God’s
Happy Poor
THE POOR IN THE SCRIPTURE
Reference: Grigg, V.
(2004). Companion to the
Poor. GA, USA:
Authentic Media in partnership with World Vision.
Questions continually rolled around
my mind:
“Why
are the poor, poor?”
“Why are they blessed?”
“Which poor are blessed?”
“Why does James call them
rich in faith?”
“Who are the poor Jesus
spoke of?”
To understand what Jesus wanted us
to do for the poor, I sat down with a friend one day and copied out every verse
in the Bible about the poor onto small, white cards. I carried them with me for
four years. They were my meditation day and night. They determined every major
decision.
My concordance to the Bible listed
245 references to
“the
poor,” “poverty,”
or “lack”
in the English scriptures. They made an interesting study. There were five main
root words:1
Ebyon:
needy and dependent (61 times)
Dal:
the frail poor, the weak (57
times)
Rush:
the impoverished through
dispossession (31 times)
Chaser:
to suffer lack of bread and
water, to hunger (36 times]
Ani:
poverty caused by affliction and
oppression (80 times)
The word Jesus uses in the New
Testament for
“poor.”
ptochos,
is the translation of the word
anaw, which in turn is derived from ani.2 Anaw at times
means
“the
humble,”
but elsewhere, as in Isaiah 61:1 from which Jesus quotes; it has the meaning of
“the
oppressed poor.”
The concept of poverty and the
analysis of its causes and effects change as the history of God’s
dealing with his people progresses. Before the monarchy of David and Solomon,
in the Pentateuch and in Job, societies were built essentially around extended
family or clan structures. Riches were the blessing of God; poverty was brought
about by some misfortune or through judgment of personal sin. The poor man was
to be helped from his poverty.
From the time of the monarchy, a
center of privileged people began to develop. Excavations in Tirzeh indicate
that before the monarchy all houses had similar dimensions and furnishings.
During the 8th century B.C. however, different districts had come into being: a
well-to-do neighborhood for the rich; slums for the poor.
The rich began to treat the poor
as though they belonged to a lower order. Poverty came to be seen as a much
deeper deficiency in a person, particularly in the Wisdom literature (the Book
of Proverbs and so on).
The poor, for their part, began to
see their poverty as synonymous with being oppressed. The standard expression,
“who
oppresses the poor.”
attributes the cause of poverty to the rich.
Hence, we find the prophets
denouncing constantly the rich (called the oppressor or the unrighteous) and
upholding the
“godly
poor.”
These are the ani, the
oppressed poor with whom Jesus identified—”the
poor of Yahweh.”
“Poor in spirit”
is an expression primarily describing this social class and its response to
such oppression.
God’s
plan for ministry
Suddenly, in the midst of these
new revelations about the poor, my plans seemed to crumble in front of my eyes.
After years of work, building relationships, molding ideas, and building
together, the leadership of the mission I worked under went through a time of
turmoil, related to this need to
“preach
the gospel to the poor.”
I returned to New Zealand
But God was faithful. The
relationships I had built with Filipino Christians opened the door back into
Manila and to
a ministry with the poor. Because of their commitment
to the poor, some of my Filipino friends had established an Indigenous
discipling movement called REACH. I began my work in Manila again, this time under
their auspices, determined to avoid being trapped into a middle-class
missionary lifestyle. This time, I wanted to dwell among the poor. I wanted to
enter into the knowledge of God. I wanted to learn to die to self, to security,
to my own culture, to my wealth.
The first step was to learn the
language and culture of the poor. I boarded a crowded bus for a small city in a
Tagalog province. Here I was to study the language of Manila’s
poor, Tagalog, in one of its purest provincial forms.
I prayed:
“Lord.
I have no home here, no contacts, but I’m
sure you’ll
provide. Find me the poorest families. Since I’m
unused to living among the poor, let it be a well-built home, with a good toilet
so I can maintain my health.”
The historic Catholic cathedral in
the town of 100,000 was full of images of saints, and there was only one
Protestant church. I walked to the pastor’s
house and asked for accommodation for a few days. Although he was gracious, I
could see that he could ill afford to provide for me. I had known this man when
he had been a fine preacher in a city church. He had chosen to minister to the
rural poor at no little cost.
After two days with the pastor,
the pastor’s
assistant came to take me to his home. We traveled by tricycle (a motorbike with
a highly decorated and stylized sidecar costing about five cents a ride) along
the half-formed muddy tracks into the unfinished government subdivision. The
local wisdom was that corrupt government officials had embezzled the development
funds through various means. As we rode along the track, I drew shy smiles and
calls of
“Hey
Joe!”
When we arrived at the house, I
thanked the Lord. It was perfect.
Ka Emilio, the father (sixty-eight
years of age), told how the family had constructed the house in one week at a
cost of $130. It was all I’d
prayed for: concrete walls and a tin roof (or a
“G.I.
sheet,”
as Filipinos call it). The toilet had a concrete floor, with enough room to
“shower”
by scooping water with a tin can from a plastic bucket. An old frog and some
neighborly lizards shared it with us. Next to my bedroom was the community
pump.
We put in a bunk above my friend’s
bed. We had to push the wall out six inches since I was ill suited to a
Filipino-sized bed. This gave us a five-by-six foot bedroom to share.
Ka Emilio was a man of old Tagalog
dignity, a gracious and hospitable host. He coughed constantly, with one lung
rotted by tuberculosis. He maintained his health by planting and watering
vegetables and the trees around his home.
I knew no Tagalog and he knew no
English, but we had many long conversations. Once he described the Japanese
invasion of their city, complete with dive-bombing and its effects on the
frightened people, all in dramatized Tagalog.
He taught me much of the dignity
and pride of the Tagalog people whom I had come to serve. While living in Ka
Emilio’s
house, I saw the Biblical concepts of poverty take flesh in the community around
me.
The poor who lack
I ate next door at his daughter
and son-in-law’s
home, but I would watch Ka Emilio cooking his rice. At times, all he had to eat
with his rice were the leaves off the trees he’d
planted.
Job 30:3–4
tells us of such poor:
Through want and hard hunger they
gnaw the dry and desolate ground; they pick mallow and the leaves of bushes and
to warm themselves the roots of broom . . .
Ka Emilio was one of the chaser:
those who lack the basic necessities of life, those who want.
At nights, I would lie sweating on
my plywood bed and search for answers.
“Why
was he poor?”
“How could such a poor man
be blessed?”
A study of the word chaser told me some causes of this kind of poverty.
Proverbs tells us that wickedness
causes the belly to suffer want (13:25); too much sleep and want will attack us
like an armed robber (6:10,11); hasty planning leads to want (21:5); oppressing
the poor to increase our own
wealth, giving to the rich, (22:16); loving pleasure
(21:17); or miserliness and gambling (28:22) all bring us to want. This poverty
is caused by personal sins.
The Scriptures also speak of the
solution:
“The
Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want”
(Psalm 23:1).
“Those
who seek the Lord lack no good thing”
(Psalm 34:10).
One day through an evangelistic
crusade, Ka Emilio came to believe that Christ had died for him. I gave him a
Tagalog Bible in comic form [the poor read comics, not books). Perhaps time
would lead him to a complete obedience to this Lord who is Shepherd, and this
would lead him and his family out of want.
Even then, I knew that such a
solution was insufficient. Deeper causes to poverty than personal
problems—communal and national and global problems—require biblical solutions
at each appropriate level.
But I needed to begin at the
level of the personal and spiritual and explore outward. We tried raising
rabbits to supplement Ka Emilio’s
income. When that failed. I bought him a goat, but he eventually sold it, as he
was too old to constantly take it out to feed. Ultimately, the solution to Ka
Emilio’s
poverty was a son who got a job in Saudi Arabia and sent back American dollars.
Poverty and sin
Some poverty is caused by sin. But
poverty also causes sin. The broken social structure of the squatter areas
creates an environment, which exercises little social control over sin. Poverty
causes people to steal.
Proverbs 30:8–9
offers this sound advice:
Give me neither poverty nor
riches: feed me with the food that is needful for me, lest I be full and deny
thee. And say,
“Who
is the Lord?”
or lest I be poor and steal, and profane the name of my God.
A favorite meal in the Philippines
is cooked dog meat and beer. One day I was walking round the comer of the track
and came across three men quietly pushing a jeepney loaded with dogs. They had
stolen them and would sell them to a restaurant for meat. That same week I
passed a truck. People were draining it of gasoline.
Ninety
percent proof
Poverty also causes drunkenness.
The first thing one notice among areas of poverty is drunken men. Everywhere
there are groups of men drinking—at all times from morning to night.
Drunkenness and alcoholism cause destitution, but most drunkenness among the
squatters is a result of the poverty in which the men find themselves.
Unemployment results in
drunkenness. Even Proverbs indicates this. When it advises against kings
becoming drunk, it suggests:
Give strong drink to him who is
perishing, and wine to those in bitter distress; let them drink and forget their
poverty, and remember their misery no more (Proverbs 31:6,7).
(We should not interpret this as a
license for the poor to drink, but rather as a plea for sober kings!)
One Filipino study of a slum
community indicated that 68% of the employable adults are unemployed.3
In Tatalon it was 42%.4 Drinking with friends is a way to fill up the
day and drown out the sorrow, despair, and lack of self–respect
inherent in unemployment.
Ka Emilio’s
two sons became my good companions. Living with them. I began to understand why
they were poor and why they were often drunk. Seraphim had been a soldier, but
lost his job and income for two years because of an injury. In my diary one
night, I jotted:
Tonight Seraphim will drink
himself to sleep. It is hard to be without work. If he had work, he could get
married. His girlfriend is already working and has graduated. He melancholically
plays his guitar on the doorstep as the sunsets. A man of dignity, a soldier of
honor seeking to maintain his dignity with the Beatles and a bottle. How do I
help his soul and body? How can this poor man be blessed except in the kingdom?
What is the solution to
drunkenness? Some years before I had traveled through a valley in Bukidnon. The
homes were among the poorest I had seen—thatched huts, only a few meters square.
I asked around to discover why. A local rice wine was ninety percent proof.
Everybody drank it.
Thirteen or fourteen year-old pregnant girls drank
it. Children were born to drunken mothers and so grew up with the taste and
desire for wine. People died before they were thirty. So, it went on for
generation after generation.
Then an older lady missionary came
in and started an orphanage. From this base, the good news spread. The preaching
of the gospel broke that cycle. Chaser, those whose personal sins have
caused poverty, are blessed by receiving God’s
kingdom.
The poverty of immorality
Poverty provides an environment
not only for drunkenness, but also for immorality. In the immediate cluster of
houses around our home, very few couples were legally married. Many of the women
had lived with two or three husbands. A number of men had a kabit (a
second wife). In one survey we did informally, over 30% of the men indicated
that they had become squatters as a result of some form of immorality—often in
the process of
“eloping”
or taking a new wife and hence leaving their provincial home.
Squatter areas seem to be the
ultimate collecting pot for the moral outcasts of society. Perhaps this is
because they are areas where social norms and values have broken down almost
totally, with Immorality and infidelity running unchecked and unashamed.
In a survey of the 43 neediest
families in one slum area, only one-sixth of those interviewed had been legally
married when first living with their wife..5 Six men and four women
had been previously married. The figures are symbols of pain, anguish and
frustration.
Frustration
over broken relationships erupted one day when I was sitting in my upstairs
room, preparing a message in Tagalog. Suddenly, I heard an angry voice in the
rooms below:
“I’m
going to leave him! I’ll
file a law suit!”
Two or three neighboring relatives
rapidly materialized to quiet down their niece, each passing on a piece of
advice.
“The best thing is to stay with
him,”
one lady said.
“I
remember when I first heard that the Bombay (Manilan terminology for an
Indian—her late husband had been one) had another woman. I was furious. So I
followed his jeepney and watched. They met at a bookstand, so I went and talked
nicely to her. I didn’t
let her know I was his wife. She told me she had three children also. I have
even had her children in my home when she could not cope!”
Her daughter added her own story:
“I
cried for months when the father of my son married her, but I’ve
learned to forgive.”
But the woman in distress would
not be quieted. What could she do? He had another woman! There were many
discussions during the next few days as the women sat for hours at a time,
analyzing what options were open when their common-law husbands moved on to the
next woman. Would they remain faithful themselves? Should they find another,
take revenge, or move out of the community?
Immorality creates poverty by
generating bitterness, jealousy, insecurity, family disorganization, hatred,
and murder. It is difficult for a man adequately to support more than one
family. When relationships have been destroyed and broken, it is difficult for
the children to learn how to relate to any form of authority, or develop the
management skills necessary for many jobs.
Personal sins help create poverty.
Poverty, in turn, provides an environment for personal sin. This kind of
poverty is only transformed by a gospel and a discipleship that enables people
to be freed from these sins.
The dependent poor
Of course, not all poverty is
related to personal sin. The words ebyon and dal describe another
kind of poor. Ebyon
is the designation of the person who finds himself
begging: the needy, the dependent.
Job indicates the appropriate
response to these ebyon when he describes his personal identification
with those in need:
“I
was eyes to the blind and feet to the lame. I was father to the poor (ebyon)
and I searched out the cause of him whom I did not know”
(Job 29:15–16).
Job’s
response was the only possible response we could give when we met a deaf and
dumb stowaway. We had parked a borrowed jeep downtown after transporting some
people back to Manila from a conference. It was late, but the crowds continued
hustling and bustling. A boy in ragged clothes indicated he would watch our
jeep for us and make sure that no one stole it. We nodded agreement, knowing
that for many boys this was their only income.
On returning, we gave him a
peso for his trouble. He signaled his thanks, but seemed strangely silent.
He went and sat down again in the shop doorway.
I got into the driver’s
seat, but the compassion of Christ would not let me start the jeep.
“Do
you think he’s
deaf?”
I asked my companion, a social worker.
She nodded. I sat and thought. How
could I return home to my luxury and leave one in such destitution?
“Let’s
go talk with him.”
I said suddenly, leaping out of the jeep and squatting beside him. I tried
speaking, but he just nodded his head. Fortunately, my companion had some
training in sign language.
“I
came from Cebu (a city on an island south of Manila),”
the boy signed to us.
“I
stowed away on a boat. It travelled three days and three nights. I arrived in
Manila with three pesos in my pocket.”
The signs were accompanied with
fear and hope. My friend translated them into English.
“Why
did you leave home?”
I asked.
“Why
did you leave home?”
she signed.
He nodded and with great rapidity
of hand action explained.
“They
always used to laugh at me. My father used to beat me because I was deaf.”
She translated. I nodded.
“Where
do you live?”
she signed.
His home was a six-by-three-foot
packing case, slotted among the others by the river.
I knew about a restaurant in the
park that was staffed by people from a school for the deaf. We signed to him
that we would meet him the next day and take him there. Eventually, he began
attending a school for the deaf run by some fine Catholic laymen. Some years
later, I heard that he was successfully working as a chicken farmer.
This type of poverty is not caused
by sin; it is poverty caused by natural calamity. It is of these poor that Jesus
spoke when answering the query of John the Baptist (“Are
you he who is to come, or shall we look for another?”):
The blind receive their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, and the deaf
hear....”
(Matthew 11:3–4).
Jesus also describes them quoting
Deuteronomy 15:11:
For the poor (ebyon)
will never cease out of the land, therefore I command you.
“You
shall open wide your hand to your brother, to the needy (ebyon)
and to the poor (ani) in the land.”
It is to these ebyon that God’s
kingdom brings healing and socio-economic uplift.
Too frail to work
“Oy,
Kumusta?”
(How are you?) I asked.
“How’s
your job-hunting going?”
She smiled sadly and answered.
“I
can’t
take a job.”
“Oh,
why is that?”
She had studied in the same class as Coring, who was typing for me at the
plywood table of my kitchen-cum-office.
“I’m
too weak. I cannot work five days a week, so I cannot take a job.”
She looked away from my eyes, staring at the drawn-back sack that acted as a
curtain.
I felt something of the sorrow God
must feel for such people. Who would rescue these poor? Poverty is frailty and
weakness. In Hebrew the root word is dal. This word is connected with
the word dallah. the
“class
of the poor.”
The Old Testament (2 Kings 24:14)
describes the poorest in the land who were left behind during the exile to
Babylon.
Jeremiah (5:4) tells us that these
poor ones were looked down upon, while Job (20:19) tells us that they are easily
crushed and abandoned, without the means to recover from loss or calamity.
These dal are blessed in
the kingdom. In the song of Hannah we read:
“He
raises the frail poor (dal) from the dust. He lifts
the needy (ebyon) from the ash heap to make them sit with
princes and inherit a seat of honor”
(1 Samuel 2:8).
Husband of widows
Widows also fall into this
category of those made poor by calamity.
Quietness stole softly over the
slum, replacing the cacophony of the sound of a thousand people crowded into
their plywood homes. The moon and the stars silhouetted the patchwork of old
tires holding down the roofs from typhoons. It was midnight, the hour for quiet
prayer.
My heart ached for the situation
of the widow next door. She had been kind to me. My thoughts and eyes sought out
the houses of other poor widows. I thought of the rice they’d
cooked that night for their children, some without fish, meat, or vegetables.
Suddenly. I realized,
“Lord,
if you are the father of orphans, surely that makes you the husband of widows!
They are especially yours!”
I began to pray for ways to help
these women. They were poor through no sin of their own, nor even the sin of
others. Their circumstances had simply happened. And so God takes
responsibility for them:
‘The
Lord watches over the sojourners. He upholds the widow and the fatherless”
(Psalm 146:9). We, too, are to incarnate his love amongst these
dallah.
Children of sweat
Children, too, are important to
Jesus. They also belong among the frail and the weak—the dallah. How can
one help but love children? As I walked down the back paths into the community,
I would hear cries of
“Kuya
Viv! Kuya Viv!”
(“Big
brother Viv!”).
Small children would laughingly greet me all the way, until I reached my own
house. Often we would play games together.
There is a Tagalog phrase,
“anak-pawis,”
which means
“child
of sweat”
or “child
of poverty.”
Ninety-two percent of children in the slums and 87% of the total population in
the Philippines suffer from intestinal parasites. Sixty-nine percent of Filipino
children under six years of age are in various stages of protein calorie
malnutrition. A further 45% of them have first-degree malnutrition, meaning they
are 10–24%
below their standard weight.
Indelibly lined in my mind is the
memory of a friend, holding in her arms a little child with swollen stomach,
spindly arms, swollen head. He was sick and retching constantly. She tried to
comfort him while telling me that when his father came home, she would get some
money for medicine. I knew he had no money to bring her. On the mat slept five
of her other eleven children.
John the Apostle said:
“If
anyone has the world’s
goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him. How does
God’s
love abide in him?”
(I John 3:17).
Poverty is dispossession
There is yet another cause of
poverty beyond the realm of personal sin and the calamities of life. This is
poverty caused by the sins of the rich, the leaders of a people, or the
oppression of a conquering nation. Two Hebrew words are related to this: rush
and ani.
Rush
means
“the
dispossessed poor, the impoverished.”
Such is the poverty of the tenant farmers forced off their lands to make way for
the multinational sugar and banana plantations, or because of unfair land
reform.
Proverbs 13:23 tells us:
“The
fallow ground of the poor yields much food, but it is swept away through
injustice.”
Many squatters come to Manila because their livelihoods have been swept away by
injustice. This is essentially a passive phenomenon. It is the people being
disinherited: first in the province, then in the city.
God looks for an intercessor who
will seek justice for these poor:
“But
this is a people robbed and plundered . . . they have become a prey with none to
rescue, a spoil with none to say
‘restore!’”
(Isaiah 42:22).
White slavery
The dispossessed also include
slaves. Aling Ada’s
daughter was taken by a syndicate that enslaves girls in drugs and
prostitution. These syndicates of
“white
slavery,”
as it is called, jail girls in barred houses and force them into prostitution.
After a few years, the girls are not only physically but also emotionally
enslaved for life. Miraculously, Aling Ada’s
daughter escaped a week after she was abducted.
People refer to darkest Africa, or
General William Booth’s
“In
Darkest England.”
The tourist belts in the Asian cities can rightly be called darkest Asia.
As slum statistics are unmentioned
in the formal record books of Asian nations, so slavery is officially not spoken
of. In the provinces, recruiters tempt girls with offers of good jobs in Manila.
But upon reaching the city, they find themselves locked into these
“safe
houses”
from which there is no escape. Once forced into the trade, the desire and
ability to escape such a lifestyle goes. Few get out.6
Others are sold by employment
agencies to men in the Middle East, Italy, Japan, Hong Kong and elsewhere, often
under the guise of being waitresses or house girls.
Bangkok’s
population, for example, of 8.3 million includes a small army of 60.000 women,
mostly prostitutes, working out of 350 go-go bars. 130 massage parlors, and 100
dance halls.
Women who make the sex business
successful in Bangkok see few profits for themselves. Travel agents skin off
50% of the take, bars and brothels pocket most of the remainder, leaving
varying cuts from that share for the girls.
“We
are down to our last resource,”
says Karinina David, a professor of community development at the University of
the Philippines.
“Once
you sell your women and debase your culture, there is not much left.”
Amos pronounces God’s
judgment on a nation for the same sin:
Because they sell the righteous
for silver and the needy for a pair of shoes, they that trample the head of the
poor into the dust of the earth and turn aside the way of the afflicted (Amos
2:6–7).
God looks for women of commitment
who will give their lives to rescue these girls. Women who accept this
ministry must try to effect changes in the law to break the horrendous sale of
flesh that parades itself under the name of tourism. It is a dangerous task. Two
friends who tried to combat it at a government level were threatened so often
they gave up. Yet Proverbs 31:9 says to continue to
“open
your mouth, judge righteously, maintain the rights of the poor and needy.”
God looks for women who know that
he will be their protector, as he was for Amy Carmichael and her band of women
when they rescued temple prostitutes in India.
Who are the blessed poor?
The fifth Hebrew word used in the
Old Testament is ani and its derivative anaw which is the word
Jesus used when he talks of the blessed poor.
The root word means to bring low,
to afflict, to ravish, to violate or force. It is used for a whole range of
exercises in domination, such as when the people of Israel were afflicted by
their taskmasters in Egypt (Exodus 1:11–12).
It was used also to denote the response of humble dependence on God to such
oppression (Job 34:28; Psalms 34:6). The ani is one bowed down under
pressure, one occupying a lowly position, one who finds himself in a dependent
relationship. It means
“the
humble poor of Yahweh”
or “God’s
poor ones.”
People who are ani are not
contrasted with the rich, but with people of violence, oppressors who
“turn
aside justice from them”
(Amos 2:7), who rob the poor of their rights by making unjust laws and
publishing burdensome decrees (Isaiah 10:1–2).
Much of the poverty of Two-Thirds
World countries can be attributed to such causes. Several centuries of
iniquitous decrees by both the Spanish and the rich 400 families that rule the
Philippines have resulted in a society oppressed, afflicted, and impoverished.
These blessed poor, then, include
the needy (ebyon) and the frail (dal), the dispossessed (rush)
and those who lack (chaser). But within these categories, underlying
them is poverty caused by the ruthlessness of the powerful, who deny the rights
of the poor and do not respond to their calamities.
Is poverty blessed?
God rebels against poverty, for it
destroys his whole creation. Nowhere in the Bible is poverty an ideal, as it
became with later mystics. Nowhere is poverty glorified or romanticized. The
fact that the poor are sometimes, and with increasing frequency in the
scriptures, called righteous is not so much to their own credit. They are
righteous because their oppressors are so terribly unrighteous. The poor are
therefore righteous in comparison with the oppressor who withholds their
rights.
Nor are the poor blessed because
of their material lack or their economic class. This would ignore salvation by
grace and imply that salvation is given according to economic and sociological
status. Poverty is not blessed, but the poor are—those poor who become
disciples. The Beatitudes were spoken to Christ’s
disciples. They were truly
“the
poor of Yahweh.”
Because of their poverty, they trusted in God in a spirit of dependence. Matthew
5:3 (“Blessed
are the poor in spirit”)
and Luke 6:20 (“Blessed
are you poor”)
are both expressions of this idea.
The solution: discipleship
In summary, we may split the
causes of poverty into three main categories: poverty caused by personal sin
(chaser); poverty caused by calamity (ebyon and dal); and
poverty caused by oppression (ani, anaw and rush).
Discipleship changes the poverty
caused by personal sin. Membership in God’s
kingdom brings love, releases guilt, heals bitterness, and breaks the power of
drunkenness, immorality and gambling. It results in a new motivation for work;
our response to such poverty must be to live among the poor and preach the
gospel by deed and by word (see Chapter 9).
Discipleship changes the poverty
of the frail and the weak, for true disciples will aid the widows and
orphans, welcome the stranger and the refugee, and help the destitute. God’s
power can heal the blind and the deaf. Our response to such poverty is relief,
economic projects, and protection of the weak (see chapter 10).
Discipleship also changes poverty
caused by oppression, injustice, and exploitation. Disciples defend the
oppressed poor by bringing justice (see chapter 11).
In the context of poverty, the
gospel is a gospel both of judgment and of mercy. To the rich and oppressor it
is a message of judgment and woe, requiring repentance. As Jesus says:
Woe to you that are rich, for you
have received your consolation. Woe to you that are full now, for you shall
hunger. Woe to you that laugh now, for you shall mourn and weep (Luke 6:24–25).
But to the poor the gospel is a
message of hope, if they would but repent and believe:
Come to me, all who labor and are
heavy laden and I will give you rest... (Matthew 11:28).
To the poor, the gospel is a
message of blessing, both now and in the future:
Blessed are you poor, for yours
is the kingdom of God. Blessed are you that hunger now, for you shall
be satisfied. Blessed are you that weep now, for you shall laugh (Luke
6:20–21).
The poor receive the kingdom
gladly now. But there will come a day when all oppression will cease and the
unjust receive their dues. On that day, the poor will laugh and leap for joy,
for each will have his mansion. There will be no more pain, no more sorrow, no
more tears!
Blessed are you poor, for yours
is—and shall be—the kingdom of God!
Notes
1.For a fuller analysis, see Harvey L. Perkins.
The Poor and Oppressed: The Focus of Christian Participation in
Human. Development, Colleagues in Development: Bible Study Series,
Singapore, Christian Conference of Asia (mimeo-series, 1977 to
present). Also, Julio de Sta Ana,
Good News to the Poor, Geneva,
World Council of Churches, 1977.
2.Conrad Boerma,
“Rich
Man, Poor Man—and
The Bible”
SCM,
London 1979. Chapters 2 and 3 have a brief summary of the
themes in the Bible related to poverty including a brief contrast
between ptochos, the beggar, and penes, the industrious poor
man.
3.F. Landa Jocano, Slum as a Way of Life, University of the
Philippines Press, Quezon City, 1975, p 31.
4.Figure from a description of the Tatalon Estate Zonal Improvement
Project, furnished by the National Housing Authority, Quezon
City.
5.Donald Denise Decaesstecker, Impoverished Urban Filipino Families,
UST Press, Manila, 1978, p.126. An in-depth study of the
structure and problems of impoverished slum families in one of
Manila’s
slums.
6.F. Landa Jocano, op cit.,
chapter IX,
“Deviant
Females.”
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