Jul 3, 2017
Along with the customary cluster of cookouts, parades, and fireworks, the 4th of July this year brings something different to the observance of our great national festival. "America First" is President Trump's not-so-new rhetorical contribution to Independence Day 2017.
Opinion is divided on whether that's good or bad. On this, a distinction may help.
Taken simply as an ingenuous expression of patriotism, there's no real objection to America First. Charity at the global level truly must begin at home, for unless it starts there – in love of one's own country, that is – charity isn't likely to thrive anywhere else.
The Second Vatican Council says as much. "Citizens should cultivate a generous and loyal spirit of patriotism," Vatican II teaches in its Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World. But then it makes a second, inseparable point. Citizens should practice patriotism, it says, "without narrow-mindedness," keeping in mind "the welfare of the whole human family which is formed into one by various kinds of links between races, peoples, and nations" (Gaudium et Spes, 75).