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Most traditional religions insisted that the well-off must be charitable to the poor. This changed with the rise of capitalism and the ideology that legitimated its institutions and practices.Following upon the works of Max Weber and Richard Tawney, the role of Protestantism in generating an ideology that blames the poor for their abject condition has been widely acknowledged. What has been less appreciated is that this ideology has its roots in a new bourgeois class’s struggle for respectability and social status and that this struggle was a principal force fuelling Protestantism’s doctrinal character and success. This ideology depicted the success of the bourgeoisie as the result of virtuous behaviour and the misery of the poor as a consequence of their moral failings. Secular political and economic thought that arose alongside Protestantism also expressed the attitudes and practices of the emerging bourgeoisie, equally blaming the poor for their poverty. —Cambridge Journal of Economics