I understand that we see hungry people and want to feed them but what does that benefit in the long run? You have millions of people in an area that may support thousands. Anywhere else in nature, the ecosystem naturally adjusts to eliminate the population. Lack of food causes starvation, rebalancing the population to food source ratio. Even the effects of starvation on the body, makes it a poor reproductive vessel, another way to dial back population. When you put food in the mouths of sick, weak, lame individuals it tampers with the design God implemented to keep a species strong and thriving. Not to mention instead of allowing an infant to go be with the Lord you condemn them to a life of poverty, and suffering. My view may be harsh but it is an intelligent observation.
I understand your view, and also understand that many today would agree with what you are saying, and that it is impossible to help every person in need.
I also understand that according to your "intelligent observation", someone like me would not be allowed to live, because (as an orphan) it would have been better for me to have been sent to be with the Lord as an infant or child than to doomed to a lifetime of poverty and suffering.
I do understand why you are saying this. I often don't know why God puts some on one path and not another, but many people have faced adversity and managed to thrive. The entire Israelite population were starving slaves at the hands of the Egyptians, but God didn't say to kill off those who are poor or suffering.
I have someone in my family who was abandoned in the street as a toddler and left to die, but now their name is on the credits of a product you might very well have in your own household.
I have always wondered how many times God has sent us the cure for a major illness, such as cancer, but in the mind of someone who was deemed to be "part of the population that must be controlled", and was killed off before they could discover it.
I can't help but think of these passages:
* "For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways are higher than your ways, and My thoughts are higher than your thoughts," declares the Lord. -- Isaiah 55:8,9.
* "But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise, and the weak things of the world to shame the strong." -- 1 Corinthians 1:25.
* "Religion that is pure and undefiled before God the Father is this: to care for widows and orphans in their affliction..." -- James 1:27.
Interesting that God doesn't say to just kill them off because they're the weakest chain of the population.
* And when Paul pleaded with God 3 times to remove the "thorn in his flesh", God didn't automatically decide just to kill him off. Rather, God told him, "My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness." -- 2 Corinthians 12:19.
Once we start to say that killing off the weak and the hungry is a merciful act of God and a means of population control in order to keep it strong, how do we then decide who is hungry enough to mercifully kill off, seeing as a 2016 statistic states that 1 in 5 children in the United States faces hunger, and a lack of access to nutritious food at some point in the year?
According to your statements above, I'm assuming you would then say that it is somehow right and Godly to not even bother trying to help them, because it's all part of God's plan for controlling the population, and ensuring that the strong survive?
I understand that it is impossible to help everyone, and Jesus even said, "The poor you will always have among you," (I see above that Joseph beat me to it,) but your post made it sound as if it's foolish, and somehow unworthy, to even make an effort at doing so.