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catholic teachings
Ethical Principles
The Common Good
Working for the common good means that our social,
economic and governmental decisions, plans and policies
contribute toward providing all people with the basic
necessities for a decent life: living-wage jobs, transportation,
housing, effective schools, and health care. Working
for the common good also includes examining how we are
affecting this wonderful part of God’s creation.
It has too often been the case, as Pope John Paul II
remarked, that we “have been making decisions,
taking actions and assigning values that are leading
us away from the world as it should be, away from the
design of God for creation, away from all that is essential
for a healthy planet and a healthy commonwealth of people.
. . .” (Bishops of Connecticut, “Common
Ground, Common Good.” [Link III.B.1.m.])
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Solidarity
In the Catholic tradition, the universal common good
is specified by the duty of solidarity, "a
firm and persevering determination to commit oneself
to the common good," a willingness "to
‘lose oneself' for the sake of the other[s] instead
of exploiting [them]" (Pope John Paul II, Sollicitudo
Rei Socialis, no. 38). In the face of "the
structures of sin," moreover, solidarity requires
sacrifices of our own self-interest for the good of
others and of the earth we share. Solidarity places
special obligations upon the industrial democracies,
including the United States. "The ecological crisis,"
Pope John Paul II has written, "reveals the urgent
moral need for a new solidarity, especially in
relations between the developing nations and those that
are highly industrialized" (EC, no. 10). Only with
equitable and sustainable development can poor nations
curb continuing environmental degradation and avoid
the destructive effects of the kind of overdevelopment
that has used natural resources irresponsibly. (U.S.
Catholic Bishops, “Renewing the Earth” III.D.
[Link III.B.1.b.])
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