D
Darryl1958
Guest
I can recall once how a Sikh colleague of mine originally from India was incensed at how the Church made a saint out of Francis Xavier. Coming from the tradition of Holy Men in India attaining perfection, or so I suspect, it was inconceivable to him how a racist could be held out to be a Holy Man in Christianity.And despite all of this controversy and detraction, Venerable Servant of God Dorothy Day is now, with the blessing and approval of the Catholic Church, being considered for sainthood. Could it be that those who insist that their staunchly held idea of conservatism as being completely inherent to and totally inextricable from Catholicism are out of step with the Church? I am most grateful that our Church accepts and finds room for Dorothy Day, and now holds her up as an example of the Christian life for all of us.
Whether or not St Francis was a racist and a male chauvinst is disputed by historians. However I think that he had a misconception of what sainthood means in the Catholic Church. (or maybe I have). The way I understand it, sainthood is not based on the perfection of the individual, but on the exceptional grace that they received from God, even if that grace befalls only one particular area of their life. St Thomas Aquinas, for example, was no less of a saint on account of his gluttony. He was far from perfect, but he was exceptional. His light shines infinitely more bright than the shadows that his sin casts.
In terms of Dororthy Day, and maybe Doris too, for all I know, it is perfectly acceptable for people to criticize her on account of her blindness to the evils of communism. She is very much a child of her milieu, which happened to be a leftist one.
The potential path to sainthood for her would not lie in her communist past, or in her blindness to the evils and destruction men like Fidel and Ho foisted upon the world. Her potential path to sainthood would lie in her faithfulness to the Church, and her willingness to bring those teachings to a world in need of them.
“Look not on our sins, but on the faith of your Church” I think is how the Mass phrases it.
It is a pretty egregious blind spot to have nevertheless, to overlook the evils of communism. In the particular case of Dorothy Day however, it is possible that she might be in a position to thank God for that particular sin, Like a homosexual might thank God for transforming his lust for men into a great agape-based, Christian love for men, it may well be that Dorothy Day’s identification with the proletariat is exactly what led her to work on behalf of the powerless in society, but not through the evil of communism, but through the ways that the Church provides us with.