The book titled, "Tea Party Catholic" isn't out yet, but when it hits the shelves, I may have to get a copy. Check it out on Amazon here.
Here is the description:
Over the past fifty years, increasing numbers of American Catholics have
abandoned the economic positions associated with Franklin Roosevelt’s
New Deal and chosen to embrace the principles of economic freedom and
limited government: ideals upheld by Ronald Reagan and the Tea Party
movement but also deeply rooted in the American Founding. This shift,
alongside America’s growing polarization around economic questions, has
generated fierce debates among Catholic Americans in recent years. Can a
believing Catholic support free markets? Does the Catholic social
justice commitment translate directly into big government? Do limited
government Catholic Americans have something unique to contribute to the
Church’s thinking about the economic challenges confronting all
Catholics around the globe?
In Tea Party Catholic, Samuel Gregg
draws upon Catholic teaching, natural law theory, and the thought of the
only Catholic Signer of America’s Declaration of Independence, Charles
Carroll of Carrollton—the first “Tea Party Catholic”—to develop a
Catholic case for the values and institutions associated with the free
economy, limited government, and America’s experiment in ordered
liberty. Beginning with the nature of freedom and human flourishing,
Gregg underscores the moral and economic benefits of business and
markets as well as the welfare state’s problems. Gregg then addresses
several related issues that divide Catholics in America. These include
the demands of social justice, the role of unions, immigration, poverty,
and the relationship between secularism and big government.
Above
all, Gregg underlines how economic freedom’s corrosion in America is
undermining the United States’ robust commitment to religious liberty—a
principle integral not only to the American Founding and the life of
Charles Carroll but also the teaching of the Second Vatican Council. As a
creative minority, Gregg argues, limited government Catholics can help
transform the wider movement to reground the United States upon the best
insights of the American Experiment—and thereby save that Experiment
itself.
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