Who are the deserving poor?

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Wherever any brother or sister of humanity is in any kind of need and we are in a position to help, there is the deserving poor.šŸ™‚
 
Wherever any brother or sister of humanity is in any kind of need and we are in a position to help, there is the deserving poor.šŸ™‚
Review the title of the thread: ā€œWho are the deserving poor?ā€

Suppose the brother or sister of humanity is a drug addict and is in need of another fix? Suppose the brother or sister of humanity is an alcoholic who drinks and drives and needs another drink?

Suppose the brother or sister of humanity simply chooses to live on charity, rather than work?

Saint Paul warned us that excessive charity can lead people into accepting it as an economic strategy. Here in American we have seen that happen, and seen them passing that strategy on to their children and grandchildren.
10 In fact, when we were with you, we instructed you that if anyone was unwilling to work, neither should that one eat.
(2 Thessalonians, 3,10.)

With the best will in the world we have done great damage to the poor.
 
Review the title of the thread: ā€œWho are the deserving poor?ā€

Suppose the brother or sister of humanity is a drug addict and is in need of another fix? Suppose the brother or sister of humanity is an alcoholic who drinks and drives and needs another drink?

Suppose the brother or sister of humanity simply chooses to live on charity, rather than work?

Saint Paul warned us that excessive charity can lead people into accepting it as an economic strategy. Here in American we have seen that happen, and seen them passing that strategy on to their children and grandchildren.

(2 Thessalonians, 3,10.)

With the best will in the world we have done great damage to the poor.
I don’t think sixtus is implying that we should offer drugs to drug addicts.:rotfl:

These threads get funny after a while.
 
If you really care about the poor, which is the better housing program, Chicago Housing Authority’s Cabrini Green project that put 20,000 poor on the ā€œreservationā€ or the private charity Habitat for Humanity?

Cabrini Green was named after a saint. It is paid for from tax revenues. Residents get a place to live but never had a chance for home ownership or to pass on savings to their children.

Habitat for Humanity is a voluntary program, requires recipients to do physical labor, if able, make mortgage payments, keep their credit clear and they get to actually own the home they live in.

CHA requires virtually nothing of the poor, Habitat for Humanity requires a lot. Which better exemplifies Christian values?
 
That’s the problem with substituting platitudes for policy.
Or maybe the problem could be thinking that we don’t have an opportunity to witness Christ to others no matter how we may percieve them to be.

I am not arguing so much as saying that I am happy to serve others if I am able and I can.
 
Or maybe the problem could be thinking that we don’t have an opportunity to witness Christ to others no matter how we may percieve them to be.

I am not arguing so much as saying that I am happy to serve others if I am able and I can.
…agreed. I think people need to take responsibility for their lives…if God has given them an able body to take care of themselves and family…but, I do think that as Disciples of Christ…we need to be mindful that it’s not our job to over-analyze…we should give when someone is true need.
 
Wherever any brother or sister of humanity is in any kind of need and we are in a position to help, there is the deserving poor.šŸ™‚
šŸ˜‰ I could not agree more, that is what I have been trying to say. We are told to ā€œLove one anotherā€, and to ā€œTreat your neighbor as yourselfā€. In the ā€œold daysā€, you know ā€œpioneer daysā€, this was unheard of. You had poor people, but there were family, friends the community to step in and help. I believe that this is the plan God has for us. We each help in our own way, in a capacity that we are good at and comfortable with. Maybe I think too simply, but it seems to me that this is the best way to do things.🤷
 
Which brings me to a recurring point – why don’t we teach economics in school?

Why don’t we teach kids about compound interest, the Rule of 78, the Time Value of Money? Why don’t we teach them the difference between stocks, bonds and mutual funds?

Why don’t kids graduate from high school knowing the folly of going into debt?
Wow, Vern…seems like you haven’t been paying attention to ā€œmadison avenueā€ . Our ā€˜economic system’ is based on people buying, buying, buying, and going into debt, and the media is complicit in that 100%. Watch some credit cards ads! :rolleyes: It goes deeper than just teaching economics…this stuff is subliminal…created by the advertising ā€˜geniuses’ of our time. :hypno: Take a look. You think perhaps AMEX or any bank is interested in people NOT going into debt? 🤷
If you are a teacher…or aspire to be one, I challenge you. I have been there.
 
Bye everyone, it’s been a blast. I guess the drug addicts and over extended credit card abusers are the topic now.
 
If you really care about the poor, which is the better housing program, Chicago Housing Authority’s Cabrini Green project that put 20,000 poor on the ā€œreservationā€ or the private charity Habitat for Humanity?
habitat is awesome! i have a friend who appears to have won the habitat for humanity lotto: she got a building site on the top of a hill on bainbridge island with a gorgeous mountain view.

i have another dear friend, though: fifteen years ago she was a divorced (against her wishes) mother of three, saddled with the archetypal abusive/deadbeat/absentee dad, full-time worker and full-time student at the university of washington school of social work.

she was too poor to qualify for habitat. can you imagine?!

so she got a rental subsidy from the state instead. when the dad finally got a job, the state garnished his wages to get their money back. 😃 two years ago, due to the generosity of some very well-off friends, she was able to buy her first house.

there’s a need for both. if folks can get a habitat house, that’s a blessing and great legacy for their kids. if they can’t, then there need to be other options.
 
Solid Christian marriages are remarkable for what they can accomplish in terms of raising children, almost as if a loving God designed it that way. Oh wait, He did design it that way. šŸ™‚
Strange how that works, what with Christian divorce rates being higher than atheists.
 
Or maybe the problem could be thinking that we don’t have an opportunity to witness Christ to others no matter how we may percieve them to be.

I am not arguing so much as saying that I am happy to serve others if I am able and I can.
No – we have and take advantage of many opportunities to witness for Christ without sinking into platitudes and washing our hands of the harm we do with ill-conceived ā€œprograms.ā€
 
Wow, Vern…seems like you haven’t been paying attention to ā€œmadison avenueā€ . Our ā€˜economic system’ is based on people buying, buying, buying, and going into debt, and the media is complicit in that 100%. Watch some credit cards ads! :rolleyes: It goes deeper than just teaching economics…this stuff is subliminal…created by the advertising ā€˜geniuses’ of our time. :hypno: Take a look. You think perhaps AMEX or any bank is interested in people NOT going into debt? 🤷
If you are a teacher…or aspire to be one, I challenge you. I have been there.
Been where? In debt?

No, long ago I started saving and established a policy of finding out what my monthly payment would be for a big-ticket purchase, and then I would put that amount aside every month until I had enough to buy for cash.

The only thing I’ve ever bought on credit was a house – and paid off the mortgage ahead of time and I sold it for a nice profit.

As for Madison Avenue – if we educated our people properly, they wouldn’t be fooled by slick commerticial.
 
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