If enough individuals are full of despair and anger in their hearts, there will be violence in the streets. If enough individuals are full of greed and fear in their hearts, there will be racism and oppression in society. You can’t remove the external social symptoms without treating the corresponding internal personal diseases…Pope Francis draws our attention to the ‘invisible thread’ of the market, which he describes as ‘the mentality of profit at any price, with no concern for social exclusion or the destruction of nature.’ This mentality generates inequality, which in turn generates ‘a violence which no police, military, or intelligence resources can control’…changed individuals cross racial, religious, ethnic, class or political boundaries to build friendships. These friendship work like sutures, healing wounds in the social fabric. They ‘humanize the other,’ making it harder for groups to stereotype or scapegoat. They create little zones where the beloved community is manifest…They help people envision the common good–a situation where all are safe, free, and able to thrive. As my friend Shane Claiborne says, our problem isn’t that rich people don’t care about poor people; it’s that all too often, rich people don’t know any poor people. Knowing one another makes interpersonal change and reconciliation possible. (p. 167-168)
If enough individuals are full of despair and anger in their hearts, there will be violence in the streets. If enough individuals are full of greed and fear in their hearts, there will be racism and oppression in society. You can’t remove the external social symptoms without treating the corresponding internal personal diseases…Pope Francis draws our attention to the ‘invisible thread’ of the market, which he describes as ‘the mentality of profit at any price, with no concern for social exclusion or the destruction of nature.’ This mentality generates inequality, which in turn generates ‘a violence which no police, military, or intelligence resources can control’…changed individuals cross racial, religious, ethnic, class or political boundaries to build friendships. These friendship work like sutures, healing wounds in the social fabric. They ‘humanize the other,’ making it harder for groups to stereotype or scapegoat. They create little zones where the beloved community is manifest…They help people envision the common good–a situation where all are safe, free, and able to thrive. As my friend Shane Claiborne says, our problem isn’t that rich people don’t care about poor people; it’s that all too often, rich people don’t know any poor people. Knowing one another makes interpersonal change and reconciliation possible. (p. 167-168)