Myths, Lies, and Mercy: Exposing the forces that perpetuate & criminalize homelessness
By Eddie Young
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They speak to the unfounded assertions and lies that are used to console
Eddie Young
Eddie Young is from Nashville, the American cradle of songs filled with anguish and despair. After 15 years of drug addictions in an attempt to numb an existential dread, he considered the Christian faith as a means to find purpose and spent the following 20 years as a minister. That evaporated in the midst of his work among the homeless and the poverty of their human condition. Young continues to work and advocate for the human and civil rights of the homeless.
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Myths, Lies, and Mercy - Eddie Young
An Everlasting Now
I was having lunch in a local restaurant and discussing the work that we do with a couple of friends, all the while noticing that someone seated nearby at the bar was listening in on our conversation. This gentleman had apparently heard enough and so he leans over to our table, and interrupting with a smile of condescension, assured me that most of the homeless choose to live that way.
Managing somehow to control and suppress my indignation for such an ignorant and unfounded assertion, I rejoined my friends in conversation after assuring this gentleman that it is extremely rare to find someone who has actually chosen
to live without the security and stability of a home. Closer to the truth is that many of the homeless across our communities have come to embrace their hopelessness – they’ve lost all trust in the systems that at best do not work for them, and at worst intentionally push and/or keep them beyond the margins of society.
The demeanor that those in the mainstream witness and mistakenly attribute to evidence that they have chosen this lifestyle, is most often an expression of the ways in which they attempt to cope with a bitter and empty existence. At some point, it is understandable how someone might choose to give up trying. As a community in a sports culture stupor, we can understand this. Imagine how demoralizing it is to go into the fourth quarter of a football game trailing 52-0. Your coach is telling you, Don’t give up! The game’s not over.
Well, he’s right, technically it’s not over but for all practical purposes, it is. And the players know it. How long do you continue to give your all for what you believe is a losing cause, embrace the reality and settle into going through the motions?
Comments like, They choose to live that way
not only add heartless insult to injury for those living in desperate poverty, (maybe one of the benefits to not living shoulder to shoulder with those of us in more privileged positions is that they’re not close enough to us to hear thoughtless comments like this), but they also serve to assuage the consciences of those who make them. Operating on the premise that those who are living in poverty and homelessness have chosen that lifestyle makes us feel better about the society that we help to create and promote. And of course, if we were to acknowledge that someone has actually fallen victim to circumstances beyond their control, we insert our belief that anyone can pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
But what if?
What if, and I know there are some – very few, but some, there are people who have chosen this lifestyle? Or maybe not chosen this lifestyle as much as not chosen the lifestyle that the rest of us have? Jan Yoors at the age of twelve ran away from home in 1934 to join a Gypsy kumpania, the Romanies, and lived among them for ten years. Yoors observed that The Gypsies, seemingly immune to progress, live in an everlasting Now, in a perpetual, heroic present, as if thy recognized only the slow pulse of eternity and were content to live in the margin of history… they’re social organization is forever fluid, yet has an internal vitality.
What if those romantic words were to describe some of the homeless who share this city with us? Is it possible that some of our disdain for them can better be attributed to our envying their courage in choosing the simplicity of the lifestyle that they live? Would any of us dare to admit to this? Probably not. Most of us will get up in the morning and engage once again in what we admittedly refer to as the rat race.
Some of us sitting at a desk and dreaming of a simpler life – living in an everlasting Now
but bound by the obligations of an existence that has all the meaningfulness of treading water – going nowhere and working ourselves to exhaustion to stay afloat yet affirming that it’s the right thing to do because it’s just what people do
There really aren’t many people experiencing homelessness in our midst who can be described as grasping for life in an everlasting Now
(choosing a life of homelessness), that’s a myth. But the few that you do come across can be challenging to one’s perspectives on the approach to life. They make one think and wonder, (if there’s space in our busy schedule), and usually, all they ask in return is a little change, something to keep them warm, and a little food to eat.
I’m ok with that.
Love Mercy, But Act With Justice
I just read through Robert Lupton’s Toxic Charity, a book that’s been making it’s rounds lately, mainly among faith-based organizations. I must take issue with, in particular, his explanation of the prophet Micah’s call to act with justice and love mercy. Because his understanding of this text appears to be the foundation upon which he builds his approach in working among the poor, it would be crucial to his argument that he get it right.
To begin, Lupton makes the mistake of defining mercy as a force that compels us to acts of compassion.
This is confusing and simply not correct; he actually has it backwards. Mercy is not a force; it is the act. Compassion comes closer to being defined as a force. For example, compassion is the deep-seated feeling that Jesus had (it is described as dwelling in his very bowels) for the oppressed crowds that drove him to acts of mercy. But one can have feelings of compassion without ever engaging in a show of mercy; it happens every day (just as one can extend acts of mercy that are not driven by feelings of compassion). My point is this: Micah is appealing to a directive from God that says act.
One cannot be blamed for a lack of compassion; the feeling is either stirred or it isn’t. You can’t create it upon command. You can act however, and this is what Micah says to love – love mercy. According to Micah, God gives no directives on our love for feelings – compassion. He wants us to love acts – mercy.
When it comes to justice, Lupton is at least partly right when he says that justice without mercy is cold and impersonal, more concerned about rights than relationships.
Well, justice is very concerned with the pursuit of and the protection of one’s rights – whether an individual or a population. It has to do with setting things right – balancing the scales. And what does Micah say? Do this. But Lupton is claiming that acts of justice and acts of mercy are an inseparable pair. Each is useless, and even deadly, without the other. I’m not sure how that claim is deduced unless it has to do with them appearing together in the same sentence. He’s all over the place here. First, he continues to treat mercy as a force, without which justice is cold and impersonal.
And it is here that he shows his hand. He’s trying his best to tie these two together in order to support the premise of his book, that mercy without justice, (the thing he will define as justice) is a dose of poison – that when these two are divorced, they become deformed.
But then he shifts and begins describing mercy as an act, one that without justice, degenerates (one) into dependency and entitlement…
And we can all see where this is going.
Lupton defines justice above as actions concerned with rights,