Office for Social Justice
328 West Kellogg Blvd.
St. Paul, MN  55102   
(651-291-4477)

Program of Catholic Charities of
Saint Paul and Minneapolis

Charity and Justice

Click here for a discussion guide to explore the distinctions between charity and justice

Below is a basic chart to help clarify the distinction between works of justice and works of charity.

Charity ..... Social Service

Justice ..... Social Change

Scriptural Reference:
Good Samaritan Story

The Gospel story does not attempt to survey the causes of highway banditry. The Samaritan provides temporary and immediate relief.

Scriptural Reference:
Exodus Story

Moses does not ask for food and medicine for the Jewish slave-labor force. He challenges the institutional system.
Message: "Let My People Go."

Private, individual acts Public, collective actions
Responds to immediate need Responds to long-term need

Provides direct service:
food, clothing, shelter

Promotes social change in institutions
Requires repeated actions Resolves structural injustice
Directed at the effects of injustice: symptoms Directed at the root causes of social injustice

Examples:
Homeless shelters, food shelves, clothing drives, emergency services Legislative advocacy, changing corporate policies or practices, congregation-based community organizing.


"Charity will never be true charity unless it takes justice into account ... Let no one attempt with small gifts of charity to exempt themselves from the great duties imposed by justice."
Pope Pius XI, Divini Redemptoris , #49

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