Some have been offended and others confused when I use the term 'the deserving poor'. I'm not putting these people down, I'm simply calling it what it is; poverty that's deserved.
Is it true that Spectrum works with the 'deserving poor'? Yes.
Naturally some of Jesus doctrine on giving to the poor would have a Jewish spin on it. I think what our Lord pushed was helping the poor including the 'deserving poor.' Examples: The leper, the blind, the cripple, the orphaned, the widowed ... those who had little or no part in they're plight. These poor were not responsible for their plight. Those I would call the 'un-deserving' of their plight ... the 'un-deserving' poor.
However another perspective surfaces in Matthew 25 where Jesus does address the 'deserving' poor. 'Visiting those in prison.' Grace appears for the sinners ... those of us who are 'deserving' of our plight.
The Believer's love or compassion must never become affected by 'hairsplitting' legality! The Bible gives no list of do's or don'ts when it comes to helping the poor. A legal doctrine as to how, who, when, and where would simply rule out Grace! Of course we must at times make a judgment call, but always with the honest of motives ... always with the bottom line of grace. The grace we received, we return to others.
I personally help both the 'deserving poor' and the 'un-deserving poor' and I try to free myself of a judgmental attitude.
As to what I call the 'deserving' poor; I would define them as those who are like most of the poor Spectrum works with; people who are living out their own consequences. Most of these 'deserving poor' are where they are because they have made bad decisions; many are lazy or addicted to drugs. Thousands captured and content with their poverty-sub-culture and confirmed by the many well meaning American groups giving them food and clothing.
There is no way we can turn our hearts from the innocent children born into this kind of 'subculture.' Indeed they are 'un-deserving poor' learning the lifestyle of poverty.
In Mexico there is a saying "what I don't see doesn't exist." Even as Christians many of us have the same philosophy and we turn our eyes away from the ugly and uncomfortable truth.
The big question for us as true Christians ... does grace discriminate? The answer is simply no. The way I read it; to God we're all poor, wretched, blind sinners awaiting condemnation.
Enter, God's grace.
How I relate to the poor around me says something about my Christian maturity. If I'm eager to discriminate between the 'deserving poor' and 'un-deserving' poor! It sounds a bit like the bigot Lawyer asking Jesus. “ and who is my neighbor?' The motive behind that question was so clear!
Many who love to argue the issue never give a cent to charity anyway.
It's true that as Christians we must make good and responsible decisions when we are faced with helping the poor, but our response must be the result of a clean and godly motive.
I hope to go through life with a godly balance in meeting the needs of all poor, the deserving; the un-deserving alike, and when I err ... may I err on the side of grace.
God, release my grip on the money you give me to do the good it was intended to do.