Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How churches are helping people with medical debt
How churches are helping people with medical debt
Sep 15, 2025 9:10 PM

A recent study found that 66.5 percent of all bankruptcies were tied to medical issues. An estimated 530,000 families turn to bankruptcy each year because of medical issues and bills, the research found. But a new nonprofit is trying to alleviate the problem by getting churches to take on their neighbors’ unpaid bills.

In an article for Christianity Today, Acton’s Jordan Ballor responds to this new form of philanthropy:

“Taking up debts, helping to relieve each other’s burdens . . . that’s a fundamental image of Christian discipleship,” said theologian Jordan J. Ballor, senior research fellow at the Acton Institute. “I think in a broad sense, this is a wonderful expression of the body of Christ caring for itself.”

The Bible has plex but realistic view of debt. From a divine perspective, God created us; we owe him everything. Here on earth, lending and owing is a regular pattern of life, with Paul telling the early church to “give to everyone what you owe them” (Rom. 13:7).

Ballor sees that as an acknowledgment that loans and debts are normal and can serve as an expression of how justice works. “Good e to those who are generous and lend freely,” according to Psalm 112:5.

But today’s debt-buying world plex and can get seedy. Even the medical billing process raises questions. If collection agencies can buy debt bundles for pennies on the dollar, are hospitals just brazenly overcharging?

Read more . . .

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Wasting Away In Refugee Camps
A refugee camp, by definition, is meant to be temporary. Yet, in many places in Africa, young people know nothing but life in a refugee camp. And they are wasting away – perhaps not physically, but mentally, emotionally and in terms of feeling useful. In Tanzania, Ezad Essa explored some of these camp, talking to young people. Ilunga Malea Shabani, 26, says he does not recall his journey to Tanzania well. It was some time in 1997 when major fighting...
Cronyism Isn’t Just About Economics; It’s About Culture
According to Merriam-Webster, “cronyism” is ” the unfair practice by a powerful person (such as a politician) of giving jobs and other favors to friends.” For instance, former Detroit mayor, Kwame Kilpatrick, surrounded himself with friends and family members while in office, as he cheerfully plundered the city’s coffers, sharing the wealth with his entourage. It’s easy to think that cronyism is like Oz: “far, far away.” Yes, there are tricky creatures there, but heavens, we here in Kansas won’t...
Ancient Israel had 613 Regulations; Modern America has Millions
In the Old Testament there are mandments. Of those 248 are mandments,” to perform an act, and 365 are mandments,” to abstain from certain acts. Some of those mandments that are deemed to be self-evident (“laws”), such as not to murder and not to steal. memorate important events in Jewish history (“testimonies”) while the rest are simply decrees of God (“decrees”). God deemed those mandments to be enough to regulate almost every aspect of the lives of his people for...
Has College Become A Scam?
Is it time to write off the college experience? John Stossel thinks so. Half today’s recent grads work in jobs that don’t require degrees. Eighty thousand of America’s bartenders have bachelor’s degrees. Politicians such as Hillary Clinton promote college by claiming that over a lifetime, college graduates “earn $1 million more.” That statistic is true but utterly misleading. People who go to college are different. They’re more likely to have been raised by two parents. They did better in high...
There are 200 Million Fewer Hungry People Today Than in 1990
Today there are216 million fewer undernourished people than there was in 1990-92. To put that number in perspective, consider that across the globe there are currently 247 countries and dependent territories. If you ranked them by the number of people in each, the last 144 countries—Serbia to Pitcairn Islands—would have bined population of 216 million. According to the United Nations’ annual hunger report, since 1990-92 the number of undernourished people has decreased from nearly a billion to about 795 million....
Why Baptists Loved Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson was a Deist who famously cut and pasted, with a razor and glue, his own version of the New Testament to remove all the miracles of Jesus and any reference to his Resurrection. So why did Baptists in New England cheer when he won the presidency and claim he had won a providential victory over John Adams? As Thomas S. Kidd and Barry Hankins explain, despite their differences the Baptists were able to mon cause with Jefferson on...
Pentecost Reimagined: How the Spirit Reveals New Economies
Pentecost Sunday:The Holy es with tongues of fire and an munity” is empowered for mission. Pentecost is not the birth of the church.The church is conceived in the words and works of Jesus as he gathers followers and promises, “If any one is thirsty, let e to me and drink. Whoever believers in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water will flow from within him.” (John 7:37-39) The church is born when our Resurrected Lord appears to...
Islamic State’s Atrocities Against Women: It’s Getting Worse
Young girls kidnapped from their beds. Yazidi women and girls sold into sex trafficking. Rumors of female Muslim teens being used as suicide bombers. It is hard to imagine that Islamic extremists could make things more difficult for women and girls in war-stricken areas, but they are. A United Nations team of sex crime investigators has been working in and around Islamic State war zones since 2009. Middle East Eye reports: According to its head, Zainab Bangura, the Islamic State...
The Thread of Work and the Fabric of Civilization
In Leonard Reed’s famous essay, “I, Pencil,” he highlights the extensive cooperation and collaboration involved in the assemblyof a simple pencil plex coordination that is quite miraculously uncoordinated. Reed’s main takeaway is that, rather than try to stifle or control these creative energies, we ought to “organize society to act in harmony with this lesson,” permitting “these creative know-hows to freely flow.” In doing so, heconcludes, we will continue to see such testimonies manifest — evidence fora faith “as practical...
Nature, Markets, and Human Creativity
Patriarch Bartholomew “Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew in his statement for the 2015 World Water Day makes a number of assertions that, while inspired by morally good ideals, are morally and practically problematic,” says Rev. Gregory Jensen in this week’s Acton Commentary. “Chief among them is his assertion ‘that environmental resources are God’s gift to the world’ and so ‘cannot be either considered or exploited as private property.’” While certainly not absolute, the Orthodox Christian moral tradition doesn’t reject the notion of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved