The reason I am highlighting this Blessed's work on the Five Wounds of the Church is that unless the people of God return to the simplicity and charitable attitudes of the early Church, the remnant will be forced to destitution and displacement.
I have seen this coming in my own person, and in the Protestant ideas which too many Catholics have adopted.
If Catholics keep insisting that it is the job of the government to take care of the poor, and not their own, we shall see chaos very soon.
The governments will stop carrying for the poor and use other means to control the populations.
The freedom of the Church to help those in need has been usurped by governments, which can as easily change policies overnight to undermine the poor. Do not kid yourselves on this point. We have the example of Stalin in modern times, enforcing a famine to destroy an ethnic group.
Catholics who trust in politics rather than Divine Providence will wake up one day realizing they had chosen a false god.
There is a fema camp two hours from where I am today. The locals know about it. The military know about it as it is on military land. Who do you think these camps, many, many in the States, are going to hold? The rich? No. The secular? No. 
My time for writing is severely limited by finances, but this fact is giving me the boldness to state that many Catholics will collude with evil in days to come. 
54. The fourth requirement governing 
  church temporalities and safeguarding the integrity of the clergy was that "ecclesiastical 
  wealth used for pious, charitable purposes, should also be assigned to fixed, 
  determined works to prevent arbitrariness and self-interest from interfering 
  in disbursement of finances." As church riches grew and abuses increased, 
  the Church intervened, although defects in administration were spasmodic and 
  contained. Church resources were allotted to definite purposes according to 
  a fourfold division: for the support of the bishop, the lower clergy, the poor, 
  and the upkeep of church buildings and cult. The Councils of Agde, 506, and 
  Orleans, 511, decreed this division on the basis of older canons. Gregory the 
  Great recalls it in many of his letters (41). 
  It is certain that the best remedy against the corruption accompanying riches 
  was the establishment of laws regulating the precise uses to which they could 
  be applied (42). Abuse is inevitable 
  if the employment of great wealth is left to the arbitrary decision of the person 
  to whom it is entrusted. The corruption and ruin of many monasteries has almost 
  certainly to be attributed to the lack of a law definite enough to determine 
  the principal uses of the great riches possessed by religious houses. As a result, 
  abbots and other superiors controlling finances spent the income as they pleased.
155. But feudalism amongst ecclesiastics 
  made this requirement impossible. Feudalism can be reduced in principle to an 
  armed aristocracy whose interests, along with the interests of the local lords, 
  demands the accumulation of wealth in the hands of the great families, that 
  is, in very restricted circles. Worldly power depended upon this concentration 
  of wealth, and consequently opposed its equitable distribution in brotherly 
  love. Benefices were thus a necessary institution to assure the maintenance 
  of the weakest elements in the clergy, who would have starved to death without 
  some safeguard against the rapacity of the great lords, bishops included. Bishops 
  no longer formed part of the people as in ancient days when episcopal ordination 
  entailed the profession of poverty (however noble one's origins) and acceptance 
  of a place amongst the poor; they were now members of a ruthless, dominant aristocracy. 
  Henceforth, abuse became law. The Church's canons were either evaded by endless 
  sophistry (43) or openly and violently 
  broken. The fourfold division of church wealth, and the application of income 
  for fixed purposes, became intolerable. The ancient rule sank without trace, 
  along with its guiding spirit.
156. The fifth requirement safeguarding 
  the Church from the danger of riches in the centuries before feudalism was "a 
  generous spirit, prompt to give, slow to receive." The great rule fixed 
  in human hearts was Christ's noble, astounding word: "It is more blessed 
  to give than to receive" (44). This 
  was the good news the Church brought to a world enslaved by selfishness; it 
  was a light shining in all that the Church did and undertook. Bishops considered 
  temporalities and their administration a burden, to be borne only from motives 
  of charity (45). Laws making difficult 
  the alienation of donated property were not yet in force; offerings were accepted 
  reluctantly, and distributed freely. St. Ambrose refused donations and legacies 
  if he knew that poor relatives of the donors would suffer as a result : non 
  quaerit donum Deus de fame parentum... misericordia a domestico progredi debet 
  pietatis officio (46) ["God 
  does not look for offerings that leave relatives hungry... mercy must begin 
  at home"]. The Church could do this because its spirit was unfettered, 
  especially by the so-called protection exercised by secular rulers.
One effect of the restrictions forced 
  upon the Church by this system was her inability to act with the splendid generosity 
  so often shown by early bishops. I have already mentioned the ideas of St. Augustine 
  in this respect. In a sermon preached to the people, the bishop of Hippo had 
  to defend himself against the accusation that "bishop Augustune gives with 
  total generosity, but takes nothing." What a glorious accusation! (47). As a result, so the complaint ran, the 
  church of Hippo received no benefactions and no legacies. Possidius, in his 
  life of Augustine, tells how the bishop restored property donated to the church 
  by one of the wealthy townsmen who, despite having no further legal claim to 
  the land, asked for it back on behalf of his son. Augustine returned it, and 
  refusing a large sum which the man sent for the poor, reminded him that he was 
  doing wrong.
Possidius also mentions Augustine's 
  reaction to the envy of one of the lower clergy because of episcopal control 
  of church finances (48). The bishop who, like all bishops of his time, spoke about 
  everything to the people of God, referred to this in a sermon. He said that 
  he would gladly have lived on collections from God's people rather than be burdened 
  with responsibility for finances, which he was ready to cede to the people so 
  that all God's servants and ministers might live by sharing at the altar as 
  did the priests of the Old Testament. But the laypeople refused his offer absolutely 
  (49).
157. St. John Chrysostom explained 
  in a sermon to his people why the Church accepted fixed, regular donations rather 
  than live, as it had done previously, on occasional collections from the faithful. 
  The clergy were forced to do this not for themselves, but for the sake of the 
  destitute affected by the lessening of charity amongst the faithful. "Your 
  tightfistedness has brought the Church to this state. If things were done according 
  to the laws reaching back to apostolic times, the Church's income would flow 
  without fail and without fear of diminution from your good will. But you are 
  all seeking treasure on earth now, and locking up your wealth in vaults, while 
  the Church has to spend money on widows, virgins, travellers, captives, the 
  handicapped and mutilated, and other needy persons. So how can the Church act 
  otherwise?" (50).