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To
promote a better world, The
most urgent reform:
In
the years 1934-1935, Louis Even was working at Garden City Press, in
Saint Anne de Bellevue, Quebec. He was a very talented man and, above
all, an apostle. He was working in an efficient way for the promotion of
workers by giving them evening classes, after having worked for hours as
a typographer and a foreman. It is during this period that he discovered
Social Credit by reading J.C. Larkin’s booklet “From Debt to
Prosperity.” “Here’s a great light in my life, everybody must be
acquainted with it,” Louis Even said. He had just discovered how to
solve the economic depression, which was the cause of so many hardships.
He started with giving lectures all over Quebec, in the evenings and on
the weekends. He translated articles on Social Credit which were
published in Garden City Press’s periodicals — “The Instructor”
and its French-language version, “Le Moniteur.” In 1936, he founded
“Les Cahiers du Crédit Social,” which were sold for 5 cents each,
and which he gave away more often than not. In March, 1937, Gilberte Côté
joined Louis Even to also spread the brilliant Social Credit doctrine.
In 1938, Louis Even left his job for good, and consequently gave up his
salary, right in the mdist of the Depression, to spread the Social
Credit idea through the apostolate, begging for his nights’ lodgings
and meals. Th.T. by
Alain Pilote A
better world The first issue of the “Vers Demain” Journal, founded by Louis Even and Gilberte Côté, was published in Canada in September,1939 (its English-language version, now called “Michael”, was first published in 1953). So the “White Berets” have been travelling all over Canada and the world for the last 63 years, to bring to the population the message of the “Vers Demain” and “Michael” Journals.
But what is precisely the message carried by this journal? Why has this periodical been founded? What were the intentions, the objectives of its founders? This message, this objective, is still the same in 2004 as in the beginning, in 1939: to promote the development of a better world, a more Christian society, through the diffusion and the implementation of the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, in every sector of society. The pursuit of a better world: it is precisely for this reason that the founders of this paper called it “Vers Demain” (Towards Tomorrow); they wanted to build a future that is better than today. Louis
Even was himself a great Catholic, and he was convinced that a better
world could be built only upon the eternal principles of the Gospel and
upon the teachings of His Church — the Roman Catholic Church — whose
visible head on earth is the Sovereign Pontiff, who is presently John
Paul II. Moreover, the objectives of the “Michael” and “Vers Demain” Journals are clearly set out on the front page of every issue, just below the logo. One can read, on the left: “A Journal of Catholic Patriots, for the Kingship of Christ and Mary, in the souls, families and countries.” And on the right: “For a Social Credit Economy, in accordance with the teachings of the Church, through the vigilant action of heads of families, and not through political parties” (which means, among other things, that the “Social Credit” philosophy that is referred to here has nothing to do with political parties, not even so-called “Social Credit parties”, but it is simply an economic reform that can be applied by any political party in power). “Michael” is therefore a journal of Catholic patriots, that also deals with an economic reform, with “Social Credit.” Why? “What does this have to do with religion?” some might ask. The “Social Credit” system is nothing but a method, a way to apply the Church's social doctrine, which is an integral part of the teaching of the Church. So in this, the “Michael” Journal does not move away from its first objective, which is “to promote the development of a more Christian society through the diffusion of the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church.”
If
the Church intervenes in social matters, and has developed a set of
principles that came to be called the “social doctrine of the
Church”, it is essentially because, as Pope Benedict XV said,
“it is on the economic field that the salvation of souls is at
stake.”
His
immediate successor, Pope Pius XI, also wrote: “It
may be said with all truth that nowadays the conditions of social and
economic life are such that vast multitudes of men can only with great
difficulty pay attention to that one thing necessary, namely their
eternal salvation.”
(Encyclical
Letter Quadragesimo
Anno, May 15, 1931.) Pius XII also used similar words, in his June 1, 1941 radio-broadcast: “How could the Church — a so loving Mother who cares about the well-being of her sons — be permitted to remain indifferent when she sees their hardships, to remain silent or pretend not to see and not to understand social conditions which, voluntarily or not, make it difficult and practically impossible a Christian conduct in conformity with the Commandments of the Sovereign Lawgiver?” And thus all of the Popes speak, including John Paul II today. Money is the license to live
The
fact that countless souls are lost because of the present economic
conditions is easy to understand: man needs a minimum of material goods
to live his short pilgrimage on earth, for while God created man with an
immortal soul, He also created him with material needs: food, clothing,
and shelter. But in order to get food, clothing, and shelter, man must
have money to purchase them; otherwise, goods will rot on the shelves,
and the pauper will starve to death. In
other words, money is the license to live for the individual: having no
money means certain death in a short term. Those who hold the power to
create money — the Bankers — therefore literally control our lives,
as Pope Pius XI rightly put it in his Encyclical letter Quadragesimo Anno, in 1931: “This
power becomes particularly irresistible when exercised by those who,
because they hold and control money, are able also to govern credit and
determine its allotment, for that reason supplying, so to speak, the
lifeblood to the entire economic body, and grasping, as it were, in
their hands the very soul of production, so that no one dare breathe
against their will.” A
little further, the Pope added that “the
State has become a slave, bound over to the service of human passion and
greed,” to the service of the money powers. This
control of money by private interests is the greatest swindle of all
times, and it has brought about an incalculable number of disastrous
consequences: economic depressions, wars, etc. One will never be able to
figure out how much harm the present crooked financial system and the
chronic money shortage has done to souls. Here are only a few examples,
which could be multiplied ad nauseam: The
newspapers recently reported that in a large city like Montreal, one
child out of four goes to school without having breakfast. On the world
scale, over one billion seven hundred million people have to search
through the garbage in order to find something to eat and stay alive.
Over 100 million children on the globe are homeless and live in the
streets, abandoned by their parents who can no longer support them. (In
Brazil alone, there are over 7 million children in this situation. In
the last 3 years, 4,600 of these children living in the streets of
Brazil have been killed by policemen hired by shopkeepers, who say that
these children bother the passers-by on the streets, which is harmful to
their businesses.) Every day on earth, over 40,000 children die of
hunger or of diseases that had not been cured because of a lack of
money. And
it is not only individuals who have money problems, as governments are
also struggling with this same problem: governments try to reduce their
deficits and debts by cutting into services and increasing taxes; roads
should be repaired, hospitals extended; the materials and workers needed
to do it exist, but nothing is done, since the government moans it has
no money. Moreover, every country in the world — industrialized
countries and Third-World countries alike — is struggling with debts
that cannot be repaid, and many of these countries cannot even pay the
interest on their foreign debts. For
those who still ask why the “Michael” Journal always speaks about
the money question, Louis Even wrote: “It is because every economic
problem, and almost every political problem, is above all a money
problem. We never say that the money question is the only one to be
solved, or the only one that must be dealt with. We do not even say that
it is the highest one, but it is certainly the most urgent one to solve,
because all the other issues come up against this money problem.”
Consider all the different problems affecting society, and you will see
that they are practically all related to money. To
correct the financial system The
Church cannot remain indifferent to situations like hunger in the world
and indebtedness, which jeopardize the salvation of souls, and this is
why she calls for a reform of the financial and economic systems, to put
them at the service of the human person. Pope John Paul II's calls along
these lines are countless. Already, in his first Encyclical Letter Redemptor
Hominis (The Redeemer of Man, March 4, 1979), the Holy Father
spoke of “the
indispensable transformations of the structures of economic life of
poverty amidst plenty that brings into question the financial and
monetary mechanisms… man cannot become the slave of economic
systems…” And for now, we will add only this other quote: “Again,
I want to tackle a very delicate and painful issue. I mean the torment
of the representatives of several countries, who no longer know how to
face the fearful problem of indebtedness. A structural reform of the
world financial system is, without doubt, one of the initiatives that
seem the most urgent and necessary.” (Message
of the Holy Father to
the 6th United Nations Conference on Trade and Development,
Geneva, September 26, 1985.) The
Church therefore presents the moral principles on which any financial or
economic system must be judged. And so that these principles may be
applied in a practical way, the Church calls on the lay faithful —
whose proper role, according to the Second Vatican Council, is precisely
to renew the temporal order and bring it in order with God's plan — to
work for the search of concrete solutions and the establishment of an
economic system that conforms to the teachings of the Gospel and to the
principles of the Church’s social doctrine. Social
Credit It
is for these reasons that Louis Even decided to spread the Social Credit
doctrine — a set of principles and financial proposals that were set
forth for the first time in 1918 by the Scottish engineer, Clifford Hugh
Douglas, to solve the problem of the chronic shortage of purchasing
power in the hands of the consumers. The words “social credit” means
social money, or national money, money issued by society, as opposed to
the present money that is a “banking credit”, money issued by the
banks.
Louis Even addressing the crowd at our Congress in Quebec City in 1955 When
Louis Even discovered the great light of Social Credit in 1935, he
immediately understood how this solution would put into application
Christian principles of social justice in economics, especially those
regarding the right of all to the use of material goods, the
distribution of the daily bread to all, through the allocation of a
social dividend to every human being. This is why, as soon as he came
across this light, Louis Even made it his duty to make it known to all. The
duty of every Christian On
July 3, 1980, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, John Paul II addressed 150,000
workers as follows: “An essential condition is to provide the economy with a human meaning and logic. It is necessary to free the various fields of existence from the dominion of subjugating economism. Economic requirements must be put in their right place and a multiform social fabric must be created, which will prevent standardization. No one is dispensed from collaborating in this task… Christians, wherever you are, assume your share of responsibility in this immense effort for the human restructuring of the city. Faith makes it a duty for you.” It
is a duty and an obligation for every Christian to work for the
establishment of a better economic system, and the Pope points out that
“no one is dispensed from collaborating in this task.” And this,
even if this task turns out to be difficult, writes John Paul II. (It
cannot be any other way, since when one attacks the monopoly of the
controllers of money and credit, one attacks the greatest power in this
world.) In spite of the lack of understanding, annoyances and opposition
of all kinds, there should be no room for discouragement, since this
task is “urgent and necessary,” as it was previously said: “Anyone
wishing to renounce the difficult yet noble task of improving the lot of
man in his totality, and of all people, with the excuse that the
struggle is difficult and that constant effort is required, or simply
because of the experience of defeat and the need to begin again, that
person would be betraying the will of God the Creator.”
(John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, n.
30.) The
love of neighbour The
most fundamental reason every Christian must work for the establishment
of a better economic system is that one will precisely be judged on what
one will have done for our brothers and sisters in need. Jesus
identified Himself with those who suffer, as it is written in the
Gospel: “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of
these my brethren, you did it to me” (Mt. 25:40). The Christian
faith teaches us to see Christ in each of our brothers, and to love our
neighbour as we love Christ.
Rosary procession on our grounds during our monthly meetings in Rougemont, Que. There
are, of course, many ways
to help our brothers in need: feeding the hungry, giving drink to the
thirsty, sheltering the homeless, visiting the imprisoned and the sick,
etc. Some will send donations to charitable organisms, whether to help
the poor of our country or of the Third World. But if these donations
can relieve a few poor people for a few days or weeks, they nevertheless
do not suppress the causes of poverty. What
is much better is to correct the problem at its root, to attack the very
causes of poverty, and to re-establish every human being in his rights
and dignity of a person created in the image of God, and being entitled
to a minimum of earthly goods. And to give to each one what is due to
him is precisely what justice consists in: “More
than any other, the individual who is animated by true charity labors
skillfully to discover the causes of misery, to find the means to combat
it and to overcome it resolutely. A creator of peace, he will follow his
path, lighting the lamps of joy and playing their brilliance and
loveliness on the hearts of men across the surface of the globe, leading
them to recognize, across all frontiers, the faces of their brothers,
the faces of their friends.”
(Paul VI, Encyclical letter Populorum Progressio on the
development of peoples, n. 75.) Louis Even had discovered the cause of the misery of the people — the creation and control of money by private banks — and also the means to combat this swindle: the education of the people. The
Financiers, rightly fearing that the implementation of Douglas’s ideas
would put an end to their monopoly of the control of money and credit,
tried everything to silence the voices of Douglas and Louis Even, either
by making sure that no media spoke about Social Credit, or if they did,
they did so by distorting it in order to ridicule it. The Financiers
even managed to deceive many by creating a “Social Credit Party” to
make people falsely believe that the only way to get the implementation
of the Social Credit principles was to vote for a party labeled
“Social Credit,” whereas the creation of this new party actually
only served to close the minds of the people to this idea. To
make sure that the authentic Social Credit message may reach the
population, and above all because his heart was filled with a great
charity for his neighbour, Louis Even went as far as to quit his job
right in the middle of the Depression in 1935, to found his own journal,
“Vers Demain”, and to give all of his time and being to the cause of
justice, literally becoming a “pilgrim” along the roads of our
country, to make the great light of Social Credit known to his brothers
and sisters, his example and self-dedication bringing other apostles to
follow him. Louis Even was not only a genius, but also a matchless apostle, and it is for this reason that the Movement he founded managed to go through every persecution imaginable, self-dedication being more powerful than all the millions of the Bankers. One can read in the Gospel: “greater love than this no man has, that a man lay down his life for his friends” (John 15:13); this is actually what Louis Even did: not only did he preach charity and justice, but he also lived what he preached. The
Popes said that the transformation of the economic structures will be
obtained only through the apostolate, self-dedication and the sacrifices
made for the love of one’s neighbour, and this is exactly the method
put forward by Louis Even with his Work of the “Pilgrims of Saint
Michael”: “These attitudes and ‘structures of sin’ are only conquered — presupposing the help of divine grace — by a diametrically opposed attitude: a commitment to the good of one’s neighbour”. (John Paul II, Encyclical Letter Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, n. 38.) No
justice without God John
Paul II also speaks about the necessity of divine grace in this battle
for justice, and this is what Louis Even understood since the very
beginning: there is no justice possible without God. Besides, Social
Credit is much more than a mere monetary reform: it is a system based on
the order wanted by God. Douglas already said that the words “social
credit” also define what binds society together (“credit” is
another word for “faith” or “confidence”) — the mutual trust
or belief in each other which allows one to exchange goods, and to
circulate freely without the fear of being attacked on the street, or of
being robbed by one's neighbour. If the Ten Commandments of God are not
respected, there is no order or life possible in society. But
divine assistance is especially needed when one knows that the real aim
of the Financiers is the establishment of a world government — which
includes the destruction of Christianity and of the family — and that
the promoters of this “New World Order” are actually led by Satan
himself, whose sole aim is the ruin of souls. Back in 1946, C.H. Douglas
wrote the following, in the Liverpool periodical The
Social Crediter: “We
are engaged in a battle for Christianity. And it is surprising to see in
how many ways this is true in practice. One of these ways goes almost
unnoticed — except in its deviations — the emphasis put by the Roman
Catholic Church on the family, against the implacable and continuous
effort of the Communists and Socialists — who, together with the
International Financiers, form the true body of the Antichrist — to
destroy the very idea of the family and substitute the State for it.” And
Louis Even wrote on the same subject, in 1973: “Yes,
the Pilgrims of St. Michael are patriots, and they wish, as much as
anyone else, a regime of order and justice, of peace, of bread and of
joy, for every family in their country. But since they are Catholics
too, they know very well that order, peace and joy are incompatible with
the rejection of God, the violation of His Commandments, the denial of
faith, the paganization of life, the scandals given to children in
schools where the parents are, by law, constrained to send them. “The
Pilgrims of St. Michael, relying on the help of the celestial powers,
swore to use all of the physical and moral forces, all of the propaganda
and educational tools they have, to replace the Kingdom of Satan by the
Kingdom of the Immaculate and Jesus Christ. “In
an engagement against the financial dictatorship, one does not deal only
with terrestrial powers. Like the Communist dictatorship, like the
powerful organization of Freemasonry, the financial dictatorship is
under the command of Satan. Simple human weapons will never be able to
overcome that power. What is needed are the weapons chosen and
recommended by She who vanquishes all heresies, She who must definitely
crush the head of Satan, She who declared Herself, at Fatima, that Her
Immaculate Heart will triumph in the end. And these weapons are: the
consecration to Her Immaculate Heart, marked by the wearing of the
Scapular, the Rosary, and penance. “The Pilgrims of St. Michael are assured that, by embracing Mary’s program, every act they perform, every ‘Hail Mary’ they address to the Queen of the World, and every sacrifice they offer up, not only contribute to their personal sanctification, but also to the coming of a sounder, more humane and more Christian social order, like Social Credit. In such a program received from Mary, everything counts, and nothing is lost.”
Pictures
of our Corpus Christi procession on our grounds in Rougemont on June 22,
2003 The
Rosary Crusade That’s
where one sees all the importance and greatness of the “Rosary
Crusade” instituted by Louis Even, which consists in visiting families
to have them pray a decade of the Rosary with us, and then to present to
them our “Michael” Journal. Louis Even, who had been himself
consecrated to Mary since the age of 17, understood all the importance
of the devotion to the Blessed Virgin for the present times. The
door-to-door Rosary Crusade is an incomparable school that forms
apostles who learn how to dedicate themselves for the love of their
neighbours. It is through our example that the people see that our
message is true. And besides giving to the people the beautiful light of
Social Credit, we strengthen them in their Catholic faith, which is more
than urgent in front of all the sects that go around and gain too much
ground. Moreover, the Blessed Virgin also said at Fatima that “many
souls are lost because there is no one who makes sacrifices for them.”
The Rosary Crusade is an excellent way to make penance and sacrifices
for the salvation of souls. To
love God and one’s neighbour One can see now how wrong are those who say: “Oh, me, I take no interest in economics, in working for social justice and in changing the financial system; this is all material stuff. I am interested in spiritual things, in moral renovation. I pray to the little Jesus, and that’s quite enough.” Prayer
is certainly necessary, but if there is the great commandment of love of
God, there is also the commandment of love of neighbour: it is a twofold
commandment, one cannot be separated from the other, one cannot be
opposed to the other — all the more so since in our brother who
suffers, it is Jesus Himself who suffers. What would be the use of
honouring God in the church, if we let Him starve to death outside in
the cold, in the person of our brother in need? Moreover,
those who pretend not to bother with material things have to feed and
clothe themselves, as well as find somewhere to live, since in fact, man
has a body and a soul, and therefore has both material and spiritual
needs. One must therefore take care of these two topics: the reform of
hearts and that of institutions. Why oppose one to the other? What
prevents us from taking care of both at the same time? The “Michael”
Journal neither neglects one nor the other, since it advocates an
integral development of the human person, in both his spiritual and
material needs. For
too many Christians, religion is limited to what is taking place within
the four walls of the church, but has nothing to do with what is taking
place outside, and must in no way have any influence on society. Such a
reasoning may please the exploiters, the tyrants, the enemies of God and
of justice, but it is also an insult to God and to the truth — the
Second Vatican Council even described this “separation of faith and
culture” as “one of the most serious errors of our times.” To
be a Catholic everywhere John
Paul II said that “there is no authentic faith without a search for
justice” (homily in Geneva, June 15, 1982). A religion which, under
the pretext that true happiness can be reached in Heaven only, tells
people to take no interest in justice, and which lets gangsters and
crooks do what they want, which lets people starve to death amidst
plenty, is a religion that means nothing, is a religion that is not
Catholic. The “Michael” Journal wants to form true Catholics, people
who think and act as Catholics everywhere, in every sector of society
— not only in church. For
in reality, no sector of life in society must be closed to the teaching
of Christ: all the existing systems — including the economic and
financial systems — must be submitted to moral laws, and put at the
service of the human person. Many might remember these words of Pope
John Paul II, on October 22, 1978, at the Mass marking the beginning of
his Pontificate: “Do not be
afraid! Open wide the doors for Christ! To his saving power open the
boundaries of States, economic and political systems, the vast fields of
civilization, culture and development. Do not be afraid. Christ knows
‘what is in man’. He alone knows it.” And
Pope John Paul II also said at Flueli, Switzerland, on June 14, 1984: “As a democratic society, see carefully to all that is happening in this powerful world of money! The world of finance is also a human world, our world, submitted to the conscience of all of us; for it too exist ethical principles. So see especially to it that you may bring a contribution to world peace with your economy and your banks, and not a contribution — perhaps in an indirect way — to war and injustice!” To
sum up, the battle of the “Michael” Journal is the battle for the
salvation of souls. This paper only repeats what the Pope and the Church
demand: a new evangelization — to remind basic Christian principles to
Christians who unfortunately forget them or ceased to put them into
practice — and a restructuring of the economic systems. To be a
Pilgrim of St. Michael in the Work of the “Michael” Journal is
therefore the most urgent and necessary vocation for our times. Who,
among our readers, will have the grace to respond to this call, to this
vocation? How great and important the Work of Louis Even is! Alain Pilote This article was published in the May-June-July, 2003 issue of “Michael”. If you want to subscribe and receive it regularly, click here. |