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Tenderly to the Poor in the Catholic Worker

Dorothy Day
Marquette University Archives

            Within The Catholic Worker, there has

Always been emphasis placed on the woks of

mercy, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked,

sheltering the harborless, that it has seemed to

many of our intellectuals a top-heavy performance.

There was early criticism that we were taking on

”rotten lumber that would sink the ship. “Derelict”

was the term used most often.

As though Jesus did not come to live with

the lost,  to save the lost, to show

them the way. His love was always shown most

tenderly to the poor, the derelict, the prodigal son,

so that he would leave the ninety-nine just ones to

go after the one.

            From Stanley Vishnewski, Meditations:

Dorothy Day, Templegate 1997.

 

Unworthy Poor

By Dorothy Day

God is on the side of even the unworthy poor,

as we know from the story Jesus told of His

Father and the prodigal son. Charles Péguy,

in God Speaks, has explained it perfectly. Readers

may object that the prodigal son returned

to his father’s house. But, who knows, he might

have gone out and squandered money on the

next Saturday night; he might have refused to

help with the farm work, and asked to be sent

to finish his education instead, thereby further

incurring his brother’s righteous wrath, and

the war between the worker and the intellectual,

or the conservative and the radical, would be on.

Jesus has another answer to that one: to forgive

one’s brother seventy times seven. There are

always answers, although they are not always

calculated to soothe.

            From Stanley Vishnewski, Meditations:

Dorothy Day, Templegate 1997.