It is an act of charity to assist someone suffering, but it is also an act of charity, even if we do not know that person, to work to change the social conditions that caused his or her suffering. If someone helps an elderly person cross a river, that is a fine act of charity. The politician, on the other hand, builds a bridge, and that too is an act of charity. While one person can help another by providing something to eat, the politician creates a job for that other person, and thus practices a lofty form of charity that ennobles his or her political activity (Fratelli tutti, no. 186).By extension, our participation in politics as Catholic constituents is a similar act of charity, building bridges of civic friendship between politicians and the people they are called to serve, ensuring that the Gospel receives a hearing among those who make our laws, and giving a voice to those who cannot speak for themselves. As Pope Francis so memorably put it, “a good Catholic meddles in politics … so that those who govern can govern.”