Christ_empowered
Member
I'm in the US, btw..."The Bible Belt," no less (1,000 miles wide, 1 inch deep). I was poor. Without my parents, I'd be another statistics--destroyed by shrinks, then counted as a casualty of "mental illness" or "poor life choices."
Anyway, I get that poor people aren't exactly super popular anywhere. The Bible, particularly the OT, speaks to this. A rich man has many friends; a poor man loses all his. I think that's Proverbs.
What I don't get is the demonization of the poor, how it's such a stigma to be anything less than middle class in a country where lots of people now have to rely on some government assistance just to make ends meet. Isn't is strange? In a country where more and more and more people are poor--including people who were once in the semi-sacred "Middle class"--the poor are increasingly demonized. We/they (I don't know how to categorize myself--mentally ill ne'er do wells don't really fit in the social class system, I guess) are the object of incredible scorn and derision.
We'll "Keep up with Kardashians," watch Hollywood plastic surgeons, talk about the latest celebrity gossip, maybe every now and then have a meaningful convo about war, but we can't/won't/don't sit down and talk about that growing problem: poverty in America.
I can't even go to church locally because I'm stigmatized, at age 29, for having *been* poor. Around here, its like a stain that may never be washed away. In my own situation, people call me "uppity" because I can't be controlled (my people are now behind me), so they can't play those fun class warfare games.
Let's look at some of the fun things that happened to me while I was poor. My poverty wasn't even that terrible. My people were estranged, but supporting me financially. Fun things happened, such as: hooking up with a dude and finding out that he took pictures and distributed them all over the place without my knowledge or consent...my psychiatric records were spread all over the place...I was almost sent to a state mental hospital when I got "uppity" and wanted to be left alone...
...on and on it goes. I'm just one person and, like I said, I experienced a softer, gentler form of poverty. Lots of people in similar situations end up homeless, in prison, in jail, or dead.
In my situation, a lot of my issues were blamed on me and/or mental illness. I guess it never occurred to anybody that the oppression that accompanies poverty and low social status just might drive someone mad, at least for a season. Again: I'm just 1 person, and when God worked on my people (particularly my father), my season of deprivation came to an end. I even get to go to Liberty U online and hopefully make a way forward for myself.
What of those whose people can't/.won't/don't lift their relatives out of poverty? And then the poor are blamed for their plight. If you worked harder, if you were smarter, if you spent your money more wisely, if you hadn't done drugs, if you weren't crazy, if you'd made better life choices...why don't you better yourself? So on and so forth.
Ugh. I think I'm frustrated in large part because now that my people are behind me, I'm not "trailer trash," but people around here hate me because I a) was poor and b) am too "uppity," refusing to play these class warfare games. Also, this is an important issue that I think too many churches gloss over. Jesus was poor, Jesus helped the poor, and Jesus had strong words for the rich who were too concerned with storing up their own wealth to help others and/or pursue The Kingdom of God.
AM ramble, lol. Seriously, though: what gives with our approach to poverty?
Anyway, I get that poor people aren't exactly super popular anywhere. The Bible, particularly the OT, speaks to this. A rich man has many friends; a poor man loses all his. I think that's Proverbs.
What I don't get is the demonization of the poor, how it's such a stigma to be anything less than middle class in a country where lots of people now have to rely on some government assistance just to make ends meet. Isn't is strange? In a country where more and more and more people are poor--including people who were once in the semi-sacred "Middle class"--the poor are increasingly demonized. We/they (I don't know how to categorize myself--mentally ill ne'er do wells don't really fit in the social class system, I guess) are the object of incredible scorn and derision.
We'll "Keep up with Kardashians," watch Hollywood plastic surgeons, talk about the latest celebrity gossip, maybe every now and then have a meaningful convo about war, but we can't/won't/don't sit down and talk about that growing problem: poverty in America.
I can't even go to church locally because I'm stigmatized, at age 29, for having *been* poor. Around here, its like a stain that may never be washed away. In my own situation, people call me "uppity" because I can't be controlled (my people are now behind me), so they can't play those fun class warfare games.
Let's look at some of the fun things that happened to me while I was poor. My poverty wasn't even that terrible. My people were estranged, but supporting me financially. Fun things happened, such as: hooking up with a dude and finding out that he took pictures and distributed them all over the place without my knowledge or consent...my psychiatric records were spread all over the place...I was almost sent to a state mental hospital when I got "uppity" and wanted to be left alone...
...on and on it goes. I'm just one person and, like I said, I experienced a softer, gentler form of poverty. Lots of people in similar situations end up homeless, in prison, in jail, or dead.
In my situation, a lot of my issues were blamed on me and/or mental illness. I guess it never occurred to anybody that the oppression that accompanies poverty and low social status just might drive someone mad, at least for a season. Again: I'm just 1 person, and when God worked on my people (particularly my father), my season of deprivation came to an end. I even get to go to Liberty U online and hopefully make a way forward for myself.
What of those whose people can't/.won't/don't lift their relatives out of poverty? And then the poor are blamed for their plight. If you worked harder, if you were smarter, if you spent your money more wisely, if you hadn't done drugs, if you weren't crazy, if you'd made better life choices...why don't you better yourself? So on and so forth.
Ugh. I think I'm frustrated in large part because now that my people are behind me, I'm not "trailer trash," but people around here hate me because I a) was poor and b) am too "uppity," refusing to play these class warfare games. Also, this is an important issue that I think too many churches gloss over. Jesus was poor, Jesus helped the poor, and Jesus had strong words for the rich who were too concerned with storing up their own wealth to help others and/or pursue The Kingdom of God.
AM ramble, lol. Seriously, though: what gives with our approach to poverty?