The Easter sacraments of initiation have called us to become a
            community of God’s people. The program for this
            “community of believers is to be of one heart and one
            mind.”
            
            The
            Second Reading
            deals with the one heart part of being community: loving
            God and loving God’s children.
            The Gospel
            deals with the one mind part of being community: belief in
            Jesus even among those who have not seen.
            
            What is such a community like? Look at the
            Reading from Acts. The early church of Jerusalem respected the apostles and their
            witness to the resurrection, and along with that they shared their
            possessions.
            
            Voluntarily surrendering their right to private ownership, they
            created a situation in which no one among them was needy. All
            members of the community had what they needed, or if they
            didn’t have it, they got it from the community.
            
            The passage from Acts does not attempt to impose on us a specific
            economic system. Rather, it tells us that whatever economic system
            the followers of Jesus Christ espouse, it had better be a system
            that provides for the needs of all the people.
          
A well-ordered human society requires that men recognize and observe their mutual rights and duties. It also demands that each contribute generously to the establishment of a civic order in which rights and duties are progressively more sincerely and effectively acknowledged and fulfilled.
It is not enough, for example, to acknowledge and respect every man’s right to the means of subsistence. One must also strive to insure that he actually has enough in the way of food and nourishment.
 
           
          

