Thursday, April 30, 2009

Mobilized to end poverty


Why do we want to end poverty? It seems like an impossible goal, maybe an unattainable ideal by pie-in-the-sky liberals. We live in a time when the disparity between the rich and the poor is growing. I heard a story on the news today about the swine flu pandemic in Mexico, how sanitation is a problem in many places, because of a lack of clean water. Some parts of Mexico City go two weeks at a time without water service. Is this not unacceptable? We who have access to clean water, bottled water, bath water, swimming pool water, and car wash water are partly responsible for the lack of water in other places. We are because we are indifferent. Indifference is the Sin of the rich. If we were using wealth and means to serve the least among us that would be one thing, but we aren't. If we were Mexican children could wash their hands.
Why do we want to end poverty? Aren't some people poor because the population is unsustainable? Isn't because poverty breeds poverty? Isn't because some people don't want to work for a living? We hear a lot of excuses and interpretations of the problem of poverty, none of which address the problem with viable solutions. In fact, the excuses are ment to avoid viable, sustainable solutions, to avoid guiilt and responsibility. Its more comfortable to be blind to suffering than to see it and have to do something about it. People have the capacity to care, to show compassion. And the capacity to remain indifferent to the cries of the billions of people without enough food, water, clothing, shelter, medicines, and education.
Why do we want to end poverty? Because of Jesus. Jesus reveals that the heart of God's Torah,the heartbeat of the living God, is this concern for the suffering. And this concern transcends cultural and ethnic boundaries. GOD is impartial in his compassion toward the creation. God is interested in setting to rights a broken, wrong-doing, long-suffering world. We want to end poverty because it is cruel, and because our hearts break over the things that break God's heart. 26,000 children die everyday from hunger-related disease. No program or project or organization alone will end poverty. It will take a broad-based movement of activists, servant-leaders, and compassionate humanitarians in government and in communities of faith/goodwill.
Sojourners is a movement of Christians who are called by GOD to eliminate injustice. Jim Wallis and many others have been prophetic voices, speaking the truth to power people for many years. They align themselves with Isaiah, Amos, Joseph, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, John the Baptist, Mary, Jesus, William Wilberforce, Sojourner Truth, Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King, Jr., and so many other prophets who have faced injustice and said, "It it time to get in the way."
It is time to trouble the waters in a way that only people of faith can, in a way that is oriented to a biblical worldview and to the way of Jesus.
Rep. John Lewis embodies that call to justice because he does what he says. He told us on Sunday that he was going to protest on Monday and be arrested. And he did. He did what he said. He protested at the Sudanese Embassy because their government kicked out many foreign humanitarian aid groups to make a political statement. Rep. Lewis is no stranger to insjutice or to protest. He marched to Selma.
I left there wondering what I have done to get in the way of injustice? What risk have I taken, whose voice have I uplifted, to whom have I given hope? Indifference is inexcusable. The church has been indifferent, caught up in culture wars, politicking for votes on behalf of a narrow agenda--like abortion or creationism. The church has announced a weak and narrow gospel that equates salvation with the after-life and heaven, while avoiding the call to save dying children in Africa or haiti. Salvation that is not holistic, that does not announce that Jesus saves people now and in the hour of death, is an incomplete and therefore useless evrsion of salvation. Either salvation is everything, every hope for deliverance and rescue, or it is nothing. I don't want a GOD who saves me when I die, but does nothing to save us while we live. The GOD I love embodied salvation in the work of Jesus. That salvation announcement includes his teachings, his healings, and his dying and rising. IN the teachings and healings, we see a GOD who is deeply concerned for the suffering, sin-sick, broken world. This GOD is concerned for the poor, for women and children, for people overburdened in labor to an imperial system that creates conditions of slavery and poverty for many, even as it creates wealth and freedom for a few. I want a GOD, a man, Jesus, who is concerned for how we treat the earth and all it inhabitants. I want a GOD who is concerned about how we live as communities, as families, as nations. When Jesus is connected to the Torah and the Prophets, the Jesus you meet is rooted in a tradition that is most concerned about those things. And we couple that concern with an eschatological/apocalyptic worldview to get a Jesus who is also concerned for how it will all turn out in the end for us. A Jesus who is also preparing a liberation from the ultimate power of death. Personal, corporate, and national salvation ought to be interrelated aspects of Christian life.
As for the nation. I learned this week that our nation is in crisis. No one political leader will solve it. Not President Obama or any member of congress. But if people motivated by love influence people motivated by the law to enact laws to protect the most vulnerable, we are on the way together. The government has an important role to play in national salvation, mainly by creating the conditions by which the majority and especially the poorest among us can live sustainable and healthy lives. Together with churches and mosques and synagogues and people of good will we can create a common life that is more just than unjust.
I was convinced this week that things can change, politicians can change, oppressive systems can change. It is possible, if we live locally and speak globally to change the world. It was impressed on me this week that people of faith are called to exercise both an advocacy ministry and a servant ministry. And both of these things are tended and nourished by prayer and Scripture. Like three legs of a stool, we need to have a micro-,macro-, and inner spirit-life. Love for God and love for neighbor are embodied in prayer, in helping/serving, and by speaking/acting on behalf of the poor and unjustly treated. I have been mobilized to end poverty by serving the needs of local people in poverty and by addressing systems of oppression and economic injustice as a leader in this church called to public profession of faith in Jesus.

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