I think that one of the key points on which we disagree over is entitlements. I believe the Bible supports that people are entitled to only what they themselves can produce.
Absolute nonsense from a biblical perspective. Did the Israelites produce their own manna in the wilderness?
Even if you were partially right, the bible also prescribes that people have the tools to produce their own food. When people sold themselves into slavery to pay debts, they were not only to be freed in seven years, their former master was to provide for them generously from his fields and his flocks so they would have the wherewithal to start over again.
And when people sold land to pay off debts, (or lost it when a mortgage was foreclosed) it was to be restored to the original owner whenever he could pay the price of redemption, or failing that in 50 years anyway.
Measures such as these helped ensure that people were not left mired in poverty with no means of leaving the trap. The failure to keep these covenantal laws was the basis of the prophetic denunciation of the rulers. See, for example Jeremiah 34:8-22
Interestingly, some biblical scholars believe that Jesus was preaching "the acceptable year of the Lord" (Isaiah 61:1-2, Luke 4:18-19), a reference to the Jubilee year of Leviticus 25--a time to cancel debts, liberate slaves and re-apportion the land. If there is any truth to this, you can understand why the poor flocked to him and wanted to make him king, and why he scared the bejabers out of the authorities.
I point back to the verses in my original quote. You believe that we are under obligation to help the poor, which from a moral standpoint we are as Christians but that does not translate to an entitlement.
I believe that as Christians and as the Church we are required to be compassionate and generous. But it is the government that is responsible for the fair distribution of a nation's resources. That is not a role the Church can take on. But we can exercise a prophetic ministry of advocacy for just laws and policies. We can declare the will of the Lord for just government regulation of the economy.
Yes, the poor--indeed everyone--has an entitlement to their share of what God has provided for all.
I don't think the verses you cite are relevant as they are addressed to the Church for settling matters in the Church. The early Church had little time or opportunity to develop messages for the civil authorities. Nevertheless, from the beginning, they acted to assure a fair distribution of the Church's resources to those in need. The Church can be a shining example of justice, a model for secular society to follow. As Jesus said, we are to be as a city set on a hill.
You can't save people from themselves. Some people, like my sister, make habitual life choices and no matter how many times you give them a hand up, or a hand out, they will revert back to a previous state until they make the choice to change life for themselves.
Then terrible as it seems to you, there is something in that life that attracts her more than what you offer. Find out what it is, and you can offer more appropriate help.
Because of this reality, government programs are limited to helping people 'get by' and actually do nothing other than make people less independent. I stand by this statement.
For most of the ones we are familiar with, that is so. A better example of what can be done comes from the overseas work of many development agencies (many of them supported by the churches).
You are also neglecting the record of many European countries whose social programming does not seem to have the deleterious effects you predict.
Public education, one of the few socialist government programs with a postive result that actually accomplishes what everyone wishes all welfare programs do.
You might also look at the various effective public health care systems around the world.
And when you're talking about poverty levels across different countries you will find a VERY real difference between the poverty line in the US and the poverty line in Cuba. Virtually no one in the US ever starves to death or suffers from malnutrition except in cases of abuse.
Starvation is also very rare in Cuba, Canada, Australia and most of Europe and all these countries have more socialist-style services than most parts of the US.
You can be poor and on government assistance here and still have cable t.v. and internet. Work at a major retailer and see what most food stamps are spent on-junk food. Don't believe me, ask your teller the next time you go to a Walmart or similiar outlet.
And might that not be because we permit TV commercials to be the primary educator on nutrition? Also, because the government does not restrict the use of food stamps to nutritious food? Of course, the government would have all the major food and beverage producers on their back if they did restrict which foods you can use food stamps for. Imagine the outcry if food stamps had to be used for fresh or frozen corn and not for Doritos!
btw I consider food stamps to be unnecessarily demeaning. We don't use them in Canada. We don't provide enough assistance to the poor, but we do provide money, not stamps, for food. But if stamps are how people are to get food, there is a lot that could be done to make sure it is nutritious food, and to be sure those who use food stamps get some basic nutritional information and training in how to use foods that may be unfamiliar to them.
As Christians, we do have a duty to help other people but if we are going to be using the arguement that socialism is Christian and that it is for the benefit of the poor, I'd first have to look at why so few churches have any real outreach programs.
Amen! We can't be the light of the world or the salt of the earth, or that city on the hill, if we don't first practice what we preach. I suspect a significant reason why there is so little outreach is that it is not preached. People don't like to hear preaching that disturbs their own conscience and calls for a new way of living more in accord with God's will. They just want to put some spare change on the collection plate and feel "spiritual".
It is the Christian's obligation to care for people, not the federal governments. Goodness knows the government couldn't manage it half as well as independent groups even IF it was their job.
Yes, it is the Christian's obligation and the Church's obligation to do all they can voluntarily. But it is also the obligation of all governments (municipal and state as well as federal) to do their share as well. The Church can only do so much with charity, and that becomes meaningless if all that can be done with charity is destroyed by injustice.
Assuring social justice not social charity, is the specific obligation of government, because only the government has the enforcement tools to see justice done. Much of our problem with government programs is that we tend to see the government as a channel of charity. It is not the government's role to be charitable. It is the government's role to assure the rights of the poor--to assure justice.
To take just one example, as Christians we can give food/money to the hungry, but it takes government to prevent hunger by enacting living wage laws and freeing people from dependence on charity.
Our problem is that we saddle government with a charitable role of giving to the poor (something we can and should do ourselves) and fail to ask for measures that would bring real justice to the poor, enabling them to leave dependence on charity (public or private) behind. We need to get our priorities straight.
Upvote
0