Thursday, December 08, 2005

[268.1] THIS TIME IT'S PERSONAL

"It is not love in the abstract that counts. Men have loved a cause as they have loved a woman. They have loved the brotherhood, the workers, the poor, the oppressed - but they have not loved [humanity]; they have not loved the least of these. They have not loved "personally." It is hard to love. It is the hardest thing in the world, naturally speaking. Have you ever read Tolstoy's Resurrection? He tells of political prisoners in a long prison train, enduring chains and persecution for the love of their brothers, ignoring those same brothers on the long trek to Siberia. It is never the brothers right next to us, but the brothers in the abstract that are easy to love."

Dorothy Day

Social activist and founder of the Catholic Worker movement. It was 25 years on 29 November since she died. Thanks to Sojourners for reminding me.

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