Charity and Christianity are married. Charity did not have
its origin in the world of antiquity as sometimes alleged:
·
Plato (427-327 BC) said that a poor man (usually
a slave) was who was no longer able to work because of sickness should be left
to die. He even praised Aesculapius, the famous Greek physican, for not
prescribing medicine to those he knew were preoccupied with their illness
(Republic 3.406d – 410a). The Roman philosopher Plautus (254 – 184 BC) argued,
“You do a beggar bad service by giving him food and drink; you lose what you
give and prolong his life for more misery” (Trinummus 2.338-39) Thucydides (ca.
460-44 BC), the honored historian of ancient Greece, cites an example of the
plague that struck Athens during the Peloponnesian War in 430 BC. Many of the
sick and dying of the
Athenians were deserted. (Alvin Schmidt, How
Christianity Changed the World, 128-29)
The Romans did the same until they were shamed into changing
their ways by the behavior of Christian who took in their sick. This inspired
their enemy, Emperor Julian the Apostate to say:
·
The impious Galileans relieve both their own
poor and ours…It is shameful that ours should be so destitute of assistance. (Epistles of Julian, 49)
With the advent of Christianity came:
·
Hospitals
and asylums and refuges for the sick, the miserable and the afflicted grow like
heaven-bedewed blossoms in its path. Woman, whose equality with man Plato
considered a sure mark of social disorganization, has been elevated; slavery
has been driven from civilized ground; literacy has been given by Christian
missionaries, under the influence of the Bible. (“The Works of Benjamin B.
Warfield”)
We are forgetful of
Christ’s contributions. Schmidt reveals that,
·
In the United States
the spirit of charity in voluntary associations is greater among church members
than among those who are not. According to a nationwide study conducted in
1987. Those belonging to Christian churches also give more financially to
nonchurch charities, and they give a higher proportion of their income to such
charities. (137)
Schmidt claims that
this is the heritage of several hundred years of vigorous church preaching on
charity:
·
With
these early American precedents, it is not surprising that astute foreign
observers noted that the United States has, virtually from its inception, been
a shining example of a charity-minded country…When Alexis de Tocqueville
visited the United States in 1831, he astutely observed: “If an accident
happens on the highway, everybody hastens to help the sufferer; if some great
and sudden calamity befalls a family, the purses of a thousand strangers are at
once willingly opened and small but numerous donations pour in to relieve their
distress.” (138)
In the 1890’s, Amos Warner identified the churches as “the
most powerful agent in inducing people to give.” Even as late as the 1940’s,
Gunnar Myrdal remarked:
·
“No country has so many cheerful givers as America.” He
attributed this cheerful giving, or “Christian neighborliness,” as he called
it, to the “influence of the churches.” (138)
Historically, charity and Jesus are inseparable. In The Charity Organization Movement in the
United States, Frank Dekker Watson concluded that:
·
It is difficult to understand the great influence
that charity exerted on the acts of man unless one realizes how religion,
especially Christianity, has reinforced by its teachings the instinct of
sympathy and altruism. (12)
Schmidt claims that this “cheerful giving” is still among us
to some degree:
·
The amount that they gave to the poor and needy
in 1991 amounted to $650 per American household. And in 1998 American church
members contributed more than $24 billion to their churches, amounting to $408
per member.
What has given the West its incredible vision and vitality?
Carlton Hayes states,
·
From the wellsprings of Christian compassion our
Western civilization has drawn its inspiration, and its sense of duty, for
feeding the poor, giving drink to the thirsty, looking after the homeless… (Christianity and Western Civilization, 56)
Schmidt writes that before the advent of Christianity there
were “no established medical institutions for nursing and ministering to the
general populace”:
·
As the growth of hospitals spread across the
nation, it was predominantly local churches and Christian denominations that
built them…[However], the Christian identity and background of many American
hospitals is now being erased.
·
The physician and medical historian Fielding
Garrison once remarked, “The chief glory of medieval medicine was undoubtedly
in the organization of hospitals and sick nursing, which had its organization
in the teachings of Christ.” Thus, whether it was establish hospitals, creating
mental institutions, professionalizing medical nursing, or founding the Red
Cross, the teachings of Christ lie behind all of these humanitarian
achievements. It is an astonishing mystery that the Greeks, who built large
temples…never built any hospitals. (166-67
The same was true for Rome,
prompting historian Philip Schaff to conclude, “The old Roman world was a world
without charity.” Schmidt therefore concludes,
·
Every time that charity and compassion are seen
in operation, the credit goes to Jesus Christ. It is he who inspired his early
followers to give and to help the unfortunate, regardless of their race,
religion, class or nationality. (148)
Historian and physician Fielding Garrison recognized that
“the credit of ministering to human suffering on an extended scale belongs to
Christianity.” (In Introduction of the
History of Medicine, 118).
Today, we credit secularists with compassion. However,
Sociologist Alvin Schmidt reminds us that they “had grown up under the
two-thousand-year-old umbrella of Christianity’s compassionate influence”
(131). Likewise, Josiah Stamp claims:
·
Christian ideals have permeated society until
non-Christians, who claim to live a “decent life” without religion, have
forgotten the origin of the very content and context of their “decency.” (Christianity and Economics, 69)
Secularists are quick to claim these successes for
themselves. However, historian Rodney Stark contradicts their assessment:
·
Rather, the West is said to have surged ahead
precisely as it overcame religious barriers…Nonsense, The success of the West,
including the rise of science, rested entirely on religious foundations, and
the people who brought it about were devout Christians.” (“The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and
Western Success,” xi)
Indeed, we find a direct connection between the moral rise
of the West and the teachings of the Bible:
·
Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and
dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness
and patience. 13Bear with each other and forgive whatever
grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. (Col. 3:12-13)
As we see Christian values continue to erode,
we should also expect to see the erosion of everything based upon these values
– relationships, trust, cooperation, diligence, business and even science. The
crimes and financial scandals of today may look like nursery games
compared to those of tomorrow.
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