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Conference lgp30::christian-perspective

Title:Discussions from a Christian Perspective
Notice:Prostitutes and tax collectors welcome!
Moderator:CSC32::J_CHRISTIE
Created:Mon Sep 17 1990
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1362
Total number of notes:61362

433.0. "Matthew 26:11" by MORO::BEELER_JE (Two stepin' wid' dogs) Mon Apr 13 1992 01:14

Matthew 26.11:  "For ye have the poor always with you"

I was really looking forward to more replies on note 428 in the  hopes
that  I  could  understand  more  about  this  passage.   Not  being a
"religious" person I may be way way off track here, but, to  date  you
people have been very understanding and patient with this reprobate of
a sinner ...  so ...  here goes ...

Let's assume that the word "poor" is all inclusive but  in  particular
that of "poor" with respect to material possessions.

As a dumb kid I went to war once ...  didn't  like  it  ...   but  the
"theory" of war has forever fascinated me.  In particular - will there
ever be an end to war?  I shudder at the words of Plato ...  "only the
dead have seen the end of war".

I once had the occasion to have dinner with the parents of my  dearest
friend  on the face of this earth ...  his parents are missionaries in
Central America for the Assembly of God.  I was hoping for  some  good
discussion  and asked a simple question:  "Will we ever see the end of
war?"

Much to my amazement there was no "preaching"  to  me  about  everyone
finding  Christ or anything like that.  Their answer was simple and to
the point:  "As long as there are the 'haves' and the  'have-nots'  we
will have war".

That floored me.  After some cursory thinking - they were  right!   Of
all  the  major wars the 'bottom line' was simple - you got it, I want
it, I'll take it by force.

Bummer.  Now, I read the passage from Matthew and find that the "poor"
will *always* be with us.

Is this telling me something that I really don't want to hear?   Am  I
way off base with the intent of this passage?  Do you see what bothers
me about this?

Thanks, and, forgive me if I'm looking like a fool.

Bubba
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433.1RUBY::PAY$FRETTSUranus+Neptune/the new physicsMon Apr 13 1992 09:425
    
    You're not looking like a fool at all Bubba.  Your's is a very
    thought provoking question.
    
    Carole
433.2My own two cents worthJURAN::VALENZALife's good, but not fair at all.Mon Apr 13 1992 10:1524
    I think you have to read the passage in context.  The complete sentence
    reads, "For you always have the poor with you, but you will not always
    have me."  Regarding the implications of this passage for our
    obligations to the poor, I don't think it means that Jesus was trying
    to discourage the Mother Theresas of the world.  It seems to me that,
    far from telling the apostles that they did not have any responsibility
    for the poor, he was in fact saying just the opposite; the passage
    certainly implied that this obligation was an ongoing responsibility. 
    Jesus noted that, at that particular time, he had some specific needs
    that legitimately needed to be addressed.  The ongoing obligation to
    the poor would continue after he was gone.  It doesn't seem to me that
    Jesus was making any sort of prophetic pronouncement about some
    allegedly preordained fate of the poor until the end of time as much as
    he was pointing out that his specific need at that instant did not
    prevent others from carrying out their ongoing responsibility to the
    poor at other times after he was gone.  

    One way of paraphrasing my understanding of that passage would be, "You
    have plenty of other opportunities to help the poor.  Just this once,
    though, I have a specific need.  Continue doing those things for the
    poor after I have gone."  That doesn't mean, to me anyway, that there
    will *necessarily* always be poor people.
    
    -- Mike
433.3FLOWER::HILDEBRANTI'm the NRAMon Apr 13 1992 13:005
    Re: .2
    
    Thats my understanding too.
    
    Marc H.
433.4CSC32::J_CHRISTIEPeace: the Final FrontierMon Apr 13 1992 19:0222
Bubba .0,

	I, too, get the sense that Jesus was saying, "The poor will be
will you long after I am gone.  This once, celebrate my presence with
you.  There will be plenty of opportunities to help the poor when I'm no
longer with you."

	Your friend is right.  A large part of war is rooted in greed,
though war is practically never defined as such.  The truth is often
overshadowed by patriotic rhetoric, flag-waving, trumped-up moral
imperatives, and proclamations of divine destiny and will.

	Note 275.10 and others such as 180.40 may help provide some
insight.

	Incidentally, you've raised an interesting parallel in my mind.
Just as some use, "The poor you shall always have with you," to perpetuate
an attitude of inevitability, some use the phrase, "There will be wars and
rumors of wars," to excuse the existence of war.

Peace,
Richard
433.5SA1794::SEABURYMZen: It's Not What You ThinkTue Apr 14 1992 00:3130
 
    So what kind of poor people are we talking about, the financially
  poor or the spiritually poor ?  I think it would be possible to
  eliminate poverty in the materialistic sense and still have loads
  of poor people around. I know a few people who want for nothing and
  are quite miserable. In a way they are they are worse off than than
  those who are materially poor. There are concrete steps that can
  be taken to help the materially poor. A job, food, decent housing
  are all things that can be done to help alleviate their poverty.
    What do you do about the spiritually poor ? Evangelize them ?
  Well, some take that approach. Befriend them ? That might not be a
  bad idea either. 
    The age groups with highest suicide rates in the US are teenagers
  and the elderly. I have read that those in these groups who do kill
  themselves are seldom "poor" in the financial sense. They tend to
  be spiritually poor. They are lonely, alienated and lacking a support
  network of family and friends. 
     I think that living in a materialistic society we tend to view
  poverty in materialistic way. Actually those who I think are the
  most desperately poor are those who find life so meaningless that
  they no longer wish to live. That the spiritually poor might always 
  be with us is strikes me as far more depressing thought than the
  financially poor always being with us.

                                                               Mike 
      
     
     
    
433.6Depends upon your glasses ...MORO::BEELER_JETwo stepin' wid' dogsTue Apr 14 1992 02:5218
.5> So what kind of poor people are we talking about, the financially
.5> poor or the spiritually poor?

You know, Mike, when I wrote the base note I was making particular
reference to the materially "poor" for my thesis on the future of
this dastardly activity called "war".  I was wrong in limiting my
perspective for there are most assuredly those who would feel that
their neighbor is perhaps spiritually poor and ... should be at
a minimum conquered so as to inflict *their* brand of spirituality
on their neighbor.  Not too distant from us fine upstanding folk
who deemed it necessary to bring the heathen Indians to the ways
of God ... they did not come easily so we killed a few along the
way.

Poor is poor - any way you cut it and it most ASSUREDLY depends upon
the glasses upon which you look at your neighbor.

Bubba
433.7If you could give just one thing to the poorCSC32::J_CHRISTIEPeace: the Final FrontierTue Apr 14 1992 16:429
	I have to agree with Mike and Jerry.  I was once asked if I could
give just one thing to the poor, what it would be.  To my own enlightenment and
my own amazement, my answer spilled from my lips in a single word:  hope.
I would give the poor a motivation for living, a reason to rise from
resignation, a belief that the future holds something important for them.
Without hope, all the rest really doesn't hold much meaning, it seems.

Peace,
Richard
433.8CSC32::J_CHRISTIEPeace: the Final FrontierTue Apr 14 1992 19:0216
	"People of faith and churches within the United States bear
significant responsibility for the present crises of poverty, militarism,
and environmental decay.  The triumphalism that greeted the Gulf War,
the predominant position of the National Security State Establishment
within U.S. society, the so-called new world order based on poverty,
militarism and environmental bankruptcy are possible in part because
as individuals and as churches we have been assimilated into a
dominating culture that clashes sharply with authentic Christian
values.  'The dominant values of American life,' writes Marcus Borg
'-- affluence, achievement, appearance, power, competition, consumption,
individualism -- are vastly different from anything recognizably
Christian.  As individuals and as a culture...., our existance has
become massively idolatrous.'"

				- Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer
				"Brave New World Order"
433.9HEFTY::SEABURYMZen: It's Not What You ThinkTue Apr 14 1992 23:3519
    
      Jerry:
    
             Actually I was thinking of something my mother once told
      me about how she never realized that she came from a poor family
      when she was growing up. There may not have been much to eat and
      they didn't usually have a nice place to live, but there was love
      and support. When times were good her family shared the surplus.
      When times were bad they all did with a little less. Were they 
      "poor" ? Not by the way I measure poor.
              On the other hand my next door neighbor's son killed
       himself this last Fall. A nice middle class family where no
       one gets along with each other. Twenty years old and he
       couldn't find anything worth living for. Are they well off ?
       Not by the way I measure well off. So, I guess you are right.
       It all depends on what kind of glasses you are looking through.
                            
          
                                                               Mike
433.10Yes, probably always...LJOHUB::NSMITHrises up with eagle wingsWed Apr 15 1992 10:2712
    
    As long as there are sinful individuals, sinful systems, and
    pathologically criminal individuals (who sometimes get into power),
    I don't see how we can avoid having both the poor and war.  That, it
    seems to me, is reality.  
    
    But we are still called to work for peace and for economic justice.
    That's part of the work of bringing in the Kingdom and being the salt
    of the earth.  Imagine how much worse things would be if we all gave
    up on social and political (as well as individual) change!
    
    Nancy
433.11re: .7OLDTMR::FRANCEYUSS SECG dtn 223-5427 pko3-1/d18Wed Apr 15 1992 19:478
    RE: .7
    
    Thank you for your message.
    
    	Shalokm,
    
    	Ron