships, committed either by the individual
against the community or by the community against the individual. Also social
is every sin against the rights of the human person, beginning with the right
to nd including the life of the unborn or against a person's physical
integrity. Likewise social is every sin against others' freedom, especially
against the supreme freedom to believe in God and adore him; social is every
sin against the dignity and honor of one's neighbor. Also social is every sin
against the common good and its exigencies in relation to the whole broad
spectrum of the rights and duties of citizens. The term social can be applied
to sins of commission or omission-on the part of political, economic or trade
union leaders, who though in a position to do so, do not work diligently and
wisely for the improvement and transformation of society according to the
requirements and potential of the given historic moment; as also on the part of
workers who through absenteeism or non-cooperation fail to ensure that their
industries can continue to advance the well-being of the workers themselves, of
their families and of the whole of society.
The
third meaning of social sin refers to the relationships between the various
human communities. These relationships are not always in accordance with the
plan of God, who intends that there be justice in the world and freedom and
peace between individuals, groups and peoples. Thus the class struggle, whoever
the person who leads it or on occasion seeks to give it a theoretical
justification, is a social evil. Likewise obstinate confrontation between blocs
of nations, between one nation and another, between different groups within the
same nation all this too is a social evil. In both cases one may ask whether
moral responsibility for these evils, and therefore sin, can be attributed to
any person in particular. Now it has to be admitted that realities and
situations such as those described, when they become generalized and reach vast
proportions as social phenomena, almost always become anonymous, just as their
causes are complex and not always identifiable. Hence if one speaks of social
sin here, the expression obviously has an analogical meaning. However, to speak
even analogically of social sins must not cause us to underestimate the
responsibility of the individuals involved. It is meant to be an appeal to the
consciences of all, so that each may shoulder his or her responsibility
seriously and courageously in order to change those disastrous conditions and
intolerable situations.
Having
said this in the clearest and most unequivocal way, one must add at once that
there is one meaning sometimes given to social sin that is not legitimate or
acceptable even though it is very common in certain quarters today.(74)
This usage contrasts social sin and personal sin, not without ambiguity, in a
way that leads more or less unconsciously to the watering down and almost the
abolition of personal sin, with the recognition only of social gilt and
responsibilities. According to this usage, which can readily be seen to derive
from non-Christian ideologies and systems-which have possibly been discarded
today by the very people who formerly officially upheld them-practically every
sin is a social sin, in the sense that blame for it is to be placed not so much
on the moral conscience of an individual, but rather on some vague entity or
anonymous collectivity such as the situation, the system, society, structures
or institutions.
Whenever
the church speaks of situations of sin or when the condemns as social sins
certain situations or the collective behavior of certain social groups, big or
small, or even of whole nations and blocs of nations, she knows and she
proclaims that such cases of social sin are the result of the accumulation and
concentration of many personal sins. It is a case of the very personal sins of
those who cause or support evil or who exploit it; of those who are in a
position to avoid, eliminate or at least limit certain social evils but who
fail to do so out of laziness, fear or the conspiracy of silence, through
secret complicity or indifference; of those who take refuge in the supposed
impossibility of changing the world and also of those who sidestep the effort
and sacrifice required, producing specious reasons of higher order. The real
responsibility, then, lies with individuals.
A
situation-or likewise an institution, a structure, society itself-is not in
itself the subject of moral acts. Hence a situation cannot in itself be good or
bad.
At
the heart of every situation of sin are always to be found sinful people. So
true is this that even when such a situation can be changed in its structural
and institutional aspects by the force of law or-as unfortunately more often
happens by the law of force, the change in fact proves to be incomplete, of
short duration and ultimately vain and ineffective-not to say counterproductive
if the people directly or indirectly responsible for that situation are not
converted.
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