August 31, 2006

Revelation 2:9 / crystal

I know your tribulation and poverty, but you are rich.

"The preferential option for the poor" is a consept in Catholic social thought (in Protestant too?). It's often linked with liberation theology, but as we can see from this passage, the idea that actual poverty = spiritual wealth is much older than LT.

Here's a bit from an interview with Gustavo Gutiérrez from an issue of America magazine ...

Do you think the “preferential option for the poor” has become an integral part of the Catholic Church’s social teaching? And where did that term come from?

Yes, I do believe that the option for the poor has become part of the Catholic social teaching. The phrase comes from the experience of the Latin American church. The precise term was born sometime between the Latin American bishops’ conferences in Medellín (1968) and in Puebla (1979). In Medellín, the three words (option, preference, poor) are all present, but it was only in the years immediately following Medellín that we brought these words into a complete phrase. It would be accurate to say that the term “preferential option for the poor” comes from the Latin American church, but the content, the underlying intuition, is entirely biblical. Liberation theology tries to deepen our understanding of this core biblical conviction.

The preferential option for the poor has gradually become a central tenet of the church’s teaching. Perhaps we can briefly explain the meaning of each term:

• The term poverty refers to the real poor. This is not a preferential option for the spiritually poor. After all, such an option would be very easy, if for no other reason that there are so few of them! The spiritually poor are the saints! The poverty to which the option refers is material poverty. Material poverty means premature and unjust death. The poor person is someone who is treated as a non-person, someone who is considered insignificant from an economic, political and cultural point of view. The poor count as statistics; they are the nameless. But even though the poor remain insignificant within society, they are never insignificant before God.

• Some people feel, wrongly I believe, that the word preferential waters down or softens the option for the poor, but this is not true. God’s love has two dimensions, the universal and the particular; and while there is a tension between the two, there is no contradiction. God’s love excludes no one. Nevertheless, God demonstrates a special predilection toward those who have been excluded from the banquet of life. The word preference recalls the other dimension of the gratuitous love of God—the universality.

• In some ways, option is perhaps the weakest word in the sentence. In English, the word merely connotes a choice between two things. In Spanish, however, it evokes the sense of commitment. The option for the poor is not optional, but is incumbent upon every Christian. It is not something that a Christian can either take or leave. As understood by Medellín, the option for the poor is twofold: it involves standing in solidarity with the poor, but it also entails a stance against inhumane poverty.

The preferential option for the poor is ultimately a question of friendship. Without friendship, an option for the poor can easily become commitment to an abstraction (to a social class, a race, a culture, an idea). Aristotle emphasized the important place of friendship for the moral life, but we also find this clearly stated in John’s Gospel. Christ says, “I do not call you servants, but friends.” As Christians, we are called to reproduce this quality of friendship in our relationships with others. When we become friends with the poor, their presence leaves an indelible imprint on our lives, and we are much more likely to remain committed.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks Crystal. I appreciate the work of the Liberation Theologians -- though I'm more familiar with Boff than with Guitierez.

Christ stands with the poor, an here promises them the crown of life.

forrest said...

"Material poverty means premature and unjust death. The poor person is someone who is treated as a non-person, someone who is considered insignificant from an economic, political and cultural point of view. " There's nothing sentimental in this description; this is what poverty means: to be "consigned to death."

Jesus says "Blessed are the poor." He has two words available. He doesn't choose the word which means "the worthy poor, the hard-working, respectable poor." He says "Blessed are the destitute."

God does not reject the rich, or truly "prefer" the poor, but the rich are hard to help, while the needs of the poor are pressing. We "rich" have no feel for the word "urgent"; the poor live from one emergency to the next.

The fact that the rich "have their reward" doesn't imply that "God won't give them anything else." The rich have the option to seek God, or to not seek God; and because they "have their reward" they may not feel the need to seek further. Clinging to false justifications for their position of relative safety and comfort, they may even fear to seek further.

The poor have no options. They do have choices, choices like "shot or hung?" Choices like "toil, steal, lie, or go hungry?" "All of the above, hunger included--or just hunger?" The poor tend to be "criminals" because their misdeeds are made illegal, while the crimes of the rich go unpunished and often socially rewarded.

The separation of "rich" from "poor" is mutual impoverishment. But when one person has something that another person needs, that establishes a barrier. "Friendship" is the only bridge across that divide; "charity" doesn't do it. Friendship lets us forgive ourselves and each other for the advantages and afflictions that inescapably alienate us from one another.

A rabbi explained to me once that Cain was not cursed for killing his brother, but for asking: "Am I my brother's keeper?"

crystal said...

Hi you guys. I'm still not sure about the "preferential option" part for the poor. Maybe it should be an option for people who are marginalized or in need. Not all the money in the world can buy happiness ... people who are healthy, beautiful, wealthy, powerful, still can be lonely, grow old, get sick, lose loved ones, die.