Today’s liturgy reveals some important facts about the
            poor.
            
            1) The poor are blessed because they have a greater recognition of
            their need for God. The two widows in the readings give up
            everything, totally trusting in the goodness of the Lord.
            
            2) The poor are therefore more generous than others. Jesus made it
            very clear that “this poor widow contributed more than all the
            others who donated to the treasury.” Recent studies in the
            United States reveal the same phenomenon: relative to their
            resources, lower income people are the most generous.
            
            3) The poor may or may not have society on their side, but there is
            no doubt where God stands: the Lord “secures justice for the
            oppressed, gives food to the hungry, sets captives free, gives sight
            to the blind, raises up those that were bowed down, protects
            strangers, and sustains the fatherless and the widow.” (Responsorial Psalm)
            
            Those among us who are not poor receive the challenge to be poor in
            spirit. We pray at the start of this liturgy for freedom of spirit
            “ ... so that we may more willingly give our lives in service
            to all.”
          
In teaching us charity, the Gospel instructs us in the preferential respect due to the poor and the special situation they have in society: the more fortunate should renounce some of their rights so as to place their goods more generously at the service of others.
Pope Paul VI, Octogesima Adveniens, 1971:23
 
           
          

