Updated 12:47 pm.EST, Sun November 22, 2009

Society|Thu, Apr. 02 2009 09:33 AM EDT

Faith, Anti-Poverty Leaders Want National Budget to Assist Poor

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

WASHINGTON – Christian leaders joined anti-poverty and policy experts Wednesday to urge the U.S. Congress to preserve the priorities within President Obama’s proposed national budget that would assist low-income and poor communities.

“A budget is a moral document,” said Jim Wallis, president of Sojourners – the largest network of progressive Christians in the nation – during a teleconference. “It reveals our priorities – who’s important, what’s important, [and] what’s a part of our agenda.”

For faith leaders across the political spectrum, Wallis noted, the issue of poverty has in recent years brought them together despite their differences. He added that for the “first time in a long time” the president’s budget does prioritize the needs of the poor.

“We want the faith community to make itself heard, to make its voice heard, to make its presence felt because we are going to be in the middle of this national debate about what our budget, our priority, what our agenda ought to be,” the well-known anti-poverty leader said.

President Obama’s budget proposes new measures to help low-income and poor communities such as providing universal health coverage, making temporary refundable tax credits primarily for low-income families with children permanent, offering more Pell grants for poor students to be educated, and investing in alternative energy sources that would create new jobs while helping the environmental problems, the speakers highlighted.

Federal budget expert Bob Greenstein, founder and executive director of the Center for Budget & Policy Priorities, said the cost for universal health care and other new proposals would be offset by closing “various unproductive tax loopholes.”

He said the budget actually reduces the deficit according to new analysis. Research shows, Greenstein said, that over a ten year period the deficit while being still “uncomfortably” high under the budget, would be a trillion dollars lower than if the government continued current policies.

“This [President’s] budget is quite different than previous budgets and it really would both devote resources and set priorities on a number of policy changes of vital importance to people living in poverty both in the United States and around the world,” Greenstein said.

World Vision president Richard Stearns, meanwhile, supports the President’s request to increase the foreign affairs budget by $4 billion. He explained that the total foreign affairs budget is $49 billion, and about $25 billion a year is spent on humanitarian assistance.

“The humanitarian portion is less than 1% of the federal budget and is equal to what we've given to the auto industry in the past few months,” Stearns highlighted.

Since January 2008, the total bailout and stimulus money has surpassed about 2 trillion dollars – an amount that could fund the humanitarian assistance budget for 80 years, Stearns noted.

“So in the context of these massive stimulus and bailout packages, the 4 billion increase that the president has requested is the equivalent of throwing a five cent tip into the tin cup of the world's poorest 2 billion people who are the most affected by the global economic crisis,” he said, stressing that humanitarian aid builds good relations abroad.

In the world today, about 1 billion, or 1 out of 6 people, are considered chronically hungry. About 24,000 people die everyday from hunger related causes. And 2 billion people live on $2 or less a day.

Ray Offenheiser, president of Oxfam America, noted during the media call that the past year has been very hard for the world’s poor countries, which faced a food crisis topped by a fuel crisis, financial crisis, global economic crisis, and likely in the near future an employment crisis.

Dave Donaldson, founder and president of the Christian humanitarian group Convoy of Hope, commented, "Jesus called upon us to care for the least of these. Many of our evangelical churches have cared the least and now there is a sea change.

“I'm seeing compassionate conservatives like myself that are looking to rebrand and expand the pro-life image to protect not only the child in the womb but the child fighting to survive in the slums.”

The World Bank estimates that 52 million more people have already fallen into poverty because of the global economic crisis. In the United States, the current economic recession threatens to push 10 million Americans into poverty.

The U.S. House is currently debating the President’s budget, which on Thursday is expected to be voted on.

“What happens to poor people is to us a matter of faith,” Sojourners’ Wallis said. “This is the moral authority of the faith community on the line here and we are getting behind to get poor people back on the agenda.”

At the end of April, Sojourners and partners will hold a large-scale event as part of their Mobilization to End Poverty initiative. On April 26-29, more than 1,000 faith leaders and activists will convene in Washington, D.C., to learn and share the vision of how to reduce poverty by half within 10 years both domestically and globally. President Obama has been invited to give a major address on poverty at the event, but he has not confirmed his decision as of yet.

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  • Wed Jul 08, 2009 12:55 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    where in the bible does it say that communism is bad and limited role of state is good?

  • Sat Apr 04, 2009 12:06 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    good old fashioned Christian charity by the State is an oxymoron. It violates God's design for the limited role of the State. Give it an inch beyond it's boundary and it soon wants a mile.

    Here's a question to ponder. Socialism began in America about 80 years ago. In Europe during the 1800s. It was a failure for the most part in France for many decades after their Revolution. How did we survive as a society from 1620 to 1930 without socialism? How did humanity survive without socialism for these past 6000 years?

    The State is now proposing to greatly restrict charitable contributions. Our state is becoming the monster that cursed the citizens of the USSR and Red China.

  • Fri Apr 03, 2009 10:19 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    If we truly want to bring Christian values into our government, then we must quit choosing between the DNC and the GOP, and find a third party. Both of these parties were once small, relatively powerless parties, but became one of the major players over time.
    Both of these parties are so heavily laden with special interest groups that citizens are lost in the traffic.
    I voted for the Constitution party in the presidential election because I could not trust either party nor their candidates. I realize I was overwhelmingly in the minority, but as a Christian I have grown accustomed to such a status. I believe if we stood in front of the Messiah and was asked why I voted for one of these two, that saying it was the lesser of two evils would be less than satisfactory. I only suggest that people investigate alternate political parties rather than accepting the status quo.

  • Fri Apr 03, 2009 9:21 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    When the sovereign spheres of church and family are doing all they can and there are still hungry children and people sleeping in the street, what is the harm of government providing charity similar to that of church or family?

    I want my government to exercise good old fashioned christian charity if the needs of the people are greater than what private resources can address. I expect compassion for the citizenry from my government when times are hard, otherwise, they have no real function other than defense and law enforcement. Addressing social needs is clearly something they should be doing, not to replace church and family, but to supplement them. It sthe christian thing to do.

    And I still resent the implication that anyone who needs charity at this time would squander and waste the money. That's such an ignorant stereotype. In this economic crisis average families like yours and mine are finding themselves in awful circumstances. We're losing half a million jobs a month - that's half a million working Americans suddenly without an income. Stores, warehouses, factories and other businesses are closing their doors. To fall back on ignorant stereotypes doesn't change the fact that most of these folks that are hurting are just like you and me. They have fallen on hard times, that's all and as christians, we should be looking to lift them up. And, we should welocome help from all quarters in doing it, even if that hand belongs to Uncle Sam.

  • Fri Apr 03, 2009 12:29 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    The socialist agenda fostered of Jim Wallis, et al is a form of communism and is totally incompatible with true Biblical teachings. The state is intruding on the sovereign spheres of the church and family'

    "London journalist Richard Spencer put it well two years ago in The Telegraph: "Christianity and communism are fundamentally incompatible-one a spiritual creed, the other materialist. Christianity lays down that a man's responsibility to his neighbour is personal, a matter for his individual conscience, while communism decrees that all duties are collective, to be enforced by the state."

    Spencer noted, "At first glance, communism may look like the fairer system, and Christianity the more selfish. In fact, of course, communism and its blood-brother, fascism, have been responsibleâ

  • Thu Apr 02, 2009 5:42 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I have to disagree with forsaltnlight's stereotyping of those who don't buy into his particular brand of christianity and beer drinking drug users. That's an awful, un-christian generalization.

    I don't remember Jesus providing a litmus test for those that would be the beneficiaries of our charity. He didn't say, "Help the poor, if..." "Tend to the sick, if..." He just commanded us to do it because it is what is right and it gives glory to God.

  • Thu Apr 02, 2009 5:37 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    There seems to be a misconception that because of teh separation of church and state our government cannot, nonetheless, operate in a moral manner towards it's citizens. Feeding the hungry, helping the sick and aiding the poor is a moral and ethical matter that our government can and should help with. Churches and charities cannot do it alone, especially in tough economic times like these. A President can still be guided to use the government's power to do what it right by his own moral convictions. The government doesn't have to be an arm of the church to act for the less fortunate as Christ would have us do.

  • Thu Apr 02, 2009 4:35 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    The reality of it is that there is a separation of church and state. Should we vote? Yes, just not as though there is a Christian alternative. Neither party is pro-life. Whether you support abortions or poverty by making the rich richer and the poor poorer. The founding fathers of this country intended from the beginning for a separation of church and state, and so it is. I voted for Obama because, I believe my heart was hardened to do so and he is the most logical choice when looking at things in a worldly matter. After all, voting is a matter of the world.

  • mike »
    Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:10 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    what happened to all those money the congregation give the church?

  • Thu Apr 02, 2009 12:29 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I will never understand why Christians today think they need the worlds help in doing what Jesus told us to do as a body. How can Christians support a person who in one hand condones killing unborn babies and on the other hand talks about concern for the poor families in this country? Makes no sense.Why not just, as the church, do as Jesus told us to do? Not expecting the government to do it for us.

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