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Saturday, September 28, 2024

A Blast from CGI's Past: God Is Not a Capitalist or a Socialist

It's hard to believe that the above title was the lead article for CGI's The International News in the Winter 2009 edition of that paper. When I think about how partisan some of the folks in that organization over the fifteen years since I penned that article, it blows my mind! At any rate, thought I'd share this blast from the past with my readers:

In the atmosphere of rancor and poison

 that permeates our political discourse,

 do we Christians sometimes forget that this

 is not God’s world/system? (2 Corinthians

 4:4). Over the last decade, we have all heard

 various people state or imply that capitalism is

 GOOD and socialism is EVIL. Nevertheless, we

 as Christians have to remember that both of

 these systems were created by men influenced

 by Satan the Devil, and that neither one of

 them represents the ideals and ultimate de

signs of our Creator. Actually, from what is

 revealed to us of God’s mind in Scripture, we can safely assert that God’s

 Kingdom will not be a capitalist or a socialist society! That is not to say there

 will not be elements of BOTH systems present in God’s system.

 Capitalism has been defined as the private ownership and control of

 capital—where goods and services are traded in a market, and profits are paid

 to the owners of capital, who then reinvest them or pay wages to labor.

 Moreover, capitalism has been associated with what Adam Smith referred to

 as the “invisible hand” of the marketplace—the notion that the pursuit of

 self-interest tends to the benefit of everyone. For Christians, this notion should

 raise an immediate red flag. The entire basis of Christ’s teaching was against

 selfishness; remember the Golden Rule? (Matthew 7:12 and Luke 6:31). Even

 so, the principles of private ownership and payment for labor rendered are also

 clearly established throughout Scripture.

 Likewise, socialism has been defined as governmental or collective

 ownership and control of capital—where the value of goods and services are

 not dictated by the market. Socialism and communism have long been

 associated with the famous principle laid down by Karl Marx, “From each

 according to his ability, to each according to his need.” The underlying

 premise is that capital or wealth should not be concentrated in the hands of a

 few, and that it should be redistributed by some central authority whenever

 it does begin to concentrate. However, it should be obvious to Christians that

 mankind has individually and collectively proven his inability to administer

 any system fairly or impartially. Who, then, is to decide how wealth is to be

 distributed? Even so, the principles of equality before the law and fair

 treatment for all people are also clearly established throughout Scripture

 (Leviticus 19:15, James 2:1–6).

 God’s system is different from both of these systems existing in various

 forms and degrees throughout the present world. God’s system is based on love

 and outgoing concern for God and each other (1 John 4:7–21). It is not based

 on greed and self-interest. God’s way includes fair wages, impartiality, loaning

 without usury (interest), and helping and giving to the poor. Everyone is

 expected to contribute.

 For those of us who might think that God is strictly a capitalist, or that He

 favors that system, we would do well to remember what God has to say about

 the fate of a society built on the backs of the poor with greed and profit as the

 principal motivators of their actions (Amos 4:1; 8:4–8). We should also

 remember what God has to say about not paying your workers a fair wage

 (Leviticus 19:13, Jeremiah 22:13, Malachi 3:5). See what God has said about

 charging interest on money, and how that applies to modern banking and

 lending practices (Exodus 22:25, Leviticus 25:35–36, Deuteronomy 23:19,

 Proverbs 28:8, Ezekiel 22:12). Proponents of capitalism should read God’s

 instructions to the farmers of ancient Israel about not harvesting all of their

 crops, but leaving some for the poor (Leviticus 19:9–10, 23:22). Moreover,

 God has clearly instructed His people to help the poor in both the Old and New

 Testaments (Deuteronomy 15:7–11 and 1 John 3:17). Yes, we are our brother’s

 keeper. However, unlike many of the “socialist” persuasion, God does expect

 everyone to work and contribute—laziness is not tolerated as part of God’s

 system (2 Thessalonians 3:10)!

 What is the end of the matter?  This world and its systems are NOT God’s

 world or systems (Revelation 18:4). We should be among those who confess

 that we are “strangers and pilgrims on the earth” and that we clearly seek

 another country (Hebrews 11:13–14). That is precisely why Christ instructed

 us to pray, “Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven”

 (Matthew 6:10). Brethren, in spite of any patriotic or sentimental attachments

 we might have to a particular system, we should all remember that God is not

 a capitalist, socialist, Republican, or Democrat.


Looking back at what I wrote in 2009, I am pleased with my own consistency on this issue. Nevertheless, it saddens me to see just how far the group with which I formerly affiliated has changed since 2009.


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