A Jubilee for workers was due to take place during the days 1st-4th May 2025, but was not able to take place following the death of Pope Francis. On 8th November 2025, a celebration of a Jubilee for Workers will take place.
In September 1981, Pope St John Paul II issued his Encyclical Letter Laborem Exercens, dedicated to the principles of the idea of human work and to discussing the contemporary problems relating to human work.
From the beginning therefore [man] is called to work. Work is one of the characteristics that distinguish man from the rest of creatures, whose activity for sustaining their lives cannot be called work. Only man is capable of work, and only man works, at the same time by work occupying his existence on earth. Thus work bears a particular mark of man and of humanity, the mark of a person operating within a community of persons. And this mark decides its interior characteristics; in a sense it constitutes its very nature.
Starting from an analysis of the teaching of the Book of Genesis (Gen.1:28) - "Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it" - John Paul II presents work in both its objective and subjective senses. He first suggests that work is something characteristic of the human person that identifies the human person apart from other creatures. The objective sense of work lies in the nature of the actual tasks undertaken, and John Paul outlines how this has changed over time, developing from a largely manual form of work to an increasingly mechanised form.
Understood in this case not as a capacity or aptitude for work, but rather as a whole set of instruments which man uses in his work, technology is undoubtedly man's ally. It facilitates his work, perfects, accelerates and augments it. It leads to an increase in the quantity of things produced by work, and in many cases improves their quality. However, it is also a fact that, in some instances, technology can cease to be man's ally and become almost his enemy, as when the mechanization of work "supplants" him, taking away all personal satisfaction and the incentive to creativity and responsibility, when it deprives many workers of their previous employment, or when, through exalting the machine, it reduces man to the status of its slave.
This development towards an ever more technological form of work, viewed in its objective sense, brings to the fore the question of work in its subjective sense:
Man has to subdue the earth and dominate it, because as the "image of God" he is a person, that is to say, a subjective being capable of acting in a planned and rational way, capable of deciding about himself, and with a tendency to self-realization. As a person, man is therefore the subject of work. As a person he works, he performs various actions belonging to the work process; independently of their objective content, these actions must all serve to realize his humanity, to fulfil the calling to be a person that is his by reason of his very humanity. ...
...the basis for determining the value of human work is not primarily the kind of work being done but the fact that the one who is doing it is a person. The sources of the dignity of work are to be sought primarily in the subjective dimension, not in the objective one.
...This does not mean that, from the objective point of view, human work cannot and must not be rated and qualified in any way. It only means that the primary basis of the value of work is man himself, who is its subject. This leads immediately to a very important conclusion of an ethical nature: however true it may be that man is destined for work and called to it, in the first place work is "for man" and not man "for work".
From this starting point, John Paul goes on to discuss in detail the contemporary situation of the world of work. But this reflection itself can already prompt individuals to look at their own experience of work, and ask how they can try to achieve that agency with regard to their work that will allow them to more effectively act as a subject rather than a slave of their work. And it also brings to the attention of those fortunate enough to be able to work that long term unemployment represents an undermining of the dignity of the person.
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