{"id":150,"date":"2010-09-14T08:53:07","date_gmt":"2010-09-14T13:53:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.ipsinaction.com\/ips\/?p=150"},"modified":"2024-06-20T15:44:15","modified_gmt":"2024-06-20T15:44:15","slug":"morality-social-justice","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/?p=150","title":{"rendered":"Morality and Social Justice &#8211; A 21st Century Invitation to Liberation"},"content":{"rendered":"<h5 style=\"text-align: center\"><a href=\"http:\/\/www.ipsinaction.com\/ips\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/09\/clouds-pano-10x4.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-152\" style=\"margin-bottom: 4px;border: 1px solid black\" src=\"http:\/\/www.ipsinaction.com\/ips\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/09\/clouds-pano-10x4.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"540\" height=\"216\" \/><\/a>by Robert Ludwig, Ph.D., Director of the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ipsinaction.com\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Institute of Pastoral Studies<\/a><\/h5>\n<p>The experience of Christ and grace in sacramental community is a path  towards liberation&#8211;the liberation of individuals from their  enslavement to all that is not God and God&#8217;s reign through a lifetime  process of conversion, and the liberation of all creation from  indifference, injustice, and violence through the patient witness of the  sacramental community in solidarity with the unloved, the poor, the  oppressed, the violated. These two dimensions of liberation go  together&#8211;personal conversion and social transformation. One is set free  from one&#8217;s small ego-encapsulated self and embraces the larger self,  the whole self, the self that is imaged in Christ. The experience of  liberation is a turning to others in compassionate service, identifying  with the marginated other in one&#8217;s recognition of one&#8217;s own marginated  status.<\/p>\n<p>The origins of the Christian tradition, in fact, lie in a  peasant movement for justice grounded in the compassion and wisdom of  God active in life and history. Biblical historian Dominic Crossan has  &#8220;[Jesus] had both a religious dream and a social program, and it was  that conjunction that got him killed&#8230;. Indeed, if Jesus had been only a  matter of words or ideas, the Romans would have probably ignored him,  and we would probably not be talking about him today. His kingdom  movement, however, with its healings and exorcisms, was action and  practice, not just thought and theory. (The Essential Jesus, p.3).<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>In  the liberation experience, all that can be said about Jesus, about  grace, about sacramental community meets the concrete dynamics of  history. Here, in a new and more powerful awareness, we recognize that  Jesus really died&#8211;that his own solidarity with the poor and the  oppressed led to his violent demise. Here, in a new and more powerful  awareness, we see that the dynamics of conversion&#8211;of saying yes to  God&#8217;s offer of grace and no to sin&#8211;makes us vulnerable to the brutal  power of human systems and their terrible violence, that entering into  the Reign of God experience puts us in jeopardy with the powers that  rule this world. Here, in a new and more powerful awareness, we  understand that as the body of Christ in history the sacramental  community is called to embody and act on the same compassionate love  that animated Jesus&#8211;that going into the water in baptism and breaking  bread in his memory, if these actions are truly authentic, also means  suffering love for the oppressed and courageous moral action on their  behalf.<\/p>\n<p>This experience of liberation is the basis for the  Catholic moral tradition. Catholicism calls the individual to a  continuous process of moral conversion, seeking liberation from sin and  complete surrender to God in Christ, growing in the patterns of love and  justice; and it calls the church community to a continuous process of  social transformation, seeking social structures and public policies  that affirm and protect the dignity of every person.<\/p>\n<p>The experience of  liberation&#8211;of being liberated oneself and of collaborating (conspiring)  in the liberation of others&#8211;is simultaneously the most challenging and  the most affirming dimension of contemporary Catholicism, the most  daring and yet the most attractive aspect of pursuing the Catholic path.  In liberation, we abandon whatever false selves we&#8217;ve created to win  acceptance and approval, and gain the courage to accept our own  acceptance&#8211;to assert our own needs and our own dignity, to claim our  human rights. In liberation, we find solidarity with every  oppressed\/repressed\/suppressed person, helping others assert their  dignity and claim their rights. In liberation, we become hungry for  justice, and seek after peace, passionately giving ourselves to the work  of transforming the structures of poverty and oppression, codependency  and addiction, violence and death, into God&#8217;s Reign of loving compassion  and radical egalitarianism.<\/p>\n<p>This is a difficult struggle, because  it means change and transformation, becoming vulnerable in solidarity  with the most vulnerable, risking the safety and security of our present  arrangements and identifying with those at the edge, the victims, the  nobodies. Here we let go of other rules and give ourselves to the rule  of God, let go of our own controlling and surrender to a compassionate  God who loves the poor, the suffering, the outcast. Liberation is a real  dying, but it is a death that hope compels. It is also a real rising in  which we transcend fear and the self which is controlled by fear,  finding new vitality and new power in God&#8217;s lifting up of the lowly.  Again, Crossan helps us see the basis of all this in Jesus: &#8221;\tThe  Kingdom movement was Jesus&#8217; program of empowerment for a peasantry  becoming steadily more hard-pressed through insistent taxation,  attendant indebtedness, and eventual land expropriation, all within  increasing commercialization in the expanding colonial economy of a  Roman Empire under Augustan peace and a Lower Galilee under Herodian  urbanization. Jesus lived, against the systemic injustice and structural  evil of that situation, an alternative open to all who would accept it:  a life of open healing and shared eating, of radical itinerancy,  programmatic homelessness, and fundamental egalitarianism, of human  contact without discrimination, and of divine contact without  hierarchy.&#8221; (Ibid., p. 12)<\/p>\n<p>The dominant focus of Catholic doctrine  in the past century has been its social teaching. From the pontificate  of Leo XIII, which began in 1878, up to the present, Catholic leaders  have spoken boldly about social, political and economic problems and the  implications of Christian faith for public life. This growing body of  Catholic social teaching is about human dignity, human rights, and the  responsibility of individuals and social institutions to insure that  those rights are honored; about the importance of the common good and  the role of government in protecting and promoting it; about the scandal  of modern war and of spending billions on weapons of mass destruction  and the critical need to address the widening gap between the rich and  the poor; about the excesses of individualism, private ownership,  materialism, and consumerism, and the need to put the needs of the poor  first; about the structures of social sin and the need to reconfigure  global systems. Taken together it provides a radical critique of modern  society and a principled vision of transformation. Ironically, it has  also been used to critique the church&#8217;s internal life, calling the  church to practice itself what it preaches to others.<\/p>\n<p>While this  body of teaching is sometimes called &#8220;our best kept secret&#8221; (because so  many people, including Catholics, know little about it), many  contemporary Catholics have sought to make it practical in a wide  variety of imaginative and creative programs and  initiatives&#8211;increasingly in concert with people of other faiths or no  religious stance who share our social concern and the underlying values  that prompt a vision of social transformation. Nonetheless, Catholic  social teaching is a startling departure from much of Catholic history,  reversing centuries of church alignment with the rich and powerful, with  the process of colonization and the oppression of indigenous peoples,  with patriarchal sexism and the domination of women. It overturns common  assumptions about Catholicism and challenges deeply inbred patterns of  domination and submission which continue to characterize so much of the  church.<\/p>\n<p>Liberation takes place in the human psyche as well as in  society. Removing external barriers and changing social structures are  tied to removing internal barriers and seeking internal change. The  destructive patterns which we find in society afflict our interiority as  well: shame and guilt, fear, hatred, contempt, self-righteousness,  judgmentalism, alienation. Self-esteem and esteem of others go together.  Self-acceptance and openness to others, compassion towards self and  towards others, recognition of our own dignity and the demands human  dignity make for social justice&#8211;the liberation experience ties these  together. Liberation is not only a social goal, but an exhilarating  interior process which transforms the self. Liberation is a healing  which restores self-esteem and self-confidence to individuals as they  discover an inner center of authority. Persons who have interiorized  external judgments and see themselves as defective come to see that the  source of their self-hatred is in defective structures. This was the  great insight that emerged from Brown vs. Board of Education: that  racial segregation led children of color to despise themselves&#8211;to  interiorize the racism of the dominant culture implied in segregated  facilities. Women, whose self-esteem has been damaged by patriarchy and  sexism, are empowered by interior healing as well as by changing social  structures. Gays and lesbians find coming out within (being reconciled  to their own sexuality and discovering their own center of sexual  authority) a necessary prerequisite to confronting heterosexist  structures in society.<\/p>\n<p>People who belong to target groups aren&#8217;t  the only ones who can and do benefit from inner healing. White, male  heterosexuals are discovering increasingly their need to be  healed&#8211;their urge to dominate others and their fear of diversity are  tied to their own self-esteem problems. Excessive aggression and  competition and the need always to be in control is more and more felt  as a deficiency that is grounded in one&#8217;s own insecurity. Attitudes that  are projected outwards&#8211;towards racial minorities, women, and gays&#8211;are  tied to inner doubts and uncertainties. Being driven to position,  wealth, power, and prestige is related to inner anxieties and unresolved  childhood experiences.<\/p>\n<p>One can easily describe our national and  global society today as &#8220;dysfunctional.&#8221; Just as in families, change and  healing involves everyone. The patterns of dominance and submission, of  controlling external authorities (international cartels, multi-national  corporations, the market economy, lobbyists and political action  committees, the media, socially dominant &#8220;isms&#8221;) and codependent groups  (whole nations) and individuals who lack any connection to their own  inner centers of authority, are in great need of healing  &#8220;interventions.&#8221; Liberation movements&#8211;whether among Latin American  peasants or inner-city neighborhoods; African-American, Hispanic,  feminist, gay, or white-male&#8211;seek the healing of a deconstructed and  violent society in crisis. The economic dissonance created by abject  poverty and opulent luxury, by an all-powerful elite and the  powerlessness of the masses, is creating an inner and outer tension.  Today&#8217;s victims are found in Harlem and on Wall Street, in barrios and  wealthy suburbs, among the poorest and the richest. We need liberation  and healing&#8211;grounded in the only real authority, which is God. The  liberation and healing of Jesus&#8217; Reign of God, mediated in sacramental  communities of compassion and service, must make social justice and the  politics of compassion central to their identity and their work. Here  inner and outer healing go together as people discover charis as their  center and charism as their vocation, experiencing forgiveness and mercy  as personal empowerment through conversion, and compassion and justice  as the empowerment of a transformed social order.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Robert Ludwig, Ph.D., Director of the Institute of Pastoral Studies The experience of Christ and grace in sacramental community is a path towards liberation&#8211;the liberation of individuals from their enslavement to all that is not God and God&#8217;s reign through a lifetime process of conversion, and the liberation of all creation from indifference, injustice, <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/?p=150\"> read more <span class=\"meta-nav\"><\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-150","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/150","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/6"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=150"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/150\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4697,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/150\/revisions\/4697"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=150"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=150"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.luc.edu\/ips\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=150"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}