Sex Offender Misstep Illustrates Outreach Difficulties
A federal judge's ruling that an outreach to sex offenders
violated the U.S. Fair Housing Act demonstrates the complexities churches and
ministries face in serving "the least of these."
The case concerns Matthew 25 Ministries, which in 2008 leased a
complex of duplexes and houses in Pahokee, Florida, to create a community of
recovering sex offenders. One problem: A state law prohibits convicted sex
offenders from living within 1,000 feet of a public-school bus stop.
Matthew 25 founder Dick Witherow first tried to persuade the
school board to relocate the stop. When that failed, he tried to convince
families with children to move.
Witherow said the company it leased the homes from, Alston
Management, had agreed to relocate the families at no charge to another complex
it owned. But according to court records, the company notified 25 families they
would be evicted if they didn't leave by January 1, 2009.
The notices sparked lawsuits in state and federal courts. U.S.
District Judge William Dimitrouleas ruled recently that both the ministry and
Alston were guilty of discrimination on the basis of familial status.
Witherow said the ruling won't affect his ministry since Matthew
25 has no assets. "We didn't discriminate against anybody," he said. "We love
children and wouldn't allow anything that would allow us to be put in that
light."
Prison Fellowship vice president Pat Nolan said the situation is
far broader than Matthew 25 or sex offenders, illustrating the difficulties any
ministry that works with an unpopular constituency faces. "It's a
'not-in-my-backyard' problem."
Matthew 25 isn't alone in seeing a ministry hurt some while it
helps others, said Galen Carey, vice president of the National Association of
Evangelicals. "Food aid can distort local markets and is sometimes ruinous to
local farmers. Slavery redemption programs sometimes create a market for more
slave raiding," he said. "The general issue of unintended consequences resulting
from inadequate planning and contextual analysis is a common one."
Comments
Post a Comment