St. Joseph Cafasso, pray for us!!
St. Joseph Cafasso | Saint of the Day | AmericanCatholic.org
Caritas in Veritate - Pope Benedict XVI
7. Another important consideration is the common good. To love someone is to  desire that person's good and to take effective steps to secure it. Besides the  good of the individual, there is a good that is linked to living in society: the  common good. It is the good of “all of us”, made up of individuals, families and  intermediate groups who together constitute society[4]. It is a good  that is sought not for its own sake, but for the people who belong to the social  community and who can only really and effectively pursue their good within it.  To desire the common good and strive towards it is a requirement of  justice and charity. To take a stand for the common good is on the one hand  to be solicitous for, and on the other hand to avail oneself of, that complex of  institutions that give structure to the life of society, juridically, civilly,  politically and culturally, making it the pólis, or “city”. The more we  strive to secure a common good corresponding to the real needs of our neighbours,  the more effectively we love them. Every Christian is called to practise this  charity, in a manner corresponding to his vocation and according to the degree  of influence he wields in the pólis. This is the institutional path — we  might also call it the political path — of charity, no less excellent and  effective than the kind of charity which encounters the neighbour directly,  outside the institutional mediation of the pólis. When animated by  charity, commitment to the common good has greater worth than a merely secular  and political stand would have. Like all commitment to justice, it has a place  within the testimony of divine charity that paves the way for eternity through  temporal action. Man's earthly activity, when inspired and sustained by charity,  contributes to the building of the universal city of God, which is the  goal of the history of the human family. In an increasingly globalized society,  the common good and the effort to obtain it cannot fail to assume the dimensions  of the whole human family, that is to say, the community of peoples and nations[5],  in such a way as to shape the earthly city in unity and peace, rendering  it to some degree an anticipation and a prefiguration of the undivided city  of God.
 
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