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Today, rather than writing about poverty, I want to talk about wealth. Not the kind of wealth you can stick a dollar sign before. That’s just stuff. You can get stuff by making it. You can get stuff by inheriting it. And, all too often in the United States, folks get stuff by stealing it from other people.
The kind of wealth I am talking about can not be made, inherited or stolen. It is a way of life that has very little to do with material success and a whole lot to do with how we handle misfortune.
Today, I met a 30 year old woman whose husband is in the ICU. He does construction work, and he fell off the roof and hit his head. He has been unconscious for three weeks. Doctors do not know if he will ever wake up. The woman has two school age kids, and she works in a warehouse that does not have air conditioning, despite her diabetes and other medical problems. With her husband in the hospital, she is now the sole bread winner. Every day, she gets the kids ready for school and then she goes to work and then she comes home and feeds the kids and then she goes to the hospital to wait and pray. Her life is hard, but it is her life, her family, and she treasures it.
Today, I met a 60 year old man who is almost crippled from arthritis. He is so happy that he may have found a desk job that he can do. There is no way that he can go back to the grueling manual labor he used to do before. Every weekend, he travels to see his father who recently had a heart attack. The drive is hard on his knees and back, but he would not dream of abandoning the dad who raised him. He is so grateful that his father survived and is slowly getting better. His life is hard, but it is his life, his family, and he treasures it.
The 30 year old wife and mother’s picture will never grace the cover of a fashion magazine. Paris Hilton is 30. She is rich in stuff. When she drove drunk (yet again) and got sent to jail for a few weeks, she pitched a temper tantrum on national television.
The 60 year old man will never run for president. Donald Trump is 65. He is rich in stuff (when he isn’t broke). When he started talking about running for president, he got wall to wall media coverage---because, hey, he has spent his whole life in the pursuit of material wealth.
Sometimes, I wonder why spiritual richness counts for so little in this country while material wealth is so god awful important. Where is the MTV coverage of the 30 year old woman? Why hasn’t A&E documented the life of the 60 year old man? The people who hoard oil in tankers in order to make the price of gasoline rise are not the heroes. The heroes are the ones who fill up their tanks, despite the high cost, and make that long drive every weekend to see dad. The people who sell us bundled mortgages while betting on the side that the mortgages will fail are not heroes. The heroes are the ones who build our houses. And yet, our government rewards the oil price gougers with tax breaks and the banksters with bailouts---almost as if throwing more money at those who have material wealth will ease their spiritual poverty. But tell me----
Have you ever seen an oilman or a banker man get down on his knees and thank God and the American people for his tax breaks or his bailout? So, why do we keep throwing good money after bad, when there are so many people who could do so much more with it?
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