Judeo-Christian Tradition
For land value taxation is
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not just a fiscal measure (although it is a fiscal
measure, and a sound one);
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not just a method of urban redevelopment (although
it is a method of urban redevelopment, and an
effective one);
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not just a means of stimulating business (although
it is a means of stimulating business, and a
wholesome one);
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not just an answer to unemployment (although it is
an answer to unemployment, and a powerful one),
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not just a way to better housing (although it is a
way to better housing, and a proven one);
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not just an approach to rational land use (although
it is an approach to rational land use, and a
non-bureaucratic one).
It is all of these things, but it is
also something infinitely more: it is the affirmation,
prosaic though it be, of a fundamental spiritual
principle — that "the earth is the Lord's, and
the fulness thereof."
It is the affirmation of the same principle to which
Moses gave embodiment in the institution of the
Jubilee, and in the prohibition against removing
ancient landmarks, and in the decree that the land
shall not be sold forever. It is the affirmation of the
same principle to which the prophets of old gave
utterance when they inveighed against those who lay
field to field, and who use their neighbor's service
without wages. It is the affirmation of the same
principle to which Koheleth gave voice when he asserted
in the fifth chapter of Ecclesiastes that "the profit
of the earth is for all."
The earth is the Lord's! Consider what this means.
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It means that our God is not a pale abstraction.
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Our God is not a remote being who sits enthroned on
some ethereal height, absorbed in the contemplation
of his own perfection, oblivious to this grubby
realm in which we live.
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Our God is concerned with the tangible, with the
mundane, with what goes on in the field, in the
factory, in the courthouse, in the exchange.
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Our God is the maker of a material world — a
world of eating and sleeping and working and
begetting, a world he loved so much that he himself
became flesh and blood for its salvation. In this
sense, then,
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our God is eminently materialistic, and nowhere is
this more clearly recognized than in the Bible,
which, for that very reason, has always been a
stumbling-block and an offense to those Gnostics,
past and present, whose delicacy is embarrassed by
the fact that they inhabit bodies, and for whom
religion is essentially the effort to escape from
or deny that fact.
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Our God is not a dainty aesthete who considers
politics and economics subjects too crass or sordid
for his notice.
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Neither is he a capricious tyrant who has enjoined
an order of distribution that condemns retirees
after a lifetime of toil to subsist on cat food
while parasitic sybarites titillate palates jaded
by the most refined achievements of the haute
cuisine.
It is men who have enjoined this order in denial of his
sovereignty, in defiance of his righteous will.
...
This is what it comes down to: How can a person be
"unhindered in the fulfilment of duty to God" if he be
denied, on the one hand, fair access to nature, the raw
material without which there can be no wealth; and on
the other, the full and free ownership of his own labor
and its earnings? ... 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 Judeo-Christian meaning of liberation is
clarified by some attention to Baal, the most active "foreign god" of the
Canaanite pantheon. To the Canaanites, fertility
depended upon sexual union between Baal and his sister
and consort, Anath. Baal worship consisted in
reenacting the mating of the gods in orgiastic rites
with temple prostitutes. Beyond
maintaining natural fertility and harmony, Baal
religion was used by the aristocracy to uphold the
social order. Canaanite tenants worked as dispossessed
farmers on estates owned by magnates, the temple, and
the king. They worshiped the landowners, the baals, who
held dominion over both the land and the peasants
themselves. Old Testament exhortations against
Baalism emphasize the proper way to
worship Yahweh: by acting with mercy and justice
towards one's fellow humans.
Because justice does not prevail when some, like
the baals, claim the land and its bounty while others
are excluded from these privileges, Hosea denounces Israel for betraying its
covenant to recognize God as the true owner of the
earth. And Amos, referring to
the greed for possessing the land and its fruits, said
God is angered by those "who trample upon the needy,
and bring the poor of the land to an end" (Amos 8:4).
Amos' indictment of Israel mentions
oppression of the poor and cultic prostitution as if
they were one (Amos 2:6-8). This seems strange until
one recognizes that the link between these two sins is
a wrongful concept of land ownership.
Recall that Baal-worship and its
sexual rites glorified inequitable land possession and
control. In the Prophets, the role of land is
crucial in the divine providential scheme, and the
flouting of just principles of land possession has
grave consequences. Human beings are caretakers, not
the owners, of God's creation.
Amos and Hosea underscored that
being a caretaker of the earth, while defining people's
relationship to the land, also defined people's
relationship to one another. Being a
caretaker meant loving justice and doing mercy, letting
go of selfish possession and the desire for power over
others by usurping their means of livelihood, and
instead becoming, like God, compassionate.
Consider what a revolutionary break this represents
from Baal worship, which idolized control of the soil
and deified the landowners! ...
Claiming the Promised Land: A
New Jubilee for a New World
In the book of Joshua, we find that although the
Promised Land is a gift from God, it is a gift that has
to be claimed. Even before the actual conquest of the
Promised Land, the Mosaic Law prescribed a method
whereby possession of land was to be rendered pleasing
in God's sight. The Canaanites' claim was forfeited by
their idolatry, with human sacrifice and temple
prostitution, and by their exploitive, monopolistic
social order. By contrast, Israel, to
make good its claim, had to institute a social order
that would guard against the desecration, pollution,
and injustices of which its predecessors were guilty,
and would secure to each family and to every generation
within the Hebrew commonwealth the equal right to the
use of the land, of which the Lord was recognized as
the sole absolute owner. Read
the whole synopsis
Lindy Davies: Land and
Justice
We were talking about the tendency for landowners to
use land as an investment — a sensible thing to
do — not to use it now if they don't need to, but
to think in terms of enjoying its increase in value
over time. We even identified that as the key to the
problem of poverty. But — good heavens, what can
we do about that? Isn't that just how the economy
works? Isn't the private ownership of land a basic part
of a modern economy? How can we do without such an
important institution?
Or in other words — won't the poor always be
with us?
Not necessarily. It has been plain, since very
earliest days of civil society, that the private
ownership of land leads to exploitation and great
extremes of wealth and poverty. And, since the time of
the Book of Leviticus, we have had a pretty good idea
of what to do about it. In that book were recorded the
words "The land shall not be sold for ever, for the
land is Mine, for ye are strangers and sojourners with
me."
This ideal was codified into a remarkable three-stage
program for economic justice and social harmony: the
land laws of Leviticus. The stages were:
1. The Sabbath. Every seventh day
was the Lord's day; people were enjoined to keep it
holy and refrain from work. Now, we were told in
Sunday school that this was all about going to
church, but, as so often happens, our teachers missed
the deeper significance. Kids who try to get out of,
say, taking out the garbage on the Sabbath realized
that the prohibition was really against gainful work;
folks were still allowed to weed the garden and
stuff.
What the Sabbath did was to force people to focus on
things that had meaning beyond striving and striving
to get ahead. Indeed, if one did work on the Sabbath,
while one's neighbors did not, one could become
wealthier, at their expense — which was why the
Sabbath was a very big deal: one of the ten
commandments.
2. The Sabbatical. Every seventh
year, the fields were to lie fallow — thus
recognizing the right of the earth itself to be
protected against depletion and misuse. And, in the
sabbatical year, debts were to be forgiven. A debt
that could not be paid off after six years was well
on the way to becoming a usurious burden, a
guaranteed flow from the labors of one into the
coffers of another. The canceling of debts in the
seventh year was designed to ensure that nobody got
too far ahead, or too far behind.
3. The Jubilee. Even seven times
seven years (actually, every 50th year), each family
could return to its original allotment, or heritage,
of land — even if it had been sold in the
meantime. Under biblical law, then, land could not be
sold for ever — never for more than a single
generation.
Now it is interesting to note that the economic
vision presented in the bible is not a precursor of
communism. Two of the ten commandments explicitly
support the institution of private property, and the
prophets consistently railed against landlords and
rulers who robbed the people of the fruits of their
labor. The laws of Leviticus, which Jesus said he "came
not to destroy but to fulfill," envisioned a community
in which everyone was secure in his own home and
property, "beneath his vine and fig tree".
(Incidentally, the quote on the American Liberty
Bell, from Leviticus, chapter 25, was a direct
reference to these principles : "Proclaim liberty
throughout the land and to all the people thereof." It
was a reference to the Jubilee, and the freedom it
provided was from debt and servitude.)
The division is clear: there is to be a sacred right
of private property in the things that are made by
people. But people were not to own the things that were
made by God. The 7th commandment sums up both
principles in 4 words: Thou shalt not
steal.
Modern society has looked away from these
principles, calling them quaint, naive, inapplicable to
the complexities of our time — yet, modern
society finds itself mired in chronic economic and
social problems for which it can find no solutions
— and which threaten to pull down all the
advances of civilization into a dark age —
occasioned by some combination of war, financial
implosion or ecological collapse.
If there is any way out of this dark future, it can
only come by way of solving the problem of land and
justice.
Fortunately, there exists a plan for that.
This plan takes the shape of a "fiscal reform",
because it applies a definition of the relationship
between the individual and the society that is
consistent with both economic efficiency and moral law.
It calls for us to respect the right of labor to create
and to save wealth, and we acknowledge that the value
of land is created not by its “owners”, but
by the entire community.
Therefore, we will abolish all taxes on income,
products and sales — and collect the full rental
value of land and other natural resources for public
revenue. ... read the whole
speech
A University of Alabama School of Law Professor has
asked God's forgiveness for the years she lived in the
sin of ignorance about tax injustice. Susan Pace
Hamill, a tax expert, business consultant, and
dedicated United Methodist church goer, thought there
was a misprint when she first read that personal
incomes as low as $4,600 for a family of four were
being taxed by the state, while timber owners holding
71% of the land of Alabama were paying less than $1 per
acre in property taxes. Two hours later she found out
there had been no mistake and that Alabama has the most
regressive tax code in the country. Her righteous rage
spawned a tax crusade that has reverberated onto the
national scene. ...
While resoundingly condemning the current system (she
uses words like "horrific" and "monstrous injustice")
Hamill clearly articulates a tax reform approach which
shifts taxes off of low wage earners and onto large
land owners. Through a combination of her own
reasoning, caring heart, and inherent sense of justice
and a thorough investigation of Judeo-Christian ethics,
Hamill arrived at a tax policy approach which bears
remarkable similarities to the economic justice
crusades of 19th century reformer, Henry George.
Her appeal is to the 93 percent of Alabama residents
who call themselves Christians. Hamill challenges them
to put their faith into practice. Her message fell on
many already listening ears. The state's two largest
denominations, United Methodists and Southern Baptists,
had passed resolutions favoring tax reform in 2000. In
2001 the state's Episcopalians, Presbyterians and
Catholics approved similar calls. The Public Affairs
Research Council of Alabama and the Business Council of
Alabama had long clamored for tax change. In fact, tax
reform is now supported by most of the state's
religious organizations, according to Charles Durham,
pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in
Tuscaloosa.
What makes Hamill's work so compelling is her deep
grasp of the Alabama tax code combined with her
thorough documentation of the scriptural bases for
economic justice. She quotes chapters and verses which
proclaim that the poor should not be oppressed and that
society should create conditions for their advance.
Among her favorites are Jesus' words in Matthew 25:45:
"Whatever you did not do for one of the least of these,
you did not do for me." Luke 16:19-31 is a parable of a
rich man sent to hell because of his indifference to
the disadvantaged and in Jeremiah 22:15-16, "He
defended the cause of the poor and needy, and so all
went well."
While Hamill suspected she would be opposed by special
interest groups like the Alabama Farmers Federation
which represents big timber and agribusiness interests,
she was not prepared for the attacks and underhanded
tactics of the Alabama Christian Coalition under the
leadership of President John Giles. While Giles agrees
that tax relief to the less fortunate "is a noble
thing" he says the care of the poor is the duty of
private charity not of government and staunchly opposes
tax increases. He tried to damage the Hamill campaign
by smearing her personal integrity, pointing to her
signing of a pro-choice petition as evidence that she
therefore could not be a moral authority on tax reform.
Opposing forces also called her a "Yankee carpetbagger"
detailing her work history at two New York law firms.
They said (wrongly so) that her tax proposals would
bring huge property increases on the average home and
business.
Bob Blalock, editorial page editor for The Birmingham
News, says that the "real question about legitimacy
should be aimed at the Christian Coalition. For whom
does it speak when it attacks Hamill? Christians, many
of whom would benefit from a fairer tax system, even
one that raised more money? Or powerful
special-interest groups (timber? agribusiness?) that
want to protect their obscene tax breaks?" Blalock says
there is no way to know because the law does not
require the Christian Coalition to disclose what
individuals or groups fund it. "When an organization
places itself in the center of the debate over tax
reform, citizens deserve to know who's funding its
point of view." (3/14/03)
Hamill's conservative theology school responded to the
attacks by firmly backing her stance. Faculty at Beeson
Divinity School of Samford University in Birmingham
passed a unanimous resolution endorsing her efforts.
"We think what she has proposed is worthy support from
the Christian community and we think it is in keeping
with the evangelical community," said the school's
dean, Timothy George (Anniston Star, 3/11/03).
Frank Thielman, Presbyterian Professor of Divinity at
Beeson had this to say about their resolution:
"Personally, I hope it does encourage dramatic tax
reform that helps to relieve the burden of the poor.
The reason I'm hopeful is because of my commitment as a
Christian and my Christian vision. That is a vision
that the poor should be dealt with equitably and fairly
and that is a very biblical vision. It's because of my
Christian commitment and the Bible and the word of God
that I hope tax reform efforts succeed." (Anniston
Star, 3/11/03) ...
read the whole article
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