Pope Francis said: "Unified culture means seeing that others are not competitors, statistics, but brothers and sisters." Unification is a word freely thrown in theology. My view on solidarity is constantly changing. As a result of interacting with new people, I now understand about theological research deepened, the unity of all people was different, I found that the experience of each person is different. Some people find unity when working with others, others listen to people's experiences.
Unification is the core concept of Christian ethics. Although solidarity or similar concepts can be found in other Christian traditions and other religious and philosophical ethical systems, the Catholic social tradition may have best formed the concept of solidarity in the last century. This article insists that the solidarity assumed in Catholic Social Education (CST) provides a powerful and useful understanding of individuals, communities, institutions, and national social obligations. In this article, we clarify its biblical, theological and empirical foundations, historical precedents, and the purpose, method and scope of solidarity as an outline of CST solidarity concept. This article also describes the modern application of Catholic solidarity ethics and the theoretical and practical challenges to its realization.
It is not complete. Emir Durchem, sister's father, groups solidarity into two categories: mechanical solidarity and organic solidarity. Mechanical solidarity means that collective bonds arise from homogeneity of members, they are linked through common similarities such as their work, identity, lifestyle, etc. Organic solidarity is a mutual interaction of various occupations How does unity and differences arising from dependency complement people?
Mechanical solidarity is a form of social cohesion that occurs when people of society have similar values and beliefs and are engaged in similar work. Mechanical solidarity is most common in traditional and simple society, such as society where everyone eats cattle and farms. Amish society reflects mechanical solidarity. In contrast, organic solidarity is a form of social cohesion that occurs when people of society are interdependent, but stick to different values and beliefs and engage in different types of work. Organic solidarity is the most common in societies with complex industries, such as the American big cities of the 2000s.