LOVE AND SOCIAL WELFARE
It seems strange, even to me,
that my life circumstances have influenced such an odd out-of-step liberal-Christian
mind set…especially since I live a very conservative-Christian lifestyle.
Perhaps the adage is truer than I really want to admit, "A conservative
young person has as very little heart while an older person who is a liberal
has a very little brain."
.
Weather true or not that natural
trend can and I'm afraid has created a divisive blind-spot not only between young
and old but between liberal and conservative as well. Now in my seventies, when
confronted with someone in need, I am inclined to think, "I got mine. You
go get your own." I personally
doubt that self-protective urge is the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The truth
is if someone hadn’t helped me along the way I would have far less of what I
call "mine" today.
.
Before I knew Christ I went
through a rough patch and was forced to live in the trunk of an old Chevy
Impala. I was homeless and unemployed. I
depended on government food stamps and handouts from individuals to see me
through. It is no surprise that my older, wiser, and wealthier friends and
family were not the source of my aid and refuge. My help came from the residents
of Portland, Oregon's intercity ghetto who were under 20. That was back in the
early 1970s when, for a time, whites had a curfew in the neighborhood. There in the city’s “Albina District” whites
were being randomly targeted and shot when out after-dark. Over time I was able
to get a job and return to being a self-supporting tax payer. But without
government assistance I'm sure I would not
be here …discussing the virtue of Christian support for secular government “social
gurus” taking the tax money of workers and distribute it were they deem fit.
.
That experience undoubtedly contributed
to my uncharacteristic liberal Christian reading of the Bible. For example when
I read Romans 13:10,
"Love does no harm to its neighbor. Therefore love is the fulfillment of the
law."
I see efforts to shrink
public assistance programs as harming my neighbor.
.
I like to believe that
not-for-profit organizations, like the church, would offer generously funded
job training, child education, business-startup grants, basic food, housing,
and health care programs if they could.
It's no criticism of the church to note that church benevolentness
programs cannot provide public assistance on the scale government programs could.
Here in the US we have 2.8 million people unemployed, a minimum of 9 thousand
homeless, and 49 million people living below the poverty line. Churches, no matter how hard they try, are
simply not established for the purpose of meeting that great a need. The
strange thing is Christians, who are very sympathetic toward the poor, appose
government programs designed to meet public needs they know they cannot.
.
However Christians could, as
a way of expressing God's incalculably generous love, promote, man and help
administer Federal and State efforts to help the needy rather than fight them. Without a doubt, Christian co-participation would
positively influence even the more value offensive of these programs. Nevertheless if conservative Christians
refuse to assist, guide, and encourage government programs they should at least
not oppose them. It is almost as if there
is a blind-spot to the harm they are doing to their neighbor by fighting them. If they worked cooperatively with government,
as they do in places like Camden, New Jersey, much of the crime and suffering
of our neighbors would be alleviated. Sympathy
looks at a neighbor’s need sentimentally.
Instead Christ’s compassion moved Him at great personal coast to do
something about it. His disciples, conservative
and liberal, are called to do likewise…fulfill the law with love.
What I think would work best is for the government to fund non-profit organizations who employ experts (social workers, therapists, doctors, job trainers, substance abuse counselors, housing coordinators, etc).
ReplyDeleteWe need the funds from the government, but the innovation and efficiency of these NGOs.