Peter Maurin

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    Page 45 of 45 - About 446 Essays
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    Discrimination has been an ongoing struggle as far back as history can recall, and it is unfortunate that it is still an issue today. We have made tremendous progress for women, African Americans, and other minorities, but we are still in the midst of full rights for the LGBT community. It would be unrealistic to say that this community now has complete equality, especially when states like North Carolina pass laws allowing discrimination and refusal of treatments to the LGBT community. It is…

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    According to Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin, Gandhi, King, and Lanza De Vasto the nonviolence philosophy relationship between nonviolence and society was important for social change. Peter Maurin has been studying philosophy and church history. He was most well-known for documenting the three-point program for the Catholic Worker community. Though nonviolence philosophy was a topic of little recent interest, the strategies have been noted in several times in history and seems to have been well…

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    Dorothy Day Role Model

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    Groody wrote that Maurin had three main points that he wanted the movement to consist on. The points include, “Round-table discussion, house of hospitality for the practice of the works of mercy and, agronomic universities or farmers and scholars worked together” (167). These points are crucial because of them, both Day and Maurin were able to assist the poor that were over looked by others. The catholic Worker Movement to…

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    Dorothy Day Radicalism

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    When one hears the term radicalism in the context of religion, the first image that appears for most is of radical Islam, specifically the terrorist organizations that have manifested themselves over the course of the twentieth and twenty-first century. However, these recent events have tarnished the term “radical” to mean a dangerous ideology. Bringing this term back to its literal meaning, Dorothy Day in her novel Loaves and Fishes discusses her radical philosophy known as the Catholic Worker…

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    In this paper, I want to argue how, Dorothy Day and Archbishop Oscar Romero are examples of living a just life by solving social poverty problems in our society. The Catholic Tradition defines justice as acting toward the good, the true, and the beautiful. Dorothy Day began the movement of The Catholic Worker which was a newspaper to inform people on social justice and Archbishop Oscar Romero was an outspoken defender of the poor. Humans are made in God’s image and likeness so human life is…

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    A1. Pope John XXII announced the Second Vatican council (ecumenical council) of the Roman Catholic Church on January 25, 1959, as a chance for the church to take part in a renewal. Pope John XXII called the Council shortly after he was elected. He noticed that the Church needed to make the message of faith relevant to people in the twentieth century. Ecumenical councils had been called before, but usually during times of great crisis for the church. To most Catholics in 1959, the church didn’t…

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