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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Just Faith: It Ain't Catholic Social Justice!

My friend Stephanie Block has a terrific article at SperoForum which I've posted below about the Just Faith program. It has popped up all over the country in parishes ostensibly waking people up to their need to be invovled in "social justice." Unfortunately, like many community organizing groups and like the CCHD (Catholic Campaign for Human Development), Just Faith focuses on worldly solutions to social problems and, in the process, partners with Planned Parenthood and other enemies of Christ. Oh, and of course, the answer to most problems is to lobby the government for forced redistribution of income by taxation, etc., etc.

Isn't that odd for Catholic action? Do you see Jesus lobbying the Romans for bread and circuses for the poor? No, that's Caesar's way of keeping the population dumb and dumber and under control while they persecute and kill off the trouble makers in the ring. (Hmm....why does that make me think of Democrat welfare policies and the persecution of pro-lifers?)

Just Faith is part of the poisonous mix that turns Christians into Marxists who spend more time seeking government redistiribution of income than in doing personal acts of charity, i.e., the corporal works of mercy: feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit the sick, etc.

If Just Faith is in your parish you need to read Stephanie's article. Waking people up to the needs of the poor and persecuted is a good thing if it makes them imitate Jesus with personal hands-on Christian charity. Turning people in the pew into socialists lobbying government to steal from people through onerous taxation (often used to buy votes), however, is just plain wrong.

JustFaith is JustWrong
Wednesday, December 08, 2010


Stephanie Block
One of the perennial topics among Catholics concerned about spiritual formation has been the toxic pollution spewed by the JustFaith program promulgated in dozens of dioceses around the US, including the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Jo Joyce from Oklahoma catches a news story about an assigned book in a New Hampshire high school “personal finance” class that is making waves for general profanity and specific anti-Christian diatribes. It’s called Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, written by Barbara Ehrenreich. The article includes an excerpt from the book:
It would be nice if someone would read this sad-eyed crowd the Sermon on the Mount, accompanied by a rousing commentary on income inequality and the need for a hike in the minimum wage. But Jesus makes his appearance here only as a corpse; the living man, the wine-guzzling vagrant and precocious socialist, is never once mentioned, nor anything he ever had to say. Christ crucified rules, and it may be that the true business of modern Christianity is to crucify him again and again so that he can never get a word out of his mouth.
Reading this, Jo wonders aloud if this is one of the books on the JustFaith website. Having a curious turn of mind, Jo looks it up (http://www.justfaith.org/news/pdf/jf_voices-09q4.pdf ) and writes, “I was right. This book (below news article) is one recommended by JustFaith. Go to page three in their newsletter! Save it before they scrub it...”
Sure enough, the Fall 2009 newsletter of JustFaith, Voices, says “Small Changes…BIG DIFFERENCES; Be informed – Read.” And there it is: the first on the recommended JustFaith reading list for Fall 2009 - Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, by Barbara Ehrenreich.

Janet Baker in Washington DC follows the link provided by Jo and reads the rest of the newsletter. “In the newsletter we see a link to ‘Institute for Women’s Policy Research.’ Go to it. Then follow ‘health and safety,’ then scroll down a little on that page to ‘reproductive health.’ There you’ll hear about ‘accessible birth control’ and ‘safe and legal abortion.’ … Gee – if you scroll down to the bottom, “’other resources’ include Planned Parenthood.”

Janet is referring to section on page 3 headed, “Join Others Working on Women’s Economic Issues,” just below the recommended reading list. Sure enough, Catholics involved with the JustFaith program through their dioceses read the JustFaith newsletter and, looking to join others working on women’s economic issues,” will visit the Institute for Women’s Policy Research under the presumption that their work with the Institute is Church-sanctioned.
The provided web address, http://www.iwpr.org, leads, just as Janet said it would, to the Institute’s homepage and a menu that includes a “health and safety” link. On the “Health and Safety” page of the Institute for Women’s’ Policy Research website there’s a “Reproductive Health” link to the following information:

Making Reproductive Health Services More Accessible

• Former Research Fellow, Holly Mead, conducted a cost-benefit analysis of over-the-counter oral contraceptives titled, Making Birth Control More Accessible to Women: A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Over-the-Counter Oral Contraceptives.

• In 2003 IWPR published a briefing paper summarizing the United States policy on abortion titled, Policy Update on Safe and Legal Abortion 30 Years After Roe v. Wade.

Links to other resources

• The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
• Guttmacher Institute
• Planned Parenthood
• National Women's Law Center
Ann in Birmingham reads the above and complains that JustFaith has been in her diocese for the past five or so years. She pulls up the summer 2008 Voices (http://www.justfaith.org/news/pdf/jf_voices-08q3.pdf ) and notices that this issue recommends the highly partisan political group Sojourners on page 3 and on page 4 carries its founder, Jack Jezreel’s comments, including:

What JustFaith Ministries does is provide opportunities for people to be changed by the Gospel (JustFaith and JusticeWalking), to become active agents of social change (JustSkills and JustMatters), and to come together and support each other as a faithful community (Graduate Ministry and Mission-Based Communities). We summarize this by saying that “JustFaith changes people. Those people change the world.” You are one of those people. You’re invited.

We notice that the newsletters point out that JustFaith is “in partnership” with Call to Action affiliate group Pax Christi – not surprising given Jezreel’s own ties with organization. Call to Action is a completely anti-Catholic coalition of groups and individuals determined to change the Church – never mind the world.
Another JustFaith “partner” is Bread for the World, whose founding president was Call to Action’s Bishop Thomas Gumbleton. Bread for the World doesn’t feed hungry people. It lobbies American legislators and awards monetary grants to organizations such as CIDHAL, a Mexican liberation theology women’s rights group that advocates for “reproductive rights.”

And, of course, there’s the Catholic Campaign for Human Development partner.

This just isn’t right.

Stephanie Block is the editor of the New Mexico-based Los Pequenos newspaper and a member of the Catholic Media Coalition. Jo Joyce, Janet Baker, and Ann are also members of the Catholic Media Coalition.

More on Just Faith:

JustFaith Is a Big Part of the Problem

 Jack Jezreel: In His Own Words

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