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God's Politics

Diagnosing Our Economic Illness

by Brian McLaren 03-26-2009

Some might say that this is the worst possible time to have a Mobilization to End Poverty. A lot of people look at their retirement accounts and investment portfolios and feel that they’re experiencing downward mobility — so it’s not a great time for them to help others experience upward mobility.

But many of us realize the fact that we have retirement accounts and investments means that we are among the most fortunate, and that, having been given much, much is expected from us.

And equally important, we understand our current economic crises to be a set of symptoms. Our symptoms are obvious, but the as-yet largely unanswered question is: What’s the underlying disease that is creating our economic symptoms?

So our economy is in the emergency room, and the doctors are doing triage but they still haven’t reached a full diagnosis of the disease — or better said, the complex of diseases — with which our economy is afflicted. We, as people of faith in the God who proclaims good news to the poor, have every reason to suspect that a key element in our as-yet undiagnosed economic disorder is a failure to properly care for the poor.

We, people who believe in the God who identifies with the least of these, have every reason to believe that if you want to check the health of the economy, you begin by checking the blood pressure of the poor. If you want to treat our economic illness, you begin with those most weakened by poverty. If you want to measure improving health, you check the vital signs of the poor.

Others, driven by a different theology (or lack thereof), are prone to ignore the poor and measure the vital signs of the most prosperous only. If that mentality wins the day, we’ll end up treating high blood pressure with salt pills, or high blood sugar with candy bars, or lung cancer with cigarette smoke.

So … seeing where our neglect of the poor and our preferential option for the rich have gotten us, now is the time to recall the biblical teaching of the Jubilee. Now is the time to realize that if there truly is a God who cares about Lazarus sitting in the gutter in front of the mansions of the millionaires, then people of faith need to advocate for the needs of the poor.

Because I am one of those people of faith, because I believe in God’s preferential option for the poor, because I see the wisdom behind the biblical teaching of Jubilee, and because I believe that Jesus was speaking about economic justice in the story of the rich man and Lazarus, I’m honored to be part of the mobilization. I hope many, many more people will join us. There won’t be a better time than this to lead our nation toward a wise and compassionate engagement with poverty, or to help our nation and world understand that the only sustainable economy is an economy in which the least of these are re-deemed — or re-valued — in light of the compassion of our common Creator.

And I can’t think of a better time than now to reaffirm that our future must be better than our past when it comes to embodying the biblical call to do justice, show kindness, and walk humbly with the God who loves the poorest among us as much as the richest.

Brian McLarenBrian McLaren (brianmclaren.net) is a speaker and author, most recently of Everything Must Change and Finding Our Way Again.

Categories: Activism, Economics, Poverty
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  • justintime
    The myopia of purist libertarian free marketeers always comes to the surface when they use developing markets as examples for promoting irresponsible trade policy.
    Transferring poverty from one nation to another is not a cure for poverty.
    Do you think Americans should be living in dormitories over sweatshops and working for ten dollars a day ?
    What about our trade deficit with China?
    Do you think it's OK for China to own America's debt?
    Creating wealth?
    The wealth just disappears into off shore tax havens.
    Read Naomi Klein's book "THE SHOCK DOCTRINE: the Rise of Disaster Capitalism".
    Neoliberal trade policy is ruining the planet.

    I wonder what you do for a living, DITE.
    Hypocrisy?
    Hah!
  • DITE
    The hypocrisy of Liberals always comes to the surface when China is discussed. The Left likes to always be center stage when they are "raising awareness" for global poverty. But when a country significantly reduces their poverty rate without the Left's permission, well that just can't be acceptable

    China, India, much of Southeast Asia, and some of South America has once again proven that the cure for poverty is the creation of wealth -- not the transferring of wealth.
  • VXRider
    A first-time poster from 'Down Under' (New Zealand). I think something of an answer and insight into NgChen & Justintime's questions at the top of this thread is found in these words of the Brazilian archbishop Dom Helder Camara: "When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a Communist." Though I haven't properly read it, I believe further insight can be found in his short book "Spiral of Violence" which considers how systemic injustice drives disempowered folks to breaking point where they'll lash out in sheer desperation to have their case heard.
  • VXRider
    A first-time poster from 'Down Under' (New Zealand). I think something of an answer and insight into NgChen & Justintime's questions at the top of the comments thread is found in these words of the Brazilian archbishop Dom Helder Camara: "When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a Communist." Though I haven't properly read it, I believe further insight can be found in his short book "Spiral of Violence" which considers how systemic injustice drives disempowered folks to breaking point where they'll lash out in sheer desperation to have their case heard.
  • justintime
    What's your point,prk?

    Are you happy for the Chinese and sad for the American workers who lose their jobs to globalization?
    Do you think American workers should work for ten dollars a day and live in dormitories over sweatshops?
    What about our trade deficit with China?
    Do you think it's OK for China to own America's debt?
    Libertarianism makes you stupid.

    Read "China's Way Forward" by James Fallows"

    Idle factories, moored container ships, widespread bankruptcies, massive migration back to the hinterlands, strangely clean air—the signs of depression are everywhere in China. Because it makes so many of the goods the world isn’t buying now, China stands to be worse hit than the rest of the world —just as America was during the Depression, when it was the world’s sweatshop. But like America then, China will use tough times to design innovative products that will get it the high profits and the high-value jobs Americans kept to themselves for decades. And that is very bad news for the United States, unless it uses tough times to reinvent itself, too.

    http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200904/chinese-i...

    Fallows has been living in Beijing for several years, sending essays to Atlantic Monthly .
    His latest is an eye opener.
  • prk
    Warren,

    Would the past 20 years of trade with the Chinese count? A million people a month coming out of proverty. The most the world has ever known.

    prk
  • justintime
    That's a new one, Eric.
    Did you make it up yourself?

    Fortunately for America, the Bush crime syndicate didn't get as far as Hitler did with Germany -- not that they weren't trying.
    The putsch for a permanent Republican majority failed when America woke up just in time.
  • Eric77
    You forgot Bushitler.
  • PRK:
    I think what McLaren is saying is that what real success is "a low unemployment rate below 5% last year and having the highest rate of home ownership in our nations history" when our economic prosperity a) negatively effects the rest of the world and b) is not shared by the poor of this nation? As the poverty gap continues to grow and more and more people struggle to find housing and food, what real economic prosperity is it?
    In Matthew 25:31–46, Jesus makes no mention of nations being judged based on their status in the world as moral, "prosperous," having low unemployment rates, powerful or pious. What he does say is "Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; 35 for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, 36 I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me."

    "Any society, any nation, is judged on the basis of how it treats its weakest members -- the last, the least, the littlest."
    ~Cardinal Roger Mahony
  • justintime
    You're welcome.

    For decades, Robert Parry has been reporting on the dark side of American foreign and domestic policy and, along with Seymour Hirsch and others, has been covering what the corporate media won't touch.
    Check out his site:
    http://www.consortiumnews.com/

    For the best background on Bush family shenanigans, check out 'AMERICAN DYNASTY: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush' by former Republican and premier political historian, Kevin Phillips.
    Phillips has a new book out titled,
    'BAD MONEY: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism'
    If I had more time I would be reading this book.

    I too am hopeful about Obama's will to reverse the disastrous consequences of criminal acts and misgovernment by the Bush administration.

    However, I have great concern that his economic advisors, denizens of Wall Street themselves, are more interested in fixing Wall Street than changing the economy to ensure the best future for America and the planet.
  • KWR
    Thank you.

    I am very aware about the assault on the US Constitution and also some of
    the aspects of the first TARP bailout. I really appreciate your sending me
    the link to Robert Parry's report.

    I am very hopeful about Obama and what I believe to be his honest commitment
    to turning our country around.
  • justintime
    For an overview of the Bush crime syndicate, I recommend Robert Parry's reporting: http://www.alternet.org/story/68843/

    Also refer to the recently published report by the Red Cross concerning torture authorized by the Bush administration -- a war crime.

    I'm sure you have access to information on the Bush administration's assault on the US Constitution -- unwarranted wiretapping of Americans both here and abroad and the bogus 'unitary executive' powers claimed by Bush. Bush's vindictive outing of a covert CIA operative and lying to America to push America into war with Iraq are war crimes and acts of treason.

    Read your morning paper about the ongoing looting of the US Treasury, made possible by deregulation of US financial markets relentlessly pushed by conservative members of Congress and, in the first TARP bailout, the active complicity of the Bush administration.
    The Obama administration is trying to unwind the fiscal mess Bush left us with.

    Good luck on 'seeing the light'.
  • KWR
    I am no fan of the Bush administration and certainly want to see the light. Please refer me to unbaised sources that would substantiate your contention that the previous administration is 1) a "crime syndicate" and 2) "still looting the US treasury"
  • justintime
    I have no links for you today, DITE.
    First you have to want to see the light.
    Then if you could just let go of the libertarian free market dogma, get outside of your bubble, listen carefully and open your eyes, it's possible you might see the light.
    No guarantee though.
  • DITE
    "GOP corporate power elite" "feudalistic society" "kleptocratic Bush crime syndicate"

    I think you forgot "Bu$hCo" "Rethuglicans" "Comander and Chimp" and the word "cabal." Other than that you got the dailykos lingo down pretty well.

    I guess I haven't been paying attention. I'm sure you have a link to some random person's blog that will show me the light.
  • justintime
    No, prk,

    We're being punished for having elected the kleptocratic Bush crime syndicate -- not just once but twice.
    Even after we finally voted them out of office, they're still looting the US treasury.
    Have you been paying attention?
  • prk
    "We, as people of faith in the God who proclaims good news to the poor, have every reason to suspect that a key element in our as-yet undiagnosed economic disorder is a failure to properly care for the poor."

    So we are being punished for having a low unemployment rate below 5% last year and having the highest rate of home ownership in our nations history. Is that correct Brian?
  • justintime
    Remember Bush's 'ownership society'?
    If you got a problem, you own it.
  • justintime
    In these difficult times, the Republican base demonstrates its indifference to the suffering of the American middle class, formerly the backbone of America's prosperity.
    The middle class is now rapidly joining the ranks of the invisible poor.
    If it were up to the GOP corporate power elite, America would be a feudalistic society.
  • Ngchen
    Question: Of course caring for those less fortunate is very important. However, how does examining how they were/are treated help diagnose what's causing the current economic woes?
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