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Remembering the Poor: An Interview with Gustavo Gutiérrez (2003)

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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-11-09 08:19 PM
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Remembering the Poor: An Interview with Gustavo Gutiérrez (2003)
Remembering the Poor: An Interview with Gustavo Gutiérrez
Daniel Hartnett | FEBRUARY 3, 2003

... Our context today is characterized by a glaring disparity between the rich and the poor. No serious Christian can quietly ignore this situation. It is no longer possible for someone to say, “Well, I didn’t know” about the suffering of the poor. Poverty has a visibility today that it did not have in the past. The faces of the poor must now be confronted. And we also understand the causes of poverty and the conditions that perpetuate it. There was a time when poverty was considered to be an unavoidable fate, but such a view is no longer possible or responsible. Now we know that poverty is not simply a misfortune; it is an injustice ...

• The term poverty refers to the real poor. This is not a preferential option for the spiritually poor. After all, such an option would be very easy, if for no other reason that there are so few of them! The spiritually poor are the saints! The poverty to which the option refers is material poverty. Material poverty means premature and unjust death. The poor person is someone who is treated as a non-person, someone who is considered insignificant from an economic, political and cultural point of view. The poor count as statistics; they are the nameless. But even though the poor remain insignificant within society, they are never insignificant before God ...

The preferential option for the poor is ultimately a question of friendship. Without friendship, an option for the poor can easily become commitment to an abstraction (to a social class, a race, a culture, an idea). Aristotle emphasized the important place of friendship for the moral life, but we also find this clearly stated in John’s Gospel. Christ says, “I do not call you servants, but friends.” As Christians, we are called to reproduce this quality of friendship in our relationships with others. When we become friends with the poor, their presence leaves an indelible imprint on our lives, and we are much more likely to remain committed ...

http://www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=2755
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dcsmart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-15-09 11:23 AM
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1. terrific post K & R
Edited on Mon Jun-15-09 11:24 AM by dcsmart
always great to listen to the latin american liberation theologians. Especially Jon Sobrino. thanks for the post


....well tried to K & R, but to late
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