Empathy is under attack in so many ways today, yet compassion for the stranger and the most vulnerable is at the heart of what it means to follow Christ. Yesterday I joined Rural & Migrant Ministry. on the first leg of their thousand-mile caravan calling for empathy and humanity for migrants. We traveled to Bridgehampton, Riverhead, Southold, and Orient, linking nonprofits, building energy, and drawing more people into the journey as the day went on. It was powerful to witness that momentum and to stand alongside friends and colleagues in this work. I am proud to serve on the RMM board as they continue their seven-day journey.
My name is Miguel Escobar and I am an Episcopal priest in the Diocese of Long Island, currently serving a two-year curacy at San Andrés Episcopal Church in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. My work centers on the intersection of faith, justice, and economics, including through research and presentations on Christianity’s complicated relationship with money, wealth, and poverty. I write and think about these issues from my location in a parish setting, and more specifically as someone committed to Spanish-language, Latino ministry. As a writer, I focus on how Christianity has wrestled with questions of money from its earliest days to the present. My first book, The Unjust Steward: Wealth, Poverty, and the Church Today , traces how the early Church’s stance on wealth shifted over the first five centuries, going from a position of sharp critique to eventual accommodation, and reflects on what was gained and lost in that transition. I’m currently working on a second book that explores the...


Comments
Post a Comment