The Ordered Life
Can markets be morally bankrupt? In this episode of The Ordered Life, Sean, AJ, and Anthony continue their discussion of Mensuram Bonam and explore how Catholic Social Teaching can shape the way investors think about wealth, markets, and human dignity. The conversation begins with a simple but challenging idea: faith and finance should not live in separate worlds. Financial decisions are moral decisions because money is never neutral. It either serves the human person, the common good, and the flourishing of life, or it can drift toward accumulation, speculation, and systems that put profit ahead of people. The episode focuses on several core principles for Catholic investors, including the dignity of the human person, the common good, solidarity, and social justice. Sean, AJ, and Anthony consider how these ideas apply to real investment decisions, from coercive marketing and addictive technology to companies that profit from vice or reduce human freedom. For Catholics who want to steward wealth without dividing their lives, this episode offers a thoughtful framework for asking better questions. What is investing actually for? Does wealth serve the person, the family, and the common good? And how can prudence and moral clarity work together in the way we allocate capital? Disclaimer: Sean Gregory is a Portfolio Manager and AJ Sanson and Anthony De Lazzari are Investment Advisors with iA Private Wealth Inc., member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund and the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization. iA Private Wealth is a trademark and business name under which iA Private Wealth Inc. operates. This content was fully or partially generated by artificial intelligence. The advisor reviewed the critical information independently.
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