For I Was Hungry & You Gave Me Food: Final Note
Agriculture is not just another economic sector. It is about food and hunger, the way we treat those who grow and harvest our food and fiber, and what kind of nation and world we are shaping. Agriculture and rural life, farmers and farmworkers have been longstanding concerns for our Conference, but the forces of increasing concentration in agriculture and increasing globalization in our world are raising new questions that have significant human dimensions and ethical implications. We hope these reflections will contribute to a broader dialogue about the moral dimensions of agriculture and to renewed efforts to advance the dignity of farmers, ranchers, and farmworkers.
Notes
1 Cf. National
Conference of Catholic Bishop/United States Catholic Conference, Report of
the Ad Hoc Task Force on Food, Agriculture, and Rural Concerns (Washington,
DC: USCCB, 1988); United States Catholic Conference, Food Policy in a Hungry
World: The Links That Bind Us Together (Washington, DC: USCCB, 1989).
2 Among
the key national Catholic organizations are the Catholic Committee on Appalachia,
Catholic Extension, Catholic Relief Services, National Catholic Rural Life
Conference, and the USCCB Catholic Campaign for Human Development and
Secretariat for Home Missions.
3 Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, Doctrinal Note on Some Questions Regarding
the Participation of Catholics in Political Life (November 24, 2002), no. 3,
https://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/ cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html. . .
(accessed in November 2003).
4 Doctrinal
Note on Some Questions Regarding the Participation of Catholics in Political
Life, no. 6.
5 USCCB,
Economic Justice for All: Tenth Anniversary Edition (Washington, DC:
USCCB, 1997): “U.S. food policy has had a parallel goal of keeping the consumer
cost of food low. As a result, Americans today spend less of their disposable
income on food than people in any other industrialized country. . . . while low
food prices benefit consumers who are left with additional income to spend on
other goods, these pricing policies put pressure on farmers to increase output
and hold down costs. This has led them to replace human labor with cheaper
energy, expand farm size to employ new technologies favoring larger scale
operations, neglect soil and water conservation, underpay farmworkers, and
oppose farmworker unionization” (nos. 219-220).
6 Cf.
USCCB, A Place at the Table: A Catholic Recommitment to Overcome Poverty and
to Respect the Dignity of All God’s Creation (Washington, DC: USCCB, 2002).
7 Catholic
social teaching is a rich tradition that is rooted in the Scripture and the
lived experience of the people of God. It has been developed in the writings of
church leaders through the ages and has most recently been articulated through
a tradition of modern papal, conciliar, and episcopal documents. For a more
thorough discussion of the themes identified here and their roots, see the Catechism
of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed. (Washington, DC: United States Conference
of Catholic Bishops [USCCB]-Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2000); Sharing
Catholic Social Teaching (Washington, DC: USCCB, 1999); the USCCB website
www.usccb.org; the Vatican website www.vatican.va. . . . Also for previous
statements of the Catholic bishops on agriculture—namely, the report of the Ad
Hoc Task Force on Food, Agriculture, and Rural Concerns (1988) and Food
Policy in a Hungry World: The Links That Bind Us Together (1989)—contact
USCCB Publishing at 800-235-8722 or check the USCCB website.
8 John
Paul II, On the Hundredth Anniversary of Rerum Novarum (Centesimus
Annus) (Washington, DC: USCCB, 1991), no. 48
9 Cf.
Archbishop Renato R. Martino, Address at the Ministerial Conference on Science
and Technology in Agriculture, Sacramento, California, June 23-25, 2003.