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Bishops Play Defense On Anti-Poverty Initiative

First Posted: 11/10/10 02:37 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:10 PM ET

American Catholic Charity

By Daniel Burke
Religion News Service

(RNS) For four decades, the U.S. Catholic bishops have maintained a nationwide program designed to help the poor lift themselves out of poverty. And for just as long, fierce critics have tried to kill it.

Proponents of the Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD) say it exemplifies Jesus' preference for the poor and downtrodden; opponents, including several bishops, say it funds left-wing activists, some of whom undermine church doctrine on homosexuality and abortion.

As the nation's 200 or so Roman Catholic bishops prepare for their annual meeting in Baltimore next week (Nov. 15-18), the CCHD has become yet another battlefield in what some Catholics lament is an increasingly polarized church.

As the U.S. bishops' flagship anti-poverty program, the CCHD is funded through a special collection taken up each year on the Sunday before Thanksgiving. Since 1970, the program has disbursed $290 million in grants, according to CCHD officials.

But the program's practices and guiding philosophy have been sharply attacked by conservatives armed with Internet-enhanced research, a sharp nose for malfeasance, and a deep apprehension for anything that sniffs of socialism.

At the bishops' meeting in Baltimore, CCHD officials will present a 15-page report that details reforms they say will bolster the program's Catholic identity. The new policies will also ensure that groups whose activities conflict with the church's stance on social issues do not receive funding, they said.

Last June, a coalition called Reform the CCHD Now sent a report to bishops in all 195 dioceses detailing accusations against nearly 50 groups that it says engaged in pursuits "antithetical to church teaching."

The CCHD acknowledged such errors at five of the 270 groups that received funding in 2009; a sixth group's contract was not renewed for the same reason, said John Carr, executive director of the bishops' social justice office. The other allegations were unfounded, he said.

"While there are relatively few (groups) that have crossed the line, that is a source of deep regret," said Bishop Roger Morin of Biloxi, Miss., who chairs the bishops' subcommittee on the CCHD. "Dozens of steps are being taken to make sure that will not happen again."

Those steps include revising grant contracts to clearly state positions, activities and relationships not permitted by the CCHD; strengthening prohibitions on partisan political activity; creating a review board; seeking more Catholic grantees; and hiring a moral theologian to help with complicated decisions.

The CCHD also pledged to develop more effective ways to monitor and respond to attacks from its critics.

The vast majority of CCHD grants went to programs such as one in San Antonio that has attracted more than $1 billion for public projects in low-income neighborhoods, according to the report. Such projects, the report implies, are endorsed by Pope Benedict XVI, who wrote in 2009 that the "institutional path" of charity is "no less excellent and effective than the kind of charity which encounters the neighbor directly."

Morin said he hopes the reforms will woo back some of the 10 bishops who, according to the independent weekly National Catholic Reporter, have stopped CCHD collections in their diocese.

"We are going to ask those bishops to reconsider and to once again walk in step with the bishops' conference on this major initiative," Morin said.

Deal Hudson, who directs the conservative website Inside Catholic, said the CCHD's reforms might eliminate funding errors if they are doggedly implemented, but said a more systemic problem remains.

"The groups they are dealing with, community organizing groups, are 100 percent committed members of the political left. That's just a fact," said Hudson, a former adviser to the Republican National Committee and former President George W. Bush.

Hudson strongly denied that politics play any role in his concern about CCHD, but said leftist groups nearly always conflict with Catholic doctrine on issues like gay rights and abortion.

Other Catholics say the reforms do not address another fundamental question: Is the church, through CCHD, essentially outsourcing its social justice mission?

Michael Hichborn, a spokesman for Reform the CCHD Now, called the anti-poverty program "philosophically flawed right from the outset."

"It never addresses sin as the root cause of poverty, which means it never addresses Christ as a remedy," he said.

Ideological battles over CCHD are distant thunder to the often desperately needy people who benefit from the program, said Robert Gorman, executive director of Catholic Charities for the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux in Louisiana.

People in his diocese are more concerned with improving police protection in violent neighborhoods, preventing drowning deaths in local pools, and restoring the state's oil-slicked coastline, Gorman said.

"It's a red herring," Gorman said of the ideological battle over the CCHD. "It's a national agenda that is not of importance to people at the local level who are just trying to work their way out of poverty and keep their kids safe."

In other business in Baltimore, the bishops will also elect a new president and vice president of their national conference, and vote on an agreement with four Reformed churches to recognize each other's baptisms.

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By Daniel Burke Religion News Service (RNS) For four decades, the U.S. Catholic bishops have maintained a nationwide program designed to help the poor lift themselves out of poverty. And for just as ...
By Daniel Burke Religion News Service (RNS) For four decades, the U.S. Catholic bishops have maintained a nationwide program designed to help the poor lift themselves out of poverty. And for just as ...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
rtgmath
There has got to be a better way!
11:26 PM on 11/18/2010
Michael Hichborn, a spokesman for Reform the CCHD Now, called the anti-poverty program "philosophically flawed right from the outset."

"It never addresses sin as the root cause of poverty, which means it never addresses Christ as a remedy," he said.

--

Ahhh, so many conservatives who ascribe the sin associated with poverty to the poor. Funny, James ascribes the sins associated with poverty to the rich, the ones who kept back the fair wages from the poor, who committed fraud, who exploited the poor, who took the poor before judges they owned to enforce their dominion over the poor. The rich, James says, will weep and howl, while the poor are the ones God has chosen, "rich in faith."

Which may explain why James does not seem to be a favorite Bible book among conservative churches!

How will Christ remedy the situation? Well, He won't right now, James says. But the "coming of the Lord draweth nigh." James implies that the coming of the Lord will take away from the rich their wealth and influence, and that *they* shall stand before a Judge they cannot bribe.

The "if you really trusted God then you wouldn't be poor" crowd are manifestly unbiblical in their theology. And their resistance to social change showcases their own unrighteous attitudes.

Jesus was very firm in his support of the poor and afflicted. The affluent religionists may be "Christians", but they are far from being like Christ.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arthur Brown
Facts Matter.
11:56 AM on 11/17/2010
“"It never addresses sin as the root cause of poverty, which means it never addresses Christ as a remedy," said Michael Hichborn

This belief is one of the reasons why you have a lot of unfulfilled Christians today...

If you are poor, its doesn't mean God doesn't love you or that you don't have enough faith or that you've sinned yourself into poverty... There is no biblical or empirical evidence to support this. There are rich sinners as well as poor sinners. Using your bank account as a means of gauging how much favor you have with God is silly.

Unfortunately, this belief has tainted many people into not want to help those less fortunate than they are. But i'm sure that "No because poor people are sinners" won't be an acceptable answer when they get asked at the pearly gates "when i was hungry, did you feed me?"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arthur Brown
Facts Matter.
11:54 AM on 11/17/2010
“"It never addresses sin as the root cause of poverty, which means it never addresses Christ as a remedy," said Michael Hichborn

This belief is one of the reasons why you have a lot of unfulfilled Christians today...

If you are poor, its doesn't mean God doesn't love you or that you don't have enough faith or that you've sinned yourself into poverty... There is no biblical or empirical evidence to support this. There are rich sinners as well as poor sinners. Using your bank account as a means of gauging how much favor you have with God is silly.

Unfortunately, this belief has tainted many people into not want to help those less fortunate than they are. But i'm sure that "No because poor people are sinners" won't be an acceptable answer when they get asked at the pearly gates "when i was hungry, did you feed me?"â€
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arthur Brown
Facts Matter.
11:51 AM on 11/17/2010
"It never addresses sin as the root cause of poverty, which means it never addresses Christ as a remedy," said Michael Hichborn

This belief is one of the reasons why you have a lot of unfulfilled Christians today...

If you are poor, its doesn't mean God doesn't love you or that you don't have enough faith or that you've sinned yourself into poverty... There is no biblical or empirical evidence to support this. There are rich sinners as well as poor sinners. Using your bank account as a means of gauging how much favor you have with God is silly.

Unfortunately, this belief has tainted many people into not want to help those less fortunate than they are. But i'm sure that "No because poor people are sinners" won't be an acceptable answer when they get asked at the pearly gates "when i was hungry, did you feed me?"
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CarmenCameron
Prepping 4 US version of French Revolution
03:03 PM on 11/16/2010
"Sin as the root cause of poverty"?!? Many sins results in great wealth.
And Christ, himself, addressed that. (Rich men and camels and "the root of all evil", anyone?)

The early Jerusalem church was the very model of socialism. (See "Acts of the Apostles.")

I think the luxurious lifestyle enjoyed by these bishops - especially those drifting through the corridors of great worldly power - has completely removed them from the very humanity that Jesus fully embraced - and whom HE treasured.
09:09 AM on 11/16/2010
"since 1970, the program has disbursed $290 million in grants, according to CCHD officials."
___________________________
That's it for forty years?
They've paid out more in legal fees,fines and restitution in one year for protecting child molesters in their midst.
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american-dolt
Truther since 2004
11:35 AM on 11/15/2010
“It is a tragic mix-up when the United States spends $500,000 for every enemy soldier killed, and only $53 annually on the victims of poverty.â€

-MLK
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LucidPanther
12:36 PM on 11/16/2010
America also has more people in its prisons than any other nation on earth. And that costs money when you factor in all the police hours, the courts and maintaining millions of people in cages.
11:16 PM on 11/13/2010
The RCC has about seventeen trillion in assets. They have almost two thousand years experience in crying crocodile tears for consumption by their sheep. What they are after is lots more money.
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Indigo1941
Time Traveler
03:08 PM on 11/12/2010
A smidgen of Liberation Theology might help clarify matters and point out the gap between directly helping the poor, that is to say, the people who are poor and maybe dirty and probably smell, and outsourcing the issue to a carefully financed conglomerate that charges an allegedly modest fee for its services. O but then . . . so it all comes back to solidly American Bumper Sticker Theology: WWJD?
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CarmenCameron
Prepping 4 US version of French Revolution
03:15 PM on 11/16/2010
WWJD - PRECISELY! (That RCC bishops seem to have completely forgotten their own core teaching is the root cause of all of ITS sins.)
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
02:39 PM on 11/12/2010
Some reactionary priests might see the program as being liberal and forgetting that Jesus himself advocated caring for the dispossessed as did the religion to which he belonged, Judaism.
08:37 AM on 11/12/2010
Can you imagine - a moral theologian needed to decide who's going to pass out the soup and sandwiches.
09:23 PM on 11/11/2010
The RCC has about seventeen trillion in assets. They have almost two thousand years experience in crying crocodile tears for consumption by their sheep. What they are mostly after is more money.
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sarahinez
03:28 PM on 11/11/2010
It would be easier to believe that it's an ideological issue, rather than a personal, selfish one, if those who complain about "welfare queens" were as quick as the lefties to help the poor and complained as vociferously about "Bernie Madoff" millionaires.
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10:25 AM on 11/11/2010
I don't recall any "stories" about Jesus questioning the poor about their beliefs on abortion and homosexuality before performing his "miracles." When churches start discriminating with their charitable-contribution collections, it's time for them to pay taxes, retroactive to the raygun administration.
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Gregor53
Remembering your past gives power to the present.
07:24 PM on 11/11/2010
The chruch in its very structure is not like the Church of Yeshua.  Ironically, he attached the Temple for all the money and business taking place there.  The Cathars were probably more like that of Yeshua's following than that of Peter.
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CarmenCameron
Prepping 4 US version of French Revolution
03:22 PM on 11/16/2010
BINGO! (F&F)
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lostnacfgop
Tiny Ripples of Hope from a Blue State's Red spot
09:55 AM on 11/11/2010
More proof that the ascribers to the "5 Non-negotiable" Catholic Perspective - which is really "2 Non-negotiable - abortion and anything gay" - are destroying the church with one, ugly wedge and a big, noisy hammer. Leave the CCHD alone, haters.