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Monday, September 28, 2015

I'm reading John Allen's book: The Francis Miracle and came across his explanation of Pope's Francis's treatment of Capitalism in "The Joy of the Gospel."  I want to share this since group one in last week's session had a robust conversation about it.  Here's what he writes: "Focusing on Francis's treatment of capitalism misses what what was truly innovative about "Evangelii Gaudium," (The Joy of The Gospel) which wasn't the pope's approach to economics but rather to Catholicism itself.  The key line was one in which Francis asserted that solidarity with the poor, as well as the promotion of peace, are constituent elements of what it means to be a missionary Church.  This was a direct challenge to contemporary Catholic sociology.  Evangelization and the social gospel have generally been regarded as distinct concerns.  The former is concerned with bringing people to faith in Jesus Christ and membership in the Chruch, while the latter addresses their material needs.  Pope Francis aspires to break down those barriers between people who evangelize and people who serve the poor, because in his mind they should be one and the same.  Serving the poor, in other words, is part and parcel of what it means to "do mission."


1 comment:

  1. To me, what is underlying this message is one of inclusiveness and the spirit of giving.

    Whether it is helping the poor or anyone that suffers in some way, one can evangelize at the same time by giving of themselves to others. These acts of selflessness do more to enlist others in Faith than any amount of preaching anyone can do.

    It is in this sharing that we can bring people together and strengthen the roar of this message of peace and love.

    What I think I hear from this Pope is that the mission is for all of us to rediscover the humanity that lives in us all whether Catholic, Muslim, Democrat, Republican, Entrepreneur, or Beggar. At the center of our humanity is our faith but that does not mean that others who do not share our beliefs cannot experience comfort by other means. For every conflict there is common ground and common good.

    Sorry for the rambling.

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