I was very gladdened to see this article, by Trevin Wax: "Do we remember the poor?"
Six months ago I commented, in a post on "The Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel", as follows:
When outsiders say that evangelicals are far too concerned about laying down the strict confines of orthodoxy and it'd be great if they demonstrated more energy in condescending to help suffering people in their very messy, practical situations, it might well be because, ever since evangelicals made it a priority to clarify that they do not believe "the social gospel", we don't seem to have made it the same priority to so clearly, and conspicuously, make it clear that our lives are handed over to showing love to people in need.
It seems to me that concern for the poor is much more prominent in the Bible (both Testaments) than it is in contemporary Western evangelicalism; and that conversely, love of endless debate that leads to no action is beloved in Western evangelicalism but is soundly condemned in the Scriptures. So, to see someone with a fairly wide reach talking about this, and making similar points, greatly encouraged me. Trevin Wax doesn't just show us what the New Testament says; he's also not afraid to point out that, in general, we're not doing it as those who went before us either in the Bible or afterwards did, and therefore we must change.
Church leader, are you the sort of person whose Christianity means what the apostle Paul's did? When he met the Jerusalem apostles, he said: "They desired only that we should remember the poor, the very thing which I also was eager to do" (Galatians 2:10). There were, at their meeting, only two things that we were told were discussed by the apostles. They established firstly that they were all preaching the same gospel; and they established secondly that they all understood and were zealous for the inevitable implication of the gospel, of serving the poor. This doesn't just mean writing periodic cheques out of our excess, out of the money that we'd just otherwise leave behind to be dealt with in a will when we've departed from this world and couldn't do anything with it anyway. Rather, it is this. “So you say you love the poor?", Gustavo Gutierrez famously asked, and continued: "Then tell me, what are their names?” May God help us to meet this faithful challenge.

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