[This is listed on the file as an ÒolderÓ
writing. It is likely that the ÒE-FileÓ was started by Winter
while at Fuller in around 1970. This document was printed up and circulated as
a small 8 x 6 brochure. Winter had written in one copy
changes, which have been included in this version E 12a.1. Subject: Poverty,
social gospel, transformation.]
Poverty and the Christian Mission
Ralph
D. Winter
OneÕs first reaction on arriving among people desperately poor is
to do something. You see Indians picking up individual grains of corn from the
gutters. They sell their few eggs because they get more calories in the
monetary equivalent of a grain. At
5 am. Little 5‑year‑old children are out on the roads stumbling
along behind their parents, carrying astonishingly heavy loads.
They walk 20 miles to be able to plant another few
square feet of corn. Desperate arguments arise over inches of land. Christian
families, swollen by the presence of medical help and the absence of money for
birth control materials, present children that are inevitable vagrants and who
cannot marry for lack of land inheritance. When Pedro, a Presbyterian elderÕs
son, wanted to marry Tons, the daughter of a leading deacon, her father said
no. Pedro has 19 living brothers and sisters.
In Guatemala and in Latin America in general, things
are not so well ordered and understood as they are in the U. S. where a pastor
rarely needs to worry about his people finding jobs. Only the refugee family
comes up for such consideration. Even there, many community resources are
already available. Automation, railway firemen, and blind type are phrases that
remind us that all our problems of transition are not behind us. But here in
Guatemala a perfectly vast scramble and shuffle is taking place as the result of
the Òcatching on and catching upÓ that is the disorder of the decade.
We North Americans come here like men from Mars, so
to speak; from a culture that is a few stages in growth beyond the largely
agrarian, self‑subsistent economy that still characterizes 80% of the
Guatemalans (most of whom are patient Indians working away in ways that are
completely outmoded). If simple hard work could solve their problems there
would be no problem. But the road ahead is not straight. It has vicious curves
they may go off. TheyÕve never had enough money so far to find out what liquor
can do for them. Their sacrificial efforts in learning a new trade—like
say tailoring—may tomorrow be undercut by the arrival of low‑priced
machine‑made garments from the Capital.
The sensitive Christian
conscience is hurt by these things. Furthermore it is not merely that the Indians are
poor, especially so the Christians in many cases, but because it is in the nature
of the Christian faith to Òlift the heavy burdensÓ (Isa.
58:6) and to share medical progress and modern wonders. Science, as the
wonderland of GodÕs handiwork, belongs as much to GodÕs Indian as the GodÕs
Californian.
But to obtain outside food donations doesnÕt really
solve the problem. Nor money for food. In our valley
of 20,000 Indians a million dollars given outright would supply food for only a
few months—and then what?
Nor can these Indians grow a whole lot more corn in
the land they have; and population growth can easily outstrip that. Land enough
there is, on the uninhabitable and disease‑ridden tropical coast. Here in
the cool, beautiful highlands is where most of the people live.
Nor can the missionary readily enter into high‑level
economic planning. The government offices are buzzing with studies and plans,
and with hundreds of U. S. advisors. And with all that help, Government efforts
themselves are often shortsighted. Relocating people on the coastal land is
merely postponing the evil day when there will come in flood tide the
inevitable shift from hand‑agriculture‑of‑the masses to mechanized
agriculture of a few—and the secondary result of large‑scale
technological unemployment. (Who shou1d know this
better than those in the U. S.?)
But in any case it is a fact that even if Christians
didnÕt need food, church buildings and pastorsÕ salaries take money; and a
Christian community that is getting the rug pulled out from under it is in no
great shape to pour funds into outreach.
On the personal level we can advise young men that
there is no future in custom‑made clothes (all clothes in rural areas
still tend to be made by hand in little one‑sewing‑machine shops). This is negatively good; can we be positively helpful and bring
training in skills‑with‑a future? Do we really need to bother about
these problems at all?
As a rule the more recently arrived[1]
missions in Guatemala (e. g. Pentecostal, Southern Baptist, Mormon) are all
strictly gospel preaching and no nonsense about economic problems. They
obviously havenÕt yet faced the physical conditions of their future constituencies.
But the older missions that have raised up thousands
of believers over more than half a century are faced with the problems of
success: do we help the already‑Christians in all their problems of
development and outreach, individual and church finance? Do we help them to
relate to the world as it is today? Or do we let Radio Cuba be the only voice
discussing their practical problems?
It may be that the New England Puritan can give us a
lead here. They faced desperate economic problems, and their preachers came
equipped with a theology that made every task a holy calling. To Rev. John
Cotton, Òa Christian would no sooner have his sin pardoned than his life established
in some good calling.Ó To them getting productively established in (this) GodÕs
world was vitally import as a Spiritual task! Vocational
rehabilitation—as secular as that phrase now sounds—was part of
their theology of redemption.
Every missionary worth his salt, no matter what his
board, bases his work 100% on the assumption that there is nothing really
possible in human development except it be built on a
transformed inner spirit. Even secular experts, Peace Corps people, or whoever
it is at work with human clay, must sense at last that when the inner spirit of
man is damaged, dampened, or degraded, there is precious little hope for
economic schemes and programs. The Biblical promise ÒI will put a new Spirit
within youÓ (Ezekiel 11:19) is the only one you can build on.
This is why ministers and take heart. Their work is
bedrock. No industrial process is more miraculous than the transformation of
the heart and life of man. This phenomenon is taking place daily‑and
progressively in the lives of those who have already surrendered all to Christ.
The secular mind looks the other way, belittles and ignores this kind of work. It
is too intangible, unscientific. Yet it is the glory of the U. S.
protestant Christian mission agencies that as the result of their work there
are now in the countries of the non‑western world something like 60,000,000
(sixty million) followers of Christ (and immeasurable indirect influences), who
constitute in their countries the highest quality sub-community. And this is
not an intangible result. They are the alert, bright-eyed, honest people who
set the standards for morality and hope. This is an immense but ÒinvisibleÓ
movement you can never read about in the papers. It is not the sudden or tragic
thing papers feed on.
Yet, believe it or not, there it was in the paper a
few days ago—in the leading Guatemalan daily ‑ in letters one half
inch high, ÒYoung Protestant wantedÓ, an ad offering a fabulous salary at least
four times as high as the average pastor here gets. The North American company running this huge want‑ad apparently believes
you can build on a transformed life.
It is well and good that we fear the sentimental
idealism involved in Òsocial gospelÓ efforts to build economic progress on
untransformed people asking no questions about the sickness of the inner man.
But it is probably a mistake to transfer this fear to the case of those who are
genuinely transformed. This kind of fear perpetuates itself by stowing away in
the memory many examples of how Òeven Christians in these countries canÕt be
trusted with money,Ó etc. It doesnÕt quite jive, of
course, with our confident reports of how many have been soundly converted!
It is true that a converted Indian doesnÕt
necessarily immediately know how to handle money like he has learned over the
centuries to save and manage corn. But with such a man you at least have
something sound to build on. Shall we teach him everything except how to handle
money?
One answer may be to work through a somewhat new
kind of pastor, teach him the broad outlines of what the modem world consists
of, and among other things how his people will have to adjust radically to meet
changing circumstances, and that his people desperately need, along with
bedrock faith and love, the elements of broad orientation and technical
training that will prepare them in creativity, resourcefulness, and durability‑with‑flexibility
to land on their feet like a cat in the rough and tumble ahead. Perhaps these
new pastors can both learn and teach up‑to‑date trades and
businesses. The most sturdy and reliable elements in the population are the
available raw materials. In the poorest Indian areas both the culture and the
economics of the situation may demand that the pastor be self‑supporting
in part, as were Presbyterian ministers to a great extent up until a few years
ago in the States. Best of all, occupied in some portable job like weaving, as
was the Apostle Paul—and for the same reasons.
ItÕs interesting to speculate what kind of book the
New Testament would have been had no one ever taught Paul a trade. Then too,
the communistic air Latin America is breathing these days as much as states
that the pastor who does no concrete work is a social parasite. Paul worked
with his hands in part possibly to set an example for his people to follow: Òwith
toil and labor we worked night and day... to give you an example to imitateÓ (2
Thess 3:8,9). Is this out of date or up to date? What is up to date?
You who are reading this article may well have some
keen ideas. Could you afford 13 cents (3 sheets) and a few moments to share
them with us? Must of us working with the Guatemalan Presbyterian Church are
related to this problem of what kind of direction and leadership is most
needed. Some of us spend our whole time wrestling with it. We donÕt claim to
know all the answers. Our hearts have not lost their ache. Send your ideas.
Better still, come and see and study and work and pray with us!
Dr.
RALPH D. WINTER
MAM
Christian Center
San
Juan Ostuncalco, Quez. Guatemala. C.A
[1] Note: Winter originally had the phrase here, ÒJohnny come latelyÓ. He also said in a later sentence they Òhad not stopped to think aboutÓ the physical conditionsÉ.