1
2
3
Wealth and Want | |||||||
... because democracy alone is not enough to produce widely shared prosperity. | |||||||
Home | Essential Documents | Themes | All Documents | Authors | Glossary | Links | Contact Us |
The Earth is the
Lord's Henry George: Thou
Shalt Not Steal (1887 speech)
Now imagine, when we men and women of today go
before that awful bar, that there we should behold the
spirits of those who in our time under this accursed
social system were driven into crime; of those who were
starved in body and mind; of those little children who,
in this city of New York, are being sent out of the world
by thousands when they have scarcely entered it —
because they do not get food enough, nor air enough;
because they are crowded together in these tenement
districts under conditions in which all diseases rage and
destroy. Supposing we are confronted with those souls, what will it avail us to say that we individually were not responsible for their earthly conditions? What, in the spirit of the parable of Matthew, would be the reply from the Judgment seat? Would it not be: "I provided for them all. The earth that I made was broad enough to give them room. The materials that are placed in it were abundant enough for all their needs. Did you or did you not lift up your voice against the wrong that robbed them of their fair share in the provision made for all?"... read the whole article Henry George: The Single Tax: What It Is and Why We Urge It (1890)
The right of property does not rest upon human
laws; they have often ignored and violated it. It rests
on natural laws -- that is to say, the law of God. It is
clear and absolute, and every violation of it, whether
committed by a man or a nation, is a violation of the
command, "Thou shalt not
steal."
The man who catches a fish, grows an apple, raises a calf, builds a house, makes a coat, paints a picture, constructs a machine, has, as to any such thing, an exclusive right of ownership which carries with it the right to give, to sell or bequeath that thing. But who made the earth that any
man can claim such ownership of it, or any part of it, or
the right to give, sell or bequeath it? Since the earth
was not made by us, but is only a temporary dwelling place
on which one generation of men follow another; since we
find ourselves here, are manifestly here with equal
permission of the Creator, it is manifest that no one can
have any exclusive right of ownership in land, and that the
rights of all men to land must be equal and inalienable.
There must be exclusive right of
possession of land, for the man who uses it must have
secure possession of land in order to reap the products of
his labor. But his right of possession must be limited by
the equal right of all, and should therefore be conditioned
upon the payment to the community by the possessor of an
equivalent for any special valuable privilege thus accorded
him. ... read the whole
article a synopsis of Robert V. Andelson and James M. Dawsey: From Wasteland to Promised land: Liberation Theology for a Post-Marxist World
The Promised Land, like Eden, is a place of
unhindered scope in which to glorify God and manifest his
will. But it is not the Kingdom of God. It represents
liberation from external bondage -- from oppression and
restricted access to material opportunity. It is the
temporal matrix within which the Kingdom may find full
expression. But it is not itself the Kingdom. Although it
is a heresy that locates this Kingdom exclusively in the
afterlife or an ethereal paradise, Jesus declared it to
be "not of this world" (John 18:36) but "within" (Luke
17:21). It is no reproach to Henry George that he lost
sight of this distinction between the Promised Land and
the Kingdom of God, enraptured by his vision of a just
society:
With want destroyed; with greed
changed to noble passions; with the fraternity that is
born of equality taking the place of jealousy and fear
that now array men against each other; with mental power
loosed by conditions that give to the humblest comfort
and leisure; and who shall measure the heights to which
our civilization may soar? Words fail the thought! It is
the Golden Age.... It is the culmination of Christianity
-- the City of God on earth, with walls of jasper and
gates of pearl! It is the reign of the Prince of
Peace!
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's Lectures, with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894)
Alanna Hartzok: Ethical Land Tenure I want to tell you the story of Charles Avilla. A
while back I came across a book called Ownership, Early Christian Teachings. Avilla
was a divinity student in the Phillipines. One of his
professors had a great concern about poverty conditions
in the Phillipines, and was taking students out to
prisons where the cooks were the land rights
revolutionaries in the Phillipines. Because they kept
pushing for land reform for the people, they had ended up
in jail. So they were political prisoners who were
reading the Bible and were asking the question,
who did God give this earth to? Who does
it belong to? It isn't in the
Bible that so few should have so much and so many have so
little. In the theological world in this upscale
seminary he was trying to put this together about poverty
and what the biblical teachings were. He had a thesis to
write and he was thinking he would do something about
economic justice. One of his professors thought there
would be a wealth of information from the church's early
history, the first 300 years after Jesus. So he actually
went back to read the Latin and Greek about land
ownership and found a wealth of information about the
prophetic railings of the people in that early time on
the rights of the land.
Nehemiah 5:11, "Restore, I pray you, to them this day
their lands, their vineyards, their olive yards, and
their houses."
Ezekiel 33:24, "The land is given us as an inheritance." Ecclesiastes 5:9, "The profit of the earth is for all." And Isaiah 5:8, "Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field til there be no place ..." Leviticus 25:23, "The land is mine, for you are strangers and sojourners with me." ... read the whole article
|
|
to email this page to a friend: right click, choose
"send"
|
||||||
Wealth and Want
|
www.wealthandwant.com
|
|||||
... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
in which all can prosper
|