The Social Justice Principles Found in the Creation Accounts

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The Social Justice Principles Found in the Creation Accounts Catholic Social Teaching Document #: TX001943

Image in shutterstock God’s original plan was to create a just community.

Image in shutterstock This just community is based on a foundational religious truth: Every person is created in the image of God.

Image in shutterstock The Creation accounts in the first chapters of the Book of Genesis reveal three important truths about the role that justice plays in God’s plan for human beings.

Image in shutterstock The first truth revealed in the Creation accounts is that God has given human beings a share of his divine life, creating us “in the divine image” (Genesis 1:27). Justice requires that we recognize and respect the divine presence in every human being (see Matthew 25:37–40).

Image in shutterstock A second truth revealed in the Creation accounts is that human beings were created to live in communion with God, who alone is the source of our true happiness.

Image in shutterstock A third truth revealed in the Creation accounts is that God created human beings to live in loving communion with one another. According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church: “The human person needs to live in society. Society is not for him [or her] an extraneous addition, but a requirement of his [or her] nature” (1879).

Adam and Eve’s disobedience, their failure to live according to God’s original plan to create a just community, led to the loss of the state of original holiness and justice for all human beings. Image in shutterstock

This is Original Sin: the wounded human nature that is transmitted to all people as a result of Adam and Eve’s first sin

Because of Original Sin, the power of our human nature is weakened. We are subject to ignorance, suffering, and death, and it is harder to resist the temptation to sin. Image in shutterstock

We see examples of this in two stories from the Old Testament. WikiMediaCommons The story of Cain and Abel—the first murder. Image in shutterstock The story of Noah and the ark—due to the sinful ways of the people, God destroyed all life except for Noah, his family, and the animals he brought on the ark.

We learn from Noah’s story that God’s salvation is near to those who remember him and who remain faithful to his original plan in creating humankind. Image in shutterstock

These four social justice principles are found in the Creation accounts: Image in shutterstock 1. Each human life has great worth and must be protected. We must promote values that emphasize the inherent worth of each individual. 2. As human beings we cannot find the happiness we long for by pursuing things that do not lead to God. 3. God intends that human beings form communities of love and justice to work together for the common good. 4. We must have the same concern for other people’s welfare that we do for our own.

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