Faith in the Future
of Texas
by Governor George W.
Bush
Many private social-service groups
in Texas have complained of bureaucratic rules and regulations
that threaten their religious integrity. In spring 1996, I
appointed a 16-member task force to recommend ways to remove the
barriers that stifle these quiet heroes. The task force unveiled a
landmark report, Faith in Action, that recommended about 40 ways
to unleash the best of Texas. Their work led to legislation that
will make it easier for good-hearted Texans to serve their
neighbors in a variety of areas:
Treating addiction. We must
enlist the aid of every effective ally to conquer the scourge of
drugs. Strong Bible-based programs like Teen Challenge (whose cure
rates far surpass those of other programs) were crowded out by
state regulations that embraced a strict medical model of
addiction treatment. The message was, "You may do it better
than everybody else, but you dont do it our way." Under
our new law, programs offering exclusively religious methods of
treatmentprayer, Bible study, spiritual nurture, moral guidancecan
operate free from the credentialing regulations that cover secular
programs.
| "Government does not have
a monopoly on compassion." |
Alternative accreditation.
Caregivers in Texas dont resist accountability, but they do
resist "subordinating" part of their ministrya
day-care center, a residential program for wayward kids, a foster
hometo state control. The state, however, has a legitimate
interest in protecting health and safety. A win-win solution is
"alternative accreditation." Texas now permits
child-care providers and "child-placing" agencies to
exist without state licensure and regulation if they are
accredited by recognized private-sector bodies whose standards
meet or exceed state minimums.
Protecting the good Samaritans. Medical
training coupled with religious commitment is a powerful
prescription for improving health. Churches and nonprofits are
uniquely positioned to reach vulnerable populations, but many
medical professionals, especially retired ones who lack
malpractice insurance, fear litigation if they donate medical
services. I proposed legal protections for these good Samaritans
who volunteer their services to low-income Texans. I also signed a
law giving litigation immunity to people who donate medical
supplies to nonprofit health-care organizations.
My view is simple: Government does
not have a monopoly on compassion. After spending trillions of
dollars on a generation of failed government programs, its time
we shifted our focus from compassionate intentions to
compassionate results.
Governor George
W. Bush |
Every
day by 5 a.m., 90 of the 380 inmates at the Jester II prison outside Houston are
awake and primed--not for pumping iron, but for praying. The men, some of whom are violent
felons, are enrolled in an intensive Christian rehabilitation program hosted by prison
officials. "We talk Jesus every day, every minute," says program director Jack
Cowley, "and we dont hide that fact at all." State guards provide
security, but volunteers from Prison Fellowship otherwise run this wing of the facility,
better known as the God Pod.
In South Carolina, Governor David Beasley used his leftover
campaign funds to set up a religious nonprofit group with a singular mission: recruit
churches and synagogues to "adopt" welfare families and lift them toward
independence. The effort is vigorously backed by the states Department of Social
Services (DSS). "Weve done focus groups with clients whove been
successful in getting off welfare and we asked them the most important aspect of their
success," says Leon Love, a DSS official. "They say its attitude--and
faith is the most important builder of attitude."
At Parkview Elementary School in Washington, D.C., the Reverend
Jim Till heads a privately run, faith-based tutoring program. Thursday nights in the
cafeteria, volunteers from local churches help about 60 at-risk kids improve their math
and reading skills, concluding each session with a story drawn from the Bible.
"Were part of the Parkview family," says Till, who calls to mind an
affable uncle. "They know exactly what it is were doing."
What these religious organizations are doing, in fact, is
demolishing mistaken assumptions about the separation of church and state--while
respecting their constitutional limits. After decades of isolation and suspicion,
faith-based groups nationwide are teaming up with government to confront social ills
ranging from welfare dependence to failing schools. Agreements are being struck that
enlist the active support of government, yet zealously guard the independence of the
faithful. "Some officials still look askance at anyone who quotes the Bible,"
says Marvin Olasky, a University of Texas professor whose books helped propel federal
welfare reform. "But many are desperate enough to approve anything that works."
Although operating below the radar of the social-service establishment, these partnerships
could help redefine the nations culture of caregiving.
God and Caesar
Until recently, there appeared to be only two roads for people of
faith eager to help the needy: scorn government as a useless annoyance or become paid
agents of the secular, administrative state. To be sure, anti-religious legal dogma has
scared countless charitable groups away. Yet many cannot resist government largesse, and
quickly join those social-service providers already awash in public funding. In Boston,
Catholic Charities gets about 65 percent of its budget from state and federal sources. For
Lutheran Social Services in New York, the figure is about 80 percent.
Government funding, however, invites government regulation. The
U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that the state can subsidize religious charities so long as
they are not, in the words of the Court, "pervasively sectarian." This means
groups must excise expressions of faith, such as prayer and proselytizing, from their
taxpayer-funded programs. Many of them barely retain any distinctive religious identity.
Hence a new via media in church-state relations: charitable
groups that shun Caesars coin but not Caesars cooperation. A growing company
of religious providers are willing to accept the states administrative and moral
support but forgo its money and oversight. That allows them to tread on secular turf with
a message that is, at its heart, religious.
At the same time, deals are being hammered out that satisfy
secularists as well as sectarians. Programs contain blunt appeals to moral and spiritual
renewal, yet participants are free to opt out. State officials can steer people toward
church-based assistance, so long as they offer secular alternatives. Ministers may
proselytize clients of government agencies, but not with public money and usually not on
public property.
Remarkably, government officials are among those most
determined to involve faith communities. Mississippi governor Kirk Fordice was one of the
first to challenge churches to help welfare families, and his efforts are being duplicated
in at least half a dozen other states. Texas governor George Bush is cutting state
regulations that hinder religious groups involved in social services (see box, page 35).
Indianapolis mayor Stephen Goldsmith has created a "Front Porch Alliance" in
which government agencies brainstorm ways to engage congregations in community renewal.
"There are far greater threats to our inner-city children
than religion," Goldsmith says. "In many of our most troubled neighborhoods,
clearly the most important asset is the church."
Back to School
Nowhere is that maxim more visible than in the perennial powder
keg of church-state conflicts, the public schools. John Dewey, the principal architect of
public education in 20th-century America, argued that schools should erase the supposedly
irrational religious influence of parents on their children. And thanks to a generation of
muddled court rulings on religion, educators inhale Deweys anti-religious bias like
oxygen.
"They have received a long civics lesson from extreme
separationists," says Steven McFarland of the Christian Legal Society. The result, he
says, is that "school districts consider involving churches as a last resort."
But Deweys moment may be passing. Mounting failures in
student discipline and academic performance are leaving school administrators hungry for
new approaches. In surprisingly large numbers, schools are inviting religious groups back
into the classroom. Asked to serve as tutors and aides, church volunteers are bringing
with them their faith and the value system it inspires.
Thats exactly what many officials are hoping for, as long as
religious folk tread gingerly in the secular schoolhouse. In both informal and written
agreements, church volunteers are expected to be role models in class and on the
playground. They can talk about values and offer advice. And they may invite children to
religious activities, so long as parents are notified.
"Religious groups have a lot to offer, and no one is saying
they shouldnt help out and run these programs," says Rob Boston of Americans
United for Separation of Church and State. "There are ways that this can be done
consistent with the First Amendment." More and more school districts around the
nation are putting this thesis to the test.
In the Topeka Unified School District in Kansas, assistant
superintendent Robert McFrazier held a meeting two years ago with 13 black pastors to see
what they could do to reduce students dropout and detention rates. He called on
church leaders to enlist members as tutors and teachers aides. He also asked
congregations to make their facilities available for after-school help. The plan: Do
everything possible to get more people of faith personally involved in the lives of
low-income kids.
"I was fully aware of the ramifications of church-state
entanglement," McFrazier says. "But we had a problem: How do we get our kids the
help they need beyond the conventional school day?" So far eight congregations have
responded, with no objections from local civil-liberties groups.
Pushing the Envelope
The Philadelphia school district recently hosted a luncheon for
about a hundred religious leaders to help launch Project 10,000, a campaign to recruit
classroom aides. "We are specifically asking churches to recruit people," says
Joseph Meade, the projects director. "There is such a sense of crisis in the
city that responsible leaders are looking for partnerships wherever they can be
found."
Principals now meet regularly with church leaders to coordinate
the effort. Volunteers are doing everything from helping with homework to monitoring
cafeterias and playgrounds. School officials privately hope they will do even more.
"Schools have an obligation to address moral questions,"
says Philadelphia school superintendent David Hornbeck. "They can more powerfully do
that if theres a link with churches and synagogues." Meade agrees:
"Frankly, what were really trying to do, in addition to boosting achievement,
is to get mature adults mentoring our young people, presenting positive role models."
"Religious groups have a lot to
offer," says a civil libertarian. "There are ways that this can be done
consistant with the First Amendment."
Hornbeck preaches church-state cooperation--literally. An
ordained Presbyterian minister, he delivers sermons once a month at churches around the
city, blending biblical references with an appeal to get involved in public education.
"Im a lawyer and I have two divinity degrees, so I take the First Amendment
very seriously," he explains. "In no way should it prohibit or inhibit
partnerships between faith communities and schools."
Officials of the Chicago school district, one of the nations
largest and most troubled, are coming to the same conclusion. Following school-related
violence last year, the district held talks with religious leaders and sought legal advice
on brokering a formal partnership between school and church. They hope to start mentoring
programs, create "safe places" for troubled youth, and lease church space for
classrooms. In an early draft of district guidelines, officials acknowledge the risks of
partnership, but insist that "these difficulties are not insurmountable."
Not long ago, that conclusion would have been unthinkable. Schools
today are not only welcoming religious groups into class to assist teachers, but some have
found permanent office space at school for them to operate. Others advertise church events
to help volunteers connect with kids outside the classroom.
At Parkview Elementary in D.C., Jim Till works out of a basement
office, where he is often seen coaching one or two delinquent kids as his
"helpers" for the day. Church-based volunteers from STEP (Strategies to Elevate
People) tutor weekly at Parkview. Most form friendships with children after hours through
Bible clubs, church socials, and other events. "The system is broken and people are
waiting for someone to come fix it," Till says. "Instead of taking our children
out, its time to get more involved in public education." Assistant principal
Wendy Edwards agrees: "We have 531 kids at Parkview, mostly from public-assistance
families. If we had 531 mentors, that would be fantastic."
Martin Luther King Elementary School in Wilmington, Delaware,
serves a student population that is mostly fatherless and living in public housing. The
school recently invited Younglife, a national, Christian-based mentoring effort, to run an
on-site program for latchkey kids. Adults meet weekly with children to motivate them
before class. Five days a week they hold after-school enrichment programs, including
sports, music, recreation, and the arts.
Though Younglife volunteers "cant come in and preach
about salvation," says principal Angela Guy, "we expect them to be positive role
models." With a weightiness falling somewhere between Barney and the Bible, afternoon
storytelling might impart lessons about courage, respect, or honesty. "Were
still finding out what our boundaries are," says Younglife director Charles Harris.
"But were trying to get kids away from so much that is negative around
them."
Younglife is targeting about 60 children this fall, but officials
hope to find mentors for the majority of the schools 350 students. Says Guy,
"Weve told them our door is open."
The Friendship Factor
One of the most aggressive efforts to mobilize churches in the
public schools is Michigan-based Kids Hope USA. About 720 adult tutors from 37
congregations now meet at least an hour a week with kids from 35 elementary schools, with
more schools on a waiting list.
Founder Virgil Gulker, a maverick in church-based social outreach,
disdains fuzzy thinking on both sides of the church-state divide. "My grievance with
so many government initiatives is they seem to assume that the only thing children need is
a computer," he says. "Our kids are like emotional checkbooks who are completely
overdrawn."
Declining student performance, of course, often results from
family breakdown, an issue best addressed by faith communities. Most congregations,
however, have kept clear of public schools because they assumed that involvement was
illegal or impossible, Gulker says. Whatever assistance they do offer--painting
classrooms, purchasing supplies--overlooks more fundamental problems. "Most churches
offer programs rather than relationships," he says. "The church needs to do what
it does best, which is to love." School officials seem to agree: They say the
friendships formed between tutors, children, and their families are the key to better
performance, especially among at-risk kids.
The focus on relationship-building is driving one of the most
carefully scripted arrangements between religious groups and public education in the
nation. Each Kids Hope congregation must hire a part-time person to coordinate and train
volunteers, sign an agreement with participating schools, and direct its pastor to help
tutor. Church volunteers not only get training in mentoring skills; they are also drilled
in the ground rules for sharing their faith.
First, parental authority is supreme. Volunteers must get a
parents permission to initiate any contact with children. Moreover, parents are
always told the content of church-sponsored events. "There are no surprises
here," says Gulker. "At no time under any circumstances is that ever
violated." Second, no proselytizing is allowed at school. Volunteers may invite
children to church activities in which evangelism occurs, but must always alert parents
first.
"I want to protect the churches opportunity to
evangelize off campus," Gulker explains, "but part of protecting that right
means protecting the policy of no evangelism at schools." That seems consistent with
concerns of civil libertarians. "We have to be sensitive to the rights of
parents," says Rob Boston of Americans United. "Parents want to be the ones to
determine what religious views their children are exposed to."
Legal experts know of no serious court challenges to church-based
tutors. Yet some add a caveat: Public schools must not give preferential access to
religious groups. A Decatur, Indiana, school tried that last year with a clergy-run
counseling program and was stopped by the ACLU. A similar counseling effort is being
challenged in a Beaumont, Texas, school. "If theres a mentoring program and a
mentor belongs to a church, hes not precluded from participating. Thats
easy," says Marc Stern, a lawyer with the American Jewish Congress in New York.
"But clearly preferential access is unconstitutional."
Dave Irwin, the principal of Alger Park Elementary in Grand
Rapids, Michigan, says hes not limiting the access of other groups; its just
that the church two blocks away is the only one sending him mentors. "Heres an
organized group of people who are trained to assist us, who bring a willingness to
serve," he says. "We dont get that support from the community at large. We
dont have people breaking down our door to help us."
Defusing the Crime Bomb
Princeton University criminologist John DiIulio proposes a thought
experiment when he lectures on inner-city crime. Imagine, he says, youre
driving alone at night through a blighted urban neighborhood. Your car is about to break
down, but your guardian angel will allow you to choose one of three places for your car to
die. Choice number one: in front of a movie theater where a teen slasher film is about to
let out. Choice number two: outside a go-go bar serving malt liquor to underage drinkers.
Choice number three: in front of a church resounding with the voices of the youth choir.
"Naturally, youre praying for number three," he says. "You simply
suppose that people involved with religious institutions are less likely to do you
harm."
According to DiIulio, the best social-science research confirms
what common sense suggests: Active religious congregations are a critical factor in
reducing violence and stabilizing inner-city neighborhoods. A 1991 study published by the
National Bureau of Economic Research, for example, found that urban youth whose neighbors
attend church are more likely to have a job and less likely to use drugs or commit crime.
This fact is slowly insinuating itself into local crime-fighting
strategies. Police are turning to clergy as the eyes and ears of their neighborhoods.
Judges and prosecutors are diverting criminals from jail into church-based programs.
Ministers and volunteers are invading prisons and bringing a tough-love gospel with them.
In all this activity, church and state share at least one goal: lower crime rates through
moral rehabilitation. Their challenge is to balance the coercive power of government with
respect for offenders religious beliefs--or lack of them.
Many of these efforts target juvenile offenders. The Reverend Tony
Evans of Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship in Dallas, one of the largest churches in the city,
tells the story of a teenager known to the church who was arrested and faced jail time.
Oak Cliff ministers intervened on his behalf, persuading a judge to release the boy to
them. He gave them six months to turn the young man around.
The ministers got busy. They talked with his parents and his
probation officer. They paired him with a mentor and enrolled him in Bible studies and
other church activities. Six months later, after the boy had landed a job and returned to
school, Evans went back to court. The judge asked him, "Will you take 20 more?"
Oak Cliff now works with about 80 juveniles, all court-involved,
in its "Teen Turnaround" effort. "We teach, preach, and practice
transformation," says the Reverend LaFayette Holland, an outreach pastor.
"Thats what everyone is really looking for."
In Indiana, the Marion County juvenile court sends troubled kids
to the Indianapolis Training Center (ITC), a Christian-based alternative to state
detention centers. The one-year residential program matches 12- to 18-year-olds with a
mentor family and volunteers from local high schools. Although not a lock-down facility,
the ITC leaves little time for mischief. Residents are up at 5:30 a.m., usually reading
from Proverbs, the Old Testament book stuffed with sound-bite advice on honesty, hard
work, and holiness. Mornings are spent doing chores, afternoons studying, and evenings
playing sports.
County officials overcame early objections by making sure parents
and children understand the regimen. "We will not order anybody into it, but once
they choose it, they are ordered to follow through," says Brian Toepp, the
countys assistant chief of probation. Moreover, by accepting only private money, ITC
is free to immerse its residents in Christian teaching. "Were trying to teach
them character," says director Benny McWha, "and we believe character is based
on biblical principles."
Last fall, juvenile court judge Jim Payne met with leading
ministers and asked them to get more involved with troubled youth and their families.
Westside Community Ministries, a coalition of about 35 churches and religious groups, has
emerged to offer community-service work, faith-based counseling, and other services.
"Everything we do with them is an excuse to build a relationship," says the
Reverend Jay Height, the executive director of Shepherd Community Church. Payne brushes
aside the argument that government should not endorse faith-based efforts to reduce crime.
"This is not an issue of [government] proselytizing," Payne says. "As long
as people understand the difference, theyve made the choice, I havent."
Though courts can order families to seek counseling, for example, they may choose between
Westside or secular programs.
There are many reasons for the states willingness to try
religious approaches. In Marion County one of them is sheer numbers: Each year the court
system sees 10,000 youths and families, far too many for state-paid counselors or
probation officers to track. "We have this untapped resource in almost every corner
of every neighborhood," Payne says. "But we have virtually excluded churches
from the service-delivery system."
No one in Indianapolis makes that point more convincingly than
Mayor Stephen Goldsmith. With a lawyers steely logic, the former prosecutor explains
why secular government cannot afford to ignore, much less harass, religious communities.
"Only hardened skeptics have trouble accepting that widespread belief in a Supreme
Being improves the strength and health of our communities," he says. "Government
can accomplish more by working with faith-based groups than it can ever achieve by
circumventing them."
Goldsmiths Front Porch Alliance, what he calls a "civic
switchboard," probably reigns as the national leader in this regard (see box, page
32). In just a few years, the Alliance has developed nearly 600 partnerships while working
with more than 150 churches and other value-shaping groups. It also sets up workshops for
civic leaders, giving them technical assistance for navigating local bureaucracies or
tapping into community resources.
The Boston Crusade
A recent Newsweek cover story celebrated perhaps the most
successful example of faith-based crime-fighting anywhere: Bostons Ten Point
Coalition. Led by the iconoclastic Reverend Eugene Rivers, a cadre of urban churches began
working with police, judges, and prosecutors in 1993 to tackle the problem of youth
violence. After Boston went two years without a single gun-related homicide among teens,
even national magazines such as the New Yorker started to take notice. "You
couldnt function effectively without the ministers in Boston," former Boston
police commissioner William Bratton told the magazine. "Those churches and leaders
like Gene Rivers were a very significant reason for our success."
Fifty-four churches in Boston now devote staff and volunteer
manpower to the effort, sometimes walking neighborhoods at night or doing street outreach
to gang members. Pastors double as legal advocates, helping youth negotiate the court
system. Teens on probation attend church-based summer camps.
The coalition also runs a groundbreaking fatherhood program, and
at least 11 court jurisdictions in Massachusetts send offenders into its 12-week
classes. These are men who need more than a pep talk in good fathering: The most recent
group of 80 program graduates had been convicted of 544 separate offenses. Most had been
charged with a violent crime. Fifty-three percent had committed domestic violence. And
most did not live with their children.
Police have no hard numbers on recidivism rates, but say that 65
percent of the men finish the program, which means they comply with probation rules,
abstain from drugs, and make restitution to their victims. About 300 have graduated since
1993, and most have claimed paternity or are taking steps to do so, says Milton Britton,
the states chief probation officer.
Each two-hour class is a model for negotiating First Amendment
pitfalls. Instruction is deliberately held in local churches. "Ive been in law
enforcement for 30 years," Britton says. "If you take out the church, the moral
and spiritual thing, it aint gonna work." Offenders are not ordered into the
program, but to encourage them to sign up, judges often waive probation fees. "We
wont take someone into the fatherhood program and ask them to worship in that
church," says Bernard Fitzgerald, the chief probation officer of Dorchester District
Court. "But we are going to try to instill in them a sense of what fatherhood
is."
Instructors go about this the old-fashioned way, with a mix of
summons and shame. "Its better than a therapy session," says Judge
Kathleen Coffey. "It offers men a moral compass, and it teaches them about personal
responsibility. I send people there all the time." Pastors and probation officers
take turns pounding home five principles of fatherhood: Give guidance to children, show
them affection, show respect to the childrens mother, provide financial support, and
set an example by living within the law.
Clergymen are free to incorporate Scripture. "Im not
dogmatic in presenting the gospel," says the Reverend Roland Hayes Robinson of Bethel
AME Church. "But Christian principle is implicit in the way I promote respect for
women, highlight the benefits of fatherhood, and reflect on our individual purpose for
being alive."
The God Pod
Prison Fellowships invasion of a Texas prison surely ranks
as one of the nations most audacious experiments in criminal rehabilitation. The
program, called Innerchange, is run inside the belly of a state correctional facility.
Program staff have 24-hour access to inmates in one wing of the prison, and oversee
virtually all day-to-day activities there. Participants need not claim a Christian faith,
but must agree to a "Bible-based, Christ-centered" program. Although inmates are
allowed to pursue their own religious beliefs (some attend weekly Islamic services), the
explicit goal is Christian conversion.
Chaplains have always worked in prisons, of course, but never as
comprehensively as Innerchange staff. Says senior warden Fred Becker, "Its the
difference between being in church on Sunday and practically being in seminary."
"Ive been in law enforcement for 30
years," says one probation official. "If you take out the church, the moral and
spiritual thing, it aint gonna work."
Prison Fellowship may have designed a lawsuit-proof approach
to getting God into the nations prison system: The program is funded purely from
private sources, is completely voluntary, has no effect on participants length of
parole, and does not discriminate on the basis of religion. "Anytime you start
spending public money on religious activity, it becomes suspect," says Jay Jacobson,
the executive director of the ACLU in Texas. "But we dont have an objection to
religious activity in prisons that is voluntary and not paid for out of public
coffers." Carol Vance, the former chairman of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice and
an early supporter, predicts, "We will not have any serious constitutional
challenge."
Innerchange staffers, however, dont take government
benevolence on faith. "It concerns me every day," says Jack Cowley, the program
director and a former warden himself. "We have to advocate for our program and remind
them that were here to do Gods work. Weve got to do it our way."
The program won a major concession on the issue of inmate
visitation. A federal court order stipulates that inmates are entitled to only one visit
per weekend, by a maximum of two adults. That posed a problem, since Innerchange depends
on volunteer mentors to develop strong ties to prisoners. But Jester II officials
persuaded the Texas Department of Criminal Justice to designate the volunteers as adjunct
staff members, not visitors, and therefore not subject to the federal rule.
About 200 church volunteers now work with 130 inmates and parolees
in the 18-month regimen. Early results are impressive: Of the 26 ex-offenders who have
completed the program, all have jobs and are involved in local churches. There are already
plans to duplicate the effort in Kansas and Iowa this year. "We want to be in every
state and federal prison in the country," says Prison Fellowship president Thomas
Pratt, "building the church inside prison walls."
A Welfare Revolution
Informal agreements between churches and city hall traditionally
characterized efforts to help Americas poor, until they were eclipsed by the modern
welfare state. "Many lives can be saved if we recapture the vision that changed lives
up to a century ago, when our concept of compassion was not so corrupt," writes
Olasky in The Tragedy of American Compassion (1992). The Welfare Reform Act of
1996, which ended the guarantee of federal aid to the poor, may be a step back to the
future.
Leon Love, the deputy director of South Carolinas DSS, is
unusually frank about his agencys failed welfare policies. "We used to build
barriers to prevent churches from participating. We hid behind confidentiality," he
says. "But people on the road to self-sufficiency must believe they can get there,
and to put a person in the company of believers is powerful."
In no other area of social policy has the shift in conventional
wisdom been more dramatic. Welfare offices are being renamed "family independence
agencies." Eligibility experts are scrambling to help recipients find jobs. And
congregations are being invited--sometimes begged--to lend a hand.
Governments are turning to religious groups for help in part
because they must meet state-imposed deadlines for terminating assistance. But surely the
deeper reason is the disastrous failure of welfare to lead families out of poverty. This
is especially true for the "hard cases": young mothers with no self-respect, no
high-school diploma, and no work history. These are the families whose problems cannot be
solved by a booming economy.
Nor, it should be added, by government caseworkers, who spend
perhaps an hour a month with welfare recipients. Unraveling the practical and moral
problems of these families simply cannot be done on the cheap. "We can do some of
that, but were limited, because were primarily eligibility specialists,"
says Elizabeth Seale of the Texas Department of Human Services.
Enter the faith community. "It appears that only churches are
willing to make the long-term volunteer investment required," writes Amy Sherman,
author of Restorers of Hope: Reaching the Poor in Your Community with
Church-Based Ministries That Work (1997) and a leading welfare-reform specialist.
Thousands of congregations around the country are working closely with welfare families,
helping them find jobs, lending emotional support, assisting with child care, and helping
with budgeting and even grocery shopping.
It can be labor-intensive work: Churches in Anne Arundel County,
Maryland, for example, report that over a six-month period they log an average of 400
hours per family. And not all of that time is spent holding hands: Career counseling
usually comes with biblical teachings about work and family responsibilities, placing new
moral demands on the poor.
In Texas, Lutheran Social Services (LSS) has signed a
"memorandum of understanding" with the states Department of Human Services
to help already-employed families stay off the dole. With the states blessing, the
LSS is training its volunteers in a program of "comprehensive spiritual care."
Volunteers make a one-year commitment as mentors, helping with transportation, budgeting,
and other issues. "The state is realizing theres a piece they are missing that
they cant fill," says LSS president Kurt Senske. "Its a good
marriage."
In California, a welfare-reform law went into effect on January 1,
1998, requiring thousands of recipients to exit welfare by December 2002. A month later,
Fresno mayor Jim Patterson--himself an active member of Evangelicals for Social
Action--called together religious and civic leaders. The goal: jump-start a partnership
between churches (mostly evangelical) and the Merced County welfare office. The reason:
The county supports 8,000 people on public assistance and, with 15 percent unemployment,
cant possibly find all of them jobs. So for starters, county officials want
businessmen in congregations to hire and train welfare moms.
Churches are also being asked to make their facilities available
for child care. Sunday-school classes for children are OK, as long as families can opt
out. Either way, church members are expected to get personally involved in the lives of
welfare recipients. Says Paul Lundberg, who is coordinating the effort, "A state
official told me that if there were a law against what were doing, he would ignore
the law, because they need us so badly."
Building Safeguards
States are designing partnerships with congregations that are
keeping litigators at bay. For example, no information on welfare recipients is released
to churches without their consent. Families must agree to any relationship with a
congregation and are never obligated to attend services or church events. State money
almost never flows directly to churches, and public assistance usually continues until
recipients are independent. "So long as individuals may freely choose religion,
merely enabling private decisions logically cannot be a government establishment of
religion," writes Carl Esbeck, a law professor at the University of Missouri and a
leading authority on the legality of government collaboration with religious groups.
An early model was the Mississippi initiative, in which the
governor used his bully pulpit to get churches involved with the poor. "God, not
government, will be the savior of welfare families," Fordice told an assembly of
religious leaders at the state capitol in 1995, launching his Faith and Families project.
The states Department of Human Services (DHS) works directly
with local congregations, matching them with willing families. Church volunteers serve as
spiritual social workers, focusing not on securing more government benefits, but on
helping families acquire the habits that lead to long-term independence.
Church response to the governors appeal so far has been
modest. "We thought we could be the catalyst between state government, the clients,
and the faith community," says Donald Taylor, the executive director of
Mississippis DHS. "But the reception we got in some quarters, quite frankly,
was disappointing."
There are at least two snags to this top-down approach. First,
state employees typically dont warm to volunteers who lack degrees in social work
and threaten their jobs. "I have many individuals in my agency who think churches
shouldnt be involved," says a veteran in government welfare services.
"Theyre a threat. It becomes a union issue."
Second, the Mississippi model fails to allay long-held suspicions
that any government entanglement amounts to a pact with the devil. Conservative churches
in Maryland, for example, did not even show up when the state held a hearing on
revolutionizing welfare.
A more nuanced policy is being hammered out in other states. In
South Carolina, Governor Beasleys nonprofit group is the engine for change. The
Putting Families First Foundation is building a statewide database of organizations
willing to offer help, while working with the DSS to match those groups with families. It
also teaches church workers about protecting confidentiality and integrating faith in
their caregiving, among other issues.
Putting Families First is incorporated as a religious nonprofit,
and its director, Lisa Van Riper, is a committed Christian--facts not lost on conservative
congregations. "Lisa can go out and preach self-sufficiency and the ministry role of
the church in a much more forthright way than can a bureaucrat," says Leon Love.
"It has much more of an impact on the recruitment process." Van Riper has
brought her seminar to about 500 churches and synagogues. Figures for church involvement
are not available, but about 160 welfare moms are in the program.
A similar effort is underway in Michigan, where Governor John
Englers welfare reforms have slashed caseloads. Ottawa County became the first
locality in the nation to move every able-bodied welfare recipient into a job. It was one
of six sites in the governors Project Zero, chosen specifically because of its
extensive church network.
State officials give much of the credit to the Good Samaritan
Center, a church-based nonprofit that recruits and trains church volunteers to support
families moving from welfare to work. Within six months of being approached by Engler,
Good Samaritan had enlisted nearly 60 churches, or about 25 percent of the countys
total. "Determining eligibility--that we do well. Were not very good at
wrapping our arms around a family," says Loren Snippe, who oversaw the Ottawa
effort. "Church volunteers bring the ability to have a long-term relationship. You
cant pay people to do this."
By serving as honest brokers between church and state, the
nonprofits in Michigan and South Carolina can help maintain a stable partnership even as
state and local governments change hands. "The churches need someone they can trust,
who knows their internal culture," says Bill Raymond, a former director of Good
Samaritan. "But you also need an independent actor who knows how to engage the powers
that be."
Another advantage of the nonprofit model is that it guards the
independence of churches as they reach out to the welfare families. The nonprofits
job is to ensure a good match between welfare recipients and congregations;
governments role is confined mostly to writing checks and sharing client
information. "Its not a government program," Van Riper says. "If the
church and a client want to talk about faith, they can do it because it is a private
relationship."
Reclaiming Compassion
All of this activity, though significant, is occurring in a legal
and political culture that, in the words of Yale law professor Stephen Carter,
"trivializes religious devotion." Many liberals still treat serious religious
belief more as a threat than a cure to the nations social ills. Writing last year in
the American Prospect, Wendy Kaminer called these partnerships an "unholy
alliance," suggesting they are part of a larger campaign "to align public
policies with majoritarian religious practices and ideals."
Too many government officials see the same dark conspiracies. A
few years ago, Indianapolis mayor Goldsmith asked churches to participate in a summer
job-training program. At the end of the summer, the state of Indiana cited the city as
"out of compliance" with a state law barring the use of funds for religious
purposes. The reason: Participants voluntarily prayed before meals and field trips.
Many in government, however, are unpersuaded by the yowling of
liberal legalists. "We have a common goal," says Milton Britton, the chief
probation officer of Massachusetts. "Were trying to improve the quality of life
for our communities. When you bring the moral perspective, the anchor that prevents you
from falling off the edge, it makes a difference."
Until the onset of the modern welfare state, the decisive power of
faith to curb evil and inspire charity was taken for granted. Even French philosopher
Voltaire, a relentless critic of Christianity, argued that societies would collapse into
disorder without some type of rational religion. "I want my attorney, my tailor, my
servants, even my wife to believe in God," he said, "and I think that then I
shall be robbed and cuckolded less often."
Ironically, it is the welfare bureaucracys moral collapse
that has lawmakers and others taking another look at the faith community. The
"charitable choice" provision of the federal welfare law, after all, was
designed to boost involvement of religious charities in fighting poverty. The law
prohibits government from undermining the religious commitments of groups taking federal
funds. It has not been tested in the courts, however, and many providers still seem wary
of state entanglement.
Meanwhile, many believers stand ready to help where government has
failed, if only government were willing to make room for them. "We have people who
feel its their obligation before God to care for the poor," says Van Riper of
Putting Families First. "Theyre organized, theyre in the working
community, and they have all the resources necessary. The little boy who brought the
basket of fish to the disciples was not a Ph.D. nutritionist."
Until the onset of the modern welfare state,
the decisive power of faith to curb evil and inspire charity was taken for granted.
Religious believers and broad-minded lawmakers are ratifying
an old precept of American civic life: that collaboration between church and state need
not lead to corruption. They are steering their way around those who fret over a lunchtime
prayer, as well as those who would trade their souls for a government contract. And they
follow Goldsmiths golden rule of government: "We will never ask an organization
to change any of its core values in order to participate in a relationship with us."
With that rule to guide them--and with a little faith, hope, and
charity--they might just reclaim and sanctify the compassionate impulses of a new
generation of caregivers.