The Beggars of Christ is a group of faithful Catholics who strive to live a virtuous life, so that with our faith we can reach out to our brothers and sisters in the spirit of Charity of our Lord Jesus Christ. From this striving to live a holy life together, and keeping each other accountable with our faith, flows the Charity of wanting to help our brothers and sisters overcome human trafficking in the everyday world.
Our main goal is to stay focus on Christ, and combat human trafficking as a whole. Our “human person” consist of body, soul and spirit. Human trafficking comes in many forms. The most severe form is when the entire “human person” is trafficked. Other form of being trafficked is when our spirit is hijacked, and trafficked into sins. The ultimate one goal of Satan is to traffic our souls into hell. With the grace of God and the armies of saints and angels, we keep on fighting, while we’re living in the “church militant zone” we’re looking at “human” as a whole of body, soul and spirit. Although our physical being is in one at one location, but our spirit, if not remain in God, can be “trafficked” or “hijacked.” To restore our spirit in Jesus, we must be persevere and be faithful to His teachings, through the only one through church, the Catholic Church, that He founded. Many of us do not even know we are being trafficked by distractions such as the all prevalent social media, video games, texting, shopping, gambling and other addictions, where you start looking at your screen for one perfectly virtuous reason, and before you know it, got led to watch/do something else, which might be sinful?

Jesus was living in Capernaum and teaching the people there, and on one occasion the people gathered in such large numbers that there was no room left inside the house where he was teaching, not even outside the door. Some men came carrying a paralyzed man but could not get inside, so they made an opening in the roof above Jesus and then lowered the man down. When Jesus saw their faith, he said to the paralyzed man, “Son, your sins are forgiven.”