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==Outspokenness during the dictatorships==

==Outspokenness during the dictatorships==



Under the [[dictatorship]]s of [[William Tubman]] up to [[Samuel Doe]], the Catholic Church continued its work in education and with the poor, as well as using its voice to denounce abuses and corruption under the different dictatorial regimes. The Catholic Church was seen as more trustworthy than other churches because its peculiar mode of financing and hierarchy did not leave it at the government's mercy. Its financing came "predominantly from giant German agencies which would simply cease contributing if previous grants were not scrupulously accounted for." Because it did not include high-ranking government officials, and because of the Catholic episcopal authority (prelates were not elected for just a few years), the Church benefited from a great freedom of expression, which it used wisely to denounce the government when necessary, using "machinery for public comment on national issues" with the Lenten or Advent Pastoral Letters. Archbishop [[Michael Kpakala Francis]] in his first letter written in 1977, denounced corruption in these words:

Under the [[dictatorship]]s of [[William Tubman]] up to [[Samuel Doe]], the Catholic Church continued its work in education and with the poor, as well as using its voice to denounce abuses and corruption under the different dictatorial regimes. The Catholic Church was seen as more trustworthy than other churches because its peculiar mode of financing and hierarchy did not leave it at the government's mercy. Its financing came "predominantly from giant German agencies which would simply cease contributing if previous grants were not scrupulously accounted for." Because of the fact that it did not include high-ranking government officials, and because of the Catholic episcopal authority (prelates were not elected for just a few years), the Church benefited from a great freedom of expression, which it used wisely to denounce the government when necessary, using "machinery for public comment on national issues" with the Lenten or Advent Pastoral Letters. Archbishop [[Michael Kpakala Francis]] in his first letter written in 1977, denounced corruption in these words:



{{Blockquote|"It is not too late to stop this ugly trend of [[Political corruption|corruption]] in our country. We are proud to call ourselves [[Christians|Christian]], but can we honestly do so if corrupt practices are the normal things in our lives?"<ref>Cited in Gifford, Paul. Christianity and politics in Doe's Liberia, p. 56. ''Cambridge University Press, 2002''. {{ISBN|0-521-52010-X}}</ref>| First Pastoral Letter of Archbishop Francis, 1977}}

{{Blockquote|"It is not too late to stop this ugly trend of [[Political corruption|corruption]] in our country. We are proud to call ourselves [[Christians|Christian]], but can we honestly do so if corrupt practices are the normal things in our lives?"<ref>Cited in Gifford, Paul. Christianity and politics in Doe's Liberia, p. 56. ''Cambridge University Press, 2002''. {{ISBN|0-521-52010-X}}</ref>| First Pastoral Letter of Archbishop Francis, 1977}}

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