Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 11 of 12 — The Challenges
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 11 of 12 — The Challenges
Dec 15, 2025 12:42 PM

[Part 1 is here.]

Economic freedom does generate certain challenges. The wealth that free economies are so effective at creating brings with it temptation. Wealth can tempt us to depend on our riches rather than on God. The temptation can be resisted, as we see with wealthy biblical characters like Abraham and Job. But it’s a challenge the church should be mindful of, helping its members cultivate a balanced view of money and of our responsibility and opportunities as stewards of the things God has given us.

The free society also can be hard munities, since the free enterprise system makes for such a mobile society. Michael Miller talks about this: the opportunities and demands generated by plex market economy mean that people often end up moving far away from their childhood homes and the network of relationships that surrounded that home. In seeking to meet this challenge, we need to ask ourselves what strategies would effectively address the problem, and are there well-intended policies that are likely to make the problem worse. In essence, we need to exercise the virtue of prudence.

The sociologist Robert Nisbet has some useful insights here. In his 1953 work The Quest for Community, he developed the case that greater centralized political authority and social safety net spending beyond a certain minimal level actually begin to undermine civil institutions munity, since people depend less and less on their family munity bonds and more and more on state-sponsored humanitarian assistance.

More recently David Quinn, director of the Iona Institute and columnist with the Irish Independent, spoke to this phenomenon in an interview he did for the PovertyCure initiative. “If you went into a parish in the most economically deprived parts of Dublin, you might find that mass attendance is two or three percent, and it’s overwhelmingly older people,” he said. “What you’ll find in these areas, by the way as well—and it’s not just in Ireland; it’s the case right around the Western world—is they’ve detached from religion; they have detached from politics pretty much; they don’t tend to be involved in trade unions; they’re not getting married. So they have retreated from all forms of institutional belonging essentially, and the one relationship that they have is to the welfare state.”

So, contemporary free market capitalism does put certain pressures munities—people moving here and there to chase good jobs, for instance—but the answer isn’t a larger welfare state. That strategy has made things worse in lower e neighborhoods, and there’s reason to think the same holds true for society as a whole.

Nineteenth century political philosopher Alexis de Tocqueville recognized the danger a century before Nisbet, after he came to the United States to study its people and institutions. His book Democracy in America is his attempt to help his fellow Frenchmen recognize some of the important ingredients in the American Experiment that were missing from the disastrous French Revolution.

The book is, in many ways, a celebration of the American republic, but in the course of the book, Tocqueville includes a warning about a danger he saw within American democracy, the potential for what he termed “soft despotism.” This is not the tyranny of the militant dictator, but a more insidious form of despotism he feared would take hold “in the very shadow of the sovereignty of this people.”

As he went on to write, “I see an innumerable crowd of men, all alike and equal” and above them “stands an immense and protective power which alone is responsible for looking after their enjoyments and watching over their destiny. It is absolute, meticulous, ordered, provident, and kindly disposed.” It’s a ruling power, he continued, that “spreads its arms over the whole of society, covering the surface of social life with a network of plicated, detailed, and uniform rules” until it “reduces each nation to nothing more than a flock of timid and hardworking animals with the government as shepherd.”

We have moved dangerously close to the culture Tocqueville foresaw, one where a growing number of people cede their freedom and responsibility to a benevolent state.

The dynamism of the free enterprise system puts special stresses on families munities, but the answer isn’t “the government as shepherd.” The answer is what Tocqueville suggested in Democracy in America: to cultivate what he encountered and admired on his visit to the United States—strong civil institutions and local organizations, including churches, families and voluntary civic organizations, and to guard the kind of cultural food we consume.

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
Coercing charity
This section from Reinhold Niebuhr’s Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics strikes me as quite true: The coercive factors, in distinction to the more purely moral and rational factors, in political relations can never be sharply differentiated and defined. It is not possible to estimate exactly how much a party to a social conflict is influenced by a rational argument or by the threat of force. It is impossible, for instance, to know what proportion...
Religious liberty in Japan
For the past several decades in the United States many parents have gravitated toward one extreme or the other in terms of allowing religion in public schools. It is generally understood these days that our public school system is not a religious organization, and should not promote one religion as a state religion, over others. Of course, this does not mean that morality or other ideas that call on the revelation of religion cannot be taught, but we try to...
The long arm of corruption
As the immigration debate mentators dig deeper in the search for the “sources of the problem.” Many have rightly pointed out that a healthier Mexican economy would alleviate the need that spurs many Mexicans to seek financial recourse across the border. Whatever one’s views on the current debate, we ought to be able to agree that a more prosperous Mexico would be beneficial for everyone. But then others have correctly noted that talk about the Mexican economy is really a...
A time to tear, a time to speak
“There is a time for everything, / and a season for every activity under heaven…a time to tear and a time to mend, / a time to be silent and a time to speak” (Ecclesiastes 3:1,7 NIV). On April 19, 1963, writing from the jail in Birmingham, Martin Luther King, Jr. penned the following words: We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed. Frankly, I have yet...
Global warming on Jupiter?
It appears so: Close inspections of Red Spot Jr., in Hubble images released today, reveal that similar to the Great Red Spot, the more recently developed storm rises above the top of the main cloud deck on Jupiter. Little is known about how storms form on the giant planet. They are often described as behaving similar to hurricanes on Earth. Some astronomers believe that the spots dredge up material deep below Jupiter’s clouds and lift it to where the Sun’s...
Ecobits
Two quick bits for your Tuesday: – Federal judges on green junkets at your expense? CRC says so! – Is “steady state ecological economics” the answer to environmental and economic woes? [also, a quick thanks to Jordan for inviting me to join the PowerBlog team.] Federal judges on green junkets at your expense? But the three organizations CRC singles out have an agenda that goes beyond education and is the equivalent of lobbying, Kendall contends. FREE, for example, describes itself...
Subsidiarity in action
In January, I wrote about the Central Plains wildfires as a very personal crisis in my Oklahoma hometown. I underscored the importance of subsidiarity, which is the idea that a central authority should perform only those tasks which cannot be handled effectively at a more immediate or local level. I’ve now had opportunity to practice subsidiarity in Oklahoma. And I can tell you, it’s harder to do than to talk or write about in the abstract. The preceding months of...
Improving Catholic education
For Catholics, few doubt the importance of quality Catholic secondary education. However, many know that the current state of Catholic secondary education in America leaves much to be desired. The question that naturally rises is “what can concerned people do to enact serious improvement?” The Acton Institute offers at least one solution. The Catholic High School Honor Roll is a unique evaluation system that assesses the overall quality of Catholic high schools based on academic excellence, Catholic identity, and civic...
A global split?
Mark Tooley in the Weekly Standard – “The Religious Left thinks that global warming is about to break-up the Religious Right.” According to Wallis, “biblically-faithful Christians” are soon going to turn against the Religious Right and instead follow his Religious Left. Instead, it seems more likely that an easy acceptance of apocalyptic warnings about a burning planet will ultimately confirm, not overturn, the political leanings of conservative evangelicals. It troubles me that Wallis seems to hope it does; confirms the...
Clear thinking on immigration
Andrew Yuengert, the author of Inhabiting the Land – The Case for the Right to Migrate, the Acton study on immigration, looks at the current debate and debunks mon misconceptions. “The biggest burdens from immigration are not economic – they are the turmoil caused by the large numbers of illegal immigrants,” Yuengert writes. Read mentary here. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved