One Christian’s Perspective on The Giving Pledge, Part III: Street Party Philanthropy

We opened our series on the Giving Pledge with the Guardian’s Peter Wilby offering a recommendation for a modified giving pledge. Note in particular today the concluding sentence of Wilby’s commentary:

If the rich really wish to create a better world, they can sign another pledge: to pay their taxes on time and in full; to stop lobbying against taxation and regulation; to avoid creating monopolies; to give their employees better wages, pensions, job protection and working conditions; to make goods and use production methods that don’t kill or maim or damage the environment or make people ill. When they put their names to that, there will be occasion not just for applause but for street parties.

It’s staggering, really, how much of the philanthropy in the Bible ends up quite literally rolling out into the street. Whether with Levi, Zaccheus, the Banquet Feast of The Lamb, or dozens of other philanthropic episodes, street parties are part and parcel of Christianity-as-philanthropy.

Philanthrocapitalists might puzzle over the following street party and, in light of Givewell’s most-lives-saved-for-the-least-money calculus, struggle to compute the philanthropy of the Son of God who tells it:

Then Jesus told them this parable: “Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them. Does he not leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep until he finds it? And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.’

This is not the most lives saved for the least money. This is a parable that shrugs off the notion of scarcity the way that contemporary philanthropy shrugs off the efficacy of self-emptying personal relationship.

Notes Luther, with additional commentary from Torvend (p. 65):

“It is necessary that you…deal with your neighbor in the very same way [as Christ has dealt with you], be given also to [the neighbor] as a gift and an example.” The Christian is taught by Christ, albeit in a “loving and friendly way,” what to do in the world. Passive in the reception of Christ as gift, the Christian is to become active in service to the neighbor in need because such work fulfills the commands of Christ, actually benefits the neighbor, and tests the authenticity of faith, that gift itself that rules and guides one’s living in the world with other persons.

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One Christian’s Perspective on The Giving Pledge, Part II: Why Philanthropy Still Beats Philanthrocapitalism

The Giving Pledge of America’s Billionaires highlights a surprisingly underexamined phenomenon in the field of philanthropy, namely, the degree to which the practice of philanthropy is being displaced by philanthrocapitalism.

An increasing number of givers identify themselves not as philanthropists but rather as “philanthrocapitalists”, utilizing their resources to contend for various visions of the future, weighing potential investments in light of their possible social returns (the most lives saved for the least money is one of GiveWell’s benchmarks)–and envisioning “social capital markets” where, in the words of Peter Wilby, funders-as-philanthropists “select charities as they would select suppliers of goods and services to their companies”, seeking “efficiency, clearly defined targets, measurable outcomes, quick results”.

Says Oracle founder Larry Ellison, “The profit motive could be the best tool for solving the world’s problems.”

Concerned, however, that “the poor are written out of their own story, that business tycoons, accustomed to getting their own way, do things to the poor, rather than with them”, former World Bank advisor and author of Small Change: Why Business Won’t Change the World Michael Edwards asks, “Why should the rich and famous decide how schools are going to be reformed, or what drugs will be supplied at prices affordable to the poor, or which civil society groups get funded for their work?”

Notes Wilby, “The emphasis on ‘rates of return’ and ‘value for money’ may exclude people in great need who happen to be difficult to reach or, even if made fit and healthy, would be of marginal economic utility.”

As we’ll note in our next and final piece on the Giving Pledge, it’s precisely on the margins that God plies His own philanthropy.

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One Christian’s Perspective on The Giving Pledge, Part I: Two Very Different Giving Pledges

Even in the midst of several really excellent pieces from secular writers on the Giving Pledge (my own favorites are here, here, here, and one particularly insightful piece I’m saving for the end of this post), I’ve been surprised not to see more vigorous discussion among Christians of this billionaire-driven challenge to America’s billionaires to give away more than half their wealth to charity. Since nature abhors a vacuum even in virtual reality, I’ve decided to devote this week’s posts to my own (Christian) perspective on the Giving Pledge.

We begin our consideration of the topic by contrasting the focus of two different “billionaire pledges”—the first from the Giving Pledge and the second from Zacchaeus the tax collector.

First, from America’s billionaires:

The Giving Pledge is an effort to help address society’s most pressing problems by inviting the wealthiest American families and individuals to commit to giving more than half of their wealth to philanthropy or charitable causes either during their lifetime or after their death.

Second, from Zaccheus the tax collector:

Jesus entered Jericho and was passing through. A man was there by the name of Zacchaeus; he was a chief tax collector and was wealthy. He wanted to see who Jesus was, but being a short man he could not, because of the crowd. So he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore-fig tree to see him, since Jesus was coming that way. When Jesus reached the spot, he looked up and said to him, “Zacchaeus, come down immediately. I must stay at your house today.” So he came down at once and welcomed him gladly.All the people saw this and began to mutter, “He has gone to be the guest of a ‘sinner.’ “

But Zacchaeus stood up and said to the Lord, “Look, Lord! Here and now I give half of my possessions to the poor, and if I have cheated anybody out of anything, I will pay back four times the amount.”

Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house, because this man, too, is a son of Abraham. For the Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost.”

Zacchaeus is not helping address society’s most pressing problems. Instead, he is repenting as a result of his warm, personal, unwarranted encounter with Jesus Christ.

In the same vein, Peter Wilby, in an especially insightful piece entitled The Rich Want a Better World? Try Paying Fair Wages and Tax suggests that the greatest social impact of all may come from the repentance of the philanthrocapitalists themselves:

If the rich really wish to create a better world, they can sign another pledge: to pay their taxes on time and in full; to stop lobbying against taxation and regulation; to avoid creating monopolies; to give their employees better wages, pensions, job protection and working conditions; to make goods and use production methods that don’t kill or maim or damage the environment or make people ill. When they put their names to that, there will be occasion not just for applause but for street parties.

There is an irony in the claim of the Giving Pledge that “the Giving Pledge is specifically focused on billionaires”.  In truth, the Giving Pledge is not focused on billionaires but rather on social problems as understood and reshaped by billionaires according to their values and experience. Absent a Zacchaeus-like transformation, it is difficult to imagine such philanthropy not being warped by what Samuel Torvend expositing Martin Luther (p. 32) called our “strong inward curvature” which “pull[s] everything, consciously and unconsciously, into the orbit of self.”

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