A Publication of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland  
Catholic Voice Online Edition  
Front Page In this Issue Around the Diocese Letters Bishop's Column News in Brief Calendar
   
Mission Statement
Contact Us
advertise
Circulation
Publication Dates
Back Issues

  May 21, 2007 VOL. 45, NO. 10Oakland, CA

placeholder
articles list
placeholder

Refugees find sanctuary in Berkeley

Traumatized teen gets his spirit back

Books recount terror and hope of asylum seekers

Religious groups launch new sanctuary program for immigrants

Construction continues for new cathedral

Rwandan woman says prayer key to survival

All O’Dowd students to read 'Left to Tell'

Physician cites a deep-seated bias to abort in complicated pregnancies

Brazilian rancher
guilty of plotting
U.S. nun’s murder

Don’t be a ‘spectator Catholic’ says former Boston mayor

Catholics for the Common Good
seek to address major social issues

Archaeologists say they’ve found King Herod’s tomb

BA, MA pastoral courses at HNU

COMMENTARY
Poverty is a major threat to the common good

The challenging choice: making money or doing good?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

placeholder

COMMENTARY

Poverty is a major threat to the common good

The challenging choice: making money or doing good?


Poverty is a major threat to the common good

The common good in America is being threatened, and many of us don’t even know it. We may have some inkling, but our awareness of the peril is not at the top of our minds – nor is the role we can play in overcoming the danger

The threat’s effects are insidious and the evidence is everywhere. And I am not talking about terrorism, a challenged education system or high summer gas prices.
The threat to the common good is poverty.

Experiencing the poor and homeless on the street is very common, and often uncomfortable and awkward. For many, we also experience the poor while volunteering at some sort of assistance program.

But many of us do not realize that we also meet the poor when we eat at a restaurant, visit the local retail store, talk to a service rep, stay in a hotel, or see children walking to school.

These are the working poor and their children.

From the parable of the Good Samaritan we are taught that any person in need is our neighbor. The message is clear, but where do we take it from there?

Our response varies from the not so good – ignoring the panhandler – to the positive – volunteering at a dining room or writing Congress.

As Christians we simply cannot disregard the fundamental command to feed the hungry, clothe the naked and welcome the stranger. How far that duty extends varies based on our abilities, resources, and individual invitations from God.

Catholic Charities around the nation have begun a campaign to urge policy makers to reduce poverty in half by 2020. “Poverty in America: A Threat to the Common Good” explores our moral and ethical response to the poor, the scope and nature of poverty, and policy solutions. (Visit www.catholiccharitiesusa.org.)

In California, Catholic Charities agencies are expanding the discussion by incorporating ideas from “Deus Caritas Est,” Pope Benedict’s first encyclical on love and charity.

“Poverty in California: Our Catholic Response” explores the particular needs and solutions to poverty in our state and the role of the laity in achieving a just state. (Visit www.cccalifornia.orgfor a copy.)

These campaigns highlight national and statewide conditions of poverty. In your own neighborhood there might be particular issues that demand attention. Local affordable housing questions or issues with wages and working conditions may pique your interest.

Every person – no matter where they are in life – has an inherent worth and dignity. It is often easier to recognize it in the struggling single mother than it is with the homeless mentally disabled person on the corner.

Both need someone to stand up for them.

California has nearly 5 million people below the federal poverty line. That number would be much higher if official statistics took into account the higher cost of living in the Golden State.

How do you know how you can help, or even where to start?

One of my wife’s favorite sayings is, “The world only had one Savior, and it wasn’t YOU.” That’s why it is important to work on an issue you are passionate about, but also recognize that the Holy Spirit calls each of us to different roles.

An able young person might be called to build houses. The corporate executive may be asked to volunteer management skills for a non-profit. The busy parent is called to raise children with Christian values.

Supporting recognized charities is critical. It is through the work of organizations like Catholic Charities, the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, and countless other faith-based and non-sectarian groups that a tremendous amount of life-changing and effective charity takes place.

But all those groups combined don’t come close to matching the power and resources of the government and that’s why it is critical to advocate for the poor and vulnerable in our city halls, county offices, Sacramento and Washington, D.C.

Plus it doesn’t take much more than a phone call, first-class stamp or e-mail access to make your concern for the poor and vulnerable known to elected officials.

Whatever the issue – be it hunger, health care, housing, etc. – it is right and natural , says Pope Benedict, for the Catholic laity to let their officials know of the needs of the poor.

As the Good Samaritan parable tells us, those in need are our neighbor. And advocacy is one of the many ways we can help.

(Steve Pehanich is the executive director of Catholic Charities of California. Contact him at spehanich@cacatholic.org)


The challenging choice: making money or doing good?

A graduating senior from a Catholic university was interviewing with a prestigious business firm for a position. The youthful company recruiters explained that the work was challenging, and demanded about 70 hours a week, but that the compensation was outstanding.

After many hours in the elegant office setting, the graduate asked the interviewers if they enjoyed their work. The pause was awkward. Gradually came the truthful reply that the work wasn’t very enjoyable or meaningful, but that the salary and “perks” were considerable.

At that point the graduating senior decided that he would not accept the position.
He had a sense of vocation. He was seeking work that would reach into the deeper values he had learned, something that would provide a sense of meaning.
He desired more than a job that would pay the bills and carry a handsome salary.

He recognized that his ambitious recruiters had more than a job; they had made a commitment to a career. But he was seeking more than a career, more than financial security. He wanted work that would have meaning and make a difference for the common good.

Any solid education, especially a Catholic education, and a sound family faith formation would inspire such a decision.

Especially at graduation time is one’s attention directed to such a demanding decision, such a critical choice.

Before Christianity, Socrates raised the question, “What ought I to do?” The liberal arts tradition, Western education, and Christian humanism have always spotlighted this concern.

Christian spirituality frames the question in terms of vocation: “What am I called to become?” Graduates faced with multiple career options often falter and allow other influences such as family expectation, the opinion of peers, and the voices of the marketplace to dictate the shape of their lives.

Usually the course of career choice follows the pattern: figure out the lifestyle you want, estimate the level of income you need, and find a job that yields those results. There probably isn’t a worse way to discover a meaningful life.

It involves a faulty logic that runs backwards. It assumes that work is only a means to a financial end. Completely ignored is the possibility that work can be worthwhile because it calls on our unique talents and can actually make a difference in our world.

One young attorney lamented, “I hate spending 60 hours a week making rich people richer.”

Christianity offers a different “take” on vocation and advises us to use our eyes of faith to determine our personal calling, to discover our gifts and aspirations and apply them to the important needs of our world.

In the spirit of the Gospel, an authentic calling reaches beyond personal fulfillment to a concern for justice and peace that addresses the fulfillment of the needs of others, even if they are strangers. God calls each to heal, serve, and create.

Champions of the laity, like Blessed William Joseph Chaminade and others of the 19th and 20th centuries, and especially the Second Vatican Council, insist that the concept of vocation extends to all the baptized. All are equally called to holiness and to service for the realization of God’s reign in this world.

Dedicated followers of Christ follow the example of the Mother of Christ to pay close attention to the actual needs of the world and the Church in order to translate their desires into practical service.

Christ’s life made it clear that his followers should take their cues from the people they serve and not from their own needs.

Our Christian faith leads us to understand that the human desire to serve reflects Christ’s compassion. It is God’s desire for us to be concerned for healing the world in the circumstances of our family, job, and community. This is where we find God, and where God finds us.

There is no standard blueprint for life. We learn “on the job” to discern God’s will in our earthly pilgrimage. The result is that we eventually end up not with a road map but with a compass.

Our continuing challenge is: How can I sustain a vocation while pursuing a career?

We are called to educate ourselves to solidarity. The Bible’s concern for justice is rooted in love of neighbor and the realization of God’s covenant with humanity.

Consequently people of faith pay special attention to the suffering children of God.
When God’s spirit works in the depths of our being in order to help us become aware of our gifts and hopes, that same Spirit works through our experience to indicate what the world needs from us. The Spirit helps us to see problems that our talents are uniquely suited to address.

Without the light of faith and the honest awareness that we have been gifted by God, the world’s needs may seem an overwhelming burden. In that case, our talents and aspirations would be wasted on mere success.

(Marianist Brother John Samaha is a former catechist who served on the religious education staff of the Oakland Diocese. Now retired, he lives in Cupertino.)

 

 


Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland

El Heraldo



Movie Reviews

Mass Times



Web
Catholic Voice

 

back to topup arrow

home

 
Copyright © 2005 The Catholic Voice, All Rights Reserved. Site design by Sarah Kalmon-Bauer.