The Valley Catholic April 2, 2019 | Page 17
tvc.dsj.org | April 2, 2019
COMMENTARY
17
Catholic Social Teaching’s Message to the National Budget
By Tony Magliano
Internationally syndicated social jus-
tice and peace columnist
[email protected]
Thirty plus years ago, the U.S. Catholic bishops
wrote a very challenging pastoral letter titled “Eco-
nomic Justice for All.” In their opening statement
they prophetically declared, “Every perspective on
economic life that is human, moral and Christian
must be shaped by three questions: What does the
economy do for people? What does it do to people?
And how do people participate in it?”
Unfortunately, most government leaders through-
out the world do not seriously consider these highly
moral questions when formulating their national
budgets. For if they did, world ills like poverty, hunger
and homelessness would virtually disappear.
With the world’s largest budget, the United States
is a prime example here.
According to the anti-poverty Christian organiza-
tion Bread for the World (BFW), the U.S. government
allocates less than one percent of the federal budget
for international poverty-focused development as-
sistance (see: www.bread.org/us-federal-budget).
Not only is this amount of aid unjust and seriously
lacking in heartfelt compassion, but every year car-
ing individuals and groups like BFW and Catholic
Relief Services have to strenuously lobby members
of Congress to appropriate at least this relatively
small amount to aid the world’s poorest of the poor
(see: https://bit.ly/2WjHS5Z).
Recently President Trump presented Congress
with his federal budget which according to the inter-
national aid organization Oxfam proposes to cut the
already relatively small amount of development and
economic assistance by 23 percent, and to cut global
health aid by 28 percent (see: https://bit.ly/2FjsNKz).
Considering the tragic fact that over 800 million
people throughout the world are hungry, over 100
million families lack clean water, and over 2 billion
people have no access to safe sanitation, the proposed
budget cuts to international poverty-focused develop-
ment assistance is unconscionable.
“Every perspective on economic life
that is human, moral and Christian
must be shaped by three questions:
What does the economy do for people?
What does it do to people?
And how do people participate in it?”
According to the National Priorities Project,
as President Trump attempts to slash funding for
Veteran Affairs, Department of Education and
NASA, he is at the same time urging Congress to
increase the military budget by $34 billion – to an
astronomical total of $750 billion in fiscal year 2020
(see: https://bit.ly/2Feekkv).
According to Catholic Charities USA, President
Trump’s proposed budget also cuts domestic anti-
poverty programs including $17 billion from the
Julie Billiart
1751-1816
April 8
Crosiers
Born in Picardy, in France, the pious Julie was allowed to make a
vow of chastity at age 14 and did manual labor when her family
suffered financial reversals. In her early 20s, she became paralyzed
after an attempt on her father’s life; at 30 she was an invalid,
dispensing catechism lessons and spiritual advice from her bed.
Forced to leave home during the French Revolution, she settled
in Amiens, where she co-founded the religious institute that later
became the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. In 1804, during a
parish mission, she walked for the first time in 22 years. From then
until her death, she traveled constantly in France and Belgium to
expand one of the great teaching congregations of the church.
Saints
© 2013 Catholic News Service
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and
$1 billion from Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families.
Please email and call your two U.S. senators and
representative (Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121)
urging them to reject President Trump’s budget cuts
to domestic anti-poverty programs and international
poverty-focused development assistance programs.
Instead, ask them to robustly increase spending.
In there landmark pastoral letter “Economic Justice
for All,” the U.S. bishops listed six moral principles to
guide Catholics and all people of good will:
• “Every economic decision and institution must
be judged in light of whether it protects or
undermines the dignity of the human person.
• “Human dignity can be realized and protected
only in community.
• “All people have a right to participate in the
economic life of society.
• “All members of society have a special obliga-
tion to the poor and vulnerable.
• “Human rights are the minimum conditions
for life in community.
• “Society as a whole, acting through public and
private institutions, has the moral responsi-
bility to enhance human dignity and protect
human rights.”
During Lent please consider prayerfully read-
ing the pastoral letter’s opening section subtitled
“Principal Themes of the Pastoral Letter” (see:
www.usccb.org/upload/economic_justice_for_all.pdf).
Over 30 years ago I read “Economic Justice for All.”
And now as I review it, I see clearly that its prophetic
wisdom is as challenging and necessary today as it
was then.