I posted an article on the shrinking of the middle class as an increasing number of people are falling into the category of low-income. “Squeezed by rising living costs a record number of Americans – nearly 1 in 2 – have fallen into poverty or are scraping by on earnings that classify them as low income.” While I did not say much about the article I did say “Is it un-Christian of me to doubt these numbers?” A Facebook friend responded to me with a private message to voice his disagreement with my obvious bias. Out of that has come an interesting exchange from our different – but not opposite – perspectives. Mine is from years of frustrating experience with bureaucracies and their penchant for reclassifying data (and people) to fit their political purposes. If you want to increase government funded programs then you make the problem worse than it is.
His perspective is well reflected in what he wrote:
“It may be helpful to share a little of my experience and perspective. I have lived for over 30 years on the edge of an African American ghetto, Woodlawn, just south of the University of Chicago. I watched as buildings continued to be ruined by landlords who paid no taxes but sucked out all the rent they could before Chicago closed down what was little more than a shell – first abandoned often burned eventually torn down. I have watched as local families and children struggled to “make it” and local organizations develop strategies to deal with rapacious landlords and dramatic loss of jobs on the south side. I too have become suspicious of lots of explanations but I am very weary of a lot of current explanations that make the poor the cause of their own problems. It was not true in Swaziland Africa where I was a school teacher for 6 years. And it seems to me it is not true in the US either.”
Our conversation reminded me of an essay I read years ago by Suzanne Roberts on the relationship between poverty and the Church from the earliest Christian community to the 19th century. It is the process she calls the “secularization of charity” and it occurs in six stages:
First, the majority of Christians were poor and shared what they had.
Second, the Church glorified the poor and those who chose poverty.
Third, the Church cared for the poor and included them in the community.
Fourth, the Church and society began to discriminate between the deserving and undeserving poor.
Fifth, the Church and society began to treat the poor as dangerous and poverty as a curse.
Sixth, the Church and society came to see poverty and the poor as a problem to be fixed by a new form of charity that would be more objective and efficient. We must eliminate poverty altogether.
From my perspective, it is that sixth stage which is the most dangerous to the poor themselves. They are a “problem” to be fixed and if they cannot or will not be fixed we must find ways to create large-scale programs that will be a solution to the problem. Obviously, it is not either/or but both/and. The issues of poverty are far too complex for a simplistic answer. The rub is finding the right relationship and spheres of influence among the players – public and private.