Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Pontifical professor: Capitalism ‘improved the living conditions of all social levels’
Pontifical professor: Capitalism ‘improved the living conditions of all social levels’
Jan 13, 2026 1:55 PM

A few months ago, a group of protesters decided to vent their frustration by screaming into the sky. Trying to encourage theologians to understand the fundamentals of economics before preaching about the subject sometimes feels just as productive. However, one of the secular media have recognized the efforts of one of the foremost Catholic exponents of the free market.

Fr. Martin Rhonheimer, a professor of ethics and philosophy at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome, shared his message as part of a profile in Expansión, possibly the most widely read business newspaper in Spain.

“The Church is not here to teach economics,” he said, so “pastors should be cautious when es to making pronouncements. But unfortunately, they are silent about issues for which they have petence and speak out about issues that basically do not concern them.”

Fr. Martin Rhonheimer.

Worse yet, when they do so, they do so badly.

“This is a world of scarcity, while that of Jesus is the kingdom of Heaven, of grace and divine mercy, a world of abundance, whose laws are not valid here,” said Fr. Rhonheimer, who spoke at Acton’s 2014 conference on Faith, State, and the Economy: perspectives from East and Westat the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

Unfortunately, he told Expansión, “theologians have the tendency” to conflate the two kingdoms.

The dividing line between primitive shamanism and the Judeo-Christian religious tradition is that the latter embraces the use of reason. While we believe in charismata and miracles, we understand that God has endowed humanity with free will and typically works His will through natural human interaction. That means that incentives matter. Economic interventionist policies that discourage industriousness and reward idleness lead to scarcity and unmet needs:

“The historical record is clear,” writes Rhonheimer.“Over the past two centuries, the capitalist economy […] has steadily improved the living conditions of all social levels, always and everywhere. On the contrary, all versions of state interventionism [have] deteriorated.”

Fr. Rhonheimer’s list of four “perceptual biases” that stop people from seeing the value of free markets alone makes the article worth reading. His overview of the “ruptures” within Catholic social teaching, as different emphases emerged between papal encyclicals, brings a nuanced insight often missing from the topic.

Acton readers will also appreciate the article’s reference to the School of Salamanca, which recently celebrated its 800th anniversary. At a time when churches preach that “justice” demands that employers pay workers a $15-an-hour minimum wage, the theologians of Salamanca came to radically different conclusions. Fr. Rhonheimer says, according to Luis de Molina, a just wage is:

one stipulated freely by the employer and employee and which corresponds to the service provided, not with what the employee and his family need to survive. This would be the best thing, but it is not economically viable. You can pay more for charity, but not for justice.

For more information on the School of Salamanca, you may enjoy reading Sourcebook in Late-Scholastic Monetary Theory: The Contributions of Martin de Azpilcueta, Luis de Molina, and Juan de Mariana. In addition, Alejandro Chafuen – the Acton Institute’s managing director, international – has written an accessible introduction titled Faith and Liberty: The Economic Thought of the Late Scholastics. (The latter is out of print as of this writing but is sometimes available on Amazon).

You can read the full profile of Fr. Martin Rhonheimer here (in Spanish). You may also enjoy this lecture, co-sponsored by the Acton Institute, about “The Christian-anthropological foundations of a free market economy”:

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
Counterpoint: The ‘Right to Water’ is not ‘Free Water for All’
“Does the Vatican think water should be ‘free’?” asked Kishore Jayabalan in his post examining the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace’s latest document on water. Although he is now the director of Istituto Acton, the Acton Institute’s Rome office, Jayabalan formerly worked for the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace as the lead policy analyst on sustainable development and arms control. In his post, Jayabalan referenced the analysis of George McGraw, the Executive Director of DigDeep Right to Water...
HHS Mandate Fits Bigger Pattern
Both the original promise versions of the Obama administration’s health insurance mandate (the HHS mandate) coerce people into paying, either directly or indirectly, for other people’s contraception. The policy may have been pushed along by exigencies of Democratic Party constituency politics, but I suspect there’s also a worldview dimension to the mandate, one embodied in one of President Obama’s more controversial appointments—Science and Technology Policy Director John Holdren. Holdren, as far as I know, wasn’t involved in crafting President Obama’s...
Creativity is Calling
What do a painter, a cartoonist, a band member and an organizer have mon? The desire to be On Call in Culture in their sphere of art. Recently, Generous Mind had conversations with four artists and the resulting article and related blog posts from the artists themselves are featured this week on , the premier online destination to engage in the global dialogue about religion and spirituality and to explore and experience the world’s beliefs. We e you to explore...
Can Fair Trade End Poverty?
Which does a better job helping the impoverished peoplearound the globe—free trade or fair trade? The American Enterprise Institute recently held a debate on that topic at John Brown Universityentitled “Free Trade vs. Fair Trade: What Helps the Poor?” Click here to watch the debate between scholars Claude Barfield, Paul Myers, and Victor Claar. In the debate Dr. Claar raises concerns about both the logic and economic reasoning underlying the fair trade movement. He also expands on that theme in...
The Social Muddle
Over on The American Spectator website, Acton research fellow Jonathan Witt explains that contrary to the misunderstanding of many on the political and religious left,business, justice, and the Gospel are already social: The adjective that economist Friedrich Hayek famously called a “weasel word” is alive and well in the feel-good phrasessocial business,social justiceandthe social gospel. In all three of these phrases, mon weasel word sucks some of the essential meaning out of what it modifies by implying that business, justice,...
Does the Vatican think water should be ‘free’?
Not surprisingly, the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace (PCJP)’s latest document on water has garnered scant media attention. Why, after all, would journalists, already notorious for their professional Attention Deficit Disorder and dislike of abstract disputation, report on something named “Water: An Essential Element of Life,” especially when it is nothing more than an update of a document originally released in 2003, and then updated in 2006 and 2009, with the exact same titles? Back then, First Things editor-in-chief...
Acton Lecture Series: Andrew Morriss on ‘The False Promise of Green Energy’
Andrew MorrissJoin us for the next Acton Lecture Series on Thursday, April 26, when Andrew Morriss, the D. Paul Jones, Jr. & Charlene Angelich Jones Chairholder of Law at the University of Alabama, will speak on “The False Promise of Green Energy.” Register online here. Here’s the lecture description: “Green energy advocates claim that transforming America to an economy based on wind, solar, and biofuels will produce jobs for Americans, benefits for the environment, and restore American industry. Prof. Andrew...
Cristiada: A Story of Heroic Martyrdom
A few days prior to Benedict’s XVI’s apostolic trip to Mexico and Cuba, producers of the epic film Cristiada (For Greater Glory in English) arranged a private screening in the Vatican City State. I was among the many avid defenders of religious liberty who scurried over to the Augustinianum venue next to St. Peter’s Square at last-minute notice. No doubt the film’s all-star Hollywood cast (Andy Garcia, Peter O’Toole, Eva Longoria and Eduardo Verastegui) was enough to draw us away...
John Locke and the Contraceptive Mandate
Michael Gerson on what the Obama administration’s view of religious liberty shares with John Locke: One tradition of religious liberty contends that freedom of conscience is protected and advanced by the autonomy of religious groups. In this view, government should honor an institutional pluralism — the ability of people to associate, live and act in accordance with their religious beliefs, limited only by the clear requirements of public order. So Roger Williams ed Catholics and Quakers to the Rhode Island...
Faith, Freedom, and ‘The Hunger Games’
In today’s Acton Commentary, “Secular Scapegoats and ‘The Hunger Games,'” I examine the themes of faith and freedom expressed in Suzanne Collins’ enormously popular trilogy. The film version of the first book hit the theaters this past weekend, and along with the release e a spate mentary critical of various aspects of Collins’ work. As for faith and freedom, it turns out there’s precious little of either in Panem. But that’s not necessarily such a bad thing, as I argue...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved