Hamilton, Brian David2022-10-262022-10-262015Hamilton, B. (2015). The Politics of Poverty: A Contribution to a Franciscan Political Theology. Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 35(1), 29-44. doi:10.1353/sce.2015.0000.https://doi.org/10.1353/sce.2015.0000This essay reconstructs the medieval practice of evangelical poverty as a resource for contemporary political theology. Francis of Assisi and his predecessors committed themselves to a form of voluntary poverty that directly contested the distribution of social power in twelfth-century Europe. Evangelical poverty was for them a critical and liberating practice. Yet they disagreed about how this practice was related to standing norms of ecclesial authority. Francis broke with the earlier movements by defining evangelical poverty as a posture of humility and obedience rather than as a counterclaim on apostolic authority. These movements are worth retrieving both for their shared commitment to a liberating poverty and for the questions they raise about the relationship between poverty and authority.en-USPoverty (Virtue)FranciscansChristianity and politics -- HistoryFrancis , of Assisi, Saint , 1182-1226The Politics of Poverty: A Contribution to a Franciscan Political TheologyArticle