Wall Street Journal: Pennies From Heaven  Peter Berger (This article is brilliant! I've posted in its entirety.)

Poverty (of sorts) is suddenly in fashion. Politicians and commentators blame the financial crisis on greed, not only by malefactors on Wall Street but also by all the denizens of Main Street who live beyond their means, accumulate useless possessions and despoil the environment. It is not quite clear what a nongreedy Wall Street would look like. But for the rest of us, after due repentance, the solution to our financial woes is held to be a more ascetic life. If it is voluntary, rather than compelled by circumstance, it has the glow of moral superiority. "Green is good," says a latter-day Gandhi as he goes to work by bicycle. But if you are really poor, asceticism does not mean giving up your SUV — it means eating just one meal a day because it is all you can afford.

Far more attractive to poor people, who are a majority of its adherents, is the "prosperity gospel," a version of Christianity asserting that material benefits will come to those who have faith, live a morally upright life and, not so incidentally, give money to the church. Broadly speaking, this is what Max Weber called the Protestant Ethic, but with much less emphasis on self-denial and more on hard work, planning for the future, family loyalty and educating one's children.

The prosperity gospel probably originated among the poorer elements of the evangelical community in America. It is now a global phenomenon, especially among the rapidly spreading Pentecostal churches in Africa, Latin America and Asia.

Virtually all outside commentary on the prosperity gospel, both by theologians and by people in the lay media, has been very negative, holding that it is a distortion of Christianity pushed by rogue preachers who enrich themselves by exploiting the poor. There is some validity to these criticisms. It is certainly true that Christianity is not a recipe for acquiring wealth. But in that respect the prosperity gospel — usually seen as being on the Christian right — closely resembles the "liberation theology" of the Christian left, except that the latter's enrichment program is collective rather than individual. Liberation theology defined Christianity as essentially being a struggle of poor oppressed people against capitalism and imperialism. And while it is obvious that some preachers of the prosperity gospel are simply motivated by self-interest, one must suppose that, given human nature, some left-leaning clergy are too.

Leaving aside theology and moral philosophy, sociology provides a rather different perspective. A few months ago, I visited a Pentecostal megachurch in a suburb of Johannesburg. The congregation of some 7,000 South Africans, black and white, created enough noise to give me a headache for hours. This was hardly a congenial form of worship for me. But I did hear the sermon, delivered by a highly charismatic preacher. There were two simple but powerful messages. One, "God does not want you to be poor!" And, two, "You can do something about it!" The New Testament strongly suggests that Jesus had a particular concern for the poor, but there is no suggestion that he wanted people to remain poor. As for the idea that God will bestow material blessings on those who remain faithful to him, there are some passages in the Old Testament, often cited by the prosperity preachers, that imply just that.

As I left the church, I asked myself: Would I really want to quarrel with these messages? There is no sentimentality about poverty in the prosperity gospel. There is an appeal to people not as victims but as responsible actors. There is also the confidence that generally people know what is best for themselves, better than any well-meaning outsiders. It is no wonder, then, that research data, from South Africa for instance, show that Pentecostals have an unusual degree of self-confidence and optimism about the future.

In 1968 a conference of Latin American bishops meeting in Medellin, Colombia, proclaimed a "preferential option for the poor," which since then has become an important ingredient of Catholic social teaching and has influenced mainline Protestantism. Liberation theologians interpreted the "preferential option" as an option for socialism. But it is helpful to pay attention to the syntax. The option is for the poor. That is, it is an option to be taken by those who are not poor.

The proposition is well-intentioned. But it is not surprising that many of the poor are opting for a less patronizing message. They do not think of themselves as dependent on the compassion of the rich. I have no idea how the current mess in the financial markets is to be fixed. But I am convinced that capitalism provides the only reliable mechanism for lifting large numbers of people out of poverty. In other words, if one is concerned for the poor, one will adopt a preferential option for capitalism. A Mexican bishop returning from the Medellin conference said "No hay otra salida!" — "There is no other way!" He meant socialism. He was wrong.

Weber believed that the economic consequences of Protestantism were unintentional. The prosperity gospel intends these consequences — material betterment for individuals, economic growth in the aggregate. It promises poor people that these goals are attainable. It is a promise likely to be kept. It seems to me that this empirical reality must be taken into account in any evaluation of the prosperity gospel — even by theologians and moral philosophers.

Related: Paul Gifford in Christian Century, Expecting miracles: The prosperity gospel in Africa

Related: Richard Mouw at his blog, Understanding the “Prosperity Gospel”


Comments

6 responses to “Pennies From Heaven”

  1. codepoke Avatar
    codepoke

    Wow. I’d never thought of supporting the prosperity gospel in any way, for any reason. You’re hurting my head here! But it’s a solid and biblically supportable thought.
    I guess I’ll have to think it for a while and see what happens.

  2. Much of Western mission has been paternalistic, offering little hope of personal transformation in the day-to-day matters of economic existence and creating a sense of dependency on Westerners.
    What I think the prosperity gospel offers first and foremost is that good cares about me and the practical realities of my life. God is at work in these practical realities. Therefore, through obedience and faith, I can dare to dream and hope for a different reality than the one I live in. I’m every bit as much a child of God as wealthy Westerners.
    In this sense the prosperity gospel offers an intimacy (warped or not) with God that more traditional missions have failed to offer.
    I’m not suggesting that the prosperity gospel is sound nor do I think the authors in these articles are giving a blanket endorsement. Rather I think what the prosperity gospel does is expose the weakness of the gospel that has traditionally been taught. There are significant dark sides to the prosperity gospel (like believing if you are poor and suffering, then it is because you don’t have faith; or if you have wealth, then God must be blessing you.)
    The challenge is to discover what it means for people to be redeemed as economic stewards and producers within the context of God’s mission in the world.

  3. codepoke Avatar
    codepoke

    Excellent points. Thank you, Michael.

  4. Codepoke linked me here.. I loved these thoughts..
    “There is an appeal to people not as victims but as responsible actors.”
    “They do not think of themselves as dependent on the compassion of the rich.”
    ..I posted on faith and prosperity today.. the issue I have with the prosperity message is how people are not taught to be content with what they have and are sometimes led into financial slavery because of a focus on money and things.
    Blessings, Bob
    http://www.kansasbob.com/
    PS: Are you in the KC area? I am in Leawood.

  5. Thanks Bob. Like I say, this article is not intended as an blanket endorsement of the prosperity gospel.
    “…the issue I have with the prosperity message is how people are not taught to be content with what they have and are sometimes led into financial slavery because of a focus on money and things.”
    No disagreement from me here. But if I’m in a village in central Africa where disease is all around, food is scarce, back breaking labor is need for the basic things of life, and I see now hope of a better life for my children, then the last thing I want to do is to teach people to be “content.” If I’m in an American urban core context where a person doesn’t have a job, drugs and crime are everywhere around, and the ideas of college, a stable job, and a strong family are like fairy tales, then the last thing I want to teach is contentment.
    The trap here is that we project our middle class angst over our own consumerism onto the message of hope we need to share with the poor. We inadvertently communicate hopelessness and perpetuate poverty. The challenge is to assist the poor in making the discovery that their circumstances are not God’s best for them and change is possible, without the reductionist nonsense that their personal wealth is some barometer of their standing with God. Context is critical.
    Yes I’m in KC. You could call me Missouri Mike. 🙂 I live two blocks west of Penn Valley Community College. I have a sister who lives in Leawood not far from 129th and Mission.
    Glad to find another KC blogger!

  6. Thanks for the response Mike.
    I agree with you that context is critical.. but maybe a bit differently? I guess it depends what one’s definition of contentment is.
    If one believes that being content is analogous to giving up on life and not having hope then I would have to agree with your perspective. One should never be content with bad situations and bad behavior.. maybe the word for that though is apathy?
    But if being content is about having peace in the midst of bad situations then maybe it is the key to moving forward. Possibly when one acts out of a sense of inner contentment that person will move forward with confidence?
    For me, for the most part, the only change that has ever been positive is the kind that comes from within. Whenever my actions have been motivated from without I simply do not have confidence in my actions.
    IMO, teaching people who are poor to be content will help them move forward from the inside out.. it will help them escape from a victim mentality.. it will help them move forward.
    I have written a few posts on contentment.. you might find them interesting.. here are a few:
    http://redemption.kansasbob.com/2008/04/perseverance.html
    http://redemption.kansasbob.com/2006/02/contentment.html
    -Bob
    PS: I live fairly close to your sister.. of course Leawood is not that big 🙂

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