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Welfare and Poverty
Why Should Christians Care about Welfare and Poverty
Legislation?
The common good includes both a
commitment to private virtue and a commitment to social justice. We believe that
individuals are responsible for their actions, for their commitment to any in
their care, and for developing their own potential through productive effort.
However, we maintain that focusing solely on individual virtue does not
represent sound public policy; we must be attentive to the justice of social
institutions, and consider how such institutions shape the lives of
citizens.
Public policy must serve the common
good. We define the common good as a social order shaped by basic human equality
and justice. We depend on others and they depend on us. The common good of a
community is greater insofar as all have access to it and all can serve it.
Through government, we have both an
opportunity and a moral obligation to help the poor. Although churches and
charitable organizations must assist the poor, they cannot and should not
shoulder this work alone. A government obligation to the poor is grounded in the
Biblical text, has been affirmed for centuries by the Christian tradition, and
is prescribed by the common moral conscience of the human community.
Learn More
Protestants for the Common Good (PCG)
has adopted principles to guide our advocacy in the area of welfare reform and
poverty. Those principles are available in PDF format at the bottom of this
page.
Currently, Protestants for the Common
Good is leading an interfaith campaign to increase the TANF (welfare) cash grant
in Illinois called Welfare Justice Now. This Fact
Sheet gives the rationale behind the campaign. For an update on Welfare
Justice Now or to learn about other initiatives of Protestants for the Common
Good on welfare and poverty policy, visit the Policy
Update page of this Web site. News and reports of PCG's activities are also
available in each issue of The Common
Good.
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