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duminică, 7 octombrie 2012

Christian's Responsibilities to the Poor in the Works of John Chrysostom (Final Part)




Chrysostom speaking to the twenty-first century Romanians
Poverty and wealth in twenty-first century Romania
The economical and social situation of Romania
Romania is a social state. The 22 years that passed since Communism fell moved Romania from the centralized system of social protection to a more flexible, but still centralized system of social protection. In fact the whole of European Union is a big socialist project in which each of the States have their own centralized system of social protection. The protection that the system offers to the poor of Romania is very weak though. The Health System is changing right now to becoming more capitalistic[1] and will offer hospitalization just to the contributors to the system. Most of the chronically poor are not part of the system.
Most of the poor are over 50 years old: 60,2%[2]. Because Romania has dropped its birth rate with almost 50% since 1990, the poor that are old and the poor that will be approaching retirement age in the next 20 years see no bright future as the populace would not be able to sustain the State Pensions for the retired. At this point all of the pensions in Romania are paid by the State Insurance. Three years ago it was introduced a private compulsory insurance for pensions, but this is a small amount of the pension and it is going to have a small effect in the overall financial situation of the retired population as a whole.
Romanian Economy is placed 17th in EU[3], but being the seventh as the number of population[4]. But as I already mentioned, Romania is on the first place in EU in terms of poverty of the employed population. There is no wonder as 54.8% of the employed population had monthly salaries in between $ 180 and $ 420 US; 7% makes less than $180 and 27,2% between $ 500 – $ 1000 US; 7,5% of the population makes between $ 1000 - $ 1600 and only 3,5% over $ 1600 US  month[5].
Not withstanding that Romania is on the second place in UE in terms of cheating on the taxes due to the State with an black economy of 29,6% of the GDP according to a Report of European Commission[6], we still have an economy with a lot of discrepancies between the rich and the majority poor (9 million on the threshold of poverty out of 19 million).
The most visible and exposed segments of the population are the gypsies and the orphans that are the product of the Orphanage System of Romania. The number of gypsies an illusory number. Most of them do not want to declare themselves gypsies because even the word “gypsy” is an stigma word. They can be 620000 out of 19 million, which makes them 3,2% (official numbers from the 2011 Romanian Census)[7] or somewhere around 2 million in an unofficial estimate[8]. Probably the truth is somewhere in between. But even at an estimate of 1,1-1,3 million they would make a population of gypsies the second largest ethnic minority with 5,7 to 6,84% of the population. Most of them are uneducated and they do not complete the required minimum school cycle (49% of them did not completed the minimum school requirement of eight classes[9]) and are living under a stigma barrier that they feel all the time. This barrier bans them from raising over the poverty mentality that they inherited.
The living standard is much bellow the poverty level for them as most of them are not employed, or they work temporary jobs. (just 22% of them have stable jobs and 17% temporary jobs)[10] Wherever they live in the country side or in the cities, the vast majority of them are living in separated areas in ghettoes, many times in cubicles or houses in which 5-15 people are jammed in a single room. The criminality level is very high.
The other population that is especially vulnerable are the children that are the product of the Orphanage System of Romania. These are kids raised in Institutions till they reach the age of 18 and then they are thrown on the streets. In Romania 23000 children are still raised in Institutional Orphanages out or the 70000 children that are raised by the State.[11] Romania still has the largest number of orphans in Europe[12] and as long as an Institutional System is still in place for them there will be future ‘victims’ of the system.

The Church‘s Solutions to the Plight of Poverty in Romania
There is social work established by the Romanian Orthodox Church that addresses the problems of the disadvantaged. Most of the Orthodox social work is done through Foundations and Associations related to the different Metropolitan Chairs or Regional Bishops in the different parts of the country. [13]
Here are the report of the Romanian Patriarchate regarding the institutions of social work blessed by the Patriarch: 121 Centers for children, 35 centers for elderly people, 106 social canteen and bakeries, 52 centers of diagnosis, treatment, medical consulting rooms and social pharmacies, 23 centers of counseling for the families with difficulties, 2 centers for the victims of the human trafficking.[14] Almost all these social institutions function besides monasteries of Metropolitan Chairs or generous parochial dioceses. All these institutions amount to 339 institutions of social work, which is half of the number of monasteries (637) under the same National Church.
Most of if is solving church related problems and addresses poor people related to the local communities in which the Foundations and Associations function. I am not aware of any serious missional activities of the Orthodox Church to the gypsies. A singular gesture came when the first and only priest of Gipsy ethnicity was ordained in the Romanian Orthodox Church.[15] The total of the population that belongs to the evangelical denominations in Romania is ~ 4% according to the census of 2011[16], but the missionary and missional activities of these denominations are far more extensive among the gypsies than those of the Majority Church when compared to the limited resources and numbers of member. There are hundreds of new evangelical churches planted in the colonies of gypsies in the villages of Romania.  Also, there is extensive social work going on with evangelical voluntaries to further the welfare of the gypsy ethnicity as a whole.
The same can be said about the activities of the churches and of the charitable institutions regarding the orphans in Romania. There are significant local charitable organizations among the evangelicals in almost all the counties of the Country. Not the same can be said about the organizations belonging to the Majority Orthodox Church of Romania. There are several initiatives of some illuminate priests like Father Tănase [17] or Father Negrea[18] that either create large orphan institutions or serve several children, but the established works of Orthodoxy toward the orphans do not make a significant impact on the situation of these children. Also the practice of the Orthodox laymen in the area of service to the orphans of Romania is almost inexistent.
The Evangelicals have foundations working with orphans in most of the counties of the country. Also there are hundreds of adoptions[19] and foster care programs happening that are supported and run by Evangelicals in Romania.

Poverty and The Kingdom: The Christian living and Its Idolatrous Competition.
If Chrysostom was upset by the way the rich persons in his church were acting with insensitivity toward the poor, one can feel something similar when watching that the vast majority of all the rich persons of Romania call themselves Christians and they are insensitive toward the poor. There are foundations set up by some of the richest people of the land to help the educational system or they fund scholarships for different special programs, or intervene from time to time when disasters hit. Almost all they do is accompanied by press attention and people wonder why they are serving when it seems that everything good they do is for the sake of the praise they get out of their generosity.
The Orthodox church itself in most of the cities, towns and villages of the country rarely sets up charitable projects and associations. Most of the charitable association are initiated by the priesthood, or the Metropolitan Chair and most of the funds are supervised and administered through the church.
Nobody knows exactly the amount of private funding that goes to the National Church, but a lot of the funds that are now intended for the welfare of the poor go into the thousands of ecclesiastical construction projects spread all over he country. These buildings for churches and monasteries require the “splendor” worthy of the house of God. So, millions of Euro are eaten up yearly from the State and from the members to sustain sometimes megalomania of some priests or bishops reflected in huge construction projects.
I suppose that most of the population required to support the church would prefer the money to be used for the poor, but as long as the “holy building of the church” stays unfinished, it seems that construction has priority over the poor in the eyes of clergy. The steep separation of clergy and laymen leave Romanians thinking that the State and eventually the illumined clergy are to take care of the poor in Romania.
There is a illustrious lack of laymen initiated charities or social projects among the Orthodox. The Orthodox Hierarchy does not seems to encourage or like very much the laymen initiatives in any area of Social Work. There are exceptions, but they are very few in comparison with the size of the need.
Perhaps most of the monasteries and some parochial churches provide at a small scale help for several poor “clients” of the institutions, but they do not intend to create programs that will extend their social impact into more needy people even locally. The social service of the monks and cenobite communities in Orthodoxy is much less involved in service to the poor that their Catholic western counterparts do. They tend to be more dedicated to the communion with God and ascetic practices than to alleviate the ills of society around them.
The Orthodox Church shines by its correctly preserved dogma and poetic - mystic theology and aphophatic practices of its elite members. It also exults through several great Fathers that share their wisdom with the people that attend their monastic cells. The Church also excel through some illustrious believing intellectuals that defend the Orthodox faith and sometimes its nationalism. But as a whole the Orthodox church is far from being an significant change agent for the needs of its destitute people. 
It is of no wonder that this is the Christ of the Christianity and His reign is an unknown reality for the most of the 86% of the population of Romania who consider themselves Christians. A sign of the indifference of the people is shown in the percentage of the men that attend at least once a week (18,1%), or once a month (16,1%) the church. Most of them (32%) attend just at Easter/ Christmas celebrations.[20]
The clergy is known for its preference of this earthly Kingdom realities (wealth, status and pleasure) There is a lot of resentment built up in the relatively poor population of Romania against the clergy. An expectation is that the clerical person has established a fairy good fortune. For the old order of things was a good thing as this person was the representative of the whole community. Now the picture has changed. The Media regularly publishes articles that inflame the public opinion toward the clergy.[21] A lot of the people envy, judge and resent the clergy and the Church[22].
With such role models that a lot of the clergy exhibit there is no wonder that the laity of the Orthodox Church are not interested in serving the poor. Their fate is well taken care by the National Church who sends them to the “everlasting green pastures” even if their life on earth did not encountered at all the living Jesus and did not count at all for the the domain where He is King.
Stark, talking about the National Churches of Europe explains why the attendance and significance of religion is low for their members. He quotes sociologist Andrew Greeley who wrote: “Christian Europe never existed.”[23] After Constantine, “Christianity left most of the rest of Europe only nominally converted”[24]. The result was an unconverted population with kings and nobles that nominally accepted Christianity and the apparition of lazy, obstructionist State Churches with “believing nonbelongers”[25] in them - unchurched people.
Generally speaking the Romanian Evangelicalism is active by comparison with the larger Orthodox Church. Still most of the communities of Evangelicals in Romania do not have a missiollogical conscience and are not involved in any social helping program. Many of the Evangelical communities follow the Romanian version of the American dream forgetting about the Great Commandment and the Great Commission to the people of Romania. There is a spread minoritarian victimization conscience that permeate much of the Evangelical communities in Romania that hinders an active social involvement of these communities. Also there is a strong tendency toward legalism, isolationism and authoritarianism that are all symptoms of institutionalization of many of the Evangelical Churches.
As an very astute Romanian Theologian affirms that in Romania we are in a crisis of discipleship[26]. We have converts, we do not have disciples that follow Jesus. Activism as Bebbington would say is one of the four characteristics of Evangelicals, but this activism is not actuated if there is no discipleship toward it[27]. We have enough “vampire Christians” as Scott McKnight would say, that apply just the blood of Jesus to their guilty conscience and then get busy with the Romanian American dream, forgetting about the poor and about the love that Jesus is waiting to pour from Him, through them, to the needy.

The Christian Response Now: Its Success and Failures
How does an ordinary Romanian perceive the all present reality of poverty? We meet daily beggars and the children that beg in almost all the Railway and Bus stations and in most of the important junctions in the cities.
The minimal social protection offered by the State leaves most of its beneficiaries on the threshold of poverty. It is in most cases the basic minimum for survival. But among those in the two most neglected categories of poor (gypsies and orphans raised in the Institutions) the State Social Protection System is not very efficient in meeting needs. There is no help to be provided by the System as there is no official employment for 77% of the gypsy population[28] and there is no help and no possibility to work if an orphan is thrown into the streets and no employer would employ a person with no place to stay or without ID.
As I mentioned before there is not a significant desire in the Majority Church to mingle with the ill reputed gypsy community. Regarding the orphans, there are beautiful cases of several Orthodox Priests that receive a lot of media coverage that formed Huge Private Orphanages in which they invested in hundreds of kids that were either abandoned at birth or were not killed through abortion, but carried until birth by the single pregnant mom.
The numerous new Evangelical churches planted in the gypsy colonies of the villages of Romania bring a ray of hope in the general landscape of desperation that generally encompasses the life of this ethnicity. New economical initiatives and a new work ethic accompany many of the conversions among the gypsies. In most of the cases there is no profound discipleship that follows, but the effect is visible in many of the gypsy communities even because the veil of stigma is broken and they were accepted by the Evangelical Christians that belonged to the majority ethnicity.
There were several cases (Toflea, Râmnicelu, Slobozia[29], Teccuci, etc.) where whole villages or ghettoes of gypsies came to Christ and as a result the criminality rate basically hit zero. Fact that was unheard of in their history. Also the level of eagerness for education hit the roof and the people were searching for honest work in all the ways they could.
There are also several Evangelical Charitable Foundations and also several Evangelical missionaries that are willing to adapt and live among the gypsies. These have the greatest impact because they offer a holistic Gospel and they are the real Jesus’ hands and feet among the most forgotten ethnicity of Romania. They are there to disciple, to “teach them to obey”, not just “teach them to know”. There are several heroes like this among Evangelicals and also there are perhaps hundreds of pastors and Evangelical leaders that would come to teach and preach in the gypsy churches every week.
Still there is the call for real missionaries from among Romanians among gypsies. The churches are still segregated. The churches where gypsies are allowed to worship together with the Romanians experience many times frictions and many Christians demand the segregation. The stigma is not easy to fight for many Romanian Evangelicals. Many times the new gypsy converts are looked upon with suspicion and their motives are questioned by the Romanian Evangelicals.
The stigma and the built in prejudices are hard to overcome in the Evangelical communities toward gypsies and toward the orphans.

Conclusion
Lines of Continuity and Discontinuity with the Situation in the Fourth Century
Similarities
Wealth and Poor and the Pursuit of Happiness
Looking for similarities between the situation of the poor of the fourth century and the situation of Romania, one can find several that seems to be perennial.
First of all, as it is specific to the more Oriental countries, there seems to not be a favorable environment for the creation of a consistent middle class that can upgrade the general standard of living. There are rich people that go somewhere around 7% of the population and then a small middle class. Most of the people are just above the subsistence level or right on that threshold. In this sense we can note a continuity between the Roman times of the cities of Chrysostom and the situation in Romania.
A second similarity between the two worlds consist in the worldly pursuit of material gain. The capitalism of the free market economy brought Romanians into the rat race of materialism. Because there are structures that are very resistant to change in the economical sense, Romanians that did not leave Romania to find a better future in the western states of Europe find themselves really unhappy. In the 2012 edition of the yearly study that Worldwide Independent Network of Market Research, is doing in 58 countries from all continents, Romanians score first at unhappiness. 39% are unhappy and 30 percent are neither happy or unhappy. [30]
Jesus said that “it is more blessed to give than to receive”. As the materialistic mantra is “take, take, take for yourself”, there is no wonder of the inner misery and auto victimization in which Romanians are living. When Chrysostom describes the Christians of his time, he is condemning the savage pursuit of material gain and the hardening that is happening on this trail for the soul.  He is presenting the pursuit of material security as “fleeting” and as a “tantrum”[31] and the result of it is “oppression and avarice”[32]
Sadly in most of the cases the first obvious mark of the Orthodox and Evangelical Romanian Christians is the pursuit of material gain. There is no point in generalizing, but there are evidences that Romanians deemed themselves as Materialists rather than Post – Materialists in orientation. As explained in a Class for social studies at Harvard[33] the meaning of Post – Materialism is the term used by Inglehart as referring to the social and self – actualization needs of the Maslowian Value Hierarchy as compared to the basic material needs of safety and sustenance. 80,2 % of the Romanians placed themselves on the first three levels closer to the materialistic option out of range of six offered for consideration between the extremes of materialistic and post – materialistic attitudes. Just 19,8% of them placed themselves on the last three levels closer to the post – materialistic extreme.
Ethnicity was a important factor in the help one would give in the fourth century. In the cosmopolite Antioch there would be riots and open conflicts between the eighteen ethnicities present and sure enough everybody would have preferred their own poor. This is similar today. Help is available considering the color of the people’s skin. Gypsies are strangers in their own country.
Similar to the poor without patronage and possibility of work of the fourth century Antioch, there are categories of poor people (gypsies and institutionalized orphans) in almost the same blockage. Different solutions were tried by the State especially after we adhered to the EU, but the problems are far from being eradicated. Also there is a similar insensibility in the eyes of the more well to do Christian members of society toward the plight of the chronically poor.

Similarities: Awareness and Practice of the Individual Christian
There are similarities at the level of the awareness and practice of the individual Christians between the times of Chrysostom and modern Romania.
Like in the fourth century, in today’s Romania, there are individual Christians who venture outside of the security given by the pursuit of the Romanian – American dream. I do not know what were the exact expectations that Chrysostom had quantitatively from his congregations. One can infer that there was much more he would expect especially from the well to dos of his times. In this sense, there is a lot more quantitatively that Romanian Christians can do to alleviate the general state of poverty and especially the situation of the chronically poor.
I do believe that just good models and consistent models of actions from Christian leaders who live in self discipline, simplicity and philanthropy will do the job of discipling the Romanian Christians into serving the poor. These models will raise the level of awareness and challenge people’s stereotypes and prejudices toward the needy. Chrysostom played that role model for his congregations and many other godly leaders of that time (like his Antiochian Bishop, Flavian, or Gregory of Nazianzen) that lived in self imposed poverty in order to serve the poor.
Gypsies are perhaps some of the closest people on the planet to the filth and density of population per square meter when it comes to housing. A considerably good portion of the gypsy population is imitating the hygienic conditions of a fourth century cubicle. Most of the time they do not have running water, electricity and gas for the stove. Also the sanitation level is low for the gypsies and the criminality is high. These can be similarities between the societies.

Similarities: Awareness and practice of the Church and Society
As in the fourth century, the church today is not without a witness among the poor of the society. There are religious NGOs that serve as charities and institutions and social projects that tackle the different needs of the disadvantaged.
As then there is the need that the contemporary church can address to have the individual Christian step up and involve themselves personally in service to the disadvantaged. The charities mediate the contact between the Christian and the poor.
I do believe that the more organic the approach in solving the problems of the poor the better and the safer the results. I believe in the potential that stays too many times unearthed in the ordinary Christian. There is a huge potential of service and social redemption in the hearts and hands of the Christians empowered to serve according to their makeup and passions.
The most important institution that remained in place over the centuries for the support of the poor is the “righteous poor”. Be that the Abbot of a monastery or a famous hermit, or a generous priest, all these are considered the benefactors. They are the ones that after fulfilling the needs of their ministries give to the poor “clients” that they already know and trust or even in some cases to unknown needy persons.
They receive the support of the Romanians as the Antiochians would give their support to their “ascetic voluntary poor”. Most of this support is administered through the monastery, or the famous priest himself.

Dissimilarities
Wealth and Poor and the Pursuit of Happiness
There are much more possibilities and options for a contemporary poor to try to help himself than for the fourth century poor. The patronage was the only option that an fourth century poor would have. In Romania the State System is sustaining and keeping in check the most of the poverty. There is for most of the population the possibility of work even if it is done in less than rewarding conditions, but still I think there are jobs now in contemporary Romania that most of the Antiochian beggars or widows would want to do, but did not have the opportunity to do.
Even when somebody compares the numbers given above about the level of poverty in the Roman Empire and Contemporary Romania, one cannot but observe that quantitatively Romania is far better off than the antique cities. The general conditions of living per individual are far better now for most of the population in Romania when compared with the multi store cubicles living of the Roman Cities.

Dissimilarities: Awareness and Practice of the Individual Christian
I guess there are much more nominal Christians in Romania than in either Antioch or Constantinople of the fourth century. Romania was one of the countries who was not evangelized naturally, but politically.
Also, in Romania now, there is a level of nominalism that did not exist yet in the period of Chrysostom. Antioch was divided almost equally between at least three major faiths. In Romania according to the census of 2011 only 0,24% of the population[34] and just 1,8 % of the population declares themselves as a different religion than the Christian one. So, Christianity is dominating the religious landscape with 98% of the population.
This sea of nominalism explains why there is a lot less social activity on the part of the ordinary Christian in Romanian Orthodoxy then in the times of Chrysostom. Also, the nominalism is entertained by the laxity of a good part of the Romanian clergy. The anti luxury canonical laws that Chrysostom issued as Patriarch would sure cost him a second deposal if not worse, if he would be in power and dare to issue them in the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Romania. He would probably have to issue the same canonical laws regarding the situations of most of the Pentecostal Wealth and Health preachers.

Dissimilarities: Awareness and Practice of the Church and Society
Beside the generally greater social protection that the population has in the modern times, today the discrepancy is greater between the chronically poor person of Romania (like gypsies) and the rest of the poor population. In Chrysostom’s time all of the city people with the exception of few privileged ones, were experiencing the filth and the sweat and the horrible smell and the basic lack of sanitary protection. To be a citizen of the city would mean then to be a part of the chaotic and raw life of it.
Modern poor of Romanian cities with the exception of the ghetto gypsies are enjoying for the most part the modern sewage and the clean water system and electricity and perhaps even gas for the heating. None of these facilities were available in those times back in Antioch.
Comparing the numbers, the church under the supervision of the bishop or the pastor was much more involved then in social work projects than now. Now the secular system of social protection of the state is what a sick person experiences more often. Then for sure the poor would feel much more the preeminence of the Christian help and care.

Lessons from Chrysostom to the Romanian Christians
For Evangelical Christians plunging themselves radically in serving the poor of Romania would be one of the most significant way to testify about the living Lord Jesus. Mike Bickle teaches out of 1 Peter 2.9-15 that one of the most powerful testimonies that the Christian community has at its disposal toward an unbelieving community is serving the poor with steadfastness.[35] We need long term, steadfast commitments. This would dispel the myth that the world believe that we serve only to proselytize and not because we really care and want to give the love of Jesus away.
This is one of the lessons that Chrysostom’s sermons emphasize. We are to love in order to be in the likeness, not just in after the image[36] of God. This is where most of the Eastern Fathers see the place of good works toward the needy ones.
There are many similarities between the two worlds that are separated by more than 1600 years: The aspirations of the people, and the idolatrous and destructive ways in which they pursue material security. The desperate situation of the chronically poor. The struggle of the Christians to live up to the ideal of Christlikeness in serving the poor. The tendency to support indirectly the poor, by using he “righteous poor” as a mean of avoidance the direct encounter with the ugly face of the needy.
Because Chrysostom besides the resistance he faced, he enjoyed a great level of success in determining his congregation to act in accord with Christ’s heart toward the poor and because of the similarities of many aspects of the multifaceted poverty issue, we would do good to ourselves to expose ourselves to the teachings about the responsibilities of the Christian toward the poor of this great teacher of the Orthodox Church
One of the first lessons from Chrysostom that we can apply to our situation is the advice to stop our frenzy pursuit of earthly accumulation of wealth when beside us are people that do not have the basic necessities of life. We need to let the Holy Spirit to sensitize our heart and to move us toward action. We need to discipline our use of earthly excesses and to learn and practice restrain and simplicity and with the goods thus saved to serve the poor.
Another lesson is to seek personal contact with the poor. To do it in an organic way where we let the Holy Spirit’s philanthropy to make us more merciful persons, not just better activists.
Another personal lesson that we can learn from John, and one that I have learned the hard way is to persuade people more through personal example than through manipulation techniques.
Many times Chrysostom’s appeal although very well intended, is resorting to threats and intimidation. We can learn from the ascetic and generous life style that Chrysostom had. Almsgiving should become a life style for every leader in the Church. Also, we can avoid trying to manipulate the audience into good deeds. We need to just preach (with passion none of the less) and remind the people and expect the Holy Spirit to work. We can give stories of impact.
The situation of the gypsies and orphans in Romania would require though a different approach when it comes to the irrespective giving. An Catholic Charismatic Community in Texas serving the poor of the poor in Mexico illustrate how they applied the verse: “whoever would not work should not eat” (2 Thessalonians 3.10) to giving to the poor[37].  There is a proverbial laziness that is characteristic to gypsy communities. Begging is a far more productive activity for them that produces them more than an normal day wage for work. So giving irrespectively will generally produce just more addiction to begging.
Also I think we should pay attention to the advises of Chrysostom toward becoming houses of mercy. Philanthropy needs to be learned by practice and also need to be taught by preaching and by example.
Romanians need to take heed at the approach Chrysostom has toward involvement of the State toward the poor. Basically there is no mixture between church and state. We should not expect the State to show Jesus to the poor. We should not relegate to the State what Jesus commanded us to do. We are to love the neighbor as ourselves and also to love sacrificially as Jesus loved us.
We can also learn that all the earthly possessions that we have should be held with an open hand and we should recognize that God is the ultimate owner of everything we have and we should be able to distribute what is His in His time and according to His directions.



[8] Liz Gallaher, The Gipsy Life, http://www.rps.psu.edu/0009/gypsy.html
[11]Oprea – Popescu Adriana, “Opriți exportul de copii”, Jurnalul Național, June 13, 2011 at http://www.jurnalul.ro/special/opriti-exportul-de-copii-581483.htm (accesed August 10, 2012)
[12]Numărul copiilor abandonați în România s-a dublat, Revista Eva, at: http://www.eva.ro/sanatate/stiri/numarul-copiilor-abandonati-din-romania-s-a-dublat-articol-24597.html (accesed August 10, 2012)
[13] There is a federation of charitable Foundations blessed by the Daniel the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church: http://federatia-filantropia.ro/ , also the Patriarchy has its own charitable association: http://asociatiadiaconia.uv.ro/
[19] an example of ministry that facilitated hundreds of children to be adopted by Christians in Romania: http://romania-reborn.org/projects/hope-house/
[21] Bejean Gabriel, România Liberă,  ”De ce nu verificați și averile preoților”, November 9, 2011, at: http://www.romanialibera.ro/opinii/editorial/de-ce-nu-verificati-si-averile-preotilor-243918.html (Accessed August 20, 2012)
[23] Rodney Stark (2011) 375
[24] Rodney Stark (2011) 376
[25] Rodney Stark (2011) 381
[30] Socaciu Ionuț, ”Românii sunt cei mai nefericiți cetățeni ai planetei...”, Jurnalul Național, January 3, 2012, at http://www.jurnalul.ro/observator/romanii-sunt-cei-mai-nefericiti-cetateni-ai-planetei-la-polul-opus-aproape-noua-din-zece-fijieni-se-declara-fericiti-600485.htm (Accessed August 14, 2012)
[31] St John Chrysostom, Word Spoken in the Old Church when the Statues of Theodosius the Great Were Smashed and about 1 Timothy 6.17, ibid
[32] John Chrysostom, Homily VI to Second Timothy, ibid
[36] St Athanasius, On the Incarnation, (CCEL.org, Copyright Cliff Lee, 2007) 29-39

Christian's Responsibilities to the Poor in the Works of John Chrysostom (Part2)




Antioch and Constantinople of the IV Century - The Cities, Their Life and Their Unfortunates

The Times and the Cities
The timeline of the life of Chrysostom have been a turbid period in the new Byzantine Empire in the religious and political respect. Arianism was the religion of Constantius II and he promoted it between 337 and 359 when the Arianism was declared official religion in the Empire[1]. Then Julian the Apostate was trying for a short time (361 -363) to revive the pagan cults. The next eastern emperors, Valens, Theodosius and Arcadius were promoting Orthodoxy, (Council of Constantinople 281) and even a too zealous persecution of the pagans.
Externally, the Empire and especially the province of Syria with Chrysostom’s Antioch as Capital were witnessing an continuous war between Romans and Sassanid Persia (337 – 363)[2]. The war was never completely pinned during the lifespan of Chrysostom as the Emperors continually won or lost territories in the eastern provinces.
Economically, the privileged aristocracy that held large estates, the military and the administrative officials[3] were the institutions of dominance that kept the poverty and inequality in place and secured privileges just for the rich. These institutions were promoted by the more autocratic Emperors which transformed the Senates in Rome and Constantinople in nothing more than administrative councils. Regarding the relief of poverty, patronage was the only social protection system in place.
Antioch is estimated to have had a population of around 300 000, divided equally in terms of religion: a third Christian, a third Jews and a third Pagans[4] or more probable just around 150 000[5]. This does not include the population that was spread in the villages auxiliary to the City.
John Chrysostom mentions several issues that are inclusive to the City of Antioch that constitute reasons for much philanthropic work: “earthquakes, droughts, wars, migrations, riots and changes of imperial laws on families and property that resulted in a large group of destitute people.” [6]
Although the city of Constantinople was founded just in 330 by the Emperor Constantine, it is reported that He gave a ratio of 80 000 free bread to the poor of the City. This suggests the magnitude of the poverty in the City at at population of 150 000.[7] The “New Rome” was in this sense inheriting the old ills of the old Rome.

The Everyday Life in the Cities of Chrysostom’s Time
Because Antioch was first founded as a fortress, there was a subhuman density of the population in between its walls. Historians estimate an density of about 195 persons per acre, in comparison with Manhattan Island that has 100 persons per acre and is spread out vertically.[8] We should not forget here the livestock that a normal person will own and host in the same space where she lived.
“Most people lived in cubicles in multistoried tenements[9]”. An estimate of perhaps 1 house at around 30-40 blocks of apartments. Apartments of one room in which “entire families were herded together”[10]. The limited space in these cities was extreme. Antioch’s thoroughfare, admired in the Greco-Roman world, was only 30 feet wide.[11]
At such a density, sanitation would have been a problem for the modern system of sewerage. The inhabitants were living their lives in filth. The water had to be carried for drinking and food, there was not much left for hygiene or washing. Water was very contaminated. Pliny advised that all water is better for being boiled.[12]
Worse yet, the excrements were collected in pots and some ditches served as sewers. “Tenement cubicles were smoky, dark, often damp, and always dirty. The smell of sweat, urine, feces, and decay permeated everything... bugs ran riot...the streets: mud, open sewers, manure, and crowds... and human corpses – adult and infant were sometimes pushed into the street and abandoned.”[13]
Disease was running rampant. In the cities the life expectancy at birth was less than thirty years. “The majority of those living in the Greco – Roman cities suffered from chronic health conditions”[14] Sickness was seen everywhere in the cities: swollen eyes, skin rashes, and lost limbs.[15]
Because of these conditions, the cities depended on a permanent influx of immigrants because of the highly death rates. The cities were thus filled with “social chaos and chronic urban misery” (Stark 156) which produced high rate of criminality. Besides this, there were approximately eighteen identifiable ethnic quarters within Antioch (Stark 158) most of them walled and separated from the others. These ethnic separation resulted regularly in riots and ethnic fights.
Also there were a lot of natural and social disasters that repeatedly struck the city: epidemics, fires, attacks of the enemies, earthquakes and famines. Antioch modern excavation prove that the city was repeatedly turned to ruins.
A portrait of the city in antiquity is “a city filled with misery, danger, fear, despair and hatred. A city where average family lived a squalid life in filthy and cramped quarters, where at least half of the children died at birth or during infancy, and where most of the children who lived lost at least one parent before reaching maturity.[16]

Christian Response and Action to the Plight of the Cities

The Evolution of the Early Fathers Thinking Regarding the Attitudes toward Wealth and Poverty
There are authors that suggest that Early Christians Thinkers inherited the Platonic and Stoic ideas regarding the practice of philanthropy. There are examples in the philosophic writings of Plato, Aristotle, Epictetus and Diogenes of the teachings about the philanthropy of these thinkers. For them the greatest good was not material, but the virtue and the one of the virtues was the philanthropy.[17]
Sure there are accents in the early Fathers thinking about philanthropy that are reflecting the Greek thinking that was ingrained for many of them in the formal education they received, but the Scriptures and the Jewish culture which was the bedrock of early Christianity were much more specific to the thinking of the early Fathers.
Friesen sees an evolution of thinking in time of four different models that he draws from three canonical writings and then one from an early writing of the Early Church. (Revelation, James, Acts and the Sheperd of Hermas) In each of the sources he identifies he observes different sources the wealth (imperial system, local elites, not stated and God) and then different actions required from the poor: denunciation of wealth, toleration, embracing of the rich and dependence of the rich. The rich should: divest wealth, correct problems with it, support the church, earn his of her own salvation.[18]
A certain trend can be seen in the practice and thinking of the church by the fourth century when John Chrysostom was on the scene of history. Most of the the more difficult teachings of Jesus were relegated to allegorical interpretations.[19] The case of “Which Rich man will be saved” of Clement of Alexandria is notable because ‘the renunciation of one’s possessions’ is made to signify the Neo-Platonist ideal of mastering passions rather than the actual abandonment of the goods.[20] Also, at Nazianzen, the rich are compelled to provide for their poor neighbors[21], but not to divest.
Ascetics appeared as a correction of the course in which the things were headed before, but especially after Constantine. The covenant of simplicity and poverty of the hermits and cenobite communities and the examples of monks like Anthony, Macarius and Evgarius and many others were a new impulse for the Christian to divest the earthly goods and serve the fellow human. Theologians, like the Cappadocians and Augustine were influenced toward godliness and personal devotion to God directly by the ascetic perspective in the fight with the ‘demon of money’. [22]
A tradition of self sacrifice and love
Stark, a sociologist of religion in his books [23] [24]relating to the growth of Christianity underlines the fact of Christian mercy toward the poor and the sick of the Roman World. There were two major plagues that struck the Roman Empire. One around 165 AD and the other about one hundred years later. Christians showed mercy by caring about their sick and also the sick of the pagans. Pagans would threw their contaminated in the streets for fear of infection, and then would flee the cities. Even the Emperor Julian the Apostate recognizes the superior charity and service of the Christians to that of the pagan religion.[25]
In the process of caring for the sick the best of the Christians died[26], but also the level of survival was rising with more than two thirds. When we consider that one quarter to a third of the whole populace of the Roman World died during those plagues the charitable actions of the Christians were one of the reasons that Christianity grew during those times when the populace generally drastically dwindled.
Early Christian writers and even the famous pagan physician Galen recognize the philanthropy that the early Christians practiced: ”they contributed money to a common fund to support orphans, widows, the sick, and the destitute”, they brought food and medicines to needy people, bought coffins, dug graves to bury the strangers, poor and criminals.[27]

John Chrysostom on Wealth and Poverty
Chrysostom’s definition of wealth and poverty
Chrysostom’s view of wealth and poverty is rich and complex. He addresses either directly or indirectly this issue in many of his works. There are thinkers like Rudolf Brändle that suggest that the central thought that is woven into all the thinking of Chrysostom has to do with the way Christians relate to the poor as the lively representation of their Lord.
At the question about the source of inequality and of poverty the response Chrysostom gives is multifaceted. Ultimately,”... in the present life poverty and wealth are only masks... when death arrives and the theatre is dissolved, everyone puts off the masks of wealth or poverty ...”[28].
Thus the source of poverty and wealth can be God in the sense of the role that God allotted to a specific actor in His great drama of history. Because the purpose in life is not wealth, but Christlikeness. This is aligned with the great trend of thinking of the most Eastern Theologians in which the ultimate purpose[29] of man and the goal of salvation is union with God through deification[30] [31]. “Rich is not the one who possesses much, but the one who gives much.”[32] – the one that imitate God better and who is affluent in spiritual wealth toward God: “If one cannot control his own greed, even if he has appropriated everyone’s property, how can he ever be affluent?”[33]
God is the source of wealth. God has His own specific purposes when He entrusts wealth: growth into imitation Christi and realization of one’s salvation – which in the deification view is not “works salvation”, but participation with God in the process of deification:  ”This is why God has allowed you to have more; not for you..., but ... to distribute to those in need.”[34] “God made you rich... to help those in need and so to unbind your sins too. He gave you money not to store them for your destruction, but to pour them toward your salvation.”[35]
The righteous suffer and poverty is one of the afflictions, but in the calculus that Chrysostom[36] invites the hearer to make, poverty is the superior stance, because it offers a better perspective for deification: “... we should not wail because of poverty... it makes the almsgiving more accessible... (the poor) goes easier to those in prison and is quicker to visit those that are sick, but (the rich) does not humble himself to these.”[37]
At the human level, “... the root and the reason for wealth is pride... It is not necessity, it is pride.”[38] That is why with this greatest of temptations wealth can be good or bad in accordance with the usage of the one who owns it: “... wealth is not an evil in itself, but its improper usage is from the Evil one. Also the poverty in itself is not something good, but the right usage of it. The Rich man in Lazarus story, was not punished for being rich, but for being cruel and unmerciful and Lazarus, the poor... was not praised for being poor, but for enduring his poverty with an grateful spirit.”[39]
The solution for the rich is to walk in “voluntary poverty” that consists of “... control of his stomach, his dismissal of excess, and his despisal of a luxurious diet...”[40] and to accompany it with the almsgiving.

Christian responsibilities to the poor
Almsgiving as the Main Responsibility of the Christian
For Chrysostom the plight that the daily scene of the poor of the cities pose to the Christian impose action. There are several ways in which Christians need to react immediately to the common reality of poverty. The first of them is almsgiving. It is something immediate as the need is.
Almsgiving is portrayed to be more than an economic empowerment for a person in need. For John, “eleemosyne” “includes far more than alms... it is a behavior of loving openness to fellow humans and can be expressed in varying acts of compassion. “[41]
Also, almsgiving represent an exchange, “an material and spiritual transaction between the rich and poor”[42] In his plea for alms, John “creates an appeal to self – interest designed to catch the attention of the rich and turn their gaze... to the poor”[43]
Are the donors of Chrysostom placed in fixed categories? Are just the rich expected to give? Or everybody?[44]  John believes the responsibility of almsgiving falls on the shoulder of every Christian: “... we should not wail because of poverty... it makes the almsgiving more accessible... (the poor) goes easier to those in prison and is quicker to visit those that are sick, but (the rich) does not humble himself to these.”[45] and: “Almsgiving ...needs wealth more in order to be expressed, but if it is done in poverty it is more glorious and illustrious... the poor widow exceeded all the rich men”[46]
Should one give irrespectively if he knows the person or not? Denise Kimber Buell[47], explains that the tradition of the early Christian practice toward poor was in a way marked by the definition of the “deserving poor” as a person who is worthy of the almsgiving. Didache, assumed then by Augustine contain urges to give with wisdom.
Chrysostom built his case for almsgiving against this tradition and is adamant about giving irrespectively to any who asks: “... if you wish to show kindness, you must not require an accounting of a person’s life, but merely correct his poverty and fill his need... Be like your Father in heaven, for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good”. “when you see on earth the man who has encountered the shipwreck of poverty, do not judge him, do not seek an account of his life, but free him from his misfortune... Charity is so called because we give it even to the unworthy.”[48]
Streaming from his conviction that the poor are the “incarnation” of Christ in our midst (Matt 25.34-35), John is advocating giving without objecting and judging ahead. He is not swerving from this conviction even if he – as we will see later – faced disdain from his congregation. He is a real advocate for the poor in many passages he describes very visually their plight, their wounds, their deep need: “Need alone is the poor man’s worthiness... we show mercy on him, not because of his virtue, but because of his misfortune... if we are going to investigate the worthiness of our fellow servants, and inquire exactly, God will do the same for us... for with the judgment you pronounce, you will be judged.”[49] He is even excusing the poor for the daring behavior that offended many and convince them to stop the giving: ” (the poor) seeing that the day has passed and he doesn’t have the money for food... is compelled to dare more ... doing innumerable other improper gestures...”[50]
Christian houses of mercy
In the Roman cities where the density of the populace was indescribable and the families were usually horded in one room cubicle in a multi leveled building we can imagine that the situation of the poor was not first of all relating to housing. Poor could be anyone who would not have the possibility to work: Mainly widows, orphans, sick and disabled. They could own a house (room), but that would not provide the means to live. There was no middle class in today’s understanding. 40% of the populace was at the subsistence level and 28% under it. The next level comprised of 22 % of the populace was barely above the subsistence level[51] There are left just around 8-9 % of people who would detain moderate to large resources for living. Sometimes the poor were those who temporarily were left without work or possibility to work. The category of the poor was more interchangeable then than today and it was the expectation of the New Testament and of leadership of the Early Church that poor people would help the poor that were temporarily in more severe lack.[52]
Besides widows and orphans, there were sick people, strangers, new immigrants and people in transit that would benefit hospitality and food. Hospitality was a capital virtue for the Roman world and it was specifically instructed by Jesus to Christians. Chrysostom envisions the Christian house as a house of hospitality and mercy. In the Homily at Acts 26.4, he portrays the father of the family as the distributor of the Word in the family and the one who invites the poor for meals and leads the family in whole nights of watches and prayer... and so the house become a church.
There is a certain discipleship that should go on in the family regarding the acts of mercy. The children should witness first hands the devotion of the parents for the Jesus “incarnate” in the poor: “God gave you children... to act humanly, not beastly... Do you want to leave a good inheritance to your children? Leave them the charity.”[53]
 John was specifically encouraging his hearers to become the donors themselves and to enter in contact with the poor. Their mercy was to emanate from the personal devotion to Jesus and to lead them into personal relations with people that the society disdains. Wendy Mayer sustains the idea that through the direct appeals to the hearers themselves, John tries to redirect the giving from the social projects of the Church and from the ascetic poor to the economically poor. [54] In the Homily at the Epistle to Philippians, John tries to correct the ‘spiritual’ way in which the help is directed to the poor “It is giving to the poor that is important, not giving to the ascetic”. The ascetic poor has about himself the image of a “virtuous poor” which makes the giving more easy for most of the Christians, but John insisted on the more organic way of giving in person and establishing individual Christian patronages of mercy besides the charities that existed at that time in the churches and at the monasteries.
In this sense the Christian should be wise in stewarding their goods with the specific goal in mind of sharing them with the others: “Therefore let us use our goods sparingly, as belonging to others, so that they may become our own. How shall we use them sparingly, as belonging to others? When we do not spend them beyond our needs... but give equal share into the hands of the poor”[55]
Even if John’s efforts was to make his hearers to devote themselves to serve directly the poor, in time, the model of charity that survived the best in the oriental countries where Easter Orthodoxy is at home is the model of indirect charity. The charity that is given to a “voluntary poor” (priest, famous hermit, monastery or church or charity of the church). From there the surplus is distributed to the poor.

The Motivations Chrysostom Uses to Propel Action Toward the Poor in His Congregation
Chrysostom’s approach to the Christ “incarnate” in the poor from Matthew 25 passage leads him to affirm that the “Christ is in the poor similar if not more present than in Eucharist and on the Cross”[56] The Christian should see and understand this and participate into the fellowship that the poor intermediates with Christ: “He (Jesus) sacrifice Himself for us and we ignore Him and we are not giving Him even the basic food, even if He is ill, or naked we are not taking Him into account.”[57]
Christlikeness or “God likeness” is the second motivator John uses.  In the theological key of deification of the Eastern Fathers, the human being is most human when it is as close as possible transformed into God likeness:  “If he loves the poor, he is a human being,...but if he has a savage temper, he is a lion; if he is rapacious, he is a wolf; if he is deceitful, he is a cobra... Learn what really is the virtue of a human being, and do not be confused.”[58]  “He did not say: if you fast you will be like your Father in heaven... but He said: “be merciful as your Father is merciful (Luke 6.36) ... Nothing attracts God more than us showing mercy...”[59]
A controversial aspect of the motivation that Chrysostom seeks to instill in his hearers is the earning of one’s salvation. “...after God’s loving kindness, we must have our hope of salvation in our own righteous deeds... nothing will help us hereafter, if we do not have good deeds”[60]
There are passages of Chrysostom’s sermons and homilies that are somehow against the Gospel of Grace: “The almsgiving in the queen of the virtues, the one which takes the men quickly to the Pearly Gates. It is our sweet defense.”[61]  Commenting on the trade that the almsgiving is, John refers to the same capital passage for him: Matthew 25:40 “And the King will answer them, 'Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.” he affirms: “Do you have a coin? Buy the heaven with it! Not that the heaven is cheap, but the Master is generous... Heaven is good trade and business and we neglect it.”[62] In the famous Sermon at the Ten Virgins, he goes on to say:  “... can you buy with money the eternal life? Yes...”[63] “An awesome thing is the almsgiving brothers... It is able to wipe out the sins and to drive away the punishment from us.”[64]
Almsgiving is motivational for Chrysostom as he invests it with the capacity to atone for sins and reduce the penance for it: “Let him seek a penalty for his sins by self-condemnation, by complete repentance, by tears, by confessions, by fasting and almsgiving ... and charity, so that in every way we may become able to put aside all our sins in this life and to depart to the next life with full confidence.”[65]
Fear for loosing one’s salvation is also played without regret and qualification in order to extract the expected answer of obedience from his audience. The unwise virgins lost their entrance into heaven because of lack of charity in their lives: ”the virgins were not guilty of licentiousness, or envy... but they were lacking of oil... which is charity”[66]
The final judgment will be also the great revealer of the heart of humanity. In this sense the level of material and social success are just roles that mask the real person, the real character of a person. The Judgment Day will reveal our real self and the attitude toward mercy will be one of the main factors that will establish the kind of real persons we are and in consequence our eternal fate: “Lazarus had the mask of a poor man, but the rich had the mask of a rich man. Appearances are masks... they departed to the other world... the masks have been removed, and the faces appear from now on.”[67]
Chrysostom motivates by affirming that Christian impact among pagans and Jews is enhanced when Christians are practicing philanthropy: ”Make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous mammon...Luke 16.9... it is almsgiving which vouches for you, and your righteous action.”[68]
Another way Chrysostom motivates his congregation is by associating the practice of mercy with the other virtues and Christian disciplines. He affirms the centrality of the philanthropy in the growth in the Christian life: “...prayer without almsgiving is lacking fruit. All are unclean without almsgiving, all are useless, even most of the virtue is tainted.”[69]
Francine Carman sees many of the strategies that John uses to motivate not as efficient as it seems in the force of the discourse[70]. Many of them manipulate and do not empower. He could have used the other powerful concepts that are more in line with the Gospel of Grace like the other motivators he uses when he says that all we have is on loan and we are becoming robbers if we are not sharing from our earthly riches. His passion for the poor as it happens with many prophetic voices sometimes seems to blind him to the long strategy of winning whole persons for his cause, not just immediate action.

Response and Resistance of the Congregations to the Message of Chrysostom Regarding the Poor
The Response
The name given him by the congregation suggest the love that the church held for this great teacher. Also the resistance of the people at his departure both from Antioch and from Constantinople proves the impact that his sermons and of his person devotion had on the people.
From his sermons though we can deduce that the things were not always as smooth as it can seem. Chrysostom approached this subject of the responsibility of the Christian toward the poor in a prophetic fashion and his sermons cut with precision every inclination toward complacency that he saw in the congregation.
The situation of the care for the poor in Antioch where he pastored for most of his life was complex, but it was well organized and sustained by Chrysostom’s efforts and also by the efforts of Flavian one of the bishops of the church in the City that was extensively involved in works of mercy. The social care at the big church, where he pastored was in good shape as they had an hostel for strangers, an hospital for the incurable sick. Also the church held four dinning halls, and kept a register where the poor widows were entered and cared for[71] in which were enlisted more than 3000 widows[72]
These were extensive projects that were under the see of the pastor and of the bishop and of the Church. In Constantinople, John seems to have had an even more extensive influence from his position and by the reforms he promoted he changed the destination of funds from the clergy toward the social projects. Olympas and other rich patrons who invested in the many social projects of the Capital City.[73]
These projects are also proof of some level of success of Chrysostom’s sermons that were full of exhortations to invest in the poor and somehow alleviate their poverty.

The Resistance
Stark and other scholars suggest now that the Christianity of the first centuries was not as it popularly was believed almost exclusively a “religion of slaves”. Most of the first converts and the so, the founding members of the church were elite citizens of the city and probably there was a perpetration of the status of the elite among the leaders and the members of the Church.[74]  So to this elite John addresses most of his rebukes: “many times I advised you to avoid the greed of riches... perhaps many revile me and say: won’t he stop fighting with his tongue against the rich... I am not their enemy ... I speak all just for their good.”[75]
He rebukes them for hoarding things that perish instead of giving them to the poor: „There is nothing more grievous than luxury... –take heed you forget not the Lord your God (Deut. 8.11)... luxury often leads to forgetfulness.” [76]
He rebukes them for being insensitive to the poor and developing a hardened heart toward them: “(the rich man) was not improved by his prosperity, but remained beastly... he surpassed the cruelty and inhumanity of any beast.”[77]
Chrysostom critiqued the elite of the City of Antioch (most of it Christian) because it “was wealthy enough to ‘nourish the poor of ten cities.’”[78] without making a significant impact in alleviating the poverty of it. Because the elites in the Church were not giving to the economic poor the church needs to burden itself with institutions of care (Homily to First Corinthians 21)[79]
Another well ingrained thought that Chrysostom fought against was the belief of the Roman world that was assumed also by many Christians that the structurally poor were in a way or another criminals. In the Homily to Acts 8, John talks about the usual reaction of the people toward those who begged for food, clothing of money was avoidance, hostility or suspicion.[80]
Chrysostom found resistance when he preached giving irrespectively of the person and when he preached giving to the economical poor instead of the voluntary poor (the ascetic). “It is giving to the poor that is important, not giving to the ascetic” (First Homily to Philippians). In the Homily to Hebrew 11 he insists that “an ascetic male that begs is fraudulent.[81]

Chrysostom, The State and The Poor
The prophetic voice of Chrysostom and his ascetic tendencies shows into the way he crafts his message to the State and the Church. Even when he was confronted with perhaps the greatest crisis regarding the State of his whole career as a preacher when members of his congregation participated into the destruction of the statues of the Emperor Theodosius he remained silent about the abuse that caused the revolt and only insisted on the individual responsibilities of the Christians toward the state. Later in life when he is in the position from which he can influence the business of the church at large he is not interfering with the State as an institution. The concept of social welfare was unknown in those times and John resorted only to the categories of social help he could get realistically.
This does not mean that John feels hindered by the social and political position of the persons in his churches. He is famous from Antioch about speaking against the greed and worldliness of the rich and he is not withholding his critiques when he arrives to be the personal pastor of the imperial family and of the court. This characteristic gets him into the problems that led to his exile.
I cannot but underline that although the State was in its first years of ”happy” marriage with the Church, Chrysostom did not perceive the state as an actor in relieving the plight of poverty. The State in his mind is separate from the Church when it comes to serving the poor, but the individuals that are holding positions of power in the state if Christians are obliged by their position to a greater and more significant work of charity than the normal citizen.




[1] Stelian Brezeanu, “O istorie a imperiului Bizantin”, (Editura Albatros, București, 1981) 13
[2] Stelian Brezeanu, (1981) 12
[3] Friesen J. Steven Injustice or God’s will?,” in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008) 20-22
[4] Eftalia Macris Walsh, (2008) 183
[5] Rodney Stark, (1997) 131
[6] Ibid, (2008)
[7] Demetrios J. Contantelos, “The Hellenistic Background and Nature of Patristic Philanthropy” in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008) 205
[8] Rodney Stark, (1997), 150
[9] Rodney Stark, The Rise of Christianity, (New York, NY, HarperCollins, 1997) 151
[10] ibidem
[11] ibidem
[12] Rodney Stark, (1997) 153
[13] Rodney Stark, (1997) 154
[14] Rodney Stark, (1997) 155
[15] ibidem
[16] Rodney Stark, (1997) 160
[17] Demetrios J. Constantelos, (2008) 187 - 199
[18] Steven J. Friesen, (2008) 35
[19] Edward Moore, Wealth, Poverty, and the Value of the Person, - Some notes on the Hymn of the Pearl and Its Early Christian Context, in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008) 56
[20] Annewies Van Der Hoek, Widening the Eye of the Needle, (2008) in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008) 71
[21] Edward Moore, (2008) 62
[22] Edward Moore, (2008) 67 - 68
[23] Rodney Stark, (1997) 73-94
[24] Rodney Stark, The Triumph of Christianity, (Harper One, New York, 2011)
[25] Rodney Stark, The Triumph of Christianity, (Harper One, New York, 2011) 117
[26] ibid
[27] Demetrios J. Constantelos, (2008) 200 - 201
[28] St John Chrysostom The Seventh Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981)
[29] “... for through love and compassion, not through asceticism we can become like God.” Rudolf Brändle, (2008) 131
[30] Zachary J. Smith, Deification in the Eastern Orthodox Tradition : A Protestant Assesment , (Soteriology IS – TH690, May, 2008), Seen at: http://danutm.wordpress.com/2010/11/30/building-bridges-a-new-book-of-the-orthodox-evangelical-dialogue/ (Accessed September 19, 2012)
[31] Deification, New Dictionary of Theology, Ed. Sinclair B Fergurson, David F. Wright, J.I. Paker, (Inter Varsity Press, Leicester, England, 1988) 189
[32] St John Chrysostom The Seventh Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981)
[33] St John Chrysostom, The Second Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man, in “Wealth and Poverty”, (----------) 41
[34] St John Chrysostom, The Second Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 50
[35] St John Chrysostom, Word Spoken in the Old Church when the Statues of Theodosius the Great Were Smashed and about 1 Timothy 6.17, ibid
[36] Francine Cardman, (2008) 168 - 170
[37] St John Chrysostom, The XIX Homily to Romans, in “Homilies to the Epistle to Romans”, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/584/omilia-x/ (Accessed July 16, 2012)
[38] St John Chrysostom, Word Spoken in the Old Church when the Statues of Theodosius the Great Were Smashed and about 1 Timothy 6.17, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/643/celor-bogati/ (Accessed July 2, 2012)
[39] St John Chrysostom, Word in the Sunday from before the Ascension of the Holy Cross, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/163/duminica-dinaintea-inaltarii-cinstitei-cruci/ (Accessed July 17, 2012)
[40] St John Chrysostom, Sermo cum presbyter (SC 272: 404, 166-169) in Wendy Mayer (2008) 148 - 149
[41] Rudolf Brändle, (2008) 131
[42] Francine Cardman, “Poverty and Wealth as Theater – John Chrysostom’ s Homilies on Lazarus and the Rich Man” in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008)171
[43] Francine Cardman, (2008) 172
[44] Denise Kimber Buell, “When both Donors and Recipients are Poor” in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008) 37-47
[45] St John Chrysostom, The XIX Homily to Romans, in “Homilies to the Epistle to Romans”, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/584/omilia-x/ (Accessed July 16, 2012)
[46] St John Chrysostom, Word at the Feast of St John the Baptist, in “Sermons on Sundays and Holidays” http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/479/cuvant-la-sfantul-ioan-botezatorul/
[47] Denise Kimber Buell, (2008) 45-46
[48] St John Chrysostom, The Second Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 52
[49] ibid, 53
[50] St John Chrysostom, The Fifth Word, in “The First Homilies in Genesis”, (Editura Sophia, București, 2004) http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/333/cuvantul-al-cincilea/ (Accessed July 14, 2012)
[51] Steven J. Friesen, (2008) 20
[52] Denise Kimber Buell, (2008) 47
[53] St John Chrysostom, The Third Homily about Mercy and the Ten Virgins,  http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/387/omilia-a-treia/  (Accessed July 15, 2012)
[54] Wendy Mayer, (2008), 151
[55] St John Chrysostom, Second Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man, (1981) 50
[56] Rudolf Brändle, (2008) 136
[57] St John Chrysostom, Seventh Homily to First Timothy, in “Interpretations to First Timothy”, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/608/omilia-vii-2/ (Accessed July 16, 2012)
[58] St John Chrysostom, The Sixth Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 107 -108
[59] St John Chrysostom, Fourth Homily to Second Timothy, ibid
[60] St John Chrysostom, The Fourth Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 80 -81
[61] St John Chrysostom, The Third Homily about Mercy and the Ten Virgins,  http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/387/omilia-a-treia/ (Accessed July 15, 2012)
[62] St John Chrysostom, The Fourth Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 80 -81
[63] ibid
[64] ibid
[65] ibid 96
[66] St John Chrysostom, Fourth Homily to Second Timothy, ibid
[67] St John Chrysostom, The Sixth Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 110
[68] St John Chrysostom, The Third Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man (1981) 77
[69] St John Chrysostom, Fourth Homily to Second Timothy, in ”Interpretations at the Second Epistle to Timothy, Titus and Philemon”, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/634/omilia-vi-2timotei/ (Accessed July 15, 2012)
[70] Francine Cardman (2008) 171
[71] Rudolf Brändle (2008) 131
[72] Eftalia Macris Walsh, (2008) 183
[73] Wendy Mayer, (2008) 143 - 147
[74] Rodney Stark, (1997) p38 - 39
[75] St John Chrysostom, Word at the Feast of the Forty Disciples, http://www.ioanguradeaur.ro/153/sfintii-patruzeci-de-mucenici/ (Accessed July 17, 2012)
[76] St John Chrysostom, First Sermon on Larzarus and the Rich Man, in ”On Wealth and Poverty”, (St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, Crestwood, NY, 1981) 26 -27
[77] St John Chrysostom, (1981) 23
[78] Eftalia Macris Walsh, (2008) 184
[79] Wendy Mayer, (2008) 156
[80] Wendy Mayer, (2008) 150
[81] Wendy Mayer, “Poverty and Generosity toward the Poor in the Time of John Chrysostom”, in Wealth and Poverty in Early Church and Society,  ed. Susan R. Holman, (Grand Rapids, MI, Baker Academic and Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, 2008) 151