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.
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