The Church and the Labor Movement

The Church and the Labor Movement
Title The Church and the Labor Movement PDF eBook
Author Charles Stelzle
Publisher
Pages 40
Release 1910
Genre Church and labor
ISBN

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Christianity and the Labor Movement

Christianity and the Labor Movement
Title Christianity and the Labor Movement PDF eBook
Author William Monroe Balch
Publisher
Pages 136
Release 1912
Genre Christian sociology
ISBN

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The Church and Labor

The Church and Labor
Title The Church and Labor PDF eBook
Author Charles Stelzle
Publisher
Pages 120
Release 1910
Genre Christian sociology
ISBN

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Organized Labor and the Church

Organized Labor and the Church
Title Organized Labor and the Church PDF eBook
Author George Higgins
Publisher
Pages 272
Release 1993
Genre Religion
ISBN

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In an engaging and highly readable memoir-cum-commentary, Monsignor Higgins, the dean of American Catholic social action, draws on his nearly 50 years of involvement in the cause of working people and their unions to create a book that will have a great impact on anyone interested in the 20th-century labor movement and the history of social action.

The Church and the Labor Conflict

The Church and the Labor Conflict
Title The Church and the Labor Conflict PDF eBook
Author Parley Paul Womer
Publisher
Pages 328
Release 1913
Genre Christian sociology
ISBN

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The Troubled Origins of the Italian Catholic Labor Movement, 1878–1914

The Troubled Origins of the Italian Catholic Labor Movement, 1878–1914
Title The Troubled Origins of the Italian Catholic Labor Movement, 1878–1914 PDF eBook
Author Sándor Agócs
Publisher Wayne State University Press
Pages 242
Release 2017-12-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 0814343317

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Sándor Agócs presents an intellectual and social history of the nascent Italian labor movement, exploring the conflicts between the conservative Catholic hierarchy and Catholic activists. In his book, Sándor Agócs explores the conflicts that accompanied the emergence of the Italian Catholic labor movement. He examines the ideologies that were at work and details the organizational forms they inspired. During the formative years of the Italian labor movement, Neo-Thomism became the official ideology of the church. Church leadership drew upon the central Thomistic principal of caritas, Christian love, in its response to the social climate in Italy, which had become increasingly charged with class consciousness and conflict. Aquinas’s principles ruled out class struggle as contrary to the spirit of Christianity and called for a symbiotic relationship among the various social strata. Neo-Thomistic philosophy also emphasized the social functions of property, a principle that demanded the paternalistic care and tutelage of the interests of working people by the wealthy. In applying these principles to the nascent labor movement, the church's leadership called for a mixed union (misto), whose membership would include both capitalists and workers. They argued that this type of union best reflected the tenets of Neo-Thomistic social philosophy. In addition, through its insistence on the misto, the church was also motivated by an obsessive concern with socialism, which it viewed as a threat, and by a fear of the working classes, which it associated with socialism, which it viewed as a threat, and by a fear of the working classes, which it associated with socialism. In pressing for the mixed union, therefore, the church leadership hoped not only to realize Neo-Thomistic principles, but also to defuse class struggle and prevent the proletariat from becoming a viable social and political force. Catholic activists, who were called upon to put ideas into practice and confronted social realities daily, learned that the "mixed" unions were a utopian vision that could not be realized. They knew that the age of paternalism was over and that neither the workers not the capitalists were interested in the mixed union. In its stead, the activists urged for the "simple" union, an organization for workers only. The conflict which ensued pitted the bourgeoisie and the Catholic hierarchy against the young activists. Sándor Agócs reveals precisely in what way Catholic social thought was inadequate to deal with the realities of unionization and why Catholics were unable to present a reasonable alternative.

The Labor Movement, from the Standpoint of Religious Values

The Labor Movement, from the Standpoint of Religious Values
Title The Labor Movement, from the Standpoint of Religious Values PDF eBook
Author Harry Frederick Ward
Publisher
Pages 218
Release 1917
Genre Church and social problems
ISBN

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