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God
Is a program God-centered, fostering self-esteem not by pretense but by
leading clients to their Creator and to an understanding of how they are made
in His image?
"True philanthropy must take into account spiritual as well as physical
needs," poverty fighters a century ago noted, and both Christians and
Jews did. Christians worshipped a God who came to earth and showed in
life and death the literal meaning of compassion - suffering with. Jewish
teaching stressed the pursuit of righteousness through the doing of good
deeds. Groups such as the Industrial Christian Alliance noted that they
used "religious methods" - reminding the poor that God made them and had
high expectations for themÜto "restore the fallen and helpless to self-respect
and self-support."
Challenge that goes beyond the material is still essential to poverty
fighting. In Washington, D.C., multimillion dollar programs have failed,
but a mile from the U.S. Capitol success stories are developing: Spiritually-based
programs such as Clean and Sober Streets, where ex-alcoholics and ex-addicts
help those still in captivity; the Gospel Mission, which fights homelessness
by offering true hope; and the Capitol Hill Crisis Pregnancy Center, where
teenage moms and their children, born and unborn, are cared for, are all
saving lives. In Dallas, Texas, a half-mile from the Dallas Housing Authority's
failed projects, a neighborhood group called Voice of Hope invites teenagers
to learn about God through Bible studies and to work at renovating deteriorated
homes in their neighborhood. During the past decade, crime rates among
the boys involved with Voice of Hope and pregnancy rates among the girls
have been much lower than those in the surrounding community.
Giving by itself, we need to remember, is morally neutral. We need to
give rightly so as not to impede the development of values that enable
people to get out of poverty and stay out. When the preceding seven principles
of effective compassion are widely understood and practiced,
antipoverty work can be effective. In 2000, as in 1900, the best programs
offer challenge, not just enabling, and deal with spiritual questions
as well as material needs. In 2000, as in 1900, there is no effective
substitute for the hard process of one person helping another. A century-old
question - Does any given "scheme of help make great demands on men to
give themselves to their brethren?" - is still the right one to ask.
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