The Social Difficulty of the Workless
Matthew 20:6
And about the eleventh hour he went out, and found others standing idle, and said to them, Why stand you here all the day idle?


Civilization works cruelly for some classes of society. It improves the condition of the few; it multiplies the miseries of the many. One thing it does - gathers great masses of people into the cities, where the demand for workers must be limited, and the thousands must be "workless." Scatter the people over the land, and every man can find work which will provide him with a simple living. Mass the people in a few centres, and, as they cannot earn by work, all they can do is prey on one another, either in the bad sense of criminality, or in the very doubtful sense of scheming to take all advantage of philanthropy and charity.

I. THE WORKLESS WHO CANNOT WORK.

1. These include persons born into disability - blind, deaf and dumb, lame, weak in intellect, etc. Of such it is only necessary to say that they are society's charge; and society is hound to provide for all who are physically incapable of work. This is simple citizen duty, society duty; it is the claim of the human brotherhood.

2. These include persons who are able to work, but cannot find work to do. They divide into:

(1) Skilled workmen, whose trade has gone out of fashion or has left the country.

(2) Unskilled workmen, labourers, only a limited number of whom can ever be required in one district.

(3) Workmen whose trade is hopelessly overstocked, such as clerks, who can do nothing but write and sum. These workless classes make the great social problem of the day. Some would say that the Church of Christ must solve the problem. But it is not her mission; nor has she, in any sense, capacity for so doing. It belongs to national government. It is a society evil, with which society must deal. And in some way the nation must find out how to turn the stream of population that has long set strongly toward the great cities, and make it flow back upon the land. Village industrial centres provide the only hope for the million workless ones among us.

II. THE WORKLESS WHO WILL NOT WORK. "If a man will not work, neither shall he eat." We might reasonably desire that legislation should deal rigorously with all such. Every man who can work and will not should lose his right of personal liberty, should be treated as a lunatic, cared for by the state, and kept from all chance of propagating his miserable species. - R.T.



Parallel Verses
KJV: And about the eleventh hour he went out, and found others standing idle, and saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle?

WEB: About the eleventh hour he went out, and found others standing idle. He said to them, 'Why do you stand here all day idle?'




The Inexcusable Idleness
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