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Economic Justice for All: Pastoral Letter on Catholic Social Teaching and the U.S. Economy neighbor, confront temptation, fulfill God's creative design, and achieve our holiness. Our economic activity in factory, field, office, or shop feeds our families—or feeds our anxieties. It exercises our talents—or wastes them.
In summary, the norms of love, basic justice, and human rights imply that personal decisions, social policies, and economic institutions should be governed by several key priorities. These priorities do not specify everything that must be considered in economic decision-making.
Economic Justice for All: Pastoral Letter on Catholic Social Teaching and the U.S. Economy measuring every policy by how it touches the least, the lost, and the left-out among us. This letter calls us to conversion and common action, to new forms of stewardship, service, and citizenship.
• The economy exists to serve the human person, not the other way around. • Economic life should be shaped by moral principles and ethical norms. • Economic choices should be measured by whether they enhance or threaten human life, human dignity and human rights.
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These letters thrust the bishops into the center of political and economic life in the United States and injected Christian perspectives into the larger debate about domestic and foreign policy.
Economic Justice for All" is the pastoral letter promulgated by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1986. It deals with the U.S. economy and with Catholic social teaching in the U.S. context. It is a part of the tradition of Catholic social teaching.