Editor’s
note: This is a must-read for all who are concerned about the
family — and the future! Richard
Eyre is in the process of writing a much longer series on the
topic of how we can all help to save the family, which will
appear on the Family Leader website in the near future. Today’s
article will focus on the problem. On Monday, read Meridian
to find a solution.
Two Three-Word Mission Statements
for Modern Mankind
Two Old Testament Prophets looked
across time, saw our day, and issued powerful, provocative warnings
that cut to the core of what today’s world needs and of what
today’s leaders need to do. Each warning is in the form of a
three-word admonition, and they are the challenges of
our time, because if they are not met, civilization as we know
it will end.
Isaiah saw our time, these past
200 years when world population has jumped tenfold to more than
6 billion, and when the gap between the earth's richest 10%
and the poorest 20% has exploded from an income ratio of 2:1
to a more than 100:1 ratio. "Repair the Breach"
Isaiah said in chapter 58, or face the inevitable micro shared
guilt and macro revolution and terrorism that will come as the
extreme poor watch (because they do have television) and envy
the rich.
Malachi saw these same past
200 years of ours and how the new explosions of population,
urbanization, materialism and amoral media would couple with
the emergence of larger, substituting institutions and begin
to subtly sabotage the smallest institution of family.
"Turn the Hearts" he said on the last
page of the Old Testament — of parents to their children and
of children to their parents — or the whole earth (and God's
plan for our happiness) will be wasted.
Repairing the breach — or closing the rapidly widening
gap between rich and poor — and Turning the hearts and
our priorities from the world to our families are the two greatest
causes and challenges of our time, and the two tasks most relevant
(and most prerequisite) to the Lord's second coming.
Many (although not nearly enough) are aware and tuned into the
first challenge. People like professor and author Jeffery
Sachs (The End of Poverty) are rallying people to the
possibility that globalization and public and private aid and
philanthropy can virtually eliminate extreme poverty on the
planet in the next 20 years. As the world shrinks (and
gets "flatter" in author Tom Friedman's terminology)
and develops a whole-planet economy, the gap between rich and
poor will begin to close again as globalization utilizes the
valuable human resources of the earth's 1.5 billion extreme
poor.
Ironically, the same shrinking world phenomenon that may repair
the breach is also turning the hearts — but in the wrong
direction. The materialistic messages and paradigms of globalization,
from advertising, marketing and media undermine family values
and make independence seem more important than commitment.
And the new, larger institutions of globalization, from corporations
to governments and from educational institutions to aid organizations,
tend to substitute for and supplant families rather than supporting
and supplementing them, making families seem superficial and
superfluous rater than significant and substantial.
Even as everyone seems to be writing, speaking and becoming
aware of the need to repair the breach, no one is talking effectively
about turning the hearts.
The family is and must always be the basic, fundamental institution
of society, and if families cease to function in that role,
none of the larger, usurping institutions can substitute for
it. These larger institutions, the engines that move our
society, need to realize that they are not only created to serve
families, but are dependent on strong and functioning families
for their very survival.
The Breach (How the Rich-Poor
Gap Got so Wide)
Twenty thousand people, mostly
children, die every day because of extreme poverty. Most of
them are killed by malaria, tuberculosis, diarrhea, measles,
and other easily preventable and easily treatable diseases.
Of the world’s six billion people,
one billion — the bottom sixth — are so desperately poor that
death is literally and daily at their door. They exist on less
than a dollar a day, have access to little or no medical care,
education or even clean water and have a life expectancy of
only about 40 years. They go to sleep hungry every night on
dirt floors and have no expectation of escaping their plight.
About a third of the extreme poor live in sub-Saharan Africa,
another third in South Asia, and another third in East Asia.
Much smaller but still significant numbers live in Latin America,
the Caribbean, Eastern Europe, and North Africa.
Another one billion people, the
top sixth, are so disproportionately rich that they earn more
money in a day than most of the extreme poor earn in a year.
They sleep in comfortable beds, live in houses the poor cannot
imagine, take things like hot running water, education, and
vaccinations for granted, and have never, ever felt real hunger.
They live mostly in the U.S. and Canada, Western Europe, and
Japan and Australia/N.Z.
In between the rich billion and
the extreme poor billion live the middle four billion, poor
by some standards, rich by others, but advancing economically,
benefiting from globalization, and at least a step or two above
starving, desperate poverty, with income, education and life
expectancy all going up.
The breach that Isaiah saw and
prophesized and warned of is the gap between the rich sixth
and the extreme poor sixth. And what a gap it is! The rich sixth
earn a per capita average income of more than $20,000, while
the poor sixth earns under $200.The rich sixth has cell phones
and computers; the poor sixth has no toilets, beds, or drinking
water. The rich sixth shops and goes to college and plays and
watches sports and drama. The poor sixth searches for food
and builds makeshift shanty shelters.
The Breach is new! It has happened
mostly in the past 200 years. Before 1800, virtually the whole
world was poor. Except for kings and a tiny percentage of very
large land owners, everyone in the world lived at essentially
the same level. Life was as difficult in much of Europe as it
was in China or India.
The past two centuries constitute
a unique era in economic history, a time period when world population
exploded by six-fold, from a billion to more than six billion
people; and when the world’s average per capita income rose
even faster — a nine-fold increase.
But the increases in the US and
Europe and Japan (Japan’s mostly in the past 60 years) were
much higher — disproportionately higher — a 25-fold increase
compared to a two-fold increase or less in parts of Africa and
Asia, opening up vast gaps or “breaches” between rich and poor.
The tragedy is that the rich sixth
has done (and is doing) so little to close the gap — to help
the poor sixth climb even a little out of desperation and away
from death’s door. Globalization and the constant search for
new, cheaper work forces have reached much of Asia, putting
people at least on the lowest rungs of economic advancement
(even working in a sweatshop is better than starvation). But
other parts of Asia and most of sub-Saharan Africa cannot reach
even the bottom rung, and have no way out of their desperate
plight unless someone gives them a hand up.
The United States spends $500 billion
on its military each year, and just $15 billion to address the
plight of the poorest of the poor. That $15 billion is less
than a fifth of one percent of our Gross National Product —
less than 15 cents of every $100.00 we have to spend (the smallest
percentage spent on the poor by any of the world’s 40 most industrialized
nations).
With that in mind, it becomes obvious
what Colin Powell meant when he said, “The war against terror
is bound up in the war against poverty.”
Terrorism is not caused by religious
fanaticism (that is just its mask). It is caused by the frustration
and jealousy of the world’s poor who see (via the TV they have
access to, despite their poverty) the vast gap between what
they have and what rich nations have. Through television, they
can see what we have and don’t deserve and use so selfishly.
We would fight the roots of terrorism
better if our budgets were reversed — if we spent $15 billion
on military and $500 billion on poverty! (Actually, the shift
would not have to be that dramatic. It has been estimated that
if we merely doubled the small percentages we spend on the plight
of the poor, we could end extreme poverty by the year 2025.)
But the situation we find ourselves
in today, the yawning breach between the world’s rich and poor,
is intolerable, unconscionable, and impossible to justify or
rationalize. Barbara Kingsolver put it into a parable:
It is easy to see the gross injustice
and the huge potential problems posed by the “breach,” easy
to recognize how essential it is to close the gap, and easy
to see why Isaiah urged us to become “repairers of the breach.”
Malachi’s prophecy was equally provocative and his warning perhaps
even more dire. “Turn the Hearts” he said, “lest the whole
earth be cursed.”
One powerful way of working at
both scriptural admonitions at the same time is to bring the
very rich together with the very poor. Doing so solves the
problems of both. The rich overcome self-centeredness and hedonism
by helping, thus turning their children from spoiled brats to
serving and world-aware stewards. And the poor begin to receive
the help they need on a personal level. Each time it happens,
the breach is repaired (even if just a little) and the hearts
are turned.
The Hearts (How Families Lost
their “Tensile Strength”)
“Tensile strength” is a chemistry
term related to a substance’s ability to hold itself together.
During the past half century, families throughout the world
have lost much of their tensile strength.
Too many kids today can rap but
cannot read. Too many know everything about drugs but can’t
pass chemistry. Too many have sex but have no love.
In America today, more teenage
boys go to jail than join the Boy Scouts.
A generation ago, a survey revealed
the seven biggest problems in one high school to be:
- Talking Out of Turn
- Chewing Gum
- Being Disruptive (Making Noise)
- Cutting in Line
- Running in the Halls
- Dress Code Violations
- Littering.
A recent survey at the same school
provides the stark contrast. Today the seven biggest problems
are:
1.
Alcohol Abuse
2.
Drug Abuse
3.
Robbery
4.
Teen Pregnancy
5.
Assault
6.
Rape
7.
Suicide
Social problems have placed this
nation on the literal brink of demise.
And “social problems” is far too
tame a description — too academic, too theoretical, too political.
What we need is a word that suggests how dramatic and deep the
dangers are. Why search for that word? The scriptural prophecy
already gave it to us. It is, as Malachi predicted, a curse.
A freedom-threatening, economy- threatening, life-threatening
curse.
The social problems that are overwhelming
this country must be cured. But the medicine we’re using isn’t
working. We’re treating the symptoms. We’re taking aspirin.
And in this case the aspirin is incredibly expensive and seems
to have negative long-term effects — actually making the problems
worse. Our welfare system and tax laws, even as they threaten
to bankrupt us, actually destroy initiative and encourage people
not to work. Our expensive criminal justice system doesn’t
rehabilitate, doesn’t deter, and actually creates a culture
of crime (especially in our prisons which are an inbred training
ground for living outside the law).
The reason we look for causes
is to permit the intelligent search for cures. In medicine,
in business, in sports, if something is wrong, we have to isolate
the cause before we can find a cure.
It is common (and popular) to blame
problems on poverty or on the growing gap between rich and poor.
But to say that economic conditions cause the social problems
may be a little like saying that the rash and the fever cause
the illness.
Economic conditions are a result
rather than a cause far more often than popular thinking (and
popular media) suggest. All of our social problems have economic
costs and financial consequences. But whether
economic problems cause social problems or social problems cause
economic problems (or whether the two repeatedly cause and exacerbate
each other in a cause-and-effect spiral) is a moot issue. The
bigger question is, what underlying cause is there for both
of them? What brings to pass the social and economic curse?
What is the deeper spiritual crisis?
It’s only recently that sophisticated
academic statistical analysis has begun to take us toward where
common sense has pointed all along: The cause of our
social problems is the breakdown of our most basis social institution
— the family.
Proof of this premise requires
only two things:
- Evidence showing how much and
in what ways American families have declined
- Evidence showing clear causal
connections between that decline of families and the rise
of social (and economic) problems.
With census and other recent (and
vast) increases of available data, there are more than enough
reliable statistics to serve as evidence on both points.
The ever-growing evidence of statistics
combines with straightforward logic to help us understand that
social problems are never really solved with social
programs. The solution lies in stronger families.
The solution, of course, lie in
the home, with parents and with families, but parents and families
need help from the larger institutions of our society — lots
of help and lots of support. Instead, it seems that the world
around us is conspiring to weaken our families and to undermine
parents.
For the conclusion of this article,
read Monday’s issue of Meridian Magazine.