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- Organization: Queen's University at Kingston
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 12:05:55 EST
- From: John G. Spragge <SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Message-ID: <93028.120555SPRAGGEJ@QUCDN.QueensU.CA>
- Newsgroups: can.politics
- Subject: Re: The Morality of Capitalism
- References: <1993Jan28.073014.19845@ee.ubc.ca>
- <1993Jan28.151120.13172@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca>
- Lines: 160
-
- In article <1993Jan28.151120.13172@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca>,
- golchowy@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca (Gerald Olchowy) says:
-
- >The mostly free market developed from Judeo-Christian ethics. It is
- >a misnomer to call "Christian critics" Christian...but this
- >is a recipe for a huge religious debate about the nature
- >of Judeo-Christianity and Western Civilization.
-
- Acceptance of usury a "Judeo-Christian" ethic?
-
- Well, if you want a huge religious debate...
-
- >Christianity is about spirituality first...all else including
- >social justice is corollary or subsidiary to spirituality...
- >the "Christian left" as you call them have basically adopted
- >Marxist ethics, not Christian ones.
-
- Lucky for all of us the monks at Lindisfarne didn't think that
- way. If St. Columban et al. had simply sat and cultivated their
- individual souls instead of bringing light and learning to the
- continent of Europe, our civilisation (free markets and all)
- might never have existed.
-
- As for Marxist ethics versus Christian ethics, I have three things
- to say: first, I agree with Gerald to this extent; that the
- essay quoted simply attacks a straw dummy. However, I disagree with
- him on two counts: first off, the charge that Christian leftists have
- abandoned Christ for Marx, a depressingly familiar (and untrue) one.
- More seriously, I do not accept his view of what Christians believe
- as definitive.
-
- >Love God with all your heart etc. etc. and love your neighbor
- >AS YOURSELF...this is not a command for self-sacrifice...and
- >love is not necessarily always altruistic. The commandmant
- >is a commandment for balance.
-
- The word "balance" as a modern market society understands it (so
- much for me, so much for them, all in measure) has little in
- common with the drastic commitment demanded in the Sermon on
- the Mount, or demonstrated on the Cross. Christianity demands
- no less a commitment than our lives.
-
- >Render unto Caesar etc. etc. emphasizes that Christianity is
- >primarily about spirituality, and not about social justice.
-
- Render unto Caesar emphasises no such thing. Render unto Caesar
- emphasises the moral triviality of the state and all of its
- works, including money and the "free market". As Jesus points
- out, you can easily tell who invented (and profits from) money;
- they put their picture on it and sign it.
-
- >The parable of Mary and Martha...selfishness is not always wrong...
- >or go back to the commandment...it includes self-love also...not
- >just love of God and neighbor. You've accepted that the arguments
- >of the so-called "Christian-left" are legitimately Christian...
- >they are not.
-
- A nasty charge; and one you ought not to make. If you want to
- claim our views do not accord with scripture, I can quote you
- chapter and verse on the topic. But you have no business defining
- what does and does not qualify as "legitimately Christian". I
- accept the Christian right as "legitimately Christian", even
- though I think they often misunderstand scripture.
-
- >It is not Christian to say that selfishness is necessarily
- >bad all the time, or that altruism is necessarily good all the
- >time...
-
- Here we go again. For the record, I have never condemned selfishness
- as bad "all the time". My primary criticism of the ideology of
- "free markets" rests on the idolatry of believing a social system
- can in and of itself produce good, as in "the invisible hand".
-
- But you have no right to pronounce on what constitutes "Christian"
- behaviour or speech.
-
- >A Christian renders unto Caesar...no matter what the system.
- >Christians cannot blame others for the state of their soul...
- >the world is never going to be free of temptations...the
- >seven deadly sins are no more endemic to market capitalism
- >or socialism.
-
- Of course not. The spirit comes first. But you will admit that
- Christians consider some social systems more in accordance with
- Christian values than others. And Christians naturally want to
- live in a society that reflects our values (for a Biblical reference,
- consider the passage about not putting "stumbling blocks" in each
- other's way).
-
- >The criticisms of the so-called Christian left are mostly
- >without merit...you've accepted their assertions about
- >Christian ethics as valid...which is a highly debatable
- >proposition.
-
- The "so-called" offends. You have no warrant whatsoever for doubting my
- Christianity, or Dan Berrigan's, or Bruce Cockburn's, or that of anyone
- else I know. Nor have you made an impressive start in debating our
- assertions about "Christian ethics".
-
- >We are commanded to love ourselves as well as our neighbors and God.
- >Christianity is about the individual...read Job or Ecclessiastes...
- >the primary concern of Christianity is the state of one's own soul...
- >that is as about as individualistic a philosophy as one can get.
-
- If so, how did Christianity become a worldwide religion? How do
- you explain the monasteries that kept learning alive, the Church's
- provision for the poor, the radical sharing described in Praxis
- Apostolian, the tithes, the Christian Children's Fund, the Primate's
- World Relief and Development Funds, the Canadian Catholic Organisation
- for Development and Peace, the food banks, the St. Vincent de Paul
- Society...
-
- You have a lot of people to put straight about the "true" nature of
- Christianity.
-
- In any case, consider the passage from the Gospels in which Jesus
- says: "inasmuch as you did it to the least of these my brethren,
- you did it to me".
-
- By the way, I think you have Job wrong. It does not celebrate
- individualism. In fact, it rebukes individualism by saying,
- quite explicitly, that Job the individual has no rights against
- God.
-
- >It is not a sin to look out for one's own interests...in fact
- >it is the primary Christian concern...the state of one's soul.
-
- Christ explicitly warns us that the state of our souls will
- depend, to a great extent, on what we have done for other people.
- He does not command us to a "state" of altruism: he commands us to
- care for the sick, feed the hungry, shelter the homeless, visit
- those in prison, and to do so even if the homeless, hungry, or
- sick have abused us in the past.
-
- >You've caught it backwards...human nature, and the family
- >is a product of human nature, creates the society...not vice
- >versa...democracy and markets in a complex technological
- >society are a product of human nature, of the desire of
- >human beings for spiritual fulfillment. Democracy and markets
- >are optimal structures given the conditions and scale of human
- >existence as they are today. The society which evolves is
- >a product of human nature interacting with the world.
-
- I dare you to prove that second last sentence. I dare you to
- even tell me in what sense you use the word optimal. And how
- DARE you call them optimal when, right now, people are freezing to
- death in Toronto; when the Bank of Canada deliberately creates
- unemployment; when peasant leaders in Guatemala have their children
- killed in front of them to keep them from demolishing the system
- that sends profits (and coffee) our way.
-
- >The seven deadly sins are the seven deadly sins regardless of
- >the economic system in place...
-
- Leaving an unjust economic system in place smacks of sloth. Last
- I looked, that ranked up there with gluttony and lechery. Oh, and
- one other you may have heard about: avarice. An attitude of mind
- many commercials seem to promote.
-
- standard disclaimers apply ----------------------- John G. Spragge
-