Preferential Option... What is it?
Preferential option for the nobility.
At first glance this expression may startle readers familiar
with the more common phrase often used by Pope John Paul
II: "preferential option for the poor." Nevertheless,
what inspires this book is precisely a preferential option
for the nobility.
The objection may be raised that, ex
natura rerum, at least a noble is wealthy, well-connected,
and socially prominent. Accordingly, he possesses manifold
means to deliver himself from any situation of penury into
which he may fall. The preferential option already exercised
on his behalf by Providence gives him everything he would
need to rise again.
The case of a poor man is precisely the
opposite. He has no social standing and no useful connections,
and he often lacks the means to remedy his privations. Therefore,
a preferential option to help him take care of his basic
necessities may be mandated by justice.
In this light, a preferential option for
the nobility seems almost an affront to the poor.
In reality, however, the antithesis between
the nobility and the poor is becoming an anachronism, since
poverty besets an ever larger number of nobles, as Pope
Pius XII observes in his allocutions to the Roman Patriciate
and Nobility. Moreover, the situation of an impoverished
noble is more poignant than that of a poor man in the street.
The poor man, by his very wretchedness,
can and should awaken his neighbor's sense of justice as
well as his generosity. The nobleman, on the other hand,
by virtue of his nobility, has reasons to avoid requesting
aid. He even prefers to conceal his name and origins when
he can no longer conceal his poverty. This is what the expressive
language of old termed "nobility in embarrassed circumstances."
Efforts to relieve the distress
of such nobles—and of all impoverished people regardless
of their social status—merited the encomium of the
ancients. Christian charity discovered a thousand ingenious
ways to alleviate the plight of impoverished nobles without
compromising their dignity.1
However, the materially destitute are not
alone in deserving a preferential option. Such
an option should also benefit people in positions that entail
particularly arduous duties whose fulfillment edifies the
social body and whose neglect scandalizes it. Members of
the contemporary nobility are often in this category, as
the present work will show.2
The preferential option for the nobility
and the preferential option for the poor are by no means
mutually exclusive. Nor are they in opposition to one another.
Pope John Paul II reminds us: "Yes, the Church takes
upon herself the preferential option for the poor. It
is, to be sure, an option of preference and not, therefore,
an exclusive or excluding option, since the message of salvation
is destined for all."3
Indeed, these options are
complementary ways of manifesting the justice and charity
that go hand in hand in the service of the same Lord Jesus
Christ, Who is the model both for the nobles and the poor,
as the Roman Pontiffs emphatically proclaim.4
May these words serve as clarification
for those who, motivated by the spirit of class struggle—at
present in evident decline—cling to the discarded
notion that constant conflict between the nobility and the
poor is inevitable. This false concept led many to interpret
the preferential option of John Paul II as an exclusive
preference. Such a passionate and factional interpretation
lacks all objectivity. One's preferences may fall simultaneously
on several objects with differing degrees of intensity.
A preference for one in no sense demands the exclusion of
the others.
_____________________
Note to the Reader: The original
texts of all the allocutions cited in this work can be found
in the Vatican's published collections of documents for
the respective popes. Translations of the allocutions of
Pius XII are provided in Part III of Nobility and Analogous
Traditional Elites in the Allocutions of Pius XII,
Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, Hamilton Press (October
1993). Footnote references to the allocutions have been
shortened to "RPN," followed by the year of the
allocution and the page(s) on which they may be found in
the collected documents or, when otherwise indicated, in
Part III of Nobility and Analogous Traditional Elites.
References to allocutions to the Pontifical Nobel Guard
have likewise been shortened to "PNG."
1 See
Nobility and Analogous Traditional Elites in the Allocutions
of Pius XII, Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, Hamilton
Press (October 1993), Documents III.
2 See
Chapter I, 1
and 3; Chapter
II, 1; Chapter
IV, 9 and 10; and Chapter
VII, 8.
3 "Ad
Patres Cardinales et Curiae Pontificalisque Domus Prelatos,
imminente Nativitate Domini coram admissos," December
21, 1984, Acta Apostolicae Sedis (Typis Polyglottis
Vaticanis, 1985), Vol. 77, no. 5, p. 511.
4 See
Chapter IV, 8;
Chapter V, 6;
and Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, Nobility and Analogous
Traditional Elites, Documents IV.
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