Who Are The Poor?

Mar 25 2010 - Published by Yaholo under Life Application

When I talk with people about the Christian responsibility to the poor, I usually get two very opposing responses. One person will state that most of the poor around us are poor of their own fault. They are poor because they don’t work hard or manage their lives wisely. Another person will state that people are poor because of the injustices of society and that those in power are keeping others down. I have learned that neither of these accurately portray the state of the poor around us, and that our opposing, yet equally delusional, view of the poor keep us from actually helping them. The truth is the poor are truly poor, not because they don’t have money, but because they don’t have love.

Now I grew up in a very conservative community, so I know half of you out there just cringed at that last sentence, so please bear with me. I have struggled with money. just like almost everyone else. I have even gone through bankruptcy. Once, while walking downtown and indulging in some self-pity, I passed a beggar and thought to myself, “this guy probably has a greater net-worth than I do, he is at zero while I am negative by thousands”. Which was immediately followed by an epiphany, “Wait! This guy has nothing, while I owe thousands… so why am I better off?”

This thought followed me for a while and throughout the next couple years as I picked myself up, moved on, and rebuilt a business from the ground up. Even though I have less money (from a purely mathematical point of view) than a homeless man on the street, I was rich because I had an education, a clear view of my own path, a skill, a craft, an understanding of the world around, and most of all… a family that loved me.

Discovering Poverty

I spend 2 years mentoring kids in the Indianapolis Public School system through a program that identified at-risk youth. The adults I worked with, both the parents of the kids (if they had any) and the volunteers in the program, had a very negative and helpless view of the business world. I was often listening to conversations about how the rich are keeping them down, how they are poor because they are helpless, and how no one will give them a break. I never, of course, shared this point of view, but I began to understand why they had it.

My parents, who run their own small business, raised me with a sense of responsibility, work ethic, fair trade, how to manage business relationships, and some understanding of how the the economy functions. More than education, my family gives me confidence, pride, and the strength of will to stand up for myself while also showing grace to others. When people grow up without families, or even those they can love and trust, they grow up both without a practical education and the internal strength to survive in a truly hard world.

I remember training one young man to get a good job, one of the things I had to teach him was, “Stop calling people ‘sir’. As soon as you call me ‘sir’ you are placing yourself under me. You are my equal, and you have to make sure I know that. Respectfully introduce yourself to someone and then ask for their name if they do not offer it. ” Of course, he learned to call people ‘sir’ from police and school authority figures in his past, who wanted him to be submissive. He was beat down and used to begging people to survive, he did not know he had the power to take relationships into his own hands.

I learned a long time ago that what makes me rich is who I am. No matter how bad the circumstances are at the present, I will always make my way back up. Even when I have nothing, I am rich because I have a real world education, and the strength of will and confidence to make my own way. Those who are truly poor are those who have never been taught how to succeed, have no confidence in their own abilities, and have never had the opportunity to learn a valuable skill or craft. They look at the world, not knowing how those who are well-off got where they are, and feel helpless.

To often in the middle and upper class, we judge the poor from our own standards. We see someone’s behavior and say, “how horrible, I would never do that”. We don’t realize they don’t know what we know, or have experienced what we have, so of course we wouldn’t act like that… they wouldn’t either. We take our understanding for granted, not realizing the world looks so small and so harsh to so many people. No, there is no one out there to blame with “keeping people down”, but we aren’t taking the time to lift them up either.

Helping the Poor

Those who are poor do need help, and we have many poor communities in America that need real charity to heal. People who say, “they just need to get a job”, are blinding themselves to the real need, but those who say, “let’s just give”, are naive to the real problem. What we have in not a poverty of money, but a poverty of love. People aren’t suffering because they lack money, but because they lack development, the kind of development the rest of us get from our families.

When someone grows up in the world without love, they never really grow up. They are children, lost and confused, and looking for answers. In order to heal the hole left in an orphaned heart requires real human charity in the form of time and attention. Yes, the poor need food and shelter, but then they need brothers, sisters, and mentors. Organizations that are most effective in combating poverty in our world are organizations that help people using near one-to-one ratios. In other words, one person can really only help one other person at a time.

One kind of organization I love is the Prison Entrepreneurship Program (http://www.prisonentrepreneurship.org/). This group, along with others like it, equips inmates nearing probation with the tools and knowledge for surviving and thriving in the world of business. They have a recidivism of 10%, which is almost inverse of the average convict’s chances (usually 80%-90% of convicts usually end up back in jail). This proves to me that most of our “criminals” exist because they are put in a place in life where they don’t know how the world works, so they feel helpless and desperate.

Those working at Crisis Pregnancy Centers, another organization I have a lot of respect for, is always happy to receive donations, but can also tell you that what scared pregnant young women most often really need is love and guidance from another dedicated and patient human being. Volunteers are often a more scarce resource than money. Of course, those who have the courage to adopt are probably the best of all of us, and truly covering the darkness of the world with their own love and sacrifice.

People want to feel good by donating money, expecting others to actually handle the problem, but what the whole world really needs is more of us getting our hands dirty. We need to step across the cafeteria line when serving food and actually eat with those on the other side. We need to stop telling people to get jobs, and offer our time to raise up those who lack the skills and understanding to get a job. Society isn’t “keeping people down”, we just aren’t taking the time in our lives to lift up the weak. Poverty, in any given society, is nothing less than the mirror reflection of that society’s own selfishness and hardened hearts.

The test of the morality of a society is what it does for its children.
~Dietrich Bonhoeffer

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7 responses so far

7 Responses to “Who Are The Poor?”

  1. Gstamoson 25 Mar 2010 at 2:01 am

    This is probably some of the most insightful material that I have ever come across on the issue of poverty.

    I always believed that if you through enough money at poverty that It was possible to fix it but your indeed right.

    It’s the lack of personal development and understanding that makes and individual truly poor.

  2. Brandon Kuehlon 25 Mar 2010 at 9:52 am

    You hit the nail right on the head. I truly love this article you wrote. I have noticed this since I have moved downtown.

  3. Paul Waltzon 28 Mar 2010 at 7:44 am

    “The greatest good you can do for another is not just to share your riches but to reveal to him his own.” -Benjamin Disraeli

  4. Dangerous Christianon 29 Mar 2010 at 11:13 am

    Excellent article-especially for Holy Week. Being one who’s had the privilege of serving the needy, it’s something to meet them where they are instead of just “throwing money” at their plight. You get to hear their stories, not what someone else may say.

    As we remember Christ’s passion this week, we need to remember that He met us needy folk by coming to Earth to meet our spiritual needs. And that one of the criteria for entering the Kingdom is going to be how we treat the poor among us (Matthew 25).

    Peace!

  5. nike shoxon 05 May 2010 at 3:33 am

    I always believed that if you through enough money at poverty that It was possible to fix it but your indeed right.

  6. Mary Tayloron 11 Sep 2010 at 3:49 pm

    I loved the article with the exception with your grievance with the word, “sir.”

    Most languages have a formal you and an informal you. Formal you is used to show respect, primarily to someone who is older and in a position of authority; someone with whom one might prefer to keep at arm’s length. The informal you is used when conversing casually with friends.

    The English language does not have this difference. You is you. Therefore we use sir and ma’am to address persons to whom we show deference. My children attend an exclusive private school. They are required to address their teachers as sir and ma’am. When my children’s friends call me ma’am I am pleased; I feel that by addressing their superiors with respect, they are respecting themselves. I also feel it teaches the valuable lesson that respect is something that is earned. Unfortunately, with humankind, it is not our birthright.

    My husband is a physician who addresses all of his older patients as ma’am or sir. He feels that because they have lived longer than him they are worthy of this respectful gesture.

    There is also the factor that the words “sir and “ma’am” soften one’s addresee by their deference and are just part of the game of life.
    I have been pulled over by cops several times for speeding. Every time I address them as “sir” even though, in my book they are all poorly educated, totally unfit blockheads. I do it because those two words may make things a bit easier for me.

    In a perfect world we could possibly do without these differences. Unfortunately, this is a world in which rules exist. And the bottem line is that people do soften and respond to expressions of deference.

  7. mikeon 30 Sep 2010 at 8:42 pm

    …”The truth is the poor are truly poor, not because they don’t have money, but because they don’t have love.” ……WOW!….im somewhat familar with the homeless and those living on the margins of society but i had never thought of their condition in terms of a lack of (brotherly?)love but YES your right!..Now put yourself in their place for a moment and then imagine what you would be thinking about someone like YOU walking by…These adjectives immediately come to mind..SNOB-HOLIER THAN THOU-SELF RIGHTEOUS-MERCILESS-COMPASSIONLESS SOB….

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