Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
There’s More to the Story About the 90-Year-Old Charged With Feeding the Homeless
There’s More to the Story About the 90-Year-Old Charged With Feeding the Homeless
May 7, 2025 7:47 PM

Cities across America – from Pensacola, Florida to Honolulu, Hawaii — have increasingly taken strong measures to discourage the homeless from making a home within their city limits. So it didn’t seem surprising when the media ran with a story last week about two pastors and a 90-year-old homeless advocate “Charged With Feeding Homeless.” As the AP reported,

To Arnold Abbott, feeding the homeless in a public park in South Florida was an act of charity. To the city of Fort Lauderdale, the 90-year-old man in white chef’s apron serving up gourmet-styled meals mitting a crime.

For more than two decades, the man many call “Chef Arnold” has proudly fired up his ovens to serve up four-course meals for the downtrodden who wander the palm tree-lined beaches and parks of this sunny tourist destination.

Now a face-off over a new ordinance restricting public feedings of the homeless has pitted Abbott and others passionate aims against some officials, residents and businesses who say the growing homeless population has overrun local parks and that public spaces merit greater oversight.

The story certainly sounds like an outrageous restriction on charity. But did the media get the story right?

The actual ordinance appears to merely restrict feeding sites to be more than 500 feet away from each other and 500 feet from residential properties, and allows only one group to share food with the homeless per city block.

According to the mayor of Fort Lauderdale,

Contrary to reports, the City of Fort Lauderdale is not banning groups from feeding the homeless. We have established an outdoor food distribution ordinance to ensure the health, safety and welfare of munity. The ordinance does not prohibit feeding the homeless; it regulates the activity in order to ensure it is carried out in an appropriate, organized, clean and healthy manner.

While the ordinance regulates outdoor food distribution, it permits indoor food distribution to take place at houses of worship throughout the City. By allowing houses of worship to conduct this activity, the City is actually increasing the number of locations where the homeless can properly receive this service.

At recent outdoor food distributions, citations were rightly issued for pliance with the process enacted to ensure public health and safety. Contrary to what was reported in the media, no one was taken into custody. Had these activities taken place indoors, at a house of worship, they would have been in pliance with the ordinance.

This seems to be more defensible ordinance, since there are genuine concerns to be raised with frequent mass feedings in outdoor locations. Since the city places no restrictions on feeding the homeless at “houses of worship,” why wouldn’t churches simply serve the meals within their own buildings?

Chronic homelessness is a difficult problem, and local politicians deserve our sympathy and support in their attempts to find solutions. At least on this particular point, Fort Lauderdale appears to have passed a prudent ordinance. Rather than passing along misinformation (such as that the city has banned the feeding of the homeless) we should instead be encouraging churches to invite the hungry into God’s house to receive both daily bread and the “bread of life” (John 6:35).

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
Acton Commentary: Obama and the Moral Imagination
mentary today looks at President Obama’s deft use of narrative — the art of story telling — to inspire and motivate. By his own admission, Obama has taken a page from the playbook of the Great Communicator himself, Ronald Reagan. Reagan biographer Lou Cannon told the Chicago Tribune last year that Obama has “a narrative reach” and a talent for story telling that reminds him of the late president. Reagan “made other people a part of his own narrative, and...
Religious Freedom Day — 2009
The Acton Institute released a new short video to mark Religious Freedom Day. The proclamation from President George W. Bush points to religious freedom as a fundamental right of Americans and, indeed, people of faith all over the world. Religious freedom is the foundation of a healthy and hopeful society. On Religious Freedom Day, we recognize the importance of the 1786 passage of the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom. We also celebrate the first liberties enshrined in our Constitution’s Bill...
Book Review: Nathan Hale
Nathan Hale has long been enshrined as a patriotic American icon for his last words before his hanging by the British, “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.” M. William Phelps, who is the author of the new book The Life and Death of America’s First Spy: Nathan Hale, believes Hale never uttered those exact words. But in Phelps’s view, that wouldn’t in any way take away from the significance and importance of...
Acton Commentary: The End of Capitalism?
Dire predictions about the “death of capitalism” reveal a deep ignorance about the nature of the current economic crisis — technical and moral. “Markets are bined activities of millions of individuals and families,” Michael Miller writes in this week’s Acton Commentary. “They are posed merely of some guys on Wall Street; they are made up by us.” Read mentary over at Acton’s website, and share your thoughts ments here. ...
Population Economics
It’s usually good to steer clear of apocalyptic predictions of any sort, but as temperatures struggle to break the 10 degrees fahrenheit mark under full sun here in the Great Lakes region, talk of a “demographic winter” feels pelling than warnings of global warming. More seriously, the release of a new film by that name is the occasion for Jenny Roback Morse’s reflection on the economics of population. I don’t pretend to be an expert in the field and I...
Excerpts from the Inaugural
Here are some excerpted quotes from the text of President Obama’s Inaugural address that are relevant to the themes of this blog. Some are already beginning the parsing of these words: … We remain a young nation, but in the words of Scripture, the time e to set aside childish things. The time e to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history; to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea, passed on from generation to generation: the...
Risky Business: Keynes, Moral Hazard, and the Economic Crisis
Acton’s Sam Gregg on Public Discourse: At the level of government policy, a prominent instance of moral hazard was what some call the “Greenspan doctrine” of 2002. This involved the U.S. Federal Reserve stating that, while it was powerless to prevent the emergence of asset bubbles (such as the and housing booms), the Federal Reserve would do everything that it could to soften the effects of an imploding bubble. This included providing investors with the option of selling their depreciated...
Journal of Markets and Morality – Volume 11, Number 2
The latest issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality is now available online for current subscribers. This issue features the timely and challenging article, “Subprime Lending and Social Justice: A Biblical Perspective,” by William C. Wood, professor of economics at James Madison University and director of JMU’s Center for Economic Education. Prof. Wood notes that within the context of Christ’s call to love our enemies as well as our neighbors, “Christians cannot placent about credit markets even if they...
Kenneth Miller: Finding Darwin’s God
In case you’re interested, I wrote and just posted a five-part review of Miller’s book, Finding Darwin’s God. ...
Neighbors
Eleven times since President Bill Clinton began the practice in 1994, the U.S. President has declared Religious Freedom Day on Jan. 16, calling on Americans to “observe this day through appropriate events and activities in homes, schools, and places of worship.” President Bush has done the same this year. The day is the anniversary of the 1786 Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom, a work that built upon an earlier Virginia document, the Virginia Declaration of Rights of 1776. There American...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved