SIDEBAR: Why Christians Should Support Population Programs

When Christians discuss issues relating to population, we are often much clearer about what we are against than what we are for. At one level, this is understandable, even appropriate. We need to speak out strongly against public policies that diminish the value of human life (including that of the unborn) and threaten to undermine the integrity of the family. At another level, we are missing an important opportunity to bring to bear key biblical principles on a topic of vital public interest—and thus help shape the agenda, rather than react to it.

Whether rapid population growth is detrimental to overall economic development is a subject of empirical debate. Evidence to date has been ambiguous, although the best recent research suggests that very high population growth does hurt a nation’s economic prospects

An issue of even greater concern to the Christian should be the impact on human well-being at the family level. Here strong evidence indicates that rapid population growth makes it much more difficult (and often impossible) for poor countries to bring vital human services, such as primary education, clean water, sanitation, and health care, to all their citizens. And growing evidence suggests that very large family size with poor spacing between children can adversely affect the well-being of children, especially among poor families

Does all this mean that Christians should embrace aggressive population policies, involving targets and coercion? Absolutely not. These should be sharply rejected on theological grounds. And the good news is that virtually everybody—including the population “experts”—now reject such policies. Coercive target-driven programs have been found to lead to human-rights abuses. They are an ineffective way to reduce population growth anyway. Such approaches have therefore been opposed by virtually all the delegates to the Cairo population conference. Replacing the old approach is one more consonant with biblical principles. Its starting point is the family unit, with a special emphasis on the mother.

The reason for this major shift is accumulating evidence that population growth rates fall when couples choose to have fewer children much more than when governments try to persuade them to have fewer children. Recent research at the World Bank. for example, shows that over 80 percent of differences in fertility rates among countries is due to these “demand” factors (such as people choosing to have fewer children), rather than the “supply” of family planning services. The best way to reduce population growth rates is to reduce poverty, provide basic education and literacy (especially for girls), reduce infant mortality, and enable greater security of employment and income.

These goals are precious to Christians. They help men, women, and children to live whole and dignified lives according to God’s original intention. We should wholeheartedly support governments and groups to help bring such developments about.

Worldwide progress in these areas has been remarkable over the past four decades: primary- and secondary-education enrollment rates have doubled; infant mortality has halved; average nutritional standards have improved; poverty has been reduced in most parts of the world. And families have been choosing to have fewer children.

On the other hand, all is not well. Despite the sharp reduction in fertility rates, total population increase—at almost 100 million per year—is greater than ever, due to the sharp increase in the number of women in childbearing age. Sadly, interest in and support for international development programs has fallen in recent years in affluent countries like the United States. In earlier times the church was at the forefront, preventing this from happening, but no more; like the nation as a whole, Christians are focusing inward on problems at home. There is now a serious threat to the momentum of development, and in some parts of the world (especially Africa), earlier progress in reducing poverty has been reversed. We thus stand at a critical juncture. This is a time for the church to lead the cause for a pro-poor pro-life agenda rather than merely react to the agenda of others.

********************

By Andrew Steer, director of the World Bank, with responsibilities for environmental and social policies.

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Are People the Problem? Some experts predict apocalyptic scenarios. Others disagree. Deciding who is right has as much to do with faith as with facts.

Cover Story

Are People The Problem?, Part 1—The Bet (b)

Cover Story

Are People The Problem?, Part 1—The Bet

Cover Story

Are People The Problem?, Part 3—Thus Saith the Lord

Cover Story

Are People The Problem?, Part 2—India, A Success Story

Put You Money Where Your Voice Is

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from October 03, 1994

Religious Right Eager for November Election

Political Tensions Between Christians, Jews

Leading Democrat Faces Strong Challenge

Will Palestinian Christians Survive?

Mormon History Under Scrutiny

Plane Found 32 Years Later

Program Links Policy Experts

Episcopal Bishops Divided Over Sexuality

WORLD SCENE: Christians Linked to Killings

Government Restricts Missionaries

Denominations Urged to Turn Focus 'Outward'

YFC Celebrates Golden Year

CHARLES COLSON: Casey Strikes Out

PLUS: Documenting a Spiritual Journey

ARTICLE: What Henri Nouwen Found at Daybreak

News

NORTH AMERICAN SCENE: Station Replaces Falwell’s ’Politics’

News

News Briefs: October 03, 1994

CONVERSATIONS: Why John Grisham Teaches Sunday School

BOOKS: The Mind of Christ

Electric Fellowship

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Uncle Sam Wants Your Tithes

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Abusing Human Rights

ARTICLE: Wise Christians Clip Obituaries

News

News Briefs: October 03, 1994

BOOKS: Probing the Passion

BOOKS: Great Scots

BOOKS: Religion and Religions

BOOKS: Nun the Wiser

BOOKS: The Mind of Christ

SIDEBAR: Worth Mentioning: News, notices, and curiosities

View issue

Our Latest

The Bulletin

Take a Look at Me Now

Presidential campaign updates, the Taliban’s new Code of Laws, and caring for our souls.

News

German Pastor to Pay for Anti-LGBTQ Statements

Years of court cases come to an end with settlement agreement. 

News

Should Christians Across Denominations Be Singing the Same Songs?

Some traditions work to refocus on theological distinctives in their music as worship megahits take over.

News

Rwanda Explains Why It Closed Thousands of Churches. Again.

The East African nation has shuttered 9,800 “prayer houses” because it wants safe buildings and well-trained pastors. Is that too much to ask?

News

Activist Lila Rose Under Fire for Suggesting Trump Hasn’t Earned the Pro-Life Vote

As conservatives see bigger shifts and divides over abortion, Live Action founder says she’ll keep speaking up for stronger policies.

More Christian Colleges Will Close. Can They Finish Well?

The “demographic cliff” will force schools to cut jobs or shut down—but how they do it matters.

Choose This (Labor) Day Whom You Will Serve

Exodus reminds us that our work can be exploitative, idolatrous, or kingdom oriented.

What to Watch for in ‘Rings of Power’ Season 2

The sumptuous Tolkien prequel has returned. Here’s what a few CT writers noticed.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube