Taking Poverty Personally - Biblical Compassion I
The professionalisation of compassion
(This article first appeared in Zadok Magazine)

During July of 2004, the Sunday Age trundled out that much-loved chestnut of investigative journalism – the “children in care” exposé.[i] Four years ago The Age covered the same issue, in exactly the same way.[ii]
You can’t blame them. There’s so much tasty juice dripping from their
stories: sexual abuse, physical assault, loneliness, exploitation,
dysfunctional adults, or better, death. A Sunday Age research
assistant asked me whether I knew of families whose children had died
while in care. Best of all, this story has a villain, cold,
calculating, and impervious to slander or libel – the welfare system.
That
the media repeatedly ‘exposes’ the ills of the welfare system reflects
the powerlessness the community feels in response to the plight of
children in care. Media investigations do little to change concrete
conditions, but act as an outlet for our frustration. Faced with our
inability to alter the fate of children in care, we turn to escapist
modes of engagement. What could be more escapist than blaming ‘the
system’?
Such a response
locates the onus for social and communal transformation within the
welfare system, allowing us to evade the difficult questions that this
issue raises.
Compassion Inc.
What are these
difficult questions? They are legion, covering the causes of family
abuse and neglect, child protection policy etc. These questions will
continue to vex Western culture for the foreseeable future. However,
the crucial issues centre around two factors that combine to
professionalise compassion.
Firstly, for a large
part of the twentieth century, church-based agencies have carried the
burden of caring for people in need. Organisations such as Wesley
Mission, Brotherhood of St. Laurence, the Salvation Army, Anglicare and
MacKillop Family Services were all rooted in Christian religious
traditions, from which they drew their inspiration, and from which they
are now mostly autonomous. Though active compassion for the needy and
vulnerable was placed in the hands of a ‘specialist’ organisation,
ordinary people were still deeply involved. Through a spirit of
volunteerism and concern for the well-being of their communities,
unpaid workers contributed heavily to the work of welfare agencies.
However, the second
factor obliterated this involvement. The privatising zeal of the early
1990s saw most community-based welfare organisations either fold, or
become aggressively professional in their fight to retain funding. The
professionalisation of the welfare sector brought forth fruits, such as
increased accountability, strategic planning and workers who understood
poverty at a structural level.
But the benefits are
massively outstripped by the negative consequences. The development of
specialist agencies (in any field) naturally marginalises
non-specialists. Jargon, inside knowledge, obscure processes and
disdain for non-professionals discourages ordinary people from offering
their talents. This may be appropriate in fields such as medicine or
science. But in the field of human relations and community, ordinary
people are the experts! A welfare organisation with whom I volunteered
found it extremely difficult to recruit carers for their teenage foster
care program. The main objection, they discovered, was a belief that
one required specialist skills, inaccessible to the ordinary mortal.
In addition, we
should suspect attempts to rely on specialists to resolve social
strife. After all, they have a financial interest in the current
arrangement – that is, the ‘need’ for welfare specialists justifies
ongoing financial support of the welfare system. That is not to suggest
that welfare professionals play no meaningful role, but transformation
hardly flourishes in an environment sustained by money.
Compassion by Proxy
But do the roots of
this problem go deeper? It does appear that the professionalisation of
compassion saps the confidence of community members to intervene for
the good of others. Yet, it seems just another explanation that defers
to ‘higher forces’, again allowing ordinary citizens off the hook, and
disempowering them by insisting on purely structural solutions. Beyond
decisions taken by politicians and bureaucrats, surely the average
citizen can do something, anything, at a personal level.
Here we touch the
edge of the root of the problem: that the citizenry, as a whole, does
not wish to venture into the pain of our communities. We are content to
sub-contract our responsibility to others through taxation, and perhaps
donate extra monies to charities, employing professionals as our
proxies. This is the real ‘welfare mentality’ in our culture.
Until this disease
is cured, any amount of structural or institutional alterations will do
little good. Surely, after decades of revelations in which the failures
of the welfare system have been extensively documented, we can admit
that calls for institutional reform will not give vulnerable citizens
what they need.
Taking Poverty Personally
Recommunitising
welfare will not be achieved by institutional reform. True change
necessitates that we get our hands dirty, that we involve ourselves in
the lives of hurting people, personally, not simply through
subsidised proxies. This approach assumes that we will also alter our
lifestyle in order to facilitate such personal involvement. In the
Depression era, in New York, Dorothy Day, revered Catholic social
activist, took the plight of the poor personally. She realised that our
responsibility cannot be deferred onto specialists; that everyone,
following the doctrine of imago Deo[iii], is able to act for the good of others.
How are we to do
this? By making deliberate, conscious choices in the dailiness of our
lives to inject divine love into that portion of history which is ours
alone and no-one else’s.[iv]
However, our current
pursuit of material security (and attendant longer working hours)
militates against altruism. By insisting on a Darwinian view of social
progress, this unholy quest blinds us to the pain of others.
Recommunitising welfare involves an ideological battle against this
quest.
Rebuilding human
community relies on trust. Notwithstanding the motivations and
capabilities of individual social workers, trust will never flourish in
the current welfare economy. The welfare system will remain a stunted
plant, incapable of producing the fruit that hurting people yearn for.
For the church-based agencies, this is an uncomfortable reminder of
their founder’s words when faced with the fig tree that bore no fruit –
“Cut it down!”

Dave Fagg is a part of Seeds Bendigo - Long Gully. You can contact him here.
[i] The Sunday Age: July 4 2004, p.1,6,12; July 11 2004, p.1,2,12,13; July 25 2004, p.17
[ii] The Age: October 20 2000, p. 3,13
[iii] Imago Deo: the doctrine that God created humans in the image of God.
[iv] Holben, L. (1997) All the Way to Heaven: A Theological Reflection on Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin and The Catholic Worker, Rose Hill Books, South Dakota, USA.