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3199 illustrations evoking compassion
"Justice and mercy—not opposites but partners. The Church's social teaching flows from prophets like Micah: preferential option for the poor (justice), works of mercy (corporal and spiritual), humility before God (prayer and sacrament). This is Catholic faith lived." — Pope Francis.
"Sin's wages are paid most heavily by the poor—death from poverty, violence, neglect. But God's gift is life—especially for the crucified peoples. Eternal life begins with abundant life now: justice, dignity, bread. The gift is liberation from every death-dealing force." — Jon Sobrino.
"God's thoughts subvert human assumptions—especially assumptions of the powerful. Our 'common sense' often serves empire; God's ways overturn it. His thoughts judge our nationalism, our economics, our hierarchies. Divine transcendence is not comforting to the comfortable but to the marginalized." — Walter Brueggemann.
"The clean heart sees injustice clearly and acts. Hearts corrupted by privilege are blind to the poor; cleansed hearts see and respond. David's sin was exploitation; his cleansing led to justice restored. God creates hearts that beat for the marginalized." — Gustavo Gutiérrez.
"Lamentations speaks from rubble—Jerusalem destroyed, people crushed. This is the cry of refugees, slum-dwellers, victims of violence. Yet FROM this devastation comes: 'His mercies never cease.' God is faithful to the devastated; His mercy meets the most desperate." — Gustavo Gutiérrez.
"What does the Lord require? Micah answers for the poor: justice that liberates, mercy that dignifies, humble walk with the God who sides with the oppressed. This is not religion as usual but prophetic faith that transforms society. God requires liberation." — Gustavo Gutiérrez.
"Christ died for sinners—and the crucified peoples of the earth are told they are sinners for their poverty, their race, their resistance. Christ identifies with them: the crucified God for the crucified peoples. 'While we were sinners' is solidarity with the condemned." — Jon Sobrino.