Posted on 02/18/2014 5:28:04 PM PST by SeekAndFind
WASHINGTON Young Evangelicals argued that Christianity and libertarianism are compatible, and some even claimed that Christians should advocate for libertarian causes.
"Christians actually ought to feel outraged that the redemptive power of charity has been taken from us and given to an unfeeling, coercive state," Leah Stiles Hughey declared at a Saturday panel at The International Students for Liberty Conference. She claimed that when government gets involved in giving to the poor it denies the God-given human dignity of both giver and receiver.
Hughey's husband Jason explained that "the Bible is not a book of political theory." Nevertheless, "there are themes we get from the Bible that give a good foundation for Christians to embrace libertarianism or even anarchy," Jason Hughey said.
The Hugheys and three other panelists provided 5 reasons why they believe Christians can be libertarian in their political beliefs.
1. Christianity Celebrates Voluntary Action, Value Creation
Jacqueline Otto Isaacs, a blogger at Values & Capitalism, explained that the Christian worldview also supports libertarianism. "The message of the Gospel, the good news, is that salvation from our sins is offered through Christ this salvation is voluntary and individual, and this is the core message of Christianity," Isaacs declared.
"Christianity literally starts with the individual, celebrates the individual's dignity and opportunity for salvation, and then grows outwardly into the community and Christ's kingdom," Isaacs said. She focused on the idea that men and women are made in the image of God. "God created everything out of nothing, and we can create economic value out of scarcity," she explained.
Since Christianity is about voluntary action, so much so that God allowed us to sin and fall short of his glory, governments should let individuals make their own decisions, Isaacs argued. "God respects our freedom, even to reject him, so we can respect the freedom of others," she said.
Jeffrey Tucker, CEO of Liberty.me and distinguished fellow of the Foundation for Economic Education, argued that Christianity offered something unique in the world, a universalist ethic. "Christianity should have a universalist, globalist, expansive outlook, always and that's the free market, too," Tucker told CP in an interview on Saturday. The free market "has this driving force towards globalism, global community, and universal cooperation in that way, the free market and Christianity totally agree."
2. Big Government Does Not Solve Poverty
Philip Luca, vice president of Social Media at The American Marketing Association, discussed his experience from going up in Eastern Europe. "We really went all in trying to put our goods in a common pot, and letting the state handle distribution and letting there be no poor among us," Luca explained. "What happened is that all of us became poor."
Isaacs cited Federick Bastiat's book The Law, which argues that the best way to bring the poor out of poverty is through free markets. Man in the image of God can participate in the Lord's redemptive work "God redeems us from our sins and we can work towards redeeming those around us from poverty and ignorance and disease."
3. The Biblical Role of Government
Jason Hughey agreed, citing specific scriptures to argue for a smaller role of government. Hughey pointed to 1 Samuel 8, where the people of Israel asked Samuel for a king. When Samuel went to God, "the Lord was not happy with this the people of Israel were turning their back on him," Hughey explained. God granted Israel's wish, but warned that their king would conscript their sons, take away their daughters, and tax the people. Hughey ended the reading with the line "and you will be his slaves."
Hughey then pointed to the gospel of Mark, where Christ describes what it means to serve others. "I think it's very interesting that the model of service that Christ points to for the church is stated in direct contrast to the way the political authorities rule and lord it over others," the speaker declared.
Finally, the speaker addressed Jesus' commandment to "render unto Caesar that which is Caesar's and unto God that which is God's." Hughey argued that the emphasis in this passage is not to dignify government but "about rendering unto God what is God's," since "God is the highest authority, Christ is the highest authority, and not Caesar."
4. The Welfare State Harms Christian Charity
"Christ's example through scripture gives us a model of what charity should look like and government, by stepping in, harms that model and generates tragic consequences for both the givers and the receivers in that situation," Leah Hughey claimed. She emphasized Jesus' declaration in John 18 that no one takes his life from him, but he offers it of his own accord.
Hughey argued that "because his sacrifice was fully voluntary, a bond was established at the cross between Christ the ultimate giver and his people the ultimate receivers." Through charity, Christians partake in this great gift.
But government redistribution ruins this connection, Hughey claimed. "When the government steps in and acts as the giver of what could have been a private gift, instead of having a posture of humility and gratefulness, the receiver actually becomes envious and starts to compare what they have to what the giver has, and feels entitled to the possessions of another human being, which we know from scripture is harmful."
While the receiver feels entitled, the giver becomes angry, Hughey argued. "Instead of getting to decide how their charitable giving is allocated, it's taken from them and redistributed," she said. "They never see where it goes, so they just have a feeling of bitterness towards the welfare state."
5. Wealth Is Not Inherently Sinful
Leah Hughey also argued that scripture does not proclaim wealth as inherently sinful. She addressed a certain reading of Matthew 19:24 "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the Kingdom of God."
"In scripture Jesus has several interactions with wealthy people, but some of them he didn't encourage to sell everything," Hughey argued. She explained that Jesus' warnings are focused on the "heart issue" of whether someone "puts possessions over Christ," and not a mere attack on the rich.
So you ARE saying that a good Christian today would take a chain saw and cut down the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil..and make people eat of the good trees... Why did God put it there then?
What the article does is describe everyday, ordinary, conservatism and pretends that it is libertarianism, totally avoiding what is so vile and disgusting about the anti-God leftism of libertarianism.
“That is an obscene statement, freedom to choose God is already there”
Not when you are addicted to some other person or government entity for your personal security. If you are not free, your ability to choose God is very limited. It takes a very strong soul who can choose God while the physical body is shackled. When the soul is shackled it is impossible to choose God.
This is why it is often easier for the prostitute or thief to enter the kingdom when they repent.
This is about politics and voting, is the only reason you vote against the left, only because you agree with our economics?
Is all of your life so religion and God oriented as you are posting on this thread? You really want us to vote against what is good, and right, and traditionally Christian American and replace it with the God hating left’s goals, and do it in the name of God?
What in the world was that about?
That didn’t make sense, and it sure wasn’t enough to switch me to being a pro-abortion voter, try again.
Real life does not now and never has consisted of only two factions.
I don’t have to ally myself with child predators to protect my freedoms.
Sometimes the enemy of my enemy is merely my other enemy.
What do child predators and Christianity and the end of the WOD have to do with each other.
Precisely!
Those votes didn't belong to the other candidate. The other candidate didn't earn those votes. It shouldn't be hard to figure out that if you keep calling people child predators and othe bulls*** like that, they aren't going to vote your way. libertarians are by and large through being abused housewives.
What, you are so addled you can’t read the topic or the article?
The topic is whether libertarianism is compatible with Christianity.
Libertarianism has become connected to removing age of consent restrictions as the post quoting past official party platforms points out.
Everything does not revolve around drugs.
LOL, I guess we just shut down freerepublic since we don't want to expose and discuss those who oppose our conservative, pro-God agenda, because it hurts their feelings and will make them support the politicians who support their liberalism.
I think the post on how libertarians will vote to give elections to democrats was a reasonable thing to post, and it is accurate.
Amen. Amen, AMEN.
They are not compatible at all
Libertarianism is the opposite
definitely incompatible
THANK YOU.
I call myself a "limited government Christian conservative." The political philosophy that guides is "Reduce government, reduce the ailment."
The worst Christian bashers I have “met” online are all avowed libertarians
There isn't just some allegation here, children as sexual beings has historically been part of the platform.
People can choose to be part of that, or they can choose not to.
Don't harbor any irrational notions that other people will be okay with that part of the libertarian party, or that they won't know.
There are certain freedoms that only are arrived at by following God’s Laws. To violate those laws will only shackle a soul. And “Thou Shall Not Kill” is pretty self explanatory.
If someone wants to take their own life, that is pro choice, but as soon as they choose to take the life of a fetus, that is murder.
Man, what are you talking about, we are discussing liberal politics, libertarian politics and them trying to get voters to start voting like lefties and anti-God voters.
When I vote, I don’t suddenly turn anti-American, anti-Christian, anti-God when it comes to choosing candidates and platforms and political positions.
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