DOROTHY DAY ~~ A WOMAN THAT DID WHAT JESUS WOULD HAVE DONE

I have met many people over the years from a diversity in backgrounds. I met many who called themselves ‘Christians’, but in reality I met very few that actually were.


Dorothy Day was one of those that were, I had the fortune of meeting her numerous times while taking part in demonstrations. She never asked the question; “What would Jesus do?”…. She actually DID it!

She founded a movement called the Catholic Worker, published a newspaper with the same name as well. She was truly a Saint, but has yet to actually become one within the Church she belonged to… perhaps one day that will happen.

The following is a tribute to Ms. Day and her work, which goes on 28 years after her death. It is taken from The Nation.

Dorothy Day’s Day

By Colman McCarthy

At Dorothy Day’s death in November 1980, at 83, talk was heard that the Catholic Worker, the movement she co-founded in 1933, would vanish without her. She was its Earth Mother–or better, its Reverend Mother, a convert to Catholicism who took literally the call of the Gospels to practice personally the works of mercy and rescue. She would do it with full-risk commitments to pacifism and nonviolent anarchism.
The talk was unfounded. With scant eyeing from the media, and far from the rites of soft-core religion that sanction coziness with Caesar and his court clerics, nearly 185 Catholic Worker houses of hospitality are currently operating in thirty-seven states and ten countries. From July 9 to 12, several hundred practitioners of Day’s methods are expected to gather in Worcester, Massachusetts, hosted by two local Worker houses: Sts. Francis and Therese and The Mustard Seed. The occasion is a celebration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Catholic Worker, going back to May Day 1933, when Day, then a 35-year-old journalist who had written about class conflict, strikes and war resistance for The Masses and The Liberator, handed out the first copies of her monthly newspaper at a Communist rally in Manhattan’s Union Square. Through thick and thick–there is no thin in poverty’s underworld–Worker houses have been models of stamina, going extra miles beyond counting. The Ammon Hennacy House in Los Angeles offers shelter and meals for homeless people and publishes The Catholic Agitator. Viva House in Baltimore runs a food pantry and family soup kitchen. St. Peter Claver House in Philadelphia gleans for food and clothing and has it on hand for all comers. Washington’s Dorothy Day House shelters five families, distributes food and stages weekly antiwar demonstrations at the White House and the Pentagon. Scott Schaeffer-Duffy, who with his wife, Claire, started Sts. Francis and Therese House in 1986, echoes Day’s line–“we confess to being fools and wish that we were more so”–by saying that Catholic Worker houses seek “an irrational and personalist way of doing things that trusts in the miraculous power of God…. Without government aid, salaries, grants or institutional help from the Church, and often without many volunteers, we feed and house people, deliver aid in war zones, confront local and national injustices, and still manage to have happy personal and family lives. That’s pretty miraculous to me.”

In the years before Day embraced Catholicism, in 1927 at 30, she lived on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. She bibbed with Eugene O’Neill and Malcolm Cowley, interviewed Trotsky, went to jail with Alice Paul, was on the barricades with the Socialists, read Peter Kropotkin, Tolstoy and Jack Reed, reveled with Greenwich Village bohemians, had an abortion, gave birth to a daughter and left a common-law marriage. In The Long Loneliness, Day’s 1952 autobiography, she tells of transferring all that fury and fire to living out Christ’s message of siding with the scorned.

Like today’s followers, Day worked her own side of the street with no official ties to the Church. A pacifist, she had contempt for churchmen who duped the faithful into accepting the “just war” theory. She struck matches to burn down the hierarchy’s chumminess with power. In the late 1960s, when a war-supporting Catholic cardinal was in Vietnam blessing US warplanes and another cardinal went to the White House for a prayer service with Richard Nixon, Day unloaded: “What a confusion we have gotten into when Christian prelates sprinkle holy water on scrap metal to be used for obliteration bombing and name bombers for the Holy Innocents, for Our Lady of Mercy; who bless a man about to press a button which releases death to 50,000 human beings, including little babies, children, the sick, the aged….”

Day’s fifty-year ministry included war tax resistance, commingling with society’s broke and broken, imprisonment–she was arrested so often for civil disobedience that a New York City jail had a “Dorothy Day suite”–and getting out a newspaper that still sells at the same penny-a-copy price and holds the same pacifist line as when it started. Day’s biographers in books and magazines include Robert Coles, Garry Wills, Daniel Berrigan, Abigail McCarthy, Dwight Macdonald, Dan Wakefield, Michael Harrington and David O’Brien–the last writing in Commonweal that Day was “the most significant, interesting and influential person in the history of American Catholicism.”

Few writers have been closer to Day than Robert Ellsberg. He took a five-year student sabbatical from Harvard in the mid-1970s to join Day at the New York Worker, washing dishes, unclogging the toilets and editing the newspaper. This summer Ellsberg, now the editor and publisher of Orbis Books, comes forward with The Duty of Delight: The Diaries of Dorothy Day. It is 669 pages of sere and flexuous prose, virtuosic in its candor. A diary entry from June 16, 1951, begins: “I have a hard enough job to curb the anger in my own heart which I sometimes even wake up with, go to sleep with–a giant to strive with, an ugliness, a sorrow to me–a mighty struggle to love. As long as there is any resentment, bitterness, lack of love in my own heart I am powerless. God must help me.”

From the evidence in Day’s life and what endures daily in the Worker houses, help kept–and keeps–coming.

6 Comments

  1. July 3, 2008 at 10:04

    I suggest you stick to political commentary, something at which you appear to have some knowledge as well as expertise.

    Claiming to know “what Jesus would have done” is, shall we say, ‘above your pay grade’.

    Same goes for your assessment of the meaning of the word “Christian”.

    You clearly have no knowledge of what is involved in such an issue.

    Michael Cecil

  2. Michael said,

    July 4, 2008 at 15:37

    Sir,

    Do you not realize the glaring illogic of your position? To presume to tell others to stick to something “above their paygrade” when you yourself, (I assume) being human cannot have such knowledge yourself.

    One of the principle edicts, or Orders (since you are evidently part of that military-industrial complex) as you would understand them, is to help out the homeless and smitten.

    You, sir, shall be prayed for.

    This woman obeyed the principle precept of the word of Our Lord Jesus Christ as recorded in the Bible.

    I shall not engage you in a battle of knowledge even should you claim to be an exalted professor of theology. A title granted by man is just that. A Title. Something that man has given. Something that is not worth the paper written on.

    I suggest, in all humbleness, that you meditate on what you wrote, and what Jesus said in the bible.

  3. scarlett said,

    July 4, 2008 at 17:13

    Following the teachings of Jesus is very difficult. It is hard to love those who hate us, but that is exactly what we need to do. Forgiveness is hard — but it is the only way that we can ever move beyond the past and work on building a future that isn’t weighted down with the desire for vengance.

    Most Christians today have been seduced by the teachings of false prophets who claim that faith alone gets you into heaven. Good works mean nothing according to this philosophy. So the emphasis was on accepting Jesus as the only means to salvation. No matter how good a life a Jew, Muslim, Hindu, etc. lives — they haven’t met that one condition of faith. And Christians don’t have to actually follow Jesus’ teaching as long as they accept that He was the son of God. It is Christianity for lazy people.

    Unfortunately, people don’t like to be reminded that their faith is basically a sham. That is why you hear so many “preachers” like Hagee, Robertson, etc. preaching the Old Testament — an eye for an eye — and you rarely, if ever, hear them talk about the words of Jesus. They can’t talk about the teachings of Jesus and still politically support warmongerers. Most Christians are no longer Christians — they have rejected Christ’s message because it is just too hard to pursue the materialism of our society and live as Christ instructed us to. But, no one wants to admit this — they’d rather blame the messenger.

    Every now and then, though, you hear of a person such as this remarkable woman that renews your faith and shows that, as hard as it may be, it is possible and that the rewards of following his teachings (whether you believe Jesus was literally the son of God or just a really good person) are well worth the sacrifice. In fact, if our priorities were really in order, we would be sacrificing very little. It is our attachment to materialism that holds us down spiritually.

  4. harmon said,

    July 4, 2008 at 18:08

    The Lord Jesus certainly extolled the value of “good works,” but He also condemned those whose personal works are a substitute for His own atoning work on the Cross. Obeying “the principle precept of the word of Our Lord Jesus Christ” has nothing to so with embracing the works righteousness enshrined in the cult of Roman Catholicism.

    If “Michael” in the previous posting wishes to appeal to “what Jesus said in the Bible” he’ll find that those who justify themselves by activism are condemned: “Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity (Matthew 7:22,23).”

  5. Involute Mirage said,

    July 4, 2008 at 19:13

    And instead of America’s so-called “Christians” giving any voice to the torture of innocent people , they instead listen to men like Crefto Dollar and his wealthy fellow Sunday Christian ministers talk about making money.

    When they should be telling us that lucifer is about to appear and the anti-christ making us take the mark, they smile and say they will be lifted into heaven leaving their mansions and private jets in garages (as they will be returned later on to reclaim them) . When they should be angry that the torture techniques that killed tens of millions of Christians, are now being used to kill innocent people, they rejoice. When the American Sunday Christian should be condemning Israel for it’s not apologizing for burning New Testaments , they give Israel more money.

    The jews have replaced Christ in America’s Christian church.
    And in the end, the jews will do to America’s Christians (as it is now obvious the hatred they can no longer hide for the very people who are protecting them) what hasn’t been before.

  6. Walt said,

    July 4, 2008 at 21:39

    The number of real “Christians” in America can be counted on one hand.