Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 reasons China is not ‘best implementing’ Catholic social teaching
5 reasons China is not ‘best implementing’ Catholic social teaching
Jan 19, 2026 3:02 AM

“Right now, those who are best implementing the social doctrine of the Church are the Chinese,”said Bishop Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, the chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. He contrasted China, which has a “positive national conscience,” favorably with U.S. President Donald Trump, whom he believes is overly influenced by “liberal [read: free market] thought.”

One could quibble with this description of President Trump. However, China violates the most fundamental pillars of Catholic social doctrine:

1. Denying the freedom of religion. “Curtailment of the religious freedom of individuals,” wrote Pope John Paul II in Redemptor Hominis, “is above all an attack on man’s very dignity, independently of the religion professed.” China has been an equal opportunity represser, making the suppression of faith an ecumenical experience. As I wrote at Providence magazine, “China persecutes itsUighurMuslims,TibetanBuddhists, and agrowing shareof its Christian population.” This excludes members of the Falun Gong, who are “subject to widespread and severe human rights violations,” according to Freedom House.

Chief among the persecuted is China’s Catholic population. Beijing recognizes only the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, not the official hierarchy loyal to the Vatican. Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI once deemed this patible with Catholic doctrine.” The New York Times reports that Pope Francis is considering a plan to replace two underground bishops with hierarchs selected by Beijing, one of whom has been municated, provoking widespread backlash.

2. Denying human dignity, especially through forced abortion. “Social justice can be obtained only in respecting the transcendent dignity of man,” according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church. “The person represents the ultimate end of society, which is ordered to him.” Furthermore, Pope John Paul II wrote that “unconditional respect for the right to life of every innocent person – from conception to natural death –is one of the pillars on which every civil society stands.”

China continues to practice forced abortion, if expectant parents cannot pay fines that run as high as $39,000 (U.S.). Although the Communist Party modified its one child policy to allow most people to have a second child, “Officials continue to pliance with population planning targets using methods including heavy fines, job termination, arbitrary detention, and coerced abortion,” according to the Congressional-Executive Commission on China’s 2017 report. “China’s two child policy continues the human rights abuses and gender-based violence of the one child policy,” said Reggie Littlejohn, a human rights advocate with Women’s Rights Without Frontiers.

3. Denying the rule of law. Pope Paul VI wrote that “government is to see to it that equality of citizens before the law, which is itself an element of mon good, is never violated.” While he specified religious discrimination, the Holy See has testified at the UN that “although the rule of law is not in itself sufficient, it remains nevertheless an indispensable instrument for the protection of human dignity.”

However, the Congressional-Executive Commission on China has reported an ongoing and “significant discrepancy between official [Chinese] statements that affirm the importance of law-based governance … and the actual ability of citizens to access justice.” Events observed in 2017 “continued to demonstrate that individuals and groups who attempt to help citizens advocate for their rights do so at significant professional and personal risk.”

4. Denying private property rights. “Every man has by nature the right to possess property as his own,” wrote Pope Leo XIII in the groundbreaking encyclical on social justice, Rerum Novarum. “It must be within his right to possess things not merely for temporary and momentary use, as other living things do, but to have and to hold them in stable and permanent possession.”

Since 1978, China has implemented free market reforms that have lifted 800 million people out of extreme poverty. Yet neither personal nor intellectual property rights remain “stable.” A 2012 study found that the government had confiscated land from 43 percent of Chinese villages. Farmers received an pensation of $17,850 an acre, “a fraction of the mean price authorities themselves received for the land (778,000 yuan per mu or $740,000 per acre, mostly in cases mercial projects).” Chinese violations of intellectual property rights are notorious, costing American firms $48 billion in 2009 alone.

5. Denying political freedom. While the Magisterium allows the existence of different forms of government, the Compendium on the Social Doctrine of the Church holds that a “source of concern is found in those countries ruled by totalitarian or dictatorial regimes, where the fundamental right to participate in public life is denied at its origin.” (Emphasis in original.) The USCCB adds, “We believe people have a right and a duty to participate in society.” China ranked among the 10 nations with the least amount of electoral freedom, in a new report by theFoundation for the Advancement of Liberty. Beijing restricts political freedom to the cadre of Communist Party members, whom President Xi Jinping has said must be “unyielding Marxist atheists.” Political participation has narrowed further under Xi, whom some have described as being in the “early stages of a personality cult.”

These are but a few of many reasons China is not an exemplar of Catholic social teaching. Additional grounds are presented by Religion & Liberty Transatlantic contributor Philip Booth in his Catholic Herald article, “Don’t look to China for an example of Catholic social teaching.”

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Could Wealth Redistribution End Global Poverty?
Americans make up around four percent of the world population and yet they control over 25 percent of the world’s wealth. What if we were to simply redistribute our wealth to the most needy people on the planet—wouldn’t that end global poverty almost overnight? “The answer unfortunately is no,” says philosopher Matt Zwolinski. “Sharing one’s wealth with those who have less is admirable and it often helps to relieve immediate suffering. But just sharing existing wealth we’ll never be enough...
Rev. Robert Sirico Takes On Trump’s Comments On Pope Francis
p Last week, the Washington Postfeatured an interview with Donald Trum, entrepreneur-turned-presidential candidate. Trump is clearly no fan of the ments on capitalism and free markets, and his approach to dealing with the pope on this topic is rather unique: Trump wants to scare Pope Francis. mon for someto criticize Pope Francis’s wariness about capitalism, but Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump just took that to a new level, saying he’d try to “scare” the pope by telling him: “ISIS wants...
Children Press-Ganged into EcoService
Whether they’re old enough to believe in the EcoGospel, or Gaia, or man-made climate change or not, children are the latest weapon pressed into service by the eco-warriors. First, it was co-opting Pope Francis and Laudato Si, and now it’s kids. Will they stop at nothing? The Wisconsin Daily Independent reported this past Monday that a group calling itself Citizens Preserving the Penokee Hills Heritage Park is promoting its environmental agenda with a painting of a young Native American girl...
Overcoming ‘Anti-Foreign Bias’ in Trade and Immigration
Many conservatives exhibit a peculiar tendency to be pro-liberty when es to business, trade, and wages, but protectionist when es to the economic effectsof immigration. It’s an odd disconnect, and yet, as we’ve begun to see with figures like Donald Trump and Rick Santorum, one side is bound to eventually give way. They’ll gush aboutthe glories petition, but the second immigration gets brought up, they seem to defer tolabor-union talking points fromages past. When pressed on this in a recent...
How Amazon is Like a Sweatshop (And What That Reveals About Flourishing and Justice)
Liberal and conservative, right and left, red state and blue state—there are dozens, if not hundreds of ways to divide political and economic lines. But one of the most helpful ways of understanding such differences is recognizing the divide between advocates of proximate justice and absolute justice. Several years ago Steven Garber wrote an essay in which he explained the concept of “proximate justice”: Proximate justice realizes that something is better than nothing. It allows us to make peace withsomejustice,somemercy,...
Gleaner Tech #4: A “Drinkable Book” That Turns Raw Sewage Into Drinking Water
[Note: See this introduction post for an explanation of gleaner technology.] Lack of clean drinking water is one of the greatest public health problems on the planet. Around the world there are 750 million people—approximately one in nine—who lack access to safe water, and millions will die each year from a water related disease. But a new “drinkable book” may soon provide an inexpensive way for the poor to get potable water. While getting her PhD in chemistry, Theresa Dankovich...
Video: Creation And The Heart Of Man
Pope Francis has started an important global discussion on the environment with the release of his encyclicalLaudeto Si’, which the Acton Institute has been engaging in with vigor since it’s release, and has been ably covered as well here on the PowerBlog by the likes of Bruce Edward Walker and Joe Carter. But this isn’t the first time that Acton has waded into the debate over protecting the environment; Acton Founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico was debating Matthew Fox, proponent...
Americans Don’t Know Pope’s Environmental Views (And What That Means For Us)
There has been no document by a world leader that has received more attention this year than Laudato Si. Three months have passed since Pope Francis released his encyclical on the environment, and yet the media coverage and mentary on it has hardly waned. Here on the Acton PowerBlog, Bruce Edward Walker has piling a daily list of links related to news mentary on the encyclical. To date he has 62 posts with hundreds of links. As the Associated Press...
How Protestant Missionaries Spread Democracy
Over the past 500 years, some countries have proven to be more receptive to democracy than others. What accounts for the disparity? What causes some countries to be more likely to embrace democratic forms of governance? As empirical evidence shows, one strong predictor is the presence of Protestant missionaries. “Protestant missionaries played an integral role in spreading democracy throughout the world,” says Greg Scandlen. “We could preserve our own if we learn from their ways.” Today we may think of...
The Denver City Council’s Despicable Disregard for the First Amendment
If you want to sell chicken sandwiches as the Denver Airport you need to check your First Amendment rights at the gate. That seems to be the message sent by the Denver City Council to Chick-fil-A, a fast-food chain that is seeking to open a store at the Denver International Airport. The Council is considering turning away the popular franchisebecause pany promotes a Christian ethic in their business dealings. This offends the Council who is worried about how it will...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved