In Matthew chapter 25 Jesus tells a
story about how we should treat people. In this story he states -
"'I tell you the truth, when you
refused to help the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were
refusing to help me.'
When we approach our problems in the
neighborhoods we serve, we must never lose sight of the "least
of these." For many people their work is dedicated to helping
provide for the "least of these." We help them with food,
housing, utilities, clothing and many other necessities of life. Yet
after decades of hard work our problems persist. To provide for
someones care is a noble venture but to provide for their
self-sufficiency is a greater good.
Many charitable efforts are offered as
a program or a class. This approach to our work misses the need for
life on life interaction. What the "least of these" needs
is a family, a community, a network of people that will care for them
and empower them to be all that God designed them to be. They don't
just need this Monday - Friday from 8 - 5. They need this 24/7.
Training and provision will always fall short if it is not connected
to loving, caring people that are willing to live side by side with
the "least of these."
There is a marginalized group of people
in our communities. These people lack education, social skills, job
skills and have often never been surrounded by loving relationships.
The "least of these" are oppressed, beat down, abused,
neglected, and carrying the mistakes of their past like yokes around
their necks. If we want to help them we must walk with them and carry
their burdens. We must make a place for them to live and work in our
communities. For many of the "least of these" they have
never had a legitimate paying job. They do not know what is required
of them to show up on time, take instruction from authority, care for
the things of others and many other lessons that are learned in
employment. The "least of these" carry burdens that will
not just go away with provision and training. They need our love and
our care and our grace as they struggle to overcome the weight of the
yoke they carry. Many have been conditioned by the pain and failures
of their past to expect those results again.
Unfortunately for our society, money
drives our work. Businesses are looking to hire the best of the best
not the "least of these." Funders drive programming as the
desired approach to our work. It is easier to evaluate a program than
it is to evaluate life on life work. Life is fluid and messy. How can
we tell if our money is getting the results we desire without the
ability to count and analyze data? If money sources would change the
way they offer support to show a priority for life on life work
instead of programming, we would have more people moving to our most
desperate neighborhoods and living alongside the "least of
these,"
When we take a life on life approach to
our work we focus on building the person up and rebuilding the
communities they live in, one person and one house at a time. If we
adopt a life on life approach to our work, we will house and employ
the "least of these" and thus raise our entire community in
the process. As we lift up the "least of these" we empower
them to take advantage of the many opportunities that already exist.
We remove the oppressive yoke from their neck and bring equity into
their lives.
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