Saints & Sinners

About The Book

<p>I once was led to believe that the United States of America and the Vatican could <span style=font-size: 10pt;>do no wrong. Th en one day south of the border I realized that Uncle Sam was not such a nice guy and the pope wasn’t either. U.S. troops and advisors ran the Banana Republics propped up dictators and trained the military to oppress the poor. In those days the Catholic Church hierarchy in Latin America mostly sided with the status quo dictators military and wealthy. But in 1968 the bishops dramatically </span><span style=font-size: 10pt;>declared “a preferential option for the poor” and later embraced “liberation theology” </span><span style=font-size: 10pt;>aiming to bring heaven down to earth. It sounded a lot like Marxism to the Vatican </span><span style=font-size: 10pt;>especially to Pope John Paul II a staunch opponent of communism. He set out to appoint only bishops who were hostile to liberation theology. Pope Benedict XVI followed suit. Pope Francis however once a slum priest in Argentina gave new life to the movement which was born and raised in Latin America. Most of the characters profiled in this book subscribe to a version of liberation theology and a preference for the poor. Th eir honor roll includes Ivan Illich and Ted Hesburgh Salvador Allende and Samuel Ruiz Oscar Romero and Daniel Ortega Fidel Castro and Jean-Bertrand Aristide and an actual canonized Chilean priest named Alberto Hurtado. The reader may decide who is a saint and who is a sinner.</span></p>
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