As I understand the question the poser wanted a construction of the enveloppingenveloping algebra of a Lie algebra in a symmetric monoidal pseudoabelian (i.e., idempotents have kernels) $K$-category $\mathcal C$ with arbitrary sums over a field $K$ of characteristic zero. This means that for any $K[\Sigma_n]$-module $M$ and any object $V\in\mathcal C$ we can define $M\bigotimes_{\Sigma_n}V^{\otimes n}$ and for any $\Sigma$-module $M_\bullet$ (i.e., a collection $(M_n)$ of $K[\Sigma_n]$-modules) we can define $M(V):=\bigoplus_nM_n\bigotimes_{\Sigma_n}V^{\otimes n}$ which is an endofunctor of $\mathcal C$. Furthermore, a map $M \to N$ of $\Sigma$-modules gives a natural transformation of functors $M(V) \to N(V)$. In the particular case when $\mathcal C$ is the category of $K$-vector spaces such a natural transformation comes from a unique map of $\Sigma$-modules. The idea is to do what we know to do for $K$-vector spaces, interpret it as a set of natural transformations, get the corresponding maps of $\Sigma$-modules and use them to induce natural transformations for a general $\mathcal C$.
Let thus $S(V)$ be the symmetric algebra on the $K$-vector space $V$, $T(V)$ the tensor algebra on $V$ and $L(V)$ the free Lie algebra on $V$. Symmetrisation gives an isomorphism $S(L(V)) \to U(L(V))=T(V)$, where $U(-)$ is the enveloppingenveloping algebra of Lie algebras. As $T(V)$ is a $T$-algebra (i.e., an associative algebra) and we can use this isomorphism to give $S(L(V))$ a $T$-algebra structure (i.e., a natural transformation $T(S(L(V))) \to S(L(V))$ fulfilling the appropriate conditions with respect to the monad structure on $T(-)$). FurthhermoreFurthermore, if $\mathfrak g$ is a Lie algebra, then the $T$-algebra structure on $S(\mathfrak g)$ induced by the isomorphism $S(\mathfrak g) \to U(\mathfrak g)$ is given as the composite of $T(S(\mathfrak g)) \to T(S(L(\mathfrak g)))$ induced by the inclusion $\mathfrak g \to L(\mathfrak g)$, the map $T(S(L(\mathfrak g))) \to S(L(\mathfrak g))$ given by the $T$-module structure on $S(L(V))$ above and the map $S(L(\mathfrak g)) S(\mathfrak g)$ induced by the structure map $L(\mathfrak g) \to \mathfrak g$
Now, the functors $S(-)$, $L(-)$ and $T(-)$ are associated to $\Sigma$-modules which will be denoted by the same letters (instead of the standard $Com$, $Lie$ and $Ass$). FurthermorFurthermore, composition of functors correspond to the plethysm $\circ$. Hence we get that $S\circ L$ is a $T$-module, i.e., we have a map $T\circ S\circ L \to S\circ L$ compatible with the operad structure on $T$. Consider now the case of a general $\mathcal C$. Each of $S$, $L$ and $T$ give endofunctors on $\mathcal C$ and $\circ$ correspond here alsoagain corresponds to composition. Let $\mathfrak g$ be a Lie algebra in $\mathcal C$ and define a $T$-algebra structure (i.e., the structure of associative algebra) on $S(\mathfrak g)$ as the composite $$ T(S(\mathfrak g)) \to T(S(L(\mathfrak g))) \to S(L(\mathfrak g)) \to S(\mathfrak g) $$ as above. The verification that this does indeed give a $T$-algebra structure is just a question of unwinding the definitions. The fact that $S$ is an operad gives us a natural transformation $V \to S(V)$ which applied to $\mathfrak g$ gives a morphism $\mathfrak g \to S(\mathfrak g)$ which we now want to show is a Lie algebra homomorphism. Here the Lie algebra structure on $S(\mathfrak g)$ is induced by its $T$-algebra structure and the operad map $L \to T$. Again unwinding definitions showshows that it is indeed a Lie algebra morphism.