Quotes about Inequality
If you're totally illiterate and living on one dollar a day, the benefits of globalization never come to you.
— Jimmy Carter
I had come to see that the great tragedy in the church is not that rich Christians do not care about the poor but that rich Christians do not know the poor...I truly believe that when the rich meet the poor, riches will have no meaning. And when the rich meet the poor, we will see poverty come to an end.
— Shane Claiborne
The world of efficiency and anonymity dehumanises us. We have to ask who the invisible people are. Who makes our clothes? Who picks our vegetables? And how are they treated?
— Shane Claiborne
There is nothing more sickening than talking about poverty over a fancy dinner.
— Shane Claiborne
Dom Helder Camara, a twentieth-century bishop in Brazil, said, "When I feed the poor, they call me a saint, but when I ask why the poor are hungry, they call me a Communist.
— Shane Claiborne
After all, what is crazier: one person owning the same amount of money as the combined economies of twenty-three countries, or suggesting that if we shared, there would be enough for everyone?
— Shane Claiborne
Someday war and poverty will be crazy and we will wonder how the world allowed such things to exist.
— Shane Claiborne
True fasting is not just depriving ourselves of privilege but als osharing sacrificially tob ring an end to the cycles of inequality, an end to creation's groaning and the groaning of hungry bellies.
— Shane Claiborne
When I fed the hungry, they called me a saint. When I asked why people are hungry, they called me a communist." Charity
— Shane Claiborne
I truly believe that when the poor meet the rich, riches will have no meaning. And when the rich meet the poor, we will see poverty come to an end.
— Shane Claiborne
For the church as we know it is a tragically dysfunctional family, in which some children are starving while others have food stashed in their closets. Some of us are living on the street while others have empty rooms in our homes. And, of course, there are all sorts of things being done that bring great dishonor and embarrassment to the family name.
— Shane Claiborne
We live among the wealthiest people of the world (top 2 percent), a tough mission field. We are preaching a gospel that declares that it's easier to fit a camel through the eye of a needle than for the rich to enter the kingdom. But look on the bright side. After we preach the crowds down, we will not need such expensive buildings.
— Shane Claiborne