There is a great deal of idealism dealt out in every plan proposed for
"Social Security." I have never liked the name, however.
I
like "Self Security" better. That is what has made every
successful man or woman, and every nation great. Self-Reliance is a twin
brother to it.
If every human being is assured, as
soon as he reaches understanding, that he is to be cared for from the
cradle to the grave, and that he has nothing to worry about, imagine
what a race of dependents this world would have! Those who first came to
the Western world, discovering, inventing, and sacrificing, had no other
capital than Self Security in mind - Self-Security for themselves, and
because of this individual independence, to pass on the example to their
children.
The weak, ill, and those who have
unavoidably been misfortunate, surely deserve all the security possible
to comfort and care for them throughout life - but not the able-bodied
and the healthy. They have the opportunity to gain Self-Security which
should be their pride, and the pride of every human being given his
chance in this world. It’s that chance that should be assured him
under a free form of government.
Food and comforts that are earned,
through work, enter into the very muscles, the brain, the heart, and
every stream of blood that courses through one’s veins. And the will
to live and to be useful inspires such a being with the love of life
itself and all its opportunities.
Take incentive away from a human being
and you rob him of his greatest asset. You dismantle his dreams. You
cheat him out of the fun of achievement. You feed him the substance of
which idleness is composed. You take the rudder of life from his
sailing-craft.
It is so much easier to succeed than
it is to fail - if a man has pride in himself. But if you hand the tools
of success to one, without his having earned them, he is most apt to
dull them into uselessness long before he has learned to make them serve
him and his fellowman.
There is no heritage quite so precious
as that of one who feels in his heart that he has been born, not only to
enjoy this beautiful world, but so to work and live that he may bring
happiness and pride to everyone about him.
The Human "Altar"
When the Church calls upon Christian
workingmen to lift their eyes and their hearts above the difficulties of
their lot, her aim is not to lull them into the sleep of indifference,
nor to develop in them a spirit of cold and dull patience. The stand of
the Church is solidly in favor of bettering the living and working
conditions of the laboring man. Thus, the Church insists on
spiritualizing man’s outlook on these problems. But this is because
her only purpose is to prevent him from defeating himself by recourse to
means that would assuredly defeat his purpose. Meekness and humility of
heart are fundamental requirements of the genuinely Christian spirit.
Acceptance of one’s station in life, and conformity to the Will of
God, are, so to speak, common currency in the life of the Church.
Acceptance of one’s humble lot and earnest striving to better it are
not incompatible. The man who first accepts his state of life instead of
fighting it in sullen bitterness is the only man who can ever hope to
better himself on his "human-Altar."
Again, to repeat, when a place of
employment is regarded as a temple where wholehearted and faithful
devotion to duty can give honor to God: when a man’s workbench or
machine is for him an altar on which daily and cheerfully he offers a
sacrifice of work and humility: when the tools of his work are
transformed into instruments of sacrifice to the Most High God, then the
humdrum existence of the workingman becomes a rich source of joyous
inspiration. In this spirit many saints of the Church wielded their
tools in their given trades and workshops. In the light and strength of
this same spirit, the laborer of today can live and work for God just as
truly as those early saints did when God stood at their sides, and, so
to speak, handed them their tools.
Such is the transforming influence of
religion. Communism derisively calls religion "the opium of the
people." It forgets that opium stupefies and has an effect like
death. But religion is certainly activity, it is life; it is spiritual
vitality. Workingmen without religion are hardly more than the tools and
machines with which they work: workingmen with religion bring a
tremendous spiritual energy to bear on ordinary existence, and give it
and the world around them new value.
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The Son of
God worked
The Son of God was a carpenter; St.
Peter and his brethren were fishermen; the Apostle of the Gentiles, St.
Paul, was a tentmaker. Hammers and saws, boats and nets, canvas and
needles - all these are little enough in themselves, but they were the
tools wherewith the Son of God and His followers supported themselves
while carrying out their divine mission. Every laboring man has a divine
mission. It is a mistake to regard humble employment only as a means of
livelihood. But when it is considered as a means of livelihood "for
the accomplishment of a higher purpose," then labor and toil are
transformed. They become means of making man more like the Son of God
"Who bore all things for the sake of the elect." When man sees
his own daily occupations placed side by side with the great work of our
Divine Saviour, he feels a close companionship with the God-man. He
grasps the great truth that the tools of his own lowly employment upon
his own "human-altar" could be for him what the cross was for
Christ: instruments of redemption and sanctification for the entire
world.
Rev. Fr. Theodore E. Ziton
is pastor at St. George’s Church,
Indianapolis, Indiana.
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