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Catholic Social Teaching: The Recovery of Leisure and the Concept of Total Work

To be human means to work and to rest, as God did

The Compendium teaches that, as the untiring God rested after creating the world, so men and women who are created in His image (but who tire) must rest.  For this reason, the Compendium insists that men and women are to structure their lives to assure that they "enjoy sufficient rest and free time that will allow them to tend to their family, cultural, social, and religious life."  This obligation is both social and individual.


CORPUS CHRISTI, TX (Catholic Online) - The first principle of action, states Aristotle, is leisure.  For Aristotle, leisure is the purpose of all lack of leisure, of all activity, of all busy-ness, of all work.  For Aristotle, work is not an end in itself.  As important as it is, work does not take precedence in human life; rather, it is leisure which ought to take precedence.  Leisure is the keystone of the arch composed of the voussoirs of work.

This is the classic and the Christian view of things.  This is the approach to work and to leisure which the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church calls by its biblical name, rest.  The Compendium teaches that, as the untiring God rested after creating the world, so men and women who are created in His image (but who tire) must rest.  For this reason, the Compendium insists that men and women are to structure their lives to assure that they "enjoy sufficient rest and free time that will allow them to tend to their family, cultural, social, and religious life."  This obligation is both social and individual.

Public authority has the duty to assure that its citizens are not deprived of their proper rest, and that they are not deprived of time for divine worship "for reasons of economic productivity."   Employers also are under an obligation to assure that their employees have an opportunity for rest and divine worship.  Indeed, "Every Christian should avoid making unnecessary demands on others that would hinder them from observing the Lord's Day." (Compendium, No. 286)

For us moderns, the authentic notion of rest or leisure escapes us.  We are perplexed at Aristotle's statement which the philosopher Josef Pieper translates as, "We are not-at-leisure in order to be-at-leisure."  Why, we moderns ask ourselves, is the Sabbath day to be kept holy, and why are we to abstain from servile work on that day?

Really, it's because we have the whole thing backwards.  We think that work is the positive noun, and leisure is its negative, a form of "non-work."  In fact the ancients had it right.  Business or work is the negative of leisure.  Work was a form of non-leisure.  In Greek, the word for leisure is schole (the word from which we get the word school), and the word for business, ascholia, is the negative of schole.  The same is true in Latin.  The word for rest or peace-otium-is the main word.  Its negative-negotium (the word from which we get our word negotiate)-means business.

How did this change of attitude in leisure and rest and its relationship to work occur?  How did leisure become the negative of work instead of work being the negative of leisure?

According to Pieper, the loss of proper focus with respect to leisure or rest occurred because we lost the link between leisure and culture, specifically the culture of celebration, worship, sacrifice to God (what Pieper calls the divine "cult").  (The word "cult," by the way, which comes from the Latin cultus, has gotten a bad rap.  Its main sense which is entirely acceptable is "religious veneration" or "religious worship.")  This cult of the divine is intrinsically part of the notion of leisure as Aristotle understands it or rest as the Scriptures understand it.

Pieper attributes the modern inability to understand the concepts of work and leisure and their relationship to the cult of God to an altered conception of the human person and human existence.  This changed understanding of who man is and what he is made for changed the ethos under which man moves and breathes and has his being.  It is this ethos typical of modernity-which Pieper calls the ethos of "total work"-that is responsible for our inability to understand the role of work, its relationship to leisure or rest, and the link leisure and rest have to divine worship.

The modern ethos of "total work" has changed both the meaning of work and the meaning of leisure.  And it has completely written God out of the picture in regard to both work and rest.  So we cannot follow Aristotle on leisure, nor, more importantly, can we follow the significance of the Biblical concept of rest until we regain something of the pre-modern notion of leisure and rest. 

There has to be a resourcement--a retrieval and renewal--of the principle of authentic leisure.

Briefly and simplistically, the way the modern ethos of "total work" came about is this.  The Catholic Church, drawing upon the Greek concept of schole and the Latin notion of otium, upon such Biblical sources as the story of Martha and Mary in the Gospel of Luke (10:38-42), and upon the experience ...

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1 - 4 of 4 Comments

  1. Marsh
    1 year ago

    Fantastic article! Well researched and well written. This is a great understanding that we have lost and must regain. I am a huge fan of the contemplative life, and this affirms that affection. Living a life of thoughtful prayer is not laziness as some assume, and this article reaffirms this notion for me.

  2. Andrew
    1 year ago

    @Joe: There is a part 2 and part 3 to this series on work and leisure and rest, and how leisure and rest are different from entertainment and vacation. Keep posted!

  3. joe
    1 year ago

    Great article. It is interesting that you went with an authority figure like Aristotle instead of Aquinas to give weight and merritt to the issue. Regretably for Catholics, free market capitalism has replaced faith, hope and charity as our core religious values. Jesus Christ has retired as the Prince of Peace and is now a war hawk lobbying congress for the Israelis. Things have changed radically for Catholics. Maybe the Protestants have it right. Hands to work and hearts to God Monday thru Friday. Honey do list on Saturday. Church and football on Sunday..

  4. abey
    1 year ago

    All work & no play makes Jack a dull boy, except that the term play be realized as soothing the spirit, cause without it there is no life In fact any work done not "taming" to the spirit is against life, even in the leisure period , for a work not done but is to be done in the leisure period is against the Spirit, as Jesus preached to the scribes & Pharisees who saw law without its love called "Legalistically' so often projected by today's society catered to by the present administration, in the "Leaven of herod", effecting the very basic social structure - the family, through divorces, gay agendas, abortions all through "legalisms." In all this love is sacrificed.

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