The most honored parts of the body are not the head or the hands, which lead and control. The most important parts are the least presentable parts. That’s the mystery of the Church. As a people called out of oppression to freedom, we must recognize that it is the weakest among us – the elderly, the small children, the handicapped, the mentally ill, the hungry and sick – who form the real center. Paul says, “It is the parts of the body which we consider least dignified, that we surround with the greatest dignity” (1 Corinthians 12:23).
The Church as the people of God can truly embody of the living Christ among us only when the poor remain its most treasured part. Care for the poor, therefore, is much more than Christian charity. It is the essence of being the body of Christ.


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October 31, 2007 at 4:24 am
Ritwik Banerjee
I find dignity to be used in terms of notional convenience now. It has become a word that invokes images of traditional shackles and not a noun defined by individual intellect.
October 31, 2007 at 8:51 am
helenl
Perhaps so, Ritwik, but the word here is quoted from scripture.