Jesus
see also the website "What Would Jesus
Tax?"
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
THE term Labor includes all human exertion in the
production of wealth, whatever its mode. In common
parlance we often speak of brain labor and hand labor as
though they were entirely distinct kinds of exertion, and
labor is often spoken of as though it involved only
muscular exertion. But in reality any form of labor, that
is to say, any form of human exertion in the production
of wealth above that which cattle may be applied to
doing, requires the human brain as truly as the human
hand, and would be impossible without the exercise of
mental faculties on the part of the laborer. Labor in
fact is only physical in external form. In its origin it
is mental or on strict analysis spiritual. —
The Science of Political Economy
unabridged: Book III, Chapter 16: The Production of
Wealth, The Second Factor of Production — Labor
• abridged:
Part III, Chapter 10: Order of the Three Factors of
Production
IT seems to us that your Holiness misses its real
significance in intimating that Christ in becoming the
son of a carpenter and Himself working as a carpenter
showed merely that "there is nothing to be ashamed of in
seeking one's bread by labor." To say that is almost like
saying that by not robbing people He showed that there is
nothing to be ashamed of in honesty. If you will consider
how true in any large view is the classification of all
men into working-men, beggar-men and thieves, you will
see that it was morally impossible that Christ during His
stay on earth should have been anything else than a
working-man, since He who came to fulfill the law must by
deed as well as word obey God's law of labor.
See how fully and how beautifully Christ's life on earth
illustrated this law. Entering our earthly life in the
weakness of infancy, as it is appointed that all should
enter it, He lovingly took what in the natural order is
lovingly rendered, the sustenance, secured by labor, that
one generation owes to its immediate successors. Arrived
at maturity, He earned His own subsistence by that common
labor in which the majority of men must and do earn it.
Then passing to a higher — to the very
highest-sphere of labor. He earned His subsistence by the
teaching of moral and spiritual truths, receiving its
material wages in the love offerings of grateful hearers,
and not refusing the costly spikenard with which Mary
anointed his feet. So, when He chose His disciples, He
did not go to land-owners or other monopolists who live
on the labor of others but to common laboring men. And
when He called them to a higher sphere of labor and sent
them out to teach moral and spiritual truths He told them
to take, without condescension on the one hand, or sense
of degradation on the other, the loving return for such
labor, saying to them that the "laborer is worthy of his
hire," thus showing, what we hold, that all labor does
not consist in what is called manual labor, but that
whoever helps to add to the material, intellectual,
moral, or spiritual fulness of life is also a laborer. -
The Condition
of Labor
NOR should it be forgotten that the investigator, the
philosopher, the teacher, the artist, the poet, the
priest, though not engaged in the production of wealth,
are not only engaged in the production of utilities and
satisfactions to which the production of wealth is only a
means, but by acquiring and diffusing knowledge,
stimulating mental powers and elevating the moral sense,
may greatly increase the ability to produce wealth. For
man does not live by bread alone. He is not an engine, in
which so much fuel gives so much power. On a capstan bar
or a topsail halyard a good song tells like muscle, and a
"Marseillaise" or a "Battle Hymn of the Republic" counts
for bayonets. A hearty laugh, a noble thought, a
perception of harmony, may add to the power of dealing
even with material things.
He who by any exertion of mind or body adds to the
aggregate of enjoyable wealth, increases the sum of human
knowledge or gives to human life higher elevation or
greater fulness — he is, in the large meaning of
the words, a "producer," a "working-man," a "laborer,"
and is honestly earning honest wages. But he who without
doing aught to make mankind richer, wiser, better,
happier, lives on the toil of others — he, no
matter by what name of honor he may be I called, or how
lustily the priests of Mammon may swing their censers
before him, is in the last analysis but a beggarman or a
thief. — Protection or Free Trade, Chapter
7
econlib
BUT is there not some line the recognition of which
will enable us to say with something like scientific
precision that this man is rich and that man is poor;
some line of possession which will enable us truly to
distinguish between rich and poor in all places and
conditions of society; a line of the natural mean or
normal possession, below which in varying degrees is
poverty, and above which in varying degrees is
wealthiness? It seems to me that there must be. And if we
stop to think of it, we may see that there is. If we set
aside for the moment the narrower economic meaning of
service, by which direct service is conveniently
distinguished from the indirect service embodied in
wealth, we may resolve all the things which directly or
indirectly satisfy human desire into one term service,
just as we resolve fractions into a common denominator.
Now is there not a natural or normal line of the
possession or enjoyment of service? Clearly there is. It
is that of equality between giving and receiving. This is
the equilibrium which Confucius expressed in the golden
word of his teaching that in English we translate into
"reciprocity." Naturally the services which a
member of a human society is entitled to receive from
other members are the equivalents of those he renders to
others. Here is the normal line from which what we call
wealthiness and what we call poverty take their start. He
who can command more service than he need render, is
rich. He is poor, who can command less service than he
does render or is willing to render: for in our
civilization of today we must take note of the monstrous
fact that men willing to work cannot always find
opportunity to work. The one has more than he ought to
have; the other has less. Rich and poor are thus
correlatives of each other; the existence of a class of
rich involves the existence of a class of poor, and the
reverse; and abnormal luxury on the one side and abnormal
want on the other have a relation of necessary sequence.
To put this relation into terms of morals, the rich are
the robbers, since they are at least sharers in the
proceeds of robbery; and the poor are the robbed. This is
the reason, I take it, why Christ, Who was not really a
man of such reckless speech as some Christians deem Him
to have been, always expressed sympathy with the poor and
repugnance of the rich. In His philosophy it was better
even to be robbed than to rob. In the kingdom of right
doing which He preached, rich and poor would be
impossible, because rich and poor in the true sense are
the results of wrong-doing. And when He said, "It is
easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle
than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven," He
simply put in the emphatic form of Eastern metaphor a
statement of fact as coldly true as the statement that
two parallel lines can never meet. Injustice cannot live
where justice rules, and even if the man himself might
get through, his riches — his power of compelling
service without rendering service — must of
necessity be left behind. If there can be no poor in the
kingdom of heaven, clearly there can be no rich. And so
it is utterly impossible in this, or in any other
conceivable world, to abolish unjust poverty, without at
the same time abolishing unjust possessions. This is a
hard word to the softly amiable philanthropists, who, to
speak metaphorically, would like to get on the good side
of God without angering the devil. But it is a true word
nevertheless. — The Science of Political
Economy
unabridged: Book II, Chapter 19, The Nature of Wealth:
Moral Confusions as to Wealth • abridged:
Part II, Chapter 15, The Nature of Wealth: Moral
Confusions as to Wealth
"The Man of the People"
NEAR nineteen hundred years ago, when another
civilization was developing monstrous inequalities, when
the masses everywhere were being ground into hopeless
slavery, there arose in a Jewish village an unlearned
carpenter, who, scorning the orthodoxies and ritualisms
of the time, preached to laborers and fishermen the
gospel of the Fatherhood of God, of the equality and
brotherhood of men, who taught His disciples to pray for
the coming of the kingdom of heaven on earth. The college
professors sneered at Him, the orthodox preachers
denounced Him. He was reviled as a dreamer, as a
disturber, as a "communist," and, finally, organized
society took the alarm, and He was crucified between two
thieves. But the word went forth, and, spread by
fugitives and slaves, made its way against power and
against persecution till it revolutionized the world, and
out of the rotting old civilization brought the germ of
the new. Then the privileged classes rallied again,
carved the effigy of the man of the people in the courts
and on the tombs of kings, in His name consecrated
inequality, and wrested His gospel to the defense of
social injustice. But again the same great ideas of a
common fatherhood, of a common brotherhood, of a social
state in which none shall be overworked and none shall
want, begin to quicken in common thought. —
Social Problems
— Chapter 4, Two Opposing Tendencies
... go to "Gems from
George"
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