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Statistical Love

by Philip Yancey

| 54 Comments

I recently listened to a speech by Peter Singer, the world’s most influential living philosopher, according to The New Yorker. Much of our compassion and charity is misguided, Singer argued. We should be focusing on how to do the most good for the most people.

As an example, Singer mentioned the noble cause of providing seeing-eye dogs for the blind. It takes $40,000 to train the dog and the recipient, whereas a treatment costing just fifty dollars would cure a person of the eye disease trachoma in an under-served country. How can we justify training a dog for one American blind person when the same money would prevent blindness in eight hundred people elsewhere?

That kind of cold logic makes disturbingly good sense—until you attempt to apply it consistently. Last year Thailand mounted a massive operation, involving 10,000 people, to rescue twelve young soccer players trapped in a cave. Why not let the twelve boys die, and use that amount of money to feed the hungry? And how can we justify expensive medical treatments—for cancer, or infertility, or keeping premature babies alive—when, as Singer proposes, the same money invested in malarial nets would do more good for more people?

This philosopher, who wrote the main article on ethics in the Encyclopedia Britannica, has also suggested that “defective” newborns and some adults no longer qualify as persons and could be euthanized. Even so, he continued to support his mother financially after she showed signs of dementia. “I think this has made me see how the issues of someone with these kinds of problems are really very difficult,” Singer told one interviewer. “It is different when it’s your mother.”

Listening to Singer, I thought back to my time working with Dr. Paul Brand, my coauthor on three books. Paul and his wife Margaret, also a physician, devoted their careers to helping leprosy patients in India. A few pennies a day can arrest leprosy’s progress with sulfone drugs. But it requires thousands of dollars, and the care of skilled professionals, to rehabilitate a patient in whom the disease has spread unchecked.

Paul Brand experimented with tendon and muscle transfers until he found the very best combination to restore movement to paralyzed claw-hands. Surgeries and physical therapy stretched over months and sometimes years as he applied similar procedures to feet. Restored feet and hands gave leprosy patients the capability to earn a living, yet soon they faced a new problem. Who would hire an employee bearing the scars of the dread disease?

Paul and Margaret Brand worked together to correct other damage caused by the disease. They learned to remake a human nose by building up a new nasal structure from the inside with bone transplants. They sought to prevent blindness by restoring the ability to blink. Leprosy deadens the tiny pain cells that prompt a healthy person to blink several times a minute, and eventually the dryness leads to blindness. Margaret learned to redirect a muscle that is normally used for chewing, tunneling it up under the cheek and attaching it to the upper eyelid. By chewing gum all day long, her patients simultaneously moved their eyelids up and down, lubricating the eyes and thus averting blindness.

All this elaborate medical care went to “nobodies,” often from the Untouchable caste, many of whom had subsisted by begging. Some who arrived at the hospital barely looked human. Their shoulders slumped, they cringed when other people approached. A year or so later these patients, Lazarus-like, would walk out of the hospital and proudly head off to learn a trade.

After working with Dr. Brand, I realized that I had been seeing large human problems in a statistical model: percentages of Gross National Product, average annual income, mortality rate, doctors-per-thousand of population. Love, however, is not statistical; we can never precisely calculate the greatest possible good to apply equally to the world’s poor and needy. We can only seek out one person, and then another, and then another, as objects for God’s love.

I have been updating and revising my writings with Dr. Brand in a new book to be released this fall, . Here is how Dr. Brand expresses his own philosophy, so different from Peter Singer’s:

I have sometimes wondered why Jesus so frequently touched the people he healed, many of whom must have been unattractive, obviously diseased, unsanitary, smelly. He could have waved a magic wand, which would have affected more people than he could personally touch. He could have divided the crowd into affinity groups and organized his miracles—paralyzed people over there, feverish people here, people with leprosy there—raising his hands to heal each group efficiently, en masse. Instead, he chose a different style.

Jesus’ mission was not chiefly a crusade against disease (if so, why did he leave so many unhealed in the world and tell followers to hush up details of his miracles?) but rather a ministry to individual people, some of whom happened to have a disease. He wanted those people, one by one, to feel his love and compassion. Jesus knew he could not readily demonstrate love to a crowd, for love usually involves touching.

I was privileged to know Mother Teresa, who was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for her work in Calcutta among members of India’s lowest castes. Her order of sisters sought out the sick and dying in the streets and garbage dumps of Calcutta’s alleys, and among these were beggars deformed by leprosy. Several times I consulted with her on the proper treatment of the disease.

The Missionaries of Charity carry on her work today. When they find beggars in the street, they bring them to the clinic and surround them with love. Smiling women daub at their sores, clean off layers of grime, and swaddle the patients in soft sheets. The beggars, often too weak to talk, stare wide-eyed at this seemingly misdirected care. Have they died and gone to heaven? Why this sudden outpouring of love, why the warm, nutritious broth being gently spooned into their mouths?

A newsman in New York once confronted Mother Teresa with those very questions. He seemed pleased with his journalistic acumen. Why indeed should she expend her limited resources on people for whom there was no hope? Why not attend to people worthy of rehabilitation? What kind of success rate could her clinic show when most of its patients died in a matter of days or weeks?

Mother Teresa stared at him in silence, absorbing the questions, trying to comprehend what kind of a person would ask them. She had no answers that would make sense to him, so she said softly, “These people have been treated all their lives like dogs. Their greatest disease is a sense that they are unwanted. Don’t they have the right to die like angels?”

Another journalist, Malcolm Muggeridge, struggled with the same questions. He observed firsthand the poverty of Calcutta and returned to England to write about it with fire and indignation. But, he comments, the difference between his approach and Mother Teresa’s was that he returned to England while she stayed in Calcutta. Statistically, he admits, she did not accomplish much by rescuing stragglers from a sump of human need. He concludes with the statement, “But then Christianity is not a statistical view of life.”

Indeed it is not. Not when a shepherd barely shuts the gate on his ninety-nine before rushing out, heartbroken and short of breath, to find the one that’s missing. Not when a laborer hired for only one hour receives the same wage as an all-day worker (Matthew 20:1–16). Not when one rascal decides to repent and ninety-nine upstanding citizens are ignored as all heaven erupts in a great party (Luke 15:4–7). God’s love, agape love, is not statistical either.

 

 

 

 

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Discussion

  1. John Bouton Avatar
    John Bouton

    Thank you for allowing God to use you to talk with all of us. I finally accepted Jesus at age 60 after seeing The Passion. Since that time, I have had a concern that “I’m not doing enough for others” . ( I do always ask God through Christ to witness/help my family & neighbors). And I have not received a call from Him to do anything else.) Now I understand why & I’m at peace. Thank you Father & you.

  2. Ann O'Malley Avatar

    “Why not attend to people worthy of rehabilitation?” It’s so easy to fall into this type of thinking, even in regard to salvation. Does God really save people by undeserved grace or does He only go after the most worthy? Even though I know the answer, I sometimes catch myself thinking of the “good soil” in Jesus’ parable as people who are already somewhat worthy. Those who have their act together and are just waiting for someone to invite them into the club, who have at least partially earned a place in heaven because they are good soil rather than being hard or rocky or thorny.

    And yet Jesus says things like, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened” (Matthew 11:28 NIV). Would good soil feel weary and burdened? Or “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17). Is He really saying that the sick and the sinners are the good soil that He’s looking for? How do you grow fruit in that kind of dirt? (Adapted from my blog at https://thosewhoweep.blogspot.com/2019/03/good-soil.html.)

    I love this God whose love is not statistical, who reaches out to those that I prefer to pass by, not just those that I would consider worthy. I know He’s real because none of us would or could invent such a God.

  3. Suwandy Avatar
    Suwandy

    Thank you for sharing these words and opening my eyes to what is essentially God’s heart for the world.

    This is exactly the sentiment that was echoed in John 3:16, “For God so loved the world that He gave His only son, so that whomsoever believed in Him may not die but have eternal life.” Many people have no trouble believing this verse that “God so loved the world”. Yet that very same people struggle when they were asked, “Do you believe that God so loved YOU?”. God’s love is widespread, and at the same time it is personal. He loved the world, and He loved you.

    God’s love is not statistical. Powerful truth. Thanks so much Philip.

  4. Wendy Spencer Avatar
    Wendy Spencer

    Oh, Philip Yancey, how grateful I am God gave you the gift of words.
    There is not one post of yours I read where I am not in tears. Or sobbing.
    This is an impactful post. Thank you for being a deep thinker of such issues and sharing your thoughts with us.
    How I long to be as self-less as Mother Teresa was.
    And may God continue to bless us through you.
    Sincerely, Wendy.

  5. SARAH LATIMER Avatar
    SARAH LATIMER

    My dear Phillip,

    Am I misreading this blog, or are you falling prey to a false dichotomy? It would seem that you are conflating the rigid approach, on the one had, of Mr. Singer’s attack on the extravagant inefficiency of seeing-eye dogs with a more nuanced approach: that of using the God-given tool of mathematics to take dominion over a fallen creation, while admitting to God’s care for each human, not only humans in aggregate. In fact, as we all know, statistics have been a tool for immeasurable good: public-health initiatives; mental-health funding; and, my personal favorite, scientific advancement. As you pointed out, statistics have also helped us in missionary endeavors. They have been used (for good or ill, depending on your perspective) in church-growth models, and in feeding the hungry and eradicating disease. Statistics are currently being used to address the soul- and body-crushing poverty in undeveloped nations. Ought we to stop? Ought we to disparage and discourage our mathematically-equipped brethren, and redirect them into sacrificial lives spent one-on-one with the dying? Ought we to redirect the Missionaries of Charity into addressing the root societal and governmental problems which lead to untouchable poor in Kolkata? Does the existence of mathematical models of ministry exist as an attack on ministries like Mother Teresa’s?

    These rhetorical questions brought to you by one who never liked the popular parable of babies in the river, and the “obvious” choice to defer pulling babies out downstream in favor of finding who upstream is tossing them in. What is Jesus’ call on my life? Both.

    Yours sincerely,

    Sarah Latimer

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      You express the dichotomy very well. I completely agree with the value of a statistical approach, and Peter Singer makes a strong case for the great good done by charitable work by the Gates Foundation and Warren Buffet. Yet we dare not lose the supreme value of every human life, and it’s a slippery slope to mathematically determine which diseases or disabilities are “worth” addressing over others. Thank you for the redress.

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54 thoughts on “Statistical Love”

  1. Thank you for allowing God to use you to talk with all of us. I finally accepted Jesus at age 60 after seeing The Passion. Since that time, I have had a concern that “I’m not doing enough for others” . ( I do always ask God through Christ to witness/help my family & neighbors). And I have not received a call from Him to do anything else.) Now I understand why & I’m at peace. Thank you Father & you.

    Reply
  2. “Why not attend to people worthy of rehabilitation?” It’s so easy to fall into this type of thinking, even in regard to salvation. Does God really save people by undeserved grace or does He only go after the most worthy? Even though I know the answer, I sometimes catch myself thinking of the “good soil” in Jesus’ parable as people who are already somewhat worthy. Those who have their act together and are just waiting for someone to invite them into the club, who have at least partially earned a place in heaven because they are good soil rather than being hard or rocky or thorny.

    And yet Jesus says things like, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened” (Matthew 11:28 NIV). Would good soil feel weary and burdened? Or “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17). Is He really saying that the sick and the sinners are the good soil that He’s looking for? How do you grow fruit in that kind of dirt? (Adapted from my blog at https://thosewhoweep.blogspot.com/2019/03/good-soil.html.)

    I love this God whose love is not statistical, who reaches out to those that I prefer to pass by, not just those that I would consider worthy. I know He’s real because none of us would or could invent such a God.

    Reply
  3. Thank you for sharing these words and opening my eyes to what is essentially God’s heart for the world.

    This is exactly the sentiment that was echoed in John 3:16, “For God so loved the world that He gave His only son, so that whomsoever believed in Him may not die but have eternal life.” Many people have no trouble believing this verse that “God so loved the world”. Yet that very same people struggle when they were asked, “Do you believe that God so loved YOU?”. God’s love is widespread, and at the same time it is personal. He loved the world, and He loved you.

    God’s love is not statistical. Powerful truth. Thanks so much Philip.

    Reply
  4. Oh, Philip Yancey, how grateful I am God gave you the gift of words.
    There is not one post of yours I read where I am not in tears. Or sobbing.
    This is an impactful post. Thank you for being a deep thinker of such issues and sharing your thoughts with us.
    How I long to be as self-less as Mother Teresa was.
    And may God continue to bless us through you.
    Sincerely, Wendy.

    Reply
  5. My dear Phillip,

    Am I misreading this blog, or are you falling prey to a false dichotomy? It would seem that you are conflating the rigid approach, on the one had, of Mr. Singer’s attack on the extravagant inefficiency of seeing-eye dogs with a more nuanced approach: that of using the God-given tool of mathematics to take dominion over a fallen creation, while admitting to God’s care for each human, not only humans in aggregate. In fact, as we all know, statistics have been a tool for immeasurable good: public-health initiatives; mental-health funding; and, my personal favorite, scientific advancement. As you pointed out, statistics have also helped us in missionary endeavors. They have been used (for good or ill, depending on your perspective) in church-growth models, and in feeding the hungry and eradicating disease. Statistics are currently being used to address the soul- and body-crushing poverty in undeveloped nations. Ought we to stop? Ought we to disparage and discourage our mathematically-equipped brethren, and redirect them into sacrificial lives spent one-on-one with the dying? Ought we to redirect the Missionaries of Charity into addressing the root societal and governmental problems which lead to untouchable poor in Kolkata? Does the existence of mathematical models of ministry exist as an attack on ministries like Mother Teresa’s?

    These rhetorical questions brought to you by one who never liked the popular parable of babies in the river, and the “obvious” choice to defer pulling babies out downstream in favor of finding who upstream is tossing them in. What is Jesus’ call on my life? Both.

    Yours sincerely,

    Sarah Latimer

    Reply
    • You express the dichotomy very well. I completely agree with the value of a statistical approach, and Peter Singer makes a strong case for the great good done by charitable work by the Gates Foundation and Warren Buffet. Yet we dare not lose the supreme value of every human life, and it’s a slippery slope to mathematically determine which diseases or disabilities are “worth” addressing over others. Thank you for the redress.

      Reply

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