The Least of These
If government's purpose is to protect us from others
who would trample our rights, shouldn't it be protecting
our right to equal opportunity? Shouldn't it be
protecting our right to what we create? Shouldn't it be
focused on protecting those at the bottom of our spectrum
— not by giving them charity, but by protecting
their genuine rights?
Henry George: Thou Shalt
Not Steal (1887 speech)
"Thou shalt not steal." That means, of course,
that we ourselves must not steal. But does it not also
mean that we must not suffer anybody else to steal if we
can help it?
"Thou shalt not steal." Does it not also mean:
"Thou shalt not suffer thyself or anybody else to be
stolen from?" If it does, then we, all of us, rich and
poor alike, are responsible for this social crime that
produces poverty. Not merely the people who monopolize
the land — they are not to blame above anyone else,
but we who permit them to monopolize land are also
parties to the theft.
The Christianity that ignores this social
responsibility has really forgotten the teachings of
Christ. Where He in the Gospels speaks
of the judgment, the question which is put to the people
is never, "Did you praise me?" "Did you pray to me?" "Did
you believe this or did you believe that?" It is only
this: "What did you do to relieve distress; to abolish
poverty?" To those who are condemned, the Judge is
represented as saying: "I was ahungered and ye gave me no
meat, I was athirst and ye gave me no drink, I was sick
and in prison and ye visited me not." Then they say,
"Lord, Lord, when did we fail to do these things to
thee?" The answer is: "Inasmuch as ye failed to do it to
the least of these, so also did ye fail to do it unto me;
depart into the place prepared for the devil and his
angels."
On the other hand, what is said to the blessed is:
"I was ahungered and ye gave me meat, I was thirsty and
ye gave me drink, I was naked and ye clothed me, I was
sick and in prison and ye visited me." And when they say:
"Lord, Lord, when did we do these things to thee?"
The answer is: "Inasmuch as ye have done
it unto the least of these my brethren, ye have done it
unto me."
Here is the essential spirit of
Christianity. The essence of its teaching is not "Provide
for your own body and save your own soul!" but "Do what
you can to make this world a better world for
all!" It was a protest against the doctrine of
"each for himself and the devil takes the hindermost!" It
was the proclamation of a common fatherhood of God and a
common brotherhood and sisterhood of men and women. This
was why the rich and powerful, the high priests and the
rulers persecuted Christianity with fire and sword.
It was not religion (what in so many of
our churches today is called religion) that pagan Rome
sought to tear out — it was the doctrine of the
equality of human rights!
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?"
"Thou shalt not steal!" It is theft, it is robbery
that is producing poverty and disease and vice and crime
among us. It is by virtue of laws that we uphold; and
those who do not raise their voices against that crime,
they are accessories. The standard has now been raised,
the cross of the new crusade at last is lifted. Some of
us, aye, many of us, have sworn in our hearts that we
will never rest as long as we have life and strength
until we expose and abolish that wrong. We have declared
war upon it. Those who are not with us, let us count them
against us. For us there will be no faltering, no
compromise, no turning back until the end. ...
read
the whole article
Alanna Hartzok: Who Would Jesus Tax?
The Saga of Susan Pace Hamill's Alabama Tax
Crusade
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."
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related
themes:
created
equal,
theft,
thou shalt
not steal,
God's eldest
sons,
justice,
landless,
equity for
the landless,
poverty,
poverty's
causes,
quaint
agrarian idea?,
equal
opportunity,
natural
opportunity,
young
people,
barriers to
entry,
entrepreneurs
, fruits,
wages,
land common
property
land
includes,
air-land-water,
privilege,
a society with
no victims,
land
as God's provisioning for all,
rent
as God's provisioning for all
about Henry
George
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