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Catholic Critique

Christian World View & Analysis

On Personalism. Peter Maurin.

A stone
is not an individual.
You can make little ones
out of big ones.

A tree
is an individual.
It comes
from a germ.
“Only God
can make a tree,”
says the poet.

A horse
is an individual.
The horse is not
an individual
the way the tree
is an individual.
It has animal life.

Man is an individual
and has animal life
like the horse.
Man has also reason.
which the horse has not.

As an animal,
man is an individual.
As a reasoning animal,
man is a person.

The difference
between an individual
and a person
is the power of reasoning.
Through the use of reason
man becomes aware
of the existence of God.

Through the use of reason
man becomes aware
of his rights
as well as
his responsibilities.

Man’s rights and responsibilities
come from God,
who made him
a reasoning animal.
Man’s primary duty
is to act
according to reason.

To guide himself
man has
not only reason
but also faith.

Faith
is not opposed to reason,
it is above reason.
The use of reason
leads to faith,
but reason
cannot understand
all the faith.

The truths of faith
that reason
cannot understand,
we call
the mysteries of faith.

To use reason
is to philosophize
and philosophy
is the handmaid of faith.

Some truths
we get through reason
and some truths
we get through faith.

Emmanuel Mounier
wrote a book entitled
A Personalist Manifesto.
Emmanuel Mounier
has been influenced
by Charles Peguy.
Charles Peguy once said:

“There are two things
in the world:
politics and mysticism.”

For Charles Peguy
as well as Mounier,
politics is the struggle for power
while mysticism
is the realism
of the spirit.

For the man-of-the-street
politics
is just politics
and mysticism
is the right spirit.

In his Personalist Manifesto
Mounier tries to explain
what the man-of-the-street
call “the right spirit.”

—Peter Maurin, Easy Essays.

Peter Maurin, was co-founder in the 1930s with Dorothy Day of the Catholic Worker movement and was chiefly responsible for the movement’s original direction.

— The Meaning of the Christian’s Call to “Hope Against Hope”

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December 10, 2022December 11, 2022 SDHCatholic, Catholic Social Teaching, Dorothy Day, Faith, Gospel, Gospels, Grace, Life, Life Lessons, Health & Sickness, Liturgical Time, Non-violence, Patience, Peacemaking, Personalism, Philosophy, Poor in Spirit, Spiritual LifeCatholic Social Justice, Catholic Social Teaching, Dorothy Day, Faith and Works, Fath-Hope-Charity, Peter Maurin

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The Bride and the Dragon
Rev. 12: 3 Then another sign appeared in heaven: an enormous red dragon with seven heads and ten horns and seven crowns on its heads. 4 Its tail swept a third of the stars out of the heavens and flung them to the earth. The dragon stood in front of the woman who was about to give birth, so that it might devour her child the moment he was born. Confess the Faith, "in season and out". [2 Tim.4:2; Rom.10:9].
For our grandchildren ❤️ and the future. Note: Citing what I regard as a significant insight from an author or article does not imply any unconditional endorsement of the author’s entire philosophy, theology or worldview. SH

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Catholic Critique: 2024-26. There is no aim to teach here, only to share opinions, other content, thoughts or principles of interpretation which I have found to be helpful in spiritually challenging times. Any errors here are my own. All final judgments belong to the Church. - 2021-2026. - Stephen Hand, editor: sthand@email.com

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