Penny Lernoux (1940 – 1989)
American journalist for National Catholic Reporter and The Nation.
Page 1 of 1
You can look at a slum or peasant village...but it is only by entering into the world—by living in it—that you begin to understand what it is like to be powerless, to be like Christ.
Opus Dei is an efficient machine run to achieve world power.
What good is life unless you give it away – unless you give it for a better world, even if you never see that world but have only carried your grain to the building site.
And the Third World will continue to beckon to the First, reminding it of the Galilean vision of Christian solidarity.
At stake are two different visions of faith, the Church of Caesar, powerful and rich; and the Church of Christ - loving, poor and spiritually rich.
Although the mass of the people accepted the white man's God, either under physical duress or because he seemed more powerful than their own Gods, they never assimilated the ideas of Christianity.
In contrast, traditional Catholic churches serve vast numbers of people who have little or nothing in common, and they are often impersonal supermarkets for the sacraments.
And many of the people who buy or found banks have had no experience in banking at all. If they can learn it, so can we.
Page 1 of 1