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Franciscan Action
Network
Franciscans in the Maelstrom:
The Politics of Poverty, Peace and Care for Creation
Inauguration of the Franciscan Action Network
Alexandria, Virginia
Michael A. Perry, OFM
"In every country and in every age, the priest has been hostile to
liberty. He is always in alliance with the despot, abetting his
abuses
in return for protection to his own."
These accusatory words were addressed by Thomas Jefferson in a
letter to
Horatio Spafford dated March 17, 1814. The elder inventor, author
and
businessman dared question Jefferson's public attacks on religion in
general, and his blistering critique of the bearers of the gospel -
the
New England priests - in particular. Jefferson accused the 'priests'
of
supporting the Crown, England, at the cost of freedom, of trying to
impose one religious system on the United States of America and of
willingly destroying all other religious claims to spiritual
authority.
This becomes particularly relevant in an age where a presidential
candidate declares that "God wants me to be president."
Heated exchanges between those committed to a spiritual regeneration
of
the nation and the world and those who believe that religion is
antithetical to freedom and human progress have marked the history
of
political debates and played a significant role in all recent
election
campaigns. Evidence for this is found in questions regarding the
religious identity of four recent or current presidential
candidates.
Little discussion was given to the specifically religious content of
their message. Mormonism, Catholicism, Evangelicalism, and the
erroneous accusation of being a Muslim all point in the general
direction of the myth of American political identity - 'one nation
under
God', a Christian nation according to many if not most of the
electorate, with unswerving allegiance to the flag and the republic
for
which it stands.
Allegiance to current U.S. political choices has in recent times
come
under the moral microscope following a series of government actions
that
have jeopardized the balance of forces in regions witnessing high
levels
of social dislocation, undermined international conventions on the
treatment of political and military prisoners, caused untold damage
to
the environment and shifted funding needed to attend to urgent
social
needs in the U.S. and abroad to the military. The international
battle
against 'terrorism' and the 'axis of evil' has come at a deep cost
to
the poor of this country and abroad because precious resources have
been
poured into a war that, according to many, is illegal, morally
unjustifiable and incapable of being 'won'.
What have the debates that raged at the dawn of the American
democratic
experiment, and those of the current presidential races,
international
engagement in wars, deepening poverty and environmental degradation
have
to do with the inauguration of the Franciscan Action Network, a
historic
and novel experiment that seeks to bring together the voice of the
Franciscan family - a large, not always coherent grouping of women
and
men, young and old? Everything!
The Franciscan movement was born out of the context not all that
dissimilar to what we witness today. Military might was defined by
divine right; the lords of the manor and the czars of economic
accumulation justified their blessed and noble state by reference to
a
providential and beneficent God. Meanwhile, the poor and those used
for
'fodder' in the seemingly interminable internecine conflicts of
Europe
were passive spectators of a history controlled by the rich, the
powerful, and by a religion that had lost sight of its core
'evangelical' values and ultimate allegiance.
With the limitations of technological advance, the natural
environment
was under increasing threat as arable lands became overworked,
indigenous forests increasingly cut down and urban centers expanded,
exacting a toll on the local natural environment.
Francis of Assisi's times were not dissimilar to our own in another
respect, the international fight over religious and cultural
ideologies,
the battle for the Holy Land and surrounding territories, and the
battle
for God. In one sense, Francis witnessed what Samuel Huntington has
termed the "clash of civilizations," between what became the
stereotypical story line of Christian 'freedom bearers' and 'Muslim
usurpers and charlatans'. Francis and his early followers witnessed
the
wholesale destruction of the values of human dignity and solidarity,
under the banner of God and politics. It was this experience that
led
Francis to turn from violence, hatred and ignorance and to pursue
dialogue with the perceived 'enemy'. Francis' confrontation with the
Rulers of the World (see Letter to the Rulers of Peoples) was
transformed into opportunities for transformation. He went to the
centers of power, where power was abused, where the merchants of
dehumanization hocked their wares. He met them on their terms and
called them to a higher ground. Active non-violence became the
hallmark
of the Franciscan movement, although not all of those who have
associated themselves with the movement have shared the same vision
or
commitment, or have placed their power at the service of humanity.
Three central themes are present within the Franciscan movement,
themes
that shape the nature of current national debate. These themes,
which
are intimately interwoven, are defined by Poverty, Peace and Care
for
Creation.
Poverty and the poor is a central theme in the life and movement of
Francis of Assisi, something that is fundamentally absent from the
current presidential debates, except as it relates to the weakening
purchasing power of the middle class, and some aspects of healthcare
reform. Francis came to the realization that the poor have been
'created' and are 'maintained' because of the unjust ordering and
distribution of the 'goods of the earth'. Poverty is not an accident
of
history; it is the direct result of decisions made by those who
control
the economic levers and access to political power. In the words of
Paul
Collier, The Bottom Billion (Oxford, University Press, 2007, xi),
"change in societies at the very bottom must come predominantly from
within; we cannot impose it on them. In all these societies there
are
struggles between brave people wanting change and entrenched
interests
opposing it."
Francis, much like Collier, realized that too many of us remain
bystanders - but far from innocent. For this reason Francis, and the
members of the Franciscan Action Network, bring our resources -
human
and material - to the struggle of the poor, marginalized and most
neglected of our society and world. We do so from a particular
vantage
point: that of standing in the midst of the poor, walking and
working
closely with them, linking our dignity with theirs, our destiny with
their destiny, and allowing them to shape the discourse and propose
solutions for themselves that should guide all future policy
decisions.
Francis recognized the link between the concentration of wealth and
power in the hands of the few, the deepening impoverishment of the
many
and an increase in conflict and social dislocation (social
non-cohesion). Neither Francis - nor I -want to demonize the
'wealthy'
indiscriminately. They, too, are searching for a greater sense of
their
dignity and humanity. Rather, Francis recognized the cost of
obtaining
and maintaining wealth, oftentimes through illicit, illegal and
immoral
means. Francis also recognized the dangerous link between the
questionable accumulation of capital, deepening impoverishment of
the
'masses', and the outbreak of increasingly extreme forms of
violence.
This link has not gone unnoticed by development experts. Lael
Brainard,
in her recent work entitled Too Poor for Peace (p. 1), writes:
"Extreme poverty exhausts governing institutions, depletes
resources,
weakens leaders, and crushes hope - fueling a volatile mix of
desperation and instability. Poor, fragile states can explode into
violence or implode into collapse, imperiling their citizens,
regional
neighbors, and the wider world as livelihoods are crushed, investors
flee, and ungoverned territories become a spawning ground for global
threats like terrorism, trafficking, environmental devastation, and
disease."
Conflict mitigation and management, thus, is intimately linked to
the
struggle for economic justice in the Franciscan tradition and
movement.
Economic Justice and the pursuit of Peace and non-violent social
transformation give fresh energy to the Franciscan Action Network
seeking to propose an alternative vision to political leaders,
military
commanders and ordinary citizens in an age of fear, resignation and
open
hostility towards all who are 'not us' - immigrants fleeing
political
and economic hardships; Muslims who are committed to the same values
as
others who participate in the American 'dream'; those among us who
might
question the pursuit of a military option in all international
dealings.
Care for Creation is the third 'pillar' of the Franciscan movement.
Francis himself is oftentimes depicted as a bird-bathing nature
lover
plopped down in gardens throughout the U.S. This 'soft side' of the
visionary prophet of the 12th and 13th centuries masks a more
fundamental truth about Francis' vision of the fundamental
connection
between human beings and the natural environment in which they live.
Environmental care is a matter of justice and the survival of all
species, equally dignified before God. In Francis' view of the
world,
nature inhabits us, it dwells within us and shapes our every
thought,
the choices we make and the actions we take. Nature stands in direct
relationship to the human community, providing opportunities for the
survival and the well-being of all human persons - all human beings
equally. The absence of justice in relationships within the human
community, for Francis, leads to extreme forms of degradation of the
natural environment. Viewed in contemporary developmental and
security
language, Francis and the Franciscan movement take seriously the
question of 'human security'. As Anthony Nyong argues in his article
"Resource and Environment Security," in Brainard et alii, Too Poor
for
Peace" (p. 73 et passim),
"Today, people around the world, particularly in the developing
world,
are struggling to survive in the face of a multitude of
environmental
problems - the overuse of natural resources, the degradation of the
ecosystem, and extreme climatic events such as floods, droughts, and
hurricanes. These problems play an important role in increasing
human
vulnerability, undermining livelihoods and human well-being,
threatening
environmental security, and potentially generating or exacerbating
conflict."
Francis and his revolutionary movement have been called to once
again
declare sacred all that God has created and entrusted to human
beings.
The Franciscan Action Network, much like the Franciscan movement,
arises
at a particularly critical moment in the course of human history, a
moment when the future of the planet and its inhabitants will be
decided. As Franciscan environmental scholar Keith Warner argues
("Taking Nature Seriously: Nature Mysticism, Environmental Advocacy
and
the Franciscan Tradition," WTU Symposium - Franciscans and Creation
-
What is our Responsibility, May 2003, p. 3 et passim):
"The erosion of our planetary life support systems may be
irreversible,
yet before full "scientific proof" can be amassed, it will too late
to
prevent a series of humanitarian and ecological disasters."
We, the Franciscan Action Network, assume our responsibility as a
'moral
ecological community', and commit to the development of a
"socio-political project that can enhance the protection of our
natural
world (Warner, 2003, p. 3)."
Concluding comment:
It is with much humility that we, the Franciscan family in the
United
States, unite our energies and resources to form the Franciscan
Action
Network and Franciscan Action Center. We seek not to create just one
more advocacy group clamoring for resources, attention and change;
rather, we seek to focus on the three values we, as Franciscans,
share
with the world, and now seek to share within the beltway of
Washington
politics. We seek the development of a new and courageous moral
vision.
It is because of the poor that we exist and name ourselves as
participants and fellow travelers on the road to justice and
dignity.
Violent conflict and the push for a militarized response and control
of
all the means made available for social reconstruction and
development
demand that we, as bearers of peace and practitioners of active
non-violence, share our vision and commitment with our government
and
with all who believe that violence can only be responded to with
equal
or excessive show of force. Threats to the natural environment,
which
impact most the poor and marginalized, but also bear negative
consequences for the entire human family, demand that we place our
vision of a moral ecological community at the service of humanity.
We, the Franciscans, stand ready to work in close collaboration with
people of all political, religious, cultural and other persuasions
on
the central themes, which govern our lives and define the most
critical
issues confronting the human community. We the Franciscans, stand in
particular relationship to all of humanity - no turf to defend, no
boundaries to maintain. May our joint efforts bring to birth the
type
of world necessary for the full promotion of the dignity and
well-being
of all people, for the care of our natural environment - the vision
of
humanity and creation renewed in God (Revelations 21, 1-5).
Document created: 2008 May
Latest Update: 2008-05-22 |