Some Christians Believe: If You’re Poor, it’s Your Fault

Over the past five years, I’ve watched Evangelicalism tear itself apart. There’s a split happening, each side growing in diametric opposition to the other side’s perspective on a few political hot topics.

One of these is domestic poverty.

Side “A” claims that it’s everyone’s responsibility to alleviate poverty in our country, side “B” blames the poor for their plight. Every time the pro-poor side makes a call to action, the other side talks about the many ways that poor people simply need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps.

Helping them will only hurt them, and that’s not justice.

To this group of God-followers, poverty is a consequence of irresponsibility. If poor people would simply get up in the morning, go to work with a good attitude, earn a paycheck and watch their spending – like the rest of us – the problem would solve itself. Everyone in America has, with little exception, the same opportunities; those who don’t take them are irresponsible. Stepping in to save irresponsible people from the consequence of their irresponsibility is, well, irresponsible.

Side “B” believes that poverty in America is a systemic thing, that poor people have not bootstraps to pull. For many, it’s much more complicated than hard work and responsibility.

Go figure that these two very different perspectives are demarcated along political lines:

My entire life, I’ve watched politicians bragging about how poor they are, how they came from nothing, how poor their parents and grandparents were. And I said to myself, if they can stay so poor for so many generations, maybe this isn’t the kind of person we want to be electing to higher office. How smart can they be? They’re morons. ~ Donald Trump

is poverty the fault of the poor

why does poverty exist

What’s interesting about poverty in the US is that it seems to trend up and down based on which political ideology is in charge. According to the following data from statista.org, poverty trends one way under a conservative administration, vice versa when liberals are running the show:

us poverty rates

Based on this, I have two issues with side A’s “poor people just need to be more responsible” approach. First, should I assume that people are less responsible under conservative administrations than liberal ones?

You could argue that poverty shrinks when liberals are in control because all they do is throw money at the poor. But if that’s true, economic indicators such as GDP growth would reflect something similar to the above graph.

They don’t.

Second, if poverty in the US is so reactive to mainstream politics, you’ll understand why I believe that poverty is, for the most part, a systemic problem, one that requires a change to the system:

“Without structural changes, it may be very difficult if not impossible to eliminate disparities and poverty.” ~ Shervin Assari, Research Investigator of Psychiatry, Public Health, and Poverty Solutions, University of Michigan

What does all of this have to do with Christian folk?

Sometime in the 80’s, Bible-believing Christianity married politics like never before, increasingly seeing government administration as God’s way of intervention in the world. Today, if you’re a Christian, you’re probably conservative, convinced that poverty in the US is not your problem.

God’s People Have Been Doing This for a Long Time.

The God-followers of Jesus’ day considered poverty to be a consequence of faithlessness, a punishment from God Himself. If these people could manage to get their act together and worship God like the rest of us, the problem would solve itself.

As you can imagine, that didn’t sit well with Jesus.

Today, not much as changed: contemporary US God-folk are still blaming the poor for their plight. Why? What is it about Christianity in particular that this attitude finds such fertile ground?

Maybe it’s a simple, human response to the psychological burden of poverty.

My city of Denver has recently allowed “urban camping” in some areas. Every time I get in the car I’m confronted with tents, tarps, shopping carts – a huge mess, and maybe a bit of a threat. It’s tempting to judge, but this is Denver in the wintertime: if my first response isn’t compassion for people camping in 18 degree weather, there’s a problem.

Stepping in to alleviate this level of brokenness, however, would require much from me, so I understandably seek ways to excuse myself. Blaming the poor is a brilliant way to do that, freeing me up to be Christian and live the American dream.

But, as I suggested above, our problem is an ancient one, so I have to assume that there’s something else afoot.

In his letter to a group of newly-minted gentile Christians, the apostle John said to “test the spirits,” i.e., when you get an idea in your head, take a minute and consider where it came from. According to John, our beliefs, ideals, and deeply held values don’t always come from the right place.

“Beloved, do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from God…” ~ 1 John 4:1-3

If you’ll allow, there might be a metaphysical aspect, a “spirit” of jackassery that whispers in our ears and works in concert with our discomfort, ultimately convincing us to blame the people who are suffering for their suffering.

It’s been around for a long time, and man are we suckers for it.

Don’t Under-Do It

Scripture never warns us about going too far, or giving too much, or over-helping. It only offers stern warnings for those who fail to go far enough.

In the following passage from the book of Matthew, true righteousness has nothing to do with church attendance, or Bible studies, or sound theology. It’s defined by a person’s posture towards the poor:

When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on his glorious throne. He will gather before him all the nations, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. And he will place the sheep on his right, the goats on his left.

Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me.’

Then the righteous will answer him, saying, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you drink? And when did we see you a stranger and welcome you, or naked and clothe you? And when did we see you sick or in prison and visit you?’ And the King will answer them, ‘Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these, you did it to me.’

“Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. For I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me no drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not clothe me, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.’

Then they also will answer, saying, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not minister to you?’ Then he will answer them, saying, ‘Truly, I say to you, as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.’ And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.” ~ Mattthew 25: 31-46

If you’re from my Christian camp, it might sting a bit to learn that God will judge ALL OF HUMANITY purely on the basis of something so “social-justicy.” It stings the hell out of me. We tend to focus on things like morality, sunday AM attendance, etc. If anything, social justice is a side thing that you can opt out of if you want to.

Ultimately, according to scripture, it’s not our place to judge why the homeless guy is homeless, or why the black family can’t bootstrap their way up to a better life.

When it comes to poverty, the Bible only commands (threatens?) us to act.

 

Photo courtesy of Mihály Köles at Unsplash.com

Blaming Biden

Shortly before WWII, Adolph Hitler and other European leaders signed the Munich Agreement, allowing Hitler to take a small, “German” part of Czechoslovakia so long as he didn’t invade any other territories. 6 months later he took the rest of Czechoslovakia. France and Britain followed with the threat of war if he went any further.

Hitler probably could’ve been handled in a million different ways, but the world didn’t know what he was up to or the carnage he would unleash.

While that scenario has many things in common with Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, there’s one major difference: everyone blamed Hitler. He wanted the world and and the world finally realized it. There was no level of sanction and/or political gymnastics that would’ve stopped him.

Nobody claimed that his campaign was the fault of some non-German politician.

Not so with Ukraine. Joe Biden is somehow to blame for Putin’s invasion of a sovereign country, and I need some help understanding how anyone can believe that. Putin wants to restore the USSR back to its former “unified” glory and is willing to blow the holy hell out of whatever to get it. Should there be sanctions? Sure, but let’s not expect much from them, now approaching the toughest the US has ever imposed on a foreign entity.

If the entire world sanctions Putin, he might reconsider, but that scenario is not likely to play out. Looks to me like China, among others, is going to lend Putin a hand.

Now, anti-Biden folk are calling for war, accusing Biden of further weakness for relying too much on sanctions. While I have some sympathy for the role of war in dealing with tyrants, this particular tyrant has his hand on a nuclear button and doesn’t seem to care much about his country, much less anyone else’s – I don’t trust him to be responsible with his nukes. And let’s reflect on what happens in a nuclear war: aside from the physical carnage, there would most likely be a huge upset in the balance of power after we incinerate half the world.

If we had a different president (guess who), however, Putin would not have invaded Ukraine, and I need some help understanding that one as well.

Would Trump have been tougher on Putin? Would he have taken us to war? How? Putin and Trump buddied up like no president I’ve ever seen.

If it were possible for Trump to stop someone like Putin, I have to assume that there’s some dark, scary relationship between the two. Note that Trump hasn’t condemned Putin’s rampage. All we’ve gotten from him is “If I was president, none of this would’ve happened.” Why the silence? What’s going on between those two?

Either way, if Trump can’t even condemn the invasion of Ukraine, how in holy fresh hell would he play the tough guy if he was president?

For now, you’ll understand why I blame Putin, not Biden, for the invasion of Ukraine.

It seems much more realistic to blame Biden for inflation and gas prices, both seemingly out of countrol. Come on, liberals, he’s been president for over a year now, can’t you admit that he’s the wrong guy for the job?

Personally, I’d be happy to blame him if it weren’t for three very clear facts.

Gas prices have been rising significantly since April of 2020.

US gas prices by year

6 months before Biden shut down drilling in an Arctic wildlife refuge, or cancelled the KXL extension of the Keystone pipeline (the Keystone pipeline itself is still up and running, folks, and this extension was never built, only planned). If closing these down is the reason gas prices are increasing, why were gas prices increasing 6 months prior to their closing?

Inflation has been rising steadily since April of 2020.

us inflation

From April of 2020 to the end of Trump’s presidency, inflation began it’s epic leap, increasing 133% by the end of December, just before Biden took office. I heard no Trump supporters losing their minds, blaming Trump, or getting sucked into the anti-Trump memeverse.

Granted, since Biden’s been in office, inflation has gone up by 464%. But is that a leftover effect from the previous administration, incompetence from the current one, or something else?

America’s worst pandemic… like… ever.

How can we so utterly fail to get our heads around this? Nobody in America – none of us: our grandparents, great grandparents, great, great grandparents, etc. – have seen a pandemic like this. I’ve watched as we tried to deny it on so many fronts, cry “hoax!” “sheep!” “conspiracy!” etc. as the death toll mounted, then blame the sitting US president for the financial aftershock that was sure to follow.

How can a country like ours go through a pandemic the likes of COVID and not take a huge $$ hit for it?

And how do we utterly ignore the fact that gas prices and inflation are rising all over the world? Is that Biden’s fault too? COVID hit everywhere, yeah? The entire world is struggling. The pandemic is hopefully wrapping up, but we’re just now beginning to pay the bill.

While it’s clear that life has gotten more expensive under President Biden, it’s much less clear whether or how much he is actually to blame for it. In his defense, life has gotten more expensive for the residents of pretty much every country, not just America. Gas prices are surging around the world. Food prices are surging around the world. Commodities. Manufactured goods…

Us Americans are super bad about blaming the politician we didn’t vote for while utterly failing to see the faults in the one we elected. No self-respecting Trump supporter, for example, would blame him for the Jan 6th riot, or using hate speech like oxygen, or hoaxifying the pandemic, or calling for violence during his campaign rallies, or presiding over contemporary America’s most divided moment. I heard nothing from my conservative friends until Biden took office, now it’s a shit-storm of memes, finger-pointing, etc., while nothing but crickets from the liberal side of America.

I’ll admit that I’m much less critical of the politician I voted for, but I have my limits: if Biden starts using hate speech with any regularity, trying to convince me that the people who don’t think like I do are trying to destroy my country; if he tries to convince me that the people who are most qualified to influence pandemic legislation are trying to mislead me; if he does anything with the sole intention of national division, I’ll speak out just as I did during the Trump era.

Beyond that, Biden will make big mistakes, as all politicians do, and I won’t be commenting on them.

To the idea that gas, inflation, and Putin are Biden’s fault, I’m sure there are things that his administration could do differently. But if your favorite media outlet has left out the three points I mentioned above, I’ll recommend adding a different perspective to your diet.

It’s a little fishy when “responsible media” leaves key facts out of their equation, but to blame Biden for our current mess, that’s what you have to do.

 

Photo by Yassine Khalfalli on Unsplash

4 Months, No Booze, One Truth About Happiness

Last October, I went solo camping in the middle of nowhere, drank some whiskey by the fire before bedtime, woke up super early the next morning with a headache and a made a tough decision to stop drinking for awhile.

The next three months were easier than I thought they’d be. I was taking on something big, new. It felt righteous, like I was better than all those suckers who drink too much. It was hard to be around other drinkers, watching them loosen up and party, but saying no to booze seemed do-able.

Month #4 (January 2021sym;) was brutal. By that time the cravings were easy to deal with, but I began to struggle with boredom, and feelings of meaninglessness. It felt like I was living the same day over and over again.

The kids were getting on my nerves like never before.

It was hard to blame this on booze because Continue reading 4 Months, No Booze, One Truth About Happiness