I am a bystander in this conversation, but I had to speak up at this point. I completely agree that, as Christians, we are to give to the needy. But Welfare is not you giving to the needy. I pay my taxes, but I have also taken homeless persons in to my home on countless occasions. Sometimes they have absolutely taken advantage of our family, and made our lives miserable. Sometimes they have been able to get on their feet and move forward. It doesn’t change the fact that we are obligated to help when we can. We are blessed, and we share it. We have paid tuition for single mothers who need to learn to make a living. Bought supplies and layettes, and whatever.
I am not pointing these things out to put our family forward. Rather it is an illustration. Welfare is not charity. It is a system that is desiged to keep people unempowered and dependent. I was a single mother who worked her way through an undergraduate degree and medical school. I never utilized the welfare system, but I understand there are some who must. I am, praise God, now married and my children are grown. I hope they learned from the way they were raised; that you don’t ever give up, and when God blesses you, you share it.
In my practice, I’ve worked with an enormous number of welfare recipients. Some were using it as it was intended to be used, a step up. Many, however, use it indefinitely, in place of any effort to care for themselves and use the money intended to care for their children to obtain drugs.
I have no problem whatsoever with requiring people who receive taxpayers dollars to drug test. If they fail, they should be required to participate in mandatory rehab programs and supervisory interventions. No, don’t strike them from the roles…but don’t let them slide either. At some point, there must be accountability. BTW; government employees are subject to random drug testing.
If you really believe in loving charity…as do I and many of my friends and family…live like the brethren and practice it. Paying your taxes does not fulfill your Christian obligation to practice charity. Welfare is a government program, paid for with the tax dollars of all, not just those who share our beliefs. There is an obligation to utilize those funds appropriately.
Don’t mix the two concepts. Welfare does not equal charity. Not in today’s America.