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Why Religious Freedom Includes the Freedom to Give to the Poor

The battle over religious freedom isn’t just about what we can preach and teach. It’s about what we can do.
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Updated Nov 12, 2014
Why Religious Freedom Includes the Freedom to Give to the Poor

In the year 257 AD, the Roman emperor Valerian stepped up the persecution of Christians, especially in the city of Rome itself. The principal targets of his campaign were the clergy and laity who came from the upper classes of Roman society.

 

One of those caught up in Valerian’s persecution was a deacon named Lawrence. Lawrence was in charge of the Church’s property used to support Rome’s poor. Lawrence was offered a deal: in exchange for turning over the property, he would be spared arrest and execution. He agreed, adding that he needed three day to collect the church’s riches.

 

On the third day, he gathered the sick, aged, widows, orphans, and the poor of the Church, presented them to the official and said, "These are the treasures of the Church."

 

He was executed on August 10, 258.

 

Those who would interfere with our providing for the least of Jesus’ brethren—that is, “the treasures of the Church—are opposing God every bit as much as those who would have us change our message and teaching.

 

Case in point: Last month Fort Lauderdale became the latest American city to limit the ability of churches and nonprofits to feed the homeless outside of certain designated areas.

 

Think about that, folks. In some places, if a homeless person tells you he’s hungry and you buy him a sandwich and give it to him, you are breaking the law.

 

Supporters of the law argue that “allowing ministries and others to hand out meals aggravates homelessness because it lures homeless people away from city-run programs.”

 

Opponents of the law insist “that the cities that have or are trying to pass these laws . . .  are doing it because they want to scrub their neighborhoods clean of homeless people, making [those neighborhoods] more appealing to businesses.”

 

Either, neither, or both of these explanations may be true. But what is definitely true is that the Church must reach out to those in need of our help.

 

The first people to be arrested for feeding the homeless in public were two pastors and 90-year-old Jim Abbott, who runs an organization named “Love Thy Neighbor, Inc.” According to Abbott, one of the arresting officers told him to “ ‘Drop that plate right now,” ’ as if Abbott were carrying a weapon.

 

As I record this broadcast, Abbott and the two ministers face a possible sixty days in jail and a $5000 fine.

 

“Drop that plate” sounds like a line from a Saturday Night Live skit, but it was the voice of the state telling believers that they could not do what God has commanded them and all of us to do.

 

Folks, this is every bit as much a violation of religious freedom as the HHS mandate or the New Mexico law that punished Elaine Huguenin for not photographing a lesbian commitment ceremony. And how can we forget what just happened in Houston, where the mayor dared to ask pastors to turn in their sermons.

 

In all of these instances, the state is daring to tell us what our mission is and how we should or should not perform it.

 

If Christians don’t protest this intrusion, we’re validating our opponents’ claims that our rhetoric about religious freedom is really about the loss of some privileged status or, worse, all about sex.

 

And if that happens, we’ll miss an opportunity to show that religious freedom is about our ability to show the world what treasure worth having looks like.

 

Before I leave you today, I want to invite you to check out our website, BreakPoint.org. We’ve got all kinds of first-rate articles, blog posts, and news on cultural trends and events that should be on the radar screen of every Christian. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Please, visit BreakPoint.org today.

 

BreakPoint is a Christian worldview ministry that seeks to build and resource a movement of Christians committed to living and defending Christian worldview in all areas of life. Begun by Chuck Colson in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print. Today BreakPoint commentaries, co-hosted by Eric Metaxas and John Stonestreet, air daily on more than 1,200 outlets with an estimated weekly listening audience of eight million people. Feel free to contact us at BreakPoint.org where you can read and search answers to common questions.

Eric Metaxas is a co-host of BreakPoint Radio and a best-selling author whose biographies, children's books, and popular apologetics have been translated into more than a dozen languages.

Publication date: November 12, 2014

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