What does the bible sat about international aid?
This seems
like a really simply question to answer. There have been mass movements driven by
leaders in churches and Christian Aid organizations across recent years, at
least the last decade or more, that have sought to encourage Christians to
lobby governments to increase foreign aid. Act justly and love mercy has been
the catch cry of these movements, and it is a wonderful slogan, because those
principles underpin the Christian ethos. These highly respectable and well-intentioned
Christian leaders believe that governments giving foreign aid is a Christian
duty, therefore it must be, mustn’t it?
I once
advocated for the Micah challenge and other initiatives to encourage government
aid myself. I found it something natural to get behind because caring for the
poor has always been something I have thought about and practiced as a
Christian. But I never did it from the perspective that, ‘Governments must
do this to be considered following their Christian duty.’ I did it because it
made sense: Christians donating can only go so far, governments have bigger
purses and therefore can do a lot more. Indeed, this was what our aid advocacy
trainer taught us, it was a numbers game; by challenging governments to
increase their aid we can do a lot of good in the world.
This seems
like a noble cause, and personally I am not against international aid. I have
strong Christian friends and family who are opposed to it, and strong Christian
friends and family who are strong advocates for it. I also understand that
there are practical reasons for giving aid to international communities,
countries and aid organizations that benefit Australians. For example, giving
aid to both government, or non-government organizations, working in refugee
camps and war torn countries can lower the mass movement of asylum seekers,
making borders safer and more easily managed across the world. This is a double
benefit, people in those camps who are in need get the help they require, and
governments don’t have to spend as much money on border security and other
programs, because less people will be seeking to enter countries illegally. So,
I am both open to international aid, I recognize how it can change lives
overseas for the better, and I recognize the benefits it can bring to the nation
giving it. Indeed, I invite advocates of aid organizations into my church to
speak, and will continue to do so. We also should note that a lot of
international aid is used in such a way as to increase the interests of the
giving nations overseas. Once these multi-faceted reasons for aid are
understood, I can very easily see why so many people advocate for it.
And that is
fine, advocate for international aid. I can find no reason to condemn people
for wanting to do this. But then this isn’t the issue, the issue is that there
are those who believe foreign aid is a Christian issue who are condemning those
who don’t necessarily agree. For example this article (here)
on the Eternity states that:
“…With a Christian Prime Minister at the national helm
guiding this year’s budget, along with an election just around the corner, many
Christians are today wondering whether the Coalition Government has chosen not
to represent Christians priorities.”
It’s one
thing to want to advocate for foreign aid, but it is another to accuse a
government, and a Christian Prime Minister of not wanting “to represent
Christian priorities” for cutting aid. To say such a thing one must have good
biblical evidence. Indeed to say it is a shameful thing to cut aid, which is also
stated in the article, again one must have good biblical reason.
Does God
condemn leaders or nations in scripture who fail to send international aid?
I
raised this question and got some interesting responses from Christians leaders
and lay people: it’s irrelevant, your perverting scripture Matthew, I don’t see
why that is even a credible observation to say the Bible doesn’t condemn
leaders on the issue of foreign aid, you’re on dangerous territory, God will
oppose those who don’t call their leaders to account on this issue, etc, etc. But
that leaves the question: does God condemn leaders in scripture who fail to
send international aid?
Well no, he
doesn’t. I carried out several different conversations on this issue over
several days, and in each of those conversations I asked people to show me
clear passages in Scripture where God condemns national leaders for cutting or
not offering aid, and none were given that specifically said that.
The most
common passage cited was the parable of the Good Samaritan. This is a famous
and wonderful passage about Jesus teaching us to love our neighbours. When
Jesus is asked ‘who is our neighbour?’ by a teacher of the law wanting to justify
himself, Jesus responds with a wonderful story about a Samaritan who helps a
man he found lying on the road when a priest, and Levite both left him lying
there. Samaritans were despised in Israel in Jesus’ day. The point of this
parable was quite obvious: bigotry is wrong, love your neighbour whoever they
happen to be, no matter their nationality.
It’s a
simple, but powerful little story, but it has nothing to do with foreign aid.
It neither condemns it or advocates it. It is simply neutral on the topic. The
parable of the Good Samaritan says we should be willing to help anybody, but it
does not condemn us for not extending aid to everybody, no one, not even
governments have the resources to send aid to everybody.
Indeed our
government does love their neighbour already. According to the ABC website (here)
$180.12 Billion of a $500.87 Billion budget is allocated for social welfare. That
is 35.9% of the current federal budget. This is allocated to people no matter
their race, no matter their ethnic origin. It is a generous allotment from collected
taxes designed to love our neighbour who is struggling. I have heard many
people say that this government is not generous and does not care about the
poor. However the single largest segment of the budget is allocated
specifically for helping the poorer people of this nation. This to me is a government that literally prioritizes the poor. But it seems to many
Christians online that none of this really counts, the cut to foreign aid
cancels this massive charity out and allows them to say our government is not
generous and doesn’t prioritize the poor, or even say they are ashamed of our country.
One Christian commentator actually complains that Australian tax payers are
being allowed to keep more of their own money (see here),
as if the government has a moral duty to confiscate even more wealth and give
it away overseas. But is that the responsibility of a nation’s government, to
prioritize the poor of other nations?
Not
according to Scripture. Here is a good example, Ezekiel 34:1-10:
“34 The word of the
Lord came to me: 2 “Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel;
prophesy, and say to them, even to the shepherds, Thus says the Lord God: Ah,
shepherds of Israel who have been feeding yourselves! Should not shepherds feed
the sheep? 3 You eat the fat, you clothe yourselves with the wool, you
slaughter the fat ones, but you do not feed the sheep. 4 The weak you have not
strengthened, the sick you have not healed, the injured you have not bound up,
the strayed you have not brought back, the lost you have not sought, and with
force and harshness you have ruled them. 5 So they were scattered, because
there was no shepherd, and they became food for all the wild beasts. My sheep
were scattered; 6 they wandered over all the mountains and on every high hill.
My sheep were scattered over all the face of the earth, with none to search or
seek for them.
7 “Therefore, you
shepherds, hear the word of the Lord: 8 As I live, declares the Lord God,
surely because my sheep have become a prey, and my sheep have become food for
all the wild beasts, since there was no shepherd, and because my shepherds have
not searched for my sheep, but the shepherds have fed themselves, and have not
fed my sheep, 9 therefore, you shepherds, hear the word of the Lord: 10 Thus
says the Lord God, Behold, I am against the shepherds, and I will require my
sheep at their hand and put a stop to their feeding the sheep. No longer shall
the shepherds feed themselves. I will rescue my sheep from their mouths, that
they may not be food for them.”
This passage
makes very clear what God’s intentions are for the leaders he places over a
nation: they are to care for the people of that nation, the leaders are the
shepherd and the people are the sheep they are to care for. This is their
priority, this is their mandate, and this is what he consistently judges them
on in scripture. Indeed in Scripture you will find much of the Old Testament,
and certain portions of the New Testament are dedicated to this very issue,
leaders are judged by how they treat their own people (cf. the books of Kings
and most of the books of the prophets) and you will find that when God condemns
nations because of their treatment of other nations, it is because they made
unjust war on them, or engaged in corrupting trade (for example: Ez. 25-32;
Amos Isa. 10-21; Amos 1-2; the Books of Jonah, Obadiah, Nahum, etc) . The
Scriptures are not at all silent on the criteria which God judges national
leaders on: he judges them on how they honour him in their lives, how they
treat their people, and how they engage in war, whether justly or unjustly, and
whether they engage in trade justly or unjustly (cf. biblical references above).
He does not condemn them in relation to whether or not they take money from
their own citizens and gives it to other nations.
The closest
passage I could find advocating for foreign aid was in Deuteronomy 23:3-6 –
“3 “No Ammonite or Moabite may enter the assembly of the
Lord. Even to the tenth generation, none of them may enter the assembly of the
Lord forever, 4 because they did not meet you with bread and with water on the
way, when you came out of Egypt, and because they hired against you Balaam the
son of Beor from Pethor of Mesopotamia, to curse you. 5 But the Lord your God
would not listen to Balaam; instead the Lord your God turned the curse into a
blessing for you, because the Lord your God loved you. 6 You shall not seek
their peace or their prosperity all your days forever.
The
Ammonites and Moabites both descended from Abraham’s nephew Lot, and therefore
distant relatives of the Israelites, refused them bread or water on their way
as they were journeying to the Promise Land, and instead attacked them. This
seems to be God judging them for not giving aid in a time of need. But when you
read the accounts of these situations in Scripture you see it was more than
that. It wasn’t just that they didn’t send aid, it was that they refused them
entry to their land, refused them entry and aid on the way through, and instead
sought to make war with them. They even went as far as hiring a prophet to
curse Israel so as to make the nation vulnerable to attack.
So this was
not about aiding those overseas, but about not aiding the foreigner in their
midst, which actually coincides with the many passages in Scripture where
Israel is commanded to care for the sojourner/foreigner/refugee in their midst.
For example, Leviticus 19:10 “And you shall not strip your vineyard bare,
neither shall you gather the fallen grapes of your vineyard. You shall leave
them for the poor and for the sojourner: I am the Lord your God.” And
again in Exodus 23:9 “You
shall not oppress a sojourner. You know the heart of a sojourner, for you were
sojourners in the land of Egypt.”
There is a
consistent pattern in Scripture that nations are given their proper boundaries,
and they are to stay in those boundaries and not make unjust war on other
nations or interfere in the affairs of other nations in corrupting ways. God
even condemns Israel for seeking military aid from Egypt on several occasions (for
example Isa. 31). National leaders are to care for their people, and the people
in their national borders, and God judges’ leaders on how well they do this. So,
unless someone has some clear passages which say otherwise, I cannot find where
God condemns nations for not sending aid to foreign nations.
Then why do so many Christian
leaders condemn government leaders who cut aid?
What happens
often in church history is someone offers an idea, in line with general
scriptural principles, then they take this idea on board and advocate it as a
good idea, and then it becomes tradition, and then those who question the
tradition, by coming back to what the Bible actually says, get accused of
perverting scripture. I think this has undeniably happened with how many church
leaders and Christians judge national leaders on the issue of foreign aid.
I don’t
think scripture gives us a mandate for condemning leaders on this issue, and as
Christians we should always hold back judgement where scripture does not give
us a clear mandate. Indeed, even when it does we should hold back because the
measure we use will be measured against us.
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