What the Bible Teaches About Economics

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Along with a blatant disregard of biblical morality, we are witnessing an all-out attack on what I continually refer to as “the fertile fields of opportunity and prosperity”. We must not allow our basic freedoms to be destroyed because some individuals have abused the blessings and benefits freedom makes possible. After several years of prayerful research, I am convinced that free market capitalism is the most consistent with biblical principles. In a recent Wall Street Journal article, I believe Rabbi Ayreh Spero gives us a clear biblical picture of why this is so.
-James

More than any other nation, the United States was founded on broad themes of morality rooted in a specific religious perspective. We call this the Judeo-Christian ethos, and within it resides a ringing endorsement of capitalism as a moral endeavor.

Regarding mankind, no theme is more salient in the Bible than the morality of personal responsibility, for it is through this that man cultivates the inner development leading to his own growth, good citizenship and happiness. The entitlement/welfare state is a paradigm that undermines that noble goal.

The Bible’s proclamation that “Six days shall ye work” is its recognition that on a day-to-day basis work is the engine that brings about man’s inner state of personal responsibility. Work develops the qualities of accountability and urgency, including the need for comity with others as a means for the accomplishment of tasks. With work, he becomes imbued with the knowledge that he is to be productive and that his well-being is not an entitlement. And work keeps him away from the idleness that Proverbs warns leads inevitably to actions and attitudes injurious to himself and those around him.

Yet capitalism is not content with people only being laborers and holders of jobs, indistinguishable members of the masses punching in and out of mammoth factories or functioning as service employees in government agencies. Nor is the Bible. Unlike socialism, mired as it is in the static reproduction of things already invented, capitalism is dynamic and energetic. It cheerfully fosters and encourages creativity, unspoken possibilities, and dreams of the individual. Because the Hebrew Bible sees us not simply as “workers” and members of the masses but, rather, as individuals, it heralds that characteristic which endows us with individuality: our creativity.

At the opening bell, Genesis announces: “Man is created in the image of God”—in other words, like Him, with individuality and creative intelligence. Unlike animals, the human being is not only a hunter and gatherer but a creative dreamer with the potential of unlocking all the hidden treasures implanted by God in our universe. The mechanism of capitalism, as manifest through investment and reasoned speculation, helps facilitate our partnership with God by bringing to the surface that which the Almighty embedded in nature for our eventual extraction and activation.

Capitalism makes possible entrepreneurship, which is the realization of an idea birthed in human creativity. Whereas statism demands that citizens think small and bow to a top-down conformity, capitalism, as has been practiced in the U.S., maximizes human potential. It provides a home for aspiration, referred to in the Bible as “the spirit of life.”

The Bible speaks positively of payment and profit: “For why else should a man so labor but to receive reward?” Thus do laborers get paid wages for their hours of work and investors receive profit for their investment and risk.

The Bible is not a business-school manual. While it is comfortable with wealth creation and the need for speculation in economic markets, it has nothing to say about financial instruments and models such as private equity, hedge funds or other forms of monetary capitalization. What it does demand is honesty, fair weights and measures, respect for a borrower’s collateral, timely payments of wages, resisting usury, and empathy for those injured by life’s misfortunes and charity.

It also demands transparency and honesty regarding one’s intentions. The command, “Thou shalt not place a stumbling block in front of the blind man” also means that you should not act deceitfully or obscure the truth from those whose choice depends upon the information you give them.

No country has achieved such broad-based prosperity as has America, or invented as many useful things, or seen as many people achieve personal promise. This is not an accident. It is the direct result of centuries lived by the free-market ethos embodied in the Judeo-Christian outlook.

Furthermore, only a prosperous nation can protect itself from outside threats, for without prosperity the funds to support a robust military are unavailable. Having radically enlarged the welfare state and hoping to further expand it, President Obama is attempting to justify his cuts to our military by asserting that defense needs must give way to domestic programs.

Both history and the Bible show the way that leads. Countries that were once economic powerhouses atrophied and declined, like England after World War II, once they began adopting socialism. Even King Solomon’s thriving kingdom crashed once his son decided to impose onerous taxes.

At the end of Genesis, we hear how after years of famine the people in Egypt gave all their property to the government in return for the promise of food. The architect of this plan was Joseph, son of Jacob, who had risen to become the pharaoh’s top official, thus: “Joseph exchanged all the land of Egypt for pharaoh and the land became pharaoh’s.” The result was that Egyptians became indentured to the ruler and state, and Joseph’s descendants ended up enslaved to the state.

Many on the religious left criticize capitalism because all do not end up monetarily equal—or, as Churchill quipped, “all equally miserable.” But the Bible’s prescription of equality means equality under the law, as in Deuteronomy’s saying that “Judges and officers…shall judge the people with a just judgment: Do not…favor one over the other.” Nowhere does the Bible refer to a utopian equality that is contrary to human nature and has never been achieved.

The motive of capitalism’s detractors is a quest for their own power and an envy of those who have more money. But envy is a cardinal sin and something that ought not to be.

God begins the Ten Commandments with “I am the Lord your God” and concludes with “Thou shalt not envy your neighbor, not for his wife, nor his house, nor for any of his holdings.” Envy is corrosive to the individual and to those societies that embrace it. Nations that throw over capitalism for socialism have made an immoral choice.

 

This editorial was published in the Jan. 30, 2012, edition of The Wall Street Journal. Reprinted with permission of Aryeh Spero. Rabbi Spero has led congregations in Ohio and New York and is president of Caucus for America. He will be a speaker at the July 27 “Under God: INDIVISIBLE” leadership conference hosted by LIFE Outreach. For details and registration, visit dfw.undergodindivisible.org.

This article was written by Rabbi Ayreh Spero

4 comments:

AnonymousJune 8, 2012 at 8:54 amReply

The United States, unfortunately, is quickly heading into the abyss that the Sanhedrin courts and Jewish scholars of Jesus’ time were enslaved in. In short, when the leaders believe they know what is better for the masses rather than what God has given as the righteous and true example, trouble, problems, and pitfalls can only follow. By allowing our Government to become more and more invasive into our private lives and by allowing them to limit our relationship with God, we are giving up our individual freedoms and are becoming as Israel was in the time of Jesus. In short, we are heading for disaster. Get back to God. As He said, “Be still, and know that I am God.”

Jim CrawfordJune 8, 2012 at 10:17 amReply

First of all the economic system with which we live in this country is a far cry from free-market capitalism. Much of the market is held up by governmental intervention. While farmers decry aid to dependent children they demand that the government give them subsidies in the form of crop insurance and specific crop price guarantees. The banking industry and Wall Street were revitalized with billions of public funds. Second, the “image of God” is of a triune God, living and being in relationships. Why did God create mankind? For relationships. Third, the alternatives are not simply “capitalism” and “statism” and “socialism.” The world is much more complicated than that. As you say, the Bible speaks to fair wages but not to capital gains, derivatives, and off-balance sheet fees. It does speak about fairness in business, and it’s pretty negative about loans, certainly condemning usury. And then there is the question of inherited wealth and capital. When should we celebrate the Year of Jubilee? Debt forgiveness? The return of property to the original owners? Scripture also is pretty clear about a society’s responsibility to widows and orphans, the poor and the disenfranchised. Christianity is the only moral alternative to all of humanity’s economic systems!

AnonymousJune 8, 2012 at 12:20 pmReply

Jesus told the story of a man who traveled to a far country, leaving his workers with some money to use while he was away. He gave one worker five talents, another worker two talents, and a third worker just one talent according to each worker’s ability. By the time he returned from his journey, the worker with the five talents had earned five more talents, and was told well done, you were faithful over a few things, I will make you overseer over many things. The worker who was given two talents had earned two more talents, and was told the same thing. However the third worker had not used the money wisely, but had hidden away the one talent he had been given. So, …his one talent was taken away and given to the worker with ten talents.

Jesus taught this lesson about money to illustrate spiritual truth, we are to use his possessions in a trustworthy way.

All hard work brings a profit, but mere talk leads only to poverty (Proverbs 14:23).
Work with your hands, just as we told you, so that your daily life may win the respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody (1 Thessalonians 4:11-12).
Lazy hands make a man poor, but diligent hands bring wealth (Proverbs 10:4).
One who is slack in his work is brother to one who destroys (Proverbs 18:9).

All will give an account to God.

AnonymousJune 11, 2012 at 10:09 pmReply

The net worth of the American Family has fallen 40 percent in the past three years. If this does not bring this nation to tears and repentance, and COMPASSION I do not know what will.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/fed-americans-wealth-dropped-40-percent/2012/06/11/gJQAlIsCVV_story.html

I have an acquaintance whose response to this news was “The prices of houses are really falling now.” This person then laid out plans to “cash in” on others’ misfortunes. Further, s/he expects the government to write a Section 8 check to do it. I wish I was joking. If we don’t think these little armies of government-worshiping welfare mommies are going to turn on us when the goodie train cuts off, we all need a very serious reality check. And I’m afraid we’re all going to get one.

I’m sorry, but when I see people on Medicaid and welfare strolling around with iPhones and designer handbags, contrasted by 20-year olds working at Walmart, literally counting out pennies and nickels so they can buy a cheeseburger, I am saddened and appalled beyond belief.

This mentality is contributing to the ruin of our nation. People care little about anything or anyone else except their own cares and wants. The heartlessness I see on a daily basis is astonishing. Sadly, some of this is coming from people who call themselves “Christians.”

People don’t wake up one day and decide to throw half of their prosperity out the window or flush it down the toilet. Something is very seriously wrong with the economic status of our country.

Replacing capitalism with the current crony-capitalism system was not the answer. It was our demise.

PS, we also have a glut of low-paying part-time jobs now being touted as the saviors of our economic turnaround. Largely this is taking place so employers can avert having to do “Obamacare” and force-provide health care benefits for employees.

Thanks again, government.

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