who don't like to get poorer,
the rich who like to get richer
turn to the State for protection.
2. But the State is not only
the State of the rich
it is also the State of the poor
who don't like to get poorer.
3. So the State sometimes chooses to help
the many poor
who don't like to get poorer,
at the expense of the few rich
who like to get richer.
4. Dissatisfied with the State,
the rich who like to get richer
turn to the Church
to save them from the poor
who don't like to get poorer.
5. But the Church can only tell the rich
who like to get richer:
"Woe to you rich
who like to get richer,
if you don't help the poor
who don't like to get poorer."
Maurin was deeply skeptical of even the Christian radicalism of the Catholic Worker, of which he was the co-founder. His vision was too radical even for that media organ. While many of his ideas wouldn't be relevant and he made some notable mistakes, his endorsement of Eric Gill, perhaps the most shocking of those. Though in Maurin's defense, he was entirely unaware of Gill's profound private depravity, as everyone outside of his family seems to have been. And there were other things which are kind of jolting in their pre-war phrasing, things I would expect he would have put differently if he had a gift or prophesy required by critics of all but their own heroes.
Still, that aside, Maurin's writing, at its most useful, still seem to me to be far more radical than anything the heroes of secular radicalism ever produced.
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