The Prince and the Pauper
Digging Deeper:
Facing the Issues #3 The Prince and the Pauper
· Factoid: The world’s richest ten individuals are £400billion more wealthy since the Covid 19 pandemic began.
· 31% of children aged 0-15 in PRESTON, some 6214 young people, are living in households defined to be below the ‘poverty line’. (Source House of Commons Library).
Being poor is an endemic situation for millions of people throughout the world, and inherent in many of the communities in our own country. For the world’s very poorest, living on around the equivalent of a US dollar a day (about 0.73 pence in pounds) is a struggle for daily survival.
In the UK poverty is defined as earning less than 60% of the average income. Last year according to the Office of National Statistics the average income was £30,800. That places the ‘poverty line’ at an income of £23,280. However, it has been estimated that the income of a single parent with two children is £10,140 (195.00 a week).
The average family in the UK spends £2417 on an annual holiday, the equivalent of more than 20% of the income of the poorest.
Poverty is actually much more than a low and insufficient income. A larger issue is one of inequality which shows itself in educational advantage, health, housing, employment and wages and life expectancy.
Inequality varies according to age, gender, ethnic origin, and region within the UK.
You may like to learn more about levels of poverty in the UK from the following websites:
Church Action on Poverty www.church-action-poverty.org.uk (Watch www.church-poverty.org.uk/sameboatfilm and www.church-poverty.org.uk/stories/hangry (NB hangry not hungry)
Joseph Rowntree Foundation www.jrf.org.uk
The bible is soaked in the call for justice and care and compassion for the poor in society. You might like to read the following:
The story of Ruth. ‘Disaster strikes women when their spouses die’.
The prophet Amos: 5. 21-24 Raging against inequality.
Luke1.46-55 ‘The Magnificat’
Matthew 5. 1-9 ‘The Beatitudes’
Matthew 25. 31-46 ‘When you do it for the least of these….’
Acts 4. 32-37 ‘The Believers share their possessions’.
Poverty and inequality is a very complex subject. Writing recently Simon Jenkins said “emotional rhetoric is rarely a good agency for reform – answers can only lie in details.’ And it is in the political arena that those details are discussed and acted upon. Our Christian response is to be on top of the detail, to understand the scriptural call to justice, and to be the voice for the powerless.



