There is an interesting parable, that of The Good Samaritan.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parable_of_the_Good_Samaritan
A private individual at great risk to himself picked up an injured stranger and put him up at an inn, took care of his immediate medical needs, left some money for him to be looked after with the promise to donate more on his return trip.
What would have happened if The Good Samaritan didn’t have any money?
The Good Samaritan didn’t use a weapon to hold up other travelers to force them to pay the expenses of the injured stranger.
It was someone who had money who volunteered it to help people less fortunate than him.
Jesus didn’t condemn the fact that The Good Samaritan had money. Or that The Good Samaritan should be taxed to within an inch of his life so that the tax collector could take the money. Or that The Good Samaritan was “wealthy” and therefor evil.
Instead, Jesus went out of His way to set up as an example that The Good Samaritan volunteered to help someone.
The Church has had private charities within the overall supervision of the Church that looked after sick people. They existed from the very early days of the Church.
Someone posted on CAF that before Medicare, old people just died. That is false. Doctors often set up their own hospitals. Voluntary hospitals. Doctors set up their own financial bases to pay the hospital expenses. Wealthy people, people who had “wealth” donated money and services to the hospitals. There were and are religious orders that provided and still provide medical assistance to people.
As a sidebar, I was watching an episode of “If Walls Could Talk” and it featured a house from the early 1800’s in Texas. It turned out to have belonged to a doctor who did well for himself. He had built up an extensive library of medical books [including some interesting exhibits on Malaria and infectious diseases) and his large house may also have been used as a hospital. The idea that we need government to take over what would normally be charitable functions is utterly false.
Sometimes, to help encourage some folks to donate, they would name a building expansion after the donor. Some people enjoy criticizing people with wealth. Well, very few poor people endow a hospital or build a new wing or buy an MRI for a hospital.
But the private Good Samaritan system worked well. And still does. Absolutely no need for government’s socialism to take over, except where the government set up demands and standards that could not be met and provided an excuse and an opportunity for the government to impose socialism.
It’s interesting that at one time, there was a military hospital transport plane that was nicknamed the “Samaritan”.