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We Are Only Saved Together: Living the Revolutionary Vision of Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement

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192 pages, Paperback

Published August 2, 2024

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67 people want to read

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Colin Miller

35 books6 followers

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5 stars
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9 (33%)
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3 (11%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
43 reviews
February 4, 2025
I thank Colin for giving me his book, it articulates matters of my concern in a way I never thought possible. As one who has theorized on these matters, I have never seen anyone carry out their principles so thoroughly as the Millers; it cannot be overstated how impressed I am. This work articulates the origination of much of our social ills, and shows that one can indeed break free from many of them with a radical effort; it will take time, but it can be done. Eventually, one will come to realize that community has been built, and such community will be one which outpours from the sacramental life of the Church. The vision of Miller is clear, and it reflects what our Lord said: “Another parable he spoke to them: The kingdom of heaven is like to leaven, which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal, until the whole was leavened.”
‭‭St Matthew‬ ‭13‬:‭33‬ ‭DRC1752‬
Profile Image for Renée.
201 reviews
September 3, 2024
People often ask me: "What's a good first book to read on the Catholic Worker, Peter Maurin, or Dorothy Day?" My new response is: this one.

In the first few pages, Colin dismantles objections that the message and practice of the Catholic Worker is for the crunchy granola Christians only or the activists haunted by a sacramental vision. It's about living the Gospel. It's about what taking the Gospel seriously as Christians looks like in the US of A. Hint: it's not a social service or a social club, it's this third thing, "community," which we are all yearning for. Community is based on beauty, it's based on friendship, and Christian community is modeled on the God who was friends with the marginalized, the despised. Shouldn't we be, too?

What orders our lives and determines our day is what we worship. It is the logos - or ordering principle - of our lives. The Gospel of John calls Jesus the logos. But is Jesus the ordering principle of our lives? Our our days guided by the Sermon on the Mount and the Works of Mercy, or are they more often dictated by the pursuit of wages and orchestrated by technology. These are the questions Colin asks.

Colin tells the story of the Catholic Worker and its founders and its founding, woven through the story of the community that developed around prayer and breakfast with some rough sleepers in Durham. He tells the stories of the friendships that change them, and how maybe sitting down and sharing a meal will change your life and help you see Christ and actually want to seek him as well.

Read more: https://sweetunrest.substack.com/p/ju...
Profile Image for Marti.
11 reviews
November 14, 2024
While there were nuggets of goodness within the book and I enjoyed hearing about the authors story with making his own Catholic Worker like community, I would not recommend it. I have read Dorthy Days autobiography and I would HIGHLY recommend that as a starting point over this book. The book was very slow at some points and seemed a little repetitive. I also completely agree that Christians are called to detachment from the world and material goods, but I would also emphasize that not working a real job and relying on others is not always virtuous. He also made an argument that some jobs are not fulfilling for the soul, which I can understand, but those jobs are still essential for the community. I think the book would have been better if it had more practical advice for the average person. I skipped the conclusion because I felt like I had heard the same themes too many times and I was ready to move on to another book.
Profile Image for Alicia Lacroix.
2 reviews2 followers
September 13, 2024
Best Catholic book on striving to leave everything and follow Christ that I have read since Fr. Dubay’s “Happy Are you Poor. The Voluntary Poverty chapter is not to be missed…or any of the others.

“For Peter [Maurin], what’s missing from the modern world is not traditional vale’s, a sense of the transcendent, religion, or even God, but the social reality of the Church as a distinctive people.”

“I wanted a Christianity that would run smoothly along the rest of my life -one that would be safe. Tony pointed out this was like wanting to be a firefighter without facing any fire - without taking on any risk. “
Profile Image for Bee.
70 reviews1 follower
July 5, 2024
We Are Only Saved Together is unsettling. Colin Miller invites us to reconsider how we do life as Christ followers, focusing on the traditions of the Catholic Worker Movement. He tells the story of his own journey establishing and living in a hospitality house, sharing his life with people who were previously homeless. Because of his experience, this book does not view ‘voluntary poverty’ through rose-tinted glasses. There are realistic descriptions of conflict and forgiveness, of financial stress and failed plans. Practical ideas are interwoven with deep theological thought. Be warned – this book is a challenging invitation to change your way of living, in whatever way God is leading you.
Profile Image for Meg Hunter-Kilmer.
Author 19 books177 followers
August 11, 2024
I feel compelled to warn you: this is not a book that can be read casually. If you’re curious about Dorothy Day or vaguely interested in “the poor” as a concept, you might want to keep your distance. Miller has not given us a memoir that leaves the reader mildly impressed and ready to return to life as it was.

No, this book is an examination of conscience, an invitation not merely to evaluate my tithing but to reconsider every element of my life: the work I do, the food I eat, the place I live. We who seek to follow Jesus can’t live ordinary lives of big box stores and travel soccer with a visit to Church most Sundays. No, the Gospel has to change us, to transform us so radically that no part of our lives is untouched.

This is a dangerous book. Which is just why I hope you read it.
Profile Image for Anna Coyne .
7 reviews
June 8, 2025
Five stars for the ideas, three stars for the writing style, thus the four star review.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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