Reprinted
from The Common Good, issue 49,
Easter 2009
A
Spirituality for Today - Dorothy Day on Justice
Jim
Forest
If
you find the life of Dorothy Day inspiring, if you want to understand what gave
her direction and courage and strength to persevere, her deep attentiveness to
others, consider her spiritual and sacramental life.
In
1933, Dorothy Day, together with Peter Maurin, began a Depression-era newspaper
called The Catholic Worker. From this early collaboration an entire movement
was bornÑthe Catholic Worker movement, which has become well known for its
houses of hospitality for people in need and for its strong stance against
injustice and violence. In the years I lived with her and helped edit the
paper, Dorothy taught me many things. HereÕs what I learnt about justice from
Dorothy Day.
First
of all, Dorothy Day taught me that justice begins on our knees. I have never
known anyone, not even in monasteries, who was more of a praying person than
Dorothy Day. When I think of her, I think of her first of all on her knees
praying before the Blessed Sacrament. I think of those long lists of names she
kept of people, living and dead, to pray for. I think of her at Mass, I think
of her praying the rosary, I think of her going off for Confession each
Saturday evening. ÔWe feed the hungry, yes,Õ she said. ÔWe try to shelter the
homeless and give them clothes, but there is strong faith at work; we pray. If
an outsider who comes to visit us doesn't pay attention to our prayings and
what that means, then he'll miss the whole point.Õ
First
of all, Dorothy Day taught me that justice begins on our knees. I have never
known anyone, not even in monasteries, who was more of a praying person than Dorothy
Day.
Second,
Dorothy Day taught me that justice is not just a project for the government,
do-good agencies, or radical movements designing a new social order in which
all the world's problems will be solved. It's for you and me, here and now,
right where we are.
Jesus
did not say ÔBlessed are you who give contributions to charityÕ or ÔBlessed are
you who are planning a just society.Õ He said, ÔWelcome into the Kingdom
prepared for you since the foundation of the world, for I was hungry and you
fed me.Õ
At
the heart of what Dorothy did were the works of mercy. For her, these were not
simply obligations the Lord imposed on his followers. As she said on one
occasion to Robert Coles, ÔWe are here to celebrate him through these works of
mercy.Õ
Third:
the most radical thing we can do is to try to find the face of Christ in
others, and not only those we find it easy to be with but those who make us
nervous, frighten us, alarm us, or even terrify us. ÔThose who cannot see the
face of Christ in the poor,Õ she used to say, Ôare atheists indeed.Õ
Dorothy
was an orthodox Catholic. This means she believed that Christ has left himself
with us both in the Eucharist and in those in need. ÔWhat you did to the least
person, you did to me.Õ
Her
searching of faces for Christ's presence extended to those who were her
Ôenemies.Õ They were, she always tried to remember, victims of the very
structures they were in charge of.
ÔThose
who cannot see the face of Christ in the poor,Õ she used to say, Ôare atheists
indeed.Õ
She
sometimes recalled the advice she had been given by a fellow prisoner named
Mary Ann, a prostitute, when she was in jail in Chicago in the early 1920s:
ÔYou must hold up your head high and give them no clue that you're afraid of
them or ready to beg them for anything, any favours whatsoever. But you must
see them for what they areÑnever forget that they're in jail too.Õ
Fourth,
I learned that beauty is not just for the affluent. Tom Cornell tells the story
of a donor coming into the Catholic Worker and giving Dorothy a diamond ring.
Dorothy thanked her for it and put it in her pocket. Later, a rather demented
lady came in, one of the more irritating regulars at the house. Dorothy took
the diamond ring out of her pocket and gave it to the woman. Someone on the staff
said to Dorothy, ÔWouldn't it have been better if we took the ring to the
diamond exchange, sold it, and paid that woman's rent for a year?Õ Dorothy
replied that the woman had her dignity and could do what she liked with the
ring. She could sell it for rent money or take a trip to the Bahamas. Or she
could enjoy wearing a diamond ring on her hand like the woman who gave it away.
ÔDo you suppose,Õ Dorothy asked, Ôthat God created diamonds only for the rich?Õ
Fifth,
Dorothy taught me that meekness does not mean being weak-kneed. There is a
place for outrage as well as a place for very plain speech in religious life.
She once told someone who was counselling her to speak in a more polite,
temperate way, ÔI hold more temper in one minute than you will hold in your
entire life.Õ Or again her lightning-like comment, ÔOur problems stem from our
acceptance of this filthy, rotten system.Õ
Sixth,
I learned from Dorothy to take the Ôlittle way.Õ The phrase was one Dorothy
borrowed from Saint Therese of Lisieux, the Little Flower. Change starts not in
the future but in the present, not in Washington or on Wall Street but where I
stand. Change begins not in the isolated dramatic gesture or the petition
signed but in the ordinary actions of life, how I live minute to minute, what I
do with my life, what I notice, what I respond to, the care and attention with
which I listen, the way in which I respond.
As
Dorothy once put it: ÔPaperwork, cleaning the house, dealing with the
innumerable visitors who come all through the day, answering the phone, keeping
patience and acting intelligently, which is to find some meaning in all that
happensÑthese things, too, are the works of peace, and often seem like a very
little way.Õ
Or
again: ÔWhat I want to bring out is how a pebble cast into a pond causes
ripples that spread in all directions. Each one of our thoughts, words, and
deeds is like that.Õ What she tried to practice was ÔChrist's technique,Õ as
she put it, which was not to seek out meetings with emperors and important
officials but with Ôobscure people, a few fishermen and farm people, a few
ailing and hard-pressed men and women.Õ
Seventh,
Dorothy taught me to love the church and at the same time to speak out honestly
about its faults. She used to say that the net Saint Peter lowered when Christ
made him a fisher of men caught Ôquite a few blowfish and not a few sharks.Õ
Dorothy
said many times that Ôthe church is the cross on which Christ is crucified.Õ
When she saw the church taking the side of the rich and powerful, forgetting
the weak, or saw bishops living in luxury while the poor are thrown the crumbs
of Ôcharity,Õ she said she knew that Christ was being insulted and once again
being sent to his death. ÔThe church doesn't only belong to the officials and
bureaucrats,Õ she said. ÔIt belongs to all people, and especially its most
humble men and women and children.Õ
Change
begins not in the isolated dramatic gesture or the petition signed but in the
ordinary actions of life, how I live minute to minute, what I do with my life,
what I notice, what I respond to, the care and attention with which I listen,
the way in which I respond.
At
the same time I learned from her not to focus on the human failings so obvious
in every church, but rather to pay attention to what the church sets its sights
on. We're not here to pass judgment on our fellow believers, whatever their
role in the church, but to live the gospel as wholeheartedly as we can and make
the best use we can of the sacraments and every other resource the church
offers to us.
ÔI
didn't become a Catholic in order to purify the church,Õ Dorothy told Coles. ÔI
knew someone, years ago, who kept telling me that if [the Catholic Workers]
could purify the church, then she would convert. I thought she was teasing me
when she first said that, but after a while I realized she meant what she kept
saying. ÔFinally, I told her I wasn't trying to reform the church or take sides
on all the issues the church was involved in; I was trying to be a loyal
servant of the church Jesus had founded.Õ She thought I was being facetious.
She reminded me that I had been critical of capitalism and America, so why not
Catholicism and Rome? ÔMy answer was that I had no reason to criticize
Catholicism as a religion or Rome as the place where the Vatican is located....
As for Catholics all over the world, including members of the church, they are
no better than lots of their worst critics, and maybe some of us Catholics are
worse than our worst critics.Õ
Last
but not least: I learned from Dorothy Day that I am here to follow Christ. Not
the pope. Not the ecumenical patriarch. Not the president of the United States.
Not even Dorothy Day or any other saint. Christ has told us plainly about the
Last Judgment, and it has nothing to do with belonging to the right church or
being theologically correct. All the church can do is try to get us on the
right track and keep us there. We will be judged not on membership cards but
according to our readiness to let the mercy of God pass through us to others.
ÔLove is the measure,Õ Dorothy said again and again, quoting Saint John of the
Cross.
Hers
was a day-to-day way of the cross, and just as truly the way of the open door.
ÔIt is the living from day to day,Õ she said, Ôtaking no thought for the
morrow, seeing Christ in all who come to us, and trying literally to follow the
gospel that resulted in this work.Õ
Jim
Forest began his association with Dorothy Day in 1961, when he moved to New
York City to join the Catholic Worker community there. He now lives in Alkmaar,
The Netherlands. Reprinted - The US Catholic, February 25, 2009