Are Evangelicals Effective at Dealing with the Poor?

Feel free to chime in on this one.  We are going to try to understand evangelicals better.

This is kind of a funny project for me, since I identify myself as an evangelical.  I go to church with these folks.  And I study these people.  You’d think I’d have this figured out.

Well, this is what I do know: evangelicals are good at evangelism.

Granted, we have all probably run into a zealous evangelical or two somewhere in our life who awkwardly thrust a tract in our face or fired off personal questions about heaven and hell in the first sentence they ever addressed to us.  One might question the effectiveness of evangelistic efforts that make the Christian faith look as inviting as a colonoscopy.

But this has not been evangelicals’ main methodology.  Through a variety of other ways in the past couple of centuries, such as revivalism, evangelicals have been very effective in bringing others into their branch of Christianity.  Though evangelicals did not exist in any clear way in 1700, they now make up about a third of American society.  The vast majority of African Americans who have embraced Christianity in the last two centuries have come by way of evangelical churches.  During the last few decades, evangelical churches have been growing while mainline Protestant groups in the U.S. have been in decline.  In Africa, Asia and Latin America, the growth has been even more dramatic.  Evangelicals, particularly Pentecostals, have grown remarkably in China, South Korea, sub-Saharan Africa, Guatemala, Brazil and many other places.  Say what you will, evangelism has been very effective in these regions.

But let’s return to the question I’m kind of avoiding:  are evangelicals any good at dealing with the poor?

This is a more complicated question.  Here are a few different responses that I have come across:

A)  No.  Evangelicals mostly see the poor as people to be evangelized.  With a few exceptions, like the Sojourners crowd, white American evangelicals through the twentieth century looked with suspicion on anything that sounded like the “social gospel.”  And they looked with deeper suspicion upon any governmental programs aimed at the poor.   This “evangelism-only” impulse carried over into the missionary movement, so that Latino and African Christians in the last few decades have upbraided American evangelical missionaries for promoting a partial gospel that neglected issues of poverty.

B)   Yes.  Even though many evangelicals distanced themselves from social causes in the mid-twentieth century, there has been an upsurge of concern and activity since the 1970s.  Those Latino and African Christians who chided American evangelicals were evangelicals themselves, after all.  And no less of an evangelical icon than Billy Graham came on board with their theological arguments at the 1974 Lausanne Conference.  Since the 1960s, we have seen the growth of agencies like World Vision, Compassion International and Habitat for Humanity – organizations that were all founded by evangelicals and still receive the bulk of their support from evangelicals.  And evangelicals had always formed the backbone of older organizations directed toward the poor, such as the Salvation Army and rescue missions.

C) Not really.  Evangelicals often have good intentions, but their effectiveness is limited by an individualistic approach to poverty.  Thus evangelicals will send relief supplies to victims of earthquakes or hand out soccer balls on short-term mission trips, but these are temporary efforts that do little to address long-term systemic and structural issues of poverty.  Evangelicals need a theology that can address issues such as political inequities, class structures, economic systems and institutional racism.  Because they think individualistically and their theology is individualistic, evangelicals often don’t understand the role that structures and institutions play in poverty.

D)  Somewhat, but more indirectly than directly.  When evangelicalism, particularly Pentecostalism, spreads among the poor of the world, it instills certain behaviors among converts that have economic benefits.  Converts develop habits of self-discipline and are transformed in ways that order is brought to disorderly lives.  Evangelical Christianity provides hope for the future, which encourages and empowers its adherents to persevere through difficult economic situations.

There are more explanations, but that seems like a good place to start.

What do you think?

 

 

 

 

3 thoughts on “Are Evangelicals Effective at Dealing with the Poor?

  1. I tend to say no. I don’t think evangelicals are any more effective or interested than the rest of the population (and probably less so than their liberal cousins). I do think that there are limitations that bind their success in this area: namely, a complete misunderstanding or no desire to understand the “other.” There has been an epidemic of pride among evangelicalism for centuries. If we take the approach that colonialism took, then we are missing the mark and hurting more than helping. If, however, we can take the time to know- really know- the “other,” then there is hope to do some real good for the poor. Throwing money at them or voting for a policy are perhaps the most passive and ineffective ways of helping the poor. I think answer D most closely aligns with my thoughts. I think there are direct ways of loving people and that God can move powerfully through the evangelical is he/she is willing to love the poor instead of feeling sorry for them. Our guilt is not meant to guide our actions; our love is.

    • one more thing: mission with an agenda is troubling. we must love without any ulterior motives; without a sense that we must give them something that we have and they don’t; without a notion that they want to be like us; without a plan to “get something out of it.”

  2. I think that Evangelicalism is broad and it varies according to one’s tradition and background. Those who grew up in white suburban Post WWII American will be inclined to say no, because their experience does not reflect direct engagement with the poor, or at least one that is substantial. But those of us who come from more “blue-collar” working class, rural, or even inner-city evangelical churches-the seed beds of much of evangelicalism pre-WWII, the story is different. Churches such as the Salvation Army prove my point, as well as churches in my own denomination that never moved to the suburbs. Unfortunately, I don’t think we always hear such voices, because the money and power have been with suburban middle class evangelicals for the last 50 years, and they have typically presumed to speak for the whole of our great tradition.

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