Posted on 05/29/2005 2:29:02 PM PDT by CHARLITE
With increasing regularity, leaders of the National Democratic Party are seeking support for their economic agenda in, of all places, the Bible.
Failed presidential candidate John Kerry, for example, persists in appealing to the New Testament book of James. "Faith without works is dead," he intones, suggesting that "works" here includes the works of lawmakers as they spend other people's money.
In like manner, Nancy Pelosi, the House minority leader, is wont to quote the teaching of Jesus that "[i]nasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me." According to Pelosi, doing unto the least means raising more taxes for entitlement programs. Even DNC Chairman Howard Dean, who kicked off President Bush's second term with the outburst "I hate Republicans," more recently accused the ones he hates of violating the biblical command to "love thy neighbor as thyself." He believes Republicans commit this sin by resisting efforts to enlarge the tender-loving federal bureaucracy.
Leaving aside speculation about motives, one thing is clear. Democratic leaders, by citing scripture in their condemnation of fiscal conservatives, have acknowledged the Bible as a relevant authority in matters of public policy. It is only fair, therefore, to consider the liberal economic agenda in light of the same authority.
The passages selected by liberals invariably relate to God's love for those in material need. Missing from their understanding, however, is any appreciation of God's primary emphasis on the spiritual needs of the giver, and potential giver. Indeed, the Bible-quoting Democrats seem utterly unacquainted this central theme of the Bible.
Jesus, who freely sacrificed his own life to save others, said, "it is more blessed to give than to receive." The teaching reflects Christ's deep knowledge of the human need to love and be loved through free-will giving.
Paying taxes, of course, is not a gift. It is required under penalty of law. The payment of taxes confers on the payer none of the spiritual blessings that flow from charity. With respect to the billions of dollars conscripted to fund entitlement programs, the government actually precludes the possibility of the "more blessed[ness]" promised by Christ.
It is not simply a matter of reducing the income available to potential givers. Welfare including the welfare for the middle class known as Social Security also taxes the purpose and the incentives for voluntary giving. When retirement is financed with money taken from the wages of strangers, and when aging parents are systematically relegated to state-funded nursing homes, a child's incentive to honor his parents with personal resources is greatly diminished, as are, of course, the resources themselves.
The government dole taxes not only income but also the impetus of neighbors, the church and other charities to lend a hand to unemployed individuals in their midst. Entitlements thus interfere with familial relationships and, contrary to Dean's invective, dampen the impulse to love one's neighbor.
Though we might wish this truth to be self-evident that love cannot be legislated it has been lost in the haze of our addiction to entitlements. Voluntary sacrifice, made on behalf of someone in need, is, like Shakespeare's quality of mercy, "twice blest." It blesses the one who receives and, even more so, the one who gives.
But entitlements, and the impassive spirits they arouse, diminish a good part of both of these blessings. By depleting the impetus and the purpose for voluntary sacrifice, the welfare state ultimately imposes a tax on the greater blessings that, according to Christ, flow from free-will giving.
Fiscal conservatives have explained many of the burdens of welfare burdens on individual freedom; on the economy; on beneficiaries themselves. Despite the unassailable logic, and perhaps because of it, these arguments also contribute to the stereotype of conservatives as uncompassionate. Even the argument that entitlements visit harm on those they are designed to help, while demonstrably true, has not helped conservatives shed their reputation for being penurious and mean.
Largely unarticulated, however, is the way the entitlement system serves to obviate individual good will. Misguided government efforts to constrain the quality of mercy have a chilling effect on charity, resulting in an increasingly uncompassionate society.
The absurd implied premise of the Bible-quoting liberals is that bigger government is a way to "love thy neighbor." In fact, government programs encourage a life profoundly centered on self, and make us increasingly spectators to the plight of our neighbors.
The incongruity between big government theology and the teachings of the Bible is thus readily apparent. Entitlements place primary importance on material needs. Christ teaches his followers to "seek ye first the kingdom of God ... and all these things [food, clothing, etc.] will be added unto you."
Whereas the biblical standard requires the gift of faith, welfare subsists on fears that voluntary giving alone would be insufficient. Welfare proponents also worry about the unfairness of voluntary giving, as many choose not to give. The God of the Bible satisfies material and spiritual needs simultaneously, by conferring blessings on those who give voluntarily and sacrificially.
Christ's vision is indeed radical as radical today as it was in the ancient world and liberals might sincerely reject his doctrine as a basis for public policy. But intellectual honesty would require leaders of the contemporary left to admit that the Christian faith is incompatible with the ideology behind entitlement programs.
This article was first published in the May 25 edition of the Washington Examiner.
Roger Banks is an attorney and author in Washington, D.C. E-mail: rogerbanksesq@aol.com
You are correct although I think it must have been his Grandfather. I believe his father committed suicide in the men's room of a Boston establishment (Hotel or Bar?). As for his wife, I believe the conversion happened at the marriage although that, too, may have been prior.
You can't use "New Testament for Dummies," or "The Apostle Cliff Notes," and expect to understand just what Christianity is and what it means to be Christian.
Knowing a few pithy quotations is not going to fool anyone.
Pelosi and Kennedy and the rest of the CINOs on Capitol Hill might want to re-read their Catechism before they take on the mantle of Christ.
In fact, taking on that mantle is one of the most humbling of things. It forces you TO BE HONEST with Yourself before God.
Oh, and one more thing, if they can't be honest with The God, they can't possibly be honest with themselves and never with anyone else.
I think you could be right! I guess we'll see what happens when they get really wound up with the Biblical use.
Christ said it would be easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter Heaven. He was speaking of the belief these elitists cherish that they possess superiority and rectitude, when their deeds are financed through the confiscation of others' toil, and taxes. They should read about Lazarus and the rich man. God is not mocked. The wicked kings and queens in the Bible learned this the hard way.
Personal giving and charity is to be done without letting the right hand know what the left is doing. That's certainly the opposite of IRS extortion for the purpose of giving Viagra to sex offenders.
Their other favorite verse involves rendering to Caesar what is Caesar's.... These Democrats are truly desperate liars when they quote God's Word for their dispicable schemes.
Excuse me .. a Catholic does not a Christian make.
A Christian is a person who receives Jesus Christ as his Savior and Lord - and denomination has nothing to do with it.
So sKerry and his "shove it" person may have "converted" to claiming they are Catholics .. but their conduct does not prove to me they are Christian in any sense of the word.
I'm not meaning to be argumentative here LB, but can you give me an example of same?
2 Thessalonians 3:10, Abcdefg's version "Them as don't work also don't eat."
Offhand, one example is when Jesus is tempted in the desert by the devil. The devil quotes scripture, but is rebuffed by Jesus (Luke 4, 9-13).
Astute observations charmingly delivered.
People can belong to any church. It's what they do while belonging that shows how they have been touched by God.
Seen a lot of shallow people who come out of Baptist, A of G, Catholic, Pentecostal and other churches...seen a lot of people that shine with the light of Christ out of the same churches.
But for those of us who believe, you really can't counterfeit it.
Not to butt-in, but Matt.4 v 6 is one of many examples.
My reading of the wilderness temptation is that Jesus quotes scripture to Satan, not the other way around. I'll keep trying to find an example, but it would contradict the Word of God which states that there is no truth in him (John 8:44). And since the Word is Truth (John 17:17), I'm guessing I'll find no examples of his quoting the truth.
Thanks, Wy.....I'm aware of his coming close in that one....but not a direct/correct quote from the original source. He has a nasty habit of leaving some things out, twisting a word or meaning, and/or wrapping a lie in the skin of the truth. I've noticed the same habit from lib/dems who like to "appropriate" God and His Word for political ends. Perhaps there is a relationship? ; )
Jesus does quote scripture to Satan, but in the verses I mentioned, Satan quotes scripture, too. Wycowboy is correct in that it occurs in (Matt 4, 6), too. Satan is using scripture for his own purposes (evil, of course).
That Satan is using the scripture doesn't make the scripture any more scandalous. It doesn't make Satan's intentions any purer, either. Enter Kerry, Dean, Pelosi, etc. with their intentions...
You go girl!! I think you 've just nailed it dead on.
"This Bible doesn't belong to Howard Dean!"
Check out #34.
A is John Kerry.
B is Arnold Palmer.
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