Thursday, October 30, 2008

Deja Vu in Munich: Marx Releases "Das Kapital"

A conspicuous namesake of the Father of Communism, B16's recently-named successor as archbishop of Munich and Freising -- a sociologist who's serving on the drafting team for the (delayed) social encyclical -- is set to publish a manifesto of his own.

Reinhard Marx's Das Kapital: A Plea for Man rolls out next month:
[T]he Roman Catholic archbishop who is the most outspoken of Germany's 27 diocesan leaders in his criticism of big business, says that his work is to some extent "an argument with Marxism."

The book begins as a letter addressed to his "dear namesake."

"The consequences," he tells the 19th-century ideologist, "of your thinking were disastrous."

The modern-day Marx demands that the whole world adopt a market economy that is kinder to the weak and downtrodden instead of "heaping even more rewards on those who behave immorally."

"That's not utopia. It's a necessity for the sake of humans," said Marx in Munich.

The 300-page book, "Das Kapital: A Plea for Man", deliberately borrows its title from the "bible" of communism in which Karl Marx claimed 140 years ago that capitalism would automatically collapse.

With this new book, however, Marx intends to highlight the value of Catholic social teaching in a globalized world.

"Capitalism without humanity, solidarity and justice has no morals and no future," Marx writes.

He said we need to take a fresh look at social justice, or the world might veer back to dangerous ideologies such as Marxism.
As head of Bavaria's mother-church, Marx is a lock for the cardinal's cap at the next consistory.

Let the "red" jokes commence.

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