Amy Sherman reviews Robert Lupton's Toxic Charity: How Churches and Charities Hurt Those They Help

[In this work]… the 40-year veteran urban minister “takes the gloves off” and argues that much of Americans’ charitable giving “is either wasted or actually harms the people it is targeted to help.”

The reason is that the “compassion industry” is “almost universally accepted as a virtuous and constructive enterprise,” but its “outcomes are almost entirely unexamined.” Years of charitable giving at home and abroad, Lupton contends, have made barely a dent in reducing poverty and often encourage dependency. Toxic Charity offers some statistics, but more stories, as evidence that both our philosophy and practice of charity are frequently misguided.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, * Religion News & Commentary, Books, Charities/Non-Profit Organizations, Evangelicals, Other Churches, Pastoral Theology, Poverty, Religion & Culture, Theology