Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Why God Gets Angry

“When you see God getting angry in the Bible, it’s often because the poor are being mistreated.” These are the words of Matthew Desmond in the August issue of Sojourners magazine (see here).

Over the years I have written about poverty several times on this blog, but reading the Sojourners’ interview with Desmond spurred me to post here again about that troubling topic.*1

Matthew Desmond is a sociology professor at Princeton University. His first book was the Pulitzer Prize-winning Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City (2016). His new book, Poverty, by America, was released in March. I was highly impressed by what I read in both books. 

In introducing their interview with Desmond (b. 1979/80), the editors of Sojourners note that he “is the son of a pastor, and his work is rich with spiritual metaphor and flare while founded in the material realities of poverty and the conditions that cause it.”

Indeed, rather than an outside academic studying the problem of poverty from the “ivory tower,” Desmond did his research by living among the poor for extended periods of time, becoming friends with those suffering from the many perils of poverty.

Interviewer Mitchell Atencio began by asking Desmond to comment on Gustavo Gutiérrez’s depiction of poverty.

The Peruvian liberation theologian defined poverty as “premature and unjust death,” and stated that “the poor person is someone who is treated as a non-person, someone who is considered insignificant from an economic, political, and cultural point of view.”*2

Desmond agreed, noting that “one of the leading causes of death in the United States is poverty.” For that and other reasons, Desmond declares, “I want to end poverty. I don’t want to treat it, I want to cure it. I don’t want to reduce it, I want to abolish it.”

Accordingly, he challenges his readers to join him in becoming “poverty abolitionists.”*3

The abolitionist movement was the name of the long struggle for the eradication of the enslavement of human beings mostly to do manual labor without pay.

There have also long been attempts to abolish capital punishment. The Death Penalty Information Center has a webpage titled The Abolitionist Movement, and it is, of course, about the history of attempts to abolish the death penalty.

Some people are seeking to abolish abortion. For example, the “Abolition of Abortion in Missouri Act” was introduced to the Missouri Senate last year.

Little has been said, though, about the abolition of poverty. There was, of course, “the war on poverty” launched by President Johnson in 1964. Although opposed by GOP politicians from the beginning, some positive steps to reduce poverty were made. But it soon began to lose effectiveness.

Accordingly, early in 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr., started the Poor People's Campaign to address what he saw as the shortcomings of the war on poverty—and his trip to Memphis where he was assassinated in April was not to struggle against racism as such, but to protest against poverty.*4

Desmond’s call for a new abolitionist movement is something that we need to take seriously. That is so for all people of goodwill and especially true for those of us who are Christians, or Jews, and take our Scripture seriously.

Reflecting on what Desmond said about why God gets angry, consider the words of the Old Testament prophets speaking for God in judgment on those who are wealthy and mistreating or neglecting the poor, words, for example, found in Isaiah 1:11~17, Ezekiel 22:29~31, and Amos 2:6-7a, 4:1-2.

If we are going to work to abolish poverty, we must work toward ridding our neighborhoods, and our churches, of segregation—not of racial segregation so much as economic segregation. Most of our neighborhoods and churches now have far more of the latter than the former.

As Desmond says, “Segregation poisons our minds and souls. When affluents live, work, play, and worship mainly alongside fellow affluents, they can grow insular, quite literally forgetting the poor.” (Poverty, p. 162).

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*1 My May 20, 2015, blog article was titled “The Culture of Poverty,” and it has been one of my most accessed blog posts with over 3,000 pageviews.

*2 “50 years later, Gustavo Gutiérrez’s ‘A Theology of Liberation’ remains prophetic” is the title of an informative 8/17/23 article in America (the Jesuit review of faith and culture) about Gutiérrez and his ground-breaking book first published in English in 1973.

*3 How to Be a Poverty Abolitionist: On Matthew Desmond’s ‘Poverty, by America’” is an excellent review of Desmond’s book published on March 21 by the Los Angeles Review of Books.

*4 In 2018, William Barber II launched the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for a Moral Revival, seeking to complete what King started 50 years earlier. (See my May 5, 2018, blog post: “Can a Barber do what a King couldn’t?”.)

16 comments:

  1. The morning after a holiday weekend is probably not a good time to post new blog articles. I say that because there have been only three responses so far this morning, and the number of pageviews is lower than usual also. I hope that is because of the timing rather than because people are not interested in the important topic I addressed in today's post.

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  2. The first comments received this morning were in an email I received from local Thinking Friend David Nelson before 7 a.m. He wrote,

    "Thanks for highlighting this terrible reality of poverty. Perhaps instead of struggling to eliminate poverty we could dedicate ourselves to restoring the beloved community where all people are safe, housed, food secure, and cherished. I remain more motivated by positive possibilities than fixing what’s broken. Building a better future gives us a mission that is empowering and possible."

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    1. Thanks, David, for reading my blog post and sending comments early this morning. I'm not sure, though, what you meant by "instead." If ALL people are "safe, housed, food secure, and cherished," poverty would, indeed be abolished. And if poverty were abolished, that would be a significant move toward establishing the beloved community you desire.

      As you know well, building the beloved community was a large part of the dream of MLK, Jr. But the abolition of slavery was first, and what was done in those first few years after the Civil War ended was extremely important. But the work to build the beloved community goes on. I think it is much the same in the effort to abolish poverty in this country--and around the globe. A beloved community for all cannot be formed as long as there are some who are still shackled by poverty,

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  3. Next, I received these comments received from Thinking Friend Eric Dollard in Chicago:

    "Thanks, Leroy, for sharing your thoughts about poverty in America.

    "The latest issue (Sept 4-11) of The Nation has a review of Desmond's book, in which Desmond challenges some of the myths about poverty. It comes highly recommended, so I should definitely try to get my hands on a copy.

    "America has sufficient wealth to eliminate poverty, but powerful and wealthy persons are generally opposed to this because they would have to pay higher taxes. There is also the racial dimension as many poor and middle-class whites do not want people of color to succeed financially as success by people of color undermines their views of white superiority. Of course, no race is superior and money is a false measure of success. Nonetheless, there is ultimately no legitimate excuse for poverty in America."

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    1. Thanks, for sharing this information about the review of Desmond's book in The Nation. (I used to subscribe to that fine magazine, but gave it up because of the over-abundance of reading material.)

      Your second paragraph reminded me of these words in Desmond's book: "The IRS now estimates that the United States loses more than $1 trillion a year in unpaid taxes, most of it owing to tax avoidance by multinational corporations and wealthy families. Congress hasn’t given the agency the resources it needs to hunt down tax criminals, leaving the IRS outgunned and outmatched" (p. 125). As you probably know, by the Inflation Reduction Act, Congress has appropriated $80 billion to go after tax cheats and evaders, which certainly seems like a legitimate thing to do--but the Republican legislators and the rightwing (MAGA) press has strongly opposed that effort.

      Desmond, Matthew. Poverty, by America (p. 287). Crown. Kindle Edition.

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  4. Then, these succinct words from Thinking Friend Glenn Hinson in Kentucky:

    "Thanks for that siren, Leroy. I hear it."

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  5. Another succinct email, this one from local Thinking Friend Ed Kail:

    Thanks, Leroy.

    Abolition — important work!

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    1. Thanks for reading and responding, Ed. I appreciate the work you do with MORE2 (Metro Organization for Racial and Economic Equality = MORE squared) here in Kansas City, dealing with issues being faced by many of the people in the area who are experiencing poverty.

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  6. Since you know Leroy that I came from a poor family, but I wouldn't say from Poverty.
    I have always tried in my own Humble way to support the poor, needy, orphans and widows; like our Bible says we should do.
    My Dear wife and I even set-up our Foundation to help&support All in need.
    I also wish our government would go after those individuals and corporations who don't pay or even avoid paying taxes.
    I commend you Leroy for bringing this disgusting situation back in focus and I would like to know what more I can do to help support the poor and needy.

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    1. Thanks, John Tim, for reading today's blog article and posting your comments on the blogsite. I am thankful for the ways you have been engaged in charitable giving through the years and all the good you have done because of that. Yes, it is always a problem to know just what we old men [for you who don't know, John Tim and I were both born in August 1938] can do to help support the poor and needy, but I think working to elect politicians who want to help the poor is one thing we can do. As I mentioned to Eric above, most of the Republican Senators and Representatives in D.C. don't support the increase for the IRS. Also, they want to cut back on government food assistance to the poor in the country. I don't know if that is something you can talk about with your friends/acquaintances where you are living, but political decisions make a lot of difference, for good or for ill, for those living in poverty. 

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  7. This afternoon I was happy to receive the following comments from Jamea Crum, who lives in Springfield, Mo.

    "I enjoyed reading this and wholeheartedly agree with your opinions. I also read and enjoyed the suggested blogs that you suggested, especially yours. The comment from Don Wideman caught my attention and took me back to Seminary days. He was my pastor. As I read his comments to your 5/20/15 blog, I could hear his slow-speaking voice and see his face: such a kind and gentle person. Thank you for including that in today’s feature.  

    "As a nurse of over 50 years, I have helped care for many who lived in poverty, especially in the Emergency Department and Operating Rooms in several hospitals. Many of those living in poverty had waited too long for a successful outcome due to the fact that they had no insurance, no money, and no understanding of health issues concerning their own bodies. I have seen them undertreated for these very reasons. I have seen them mistreated by policeman of our community. I have seen them talked badly about by some healthcare professionals.  

    "The same mistreatment occurs with those in other subgroups such as anyone with a foreign name/face and prisoners. I have always tried to focus my care of others as if they were a member of my family and how I would want them to be treated. I have also tried to remind myself that it was my privilege to be caring for ‘one of the least of these.’"

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    1. Thanks so much, Jamea, for your kind comments in your first paragraph and then for sharing your personal reflections regarding contact with people living in poverty from your work as a nurse. I greatly admire the way you have sought to treat others, guided by your faith in Jesus Christ.

      You also mentioned mistreated subgroups other than those who are poverty-stricken. It seems to me, though, that generally society now is more aware of the need to treat racially and ethnically minority people fairly than the need to treat those who are poor with more respect and understanding. In addition to LGBGQ people in some circles, the economically poor are now probably the most mistreated people in USAmerican society.

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  8. Long ago an article appeared in one of our SBC missions magazines highlighted by a quote from a man in poverty from Arkansas. He said, "Being poor ain't bad. It's just inconvenient." Since reading that article, I have been continually struck by the truth poverty may be seen as inconvenient if it is all you have ever known. If welfare is all you've known, it can become comfortable. If slavery is all you've known, it can become your general expectation. As a Christian I believe part of our responsibility is to change these expectations. That doesn't mean making everyone millionaires. It does mean we provide morally and legally correct ways for people to see there is a better way to live and we are there to help them obtain it.

    What can we do as individuals and a community? Our local community college is finding more ways to offer tuition free education to students. Support local thrift stores and food banks through donations and purchases. Churches can adopt families who have hit hard times through no fault of their own. Find ways of providing transportation to jobs. Make sure families who have bread winners in prison don't lose everything.

    Finally I have expressed previously my opinion of Rev. Barber. In spite of my opinion he thinks more of his public standing and influence than of the causes he represents, I am reminded of another quote from a television program many decades ago. The episode was about an organization seeking to raise money for a children's medical center. It's main spokesperson was also running for a public office. When a question was raised about the man's sincerity, one of the board members who had remained in the background made the comment, "Sometimes you have to have the grandstander to gain the greater good."

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    1. Thanks, Tom, for your comments, including the good concrete suggestions in your second paragraph about what we can do.

      That was an interesting statement in the first paragraph, but there is a difference between being poor, as in the lower middle class, and living in poverty. If you would read some of Desmond's 2016 book about his contact with the poverty-stricken people who were evicted from their homes, you would see that for such people being poor was far worse than just being inconvenient.

      I don't remember what you said earlier about Rev. Barber--and perhaps it was not regarding what I had written about him in previous blogs. But in addition to watching videos of him speaking, I went to hear him speak when he was in Kansas City a few years ago, and I have the highest regard for him. He does speak with a great deal of confidence, but I have not seen that as arrogant or self-serving.

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  9. Well, while you were wondering where we all were this morning, I was at the bookstore buying a new book my SS class decided to read starting next Sunday. When I say new, I mean officially released today. It is "The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy: and the Path to a Shared American Future" by Robert P. Jones. In the Prologue he examines the strength and weakness of the 1619 Project. Jones concludes that while 1619 was an important year, it was not even the first year with black slaves in what is now the United States (that was in 1526 on the Georgia-South Carolina border by Spain). Rather, he agrees with Charles C. Mann whose book "1493" is named after the critical year. Mann calls 1493 the year Columbus returned to the New World to establish "globalism." Jones looks behind that to another event in 1493, when in May Pope Alexander VI declared a key part of the Doctrine of Discovery, which intended to minimize European imperial conflicts, while maximizing imperial profits for both western nations and for the Roman Catholic Church. Basically, the Doctrine of Discovery means that native inhabitants of non-Christian lands have no rights. That Doctrine of Discovery echoes down through the centuries through both the US Constitution and even US Supreme Court decisions. Jones points to two books by Sioux scholar Vine Deloria Jr. with the "provocative" titles of "Custer Died for Your Sins" and "God Is Red." American history is so horrible that centuries of apologists right down to Gov. Ron DeSantis have been censoring history as much as possible.

    Of course, while pre-USA, the spirit of the Doctrine of Discovery goes back many centuries before Columbus, at least to Roman Emperor Constantine, who put the cross of Jesus on his soldiers' shields, and after marching off to victory thus protected, made the Roman Catholic Church the official religion of Rome, and soon moved on to banning all other religions. This led to the spectacle of church leaders such as Saint Augustine using violent suppression against not just non-Christians, but even on those declared by the Emperor through his bishops to be "heretics." A lot of theological battles were really about political power. One God, One Pope, One Emperor. Get those bothersome gnostics and such out of the way!

    So, yes, let us abolish poverty. We must, however, remember that there are powers that be which would rather make war on the poor than war on poverty. It is much easier and cheaper to send in the police to clear out a homeless encampment than it is to find decent housing for the houseless. So we destroy the tents and lean-tos that they had been calling home. Jesus had nowhere but a rock to rest His head, and the powers that be decided to kill Him after He called for the forgiveness of debts. In the Greco-Roman-American world, debts must be paid!

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    1. Craig, I'm sorry to be so slow in responding to your thoughtworthy comments. I started to respond yesterday, but I saw then that a link to an interview with Robert P. Jones yesterday was going to be available on YouTube today, so I waited until today so I could link to it. You may want to watch the video and/or recommend it to your Sunday School class. Here is the link:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6D80xxQtng

      I read Jones's first book and have some limited interaction with him on Facebook and in a webinar he spoke at. I wish I could be a part of the discussions your SS class will be having about his new book.

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