Amazing Stories of Effective Compassion

Wednesday, February 1, 2006
I was reminded recently that Jesus repeatedly underscored the high value of seemingly very small things. The signficant results of small mustard seeds and lost coins made his parable points well but, as a mom, the story of one lost sheep made me quickly leap to the incalculable value of one lost person. On a planet of billions, many of whom live and die with scarcely any notice, Jesus says God notices ... and cares. And He calls us to care.

Acton’s 2005 Samaritan Award Winner Profiles (PDF), now available online, demonstrate that large or small, effective compassion greatly values even one lost or needy person. As helpful as “best practices” from such charity programs can be, each evidences more important best principles.

Principles transcend practices, because practices are simply activities, albeit some times ones linked to impressive results. But could they be as effective in Memphis as they are in Seattle as they are in tiny Seminole, Oklahoma? That is why Acton’s Samaritan Award entry survey is based on Marvin Olasky’s 7 Principles of Effective Compassion. The manner in which an effective charity may encourage reconnecting a homeless person to family and community may look very different among programs in those three cities -- quite different in demographics and culture. But any homeless program in any of those cities should operationalize this “affiliation” principle.

Dr. Olasky asks: “Does the program work through families, neighbors, and religious or community organizations, or does it supersede them?” For example, studies show that many homeless alcoholics have families, but they do not want to be with them. When homeless shelters provide food, clothing, and housing without asking hard questions, aren’t they subsidizing disaffiliation and enabling addiction? Instead of giving aid directly to homeless men, why not work on reuniting them with brothers, sisters, parents, wives, or children?

The 2005 Samaritan Award Winners represent a wide variety of social services and budgets. Some programs serve a large number of ‘lost sheep’ and some serve only a few. Yet each has demonstrated a sharp understanding and commitment to effective compassion principles. An extensive report of each may also be found at Acton’s online Samaritan Guide.

We commend them to you.
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  1. Maria ?rodo? says:

    I’m not sure about reconnecting alcoholics with their wives and children if this entails risking violence etc. They may be unready, and untill then they still must not be left to freeze to death...

  2. Karen Woods says:

    An expectation and facilitation of healthy behavior should always be the benchmark. I would hope that “effective compassion” would at least connote that neither inappropriately reconnecting a violent person, alcoholic or not, with the estranged family nor leaving that person to freeze were options. Both Dr. Olasky and Acton consistently support assistance that addresses the problem, not the symptoms. Too many programs would keep the alcoholic from freezing but never even inquire about an estranged family. Please do not mistake that we would ever advocate cavalierly or unadvisedly reuniting a violent person to others, family or not, until the source of the violence has been addressed and resolved.


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