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Religion and Social Work: Diocesan Rescue Societies as a Case Example

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2024

Extract

The subject of this article invites (and has received) discussion at a high level of abstraction, but the basic question can be posed quite simply: are religious social work organizations (such as the Diocesan Rescue Societies) religious organizations that undertake social work or social work organizations that are religious? To some this will appear an unhelpful contrast, but I hope to show that analysis in these terms yields fruitful results. Clearly, the question is based on certain assumptions, the most important of which lies in the discontinuity between religion and social work. Such an assumption runs counter to some commonly held ideas concerning the relationship between these two. These ideas are, I believe, mistaken, but I cannot at this juncture do more than make a brief outline of some of the main themes in what I would consider an adequate history of the relationship between social work and religion.

Such a history would have to deal with at least three important themes. Firstly, the practice of religious protectionism and denominational exclusiveness, which is difficult to reconcile with the universalism implicit in social work, will require consideration. Historically there have been strong traditions, not only that particular religious groups ought to care for their own, but that their members would suffer penalties if they received help from ‘non-believers’. Thus, in 1677 the York meeting of the Society of Friends refused help to a member who had applied to the Lord Mayor, whilst in ancient Jewry a Jew living publicly on non-Jewish charities was considered to be like a pork eater and was disqualified from testifying in court.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1971 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 The material was collected during the author's recent survey undertaken at the invitation of the Catholic Child Welfare Council. The opinions of Administrators of Rescue Societies are taken from an early phase of the enquiry conducted by Fr. S. Sellar.

1 Siedenberg, F., ‘The Religious Value of Social Work. American Journal of Sociology XXVII, No. 5, March 1922Google Scholar.

2 Keith Lucas, A., The Church and Social Welfare, p. 15.

1 Quoted in Heasman, K., Evangelicals in Action, Bles, 1962, p. 25Google Scholar.

2 Williams, A. E., Barnardo of Stepney, 1943, p. 123.

1 ‘A Program for Catholic Childcaring Homes’, National Conference of Catholic Charities 1923.