Horrid Socialism
I
constantly hear folks talking about how horrible socialism is. In the
USA, we have fashioned a definition of socialism that has little to
do with socialism and much to do with the vague ideological enemy of
the cold war era red scare.
First
of all, socialism is an economic system, not a political one. It is
on the continuum with capitalism. Communism lies on a different axis
with democracy, theocracy, autocracy, and such. While capitalism
elevates capital as the most important element in an economic system,
socialism elevates the public welfare as the most important and
valued element. This is often looked at as labor versus capital, but
my understanding is that it is more than labor. It is the social
sphere that includes labor as well as those who are unable to provide
labor in the economic system.
As
to theology, doctrine, and Biblical witness, however, we find those
attitudes cast against the nebulous enemies of the nation from our
Red Scare days greatly impacting our attitudes on economics, as well
as ignoring the Biblical witness in regard to our responsibilities
toward others.
“Love
your neighbor as yourself” is a concept tied much more closely to
socialism than capitalism. It requires that we regard the welfare of
all participants in our economic system as having equal worth.
Instead of granting special dispensation and value to those who hold
wealth or political power, we are required to treat one another as
equals. Interestingly, it was one of the ideals celebrated in the
Declaration of Independence, though it never made it into law, nor
was it allowed to impact the economic system established in the
colonies that were to become the United States of America.
The
“Year of Jubilee” was a concept determined to be foundational to
the establishment of Israel in the land of Yahweh. The land was to be
equally divided among the families of the tribes according to their
population. Every fifty years, the land was to be redistributed
according to the new population realities of the nation. In these
subsequent redistributions of land, the children of immigrants were
to be included as recipients of their respective slices of land, the
basis for wealth production in an agricultural and pastoral economy.
There is no evidence that Israel every lived up to the demands of the
Year of Jubilee, but this was the standard established for the
economic life of the community. All were to have the same access to
wealth production, and this was to be reinforced every fifty years to
avoid generational wealth and generational poverty.
Israel’s
sin in requesting a king had as much to do with refusing Yahweh’s
classless society as anything. They were supposed to assume
responsibility for their neighbor’s needs in such a manner that
when enemies arose, they would march to the defense of their
neighbors. No one was deemed too important or too unimportant. Rather
than lean upon a professional military structure, they were to live
as a society that cared for each other. This society was also not
supposed to develop a hierarchy of people who were deemed more
important than others. They were to be essentially classless. Their
desire for a king was a desire for a class structure which would not
only allow some to rise to the top, but also push others to the
bottom. The Mosaic laws ran contrary to such a concept, making sure
that all were cared for in such a way that poverty was not supposed
to exist.
If
I am to love my neighbor as Deuteronomy tells us and Jesus repeats as
the second greatest of all God’s commandments, I must be as
interested in my neighbor’s access to things like healthcare,
housing, security, income producing opportunities, and wealth
accumulation as my own. That means there must be a limit to the
exercise of my desire to increase my personal wealth as others around
me are unable to do the same. If I am to love my neighbor, I can
become and remain wealthy, but I cannot do so while hindering others
in doing the same, nor in overlooking the needs of others in meeting
their own needs. My access to healthcare must not interfere with
their access. My income opportunities must not trample theirs. My
strategies for wealth production must not run roughshod over the
lives of others.
Ezekiel
tells us that Sodom’s sin had nothing to do with homosexuality.
Indeed, rape is not sexuality, but the wielding of power and force
against another. For Ezekiel, the issue in Sodom was how they treated
foreigners, strangers, and the otherwise outsiders or marginalized.
It was the sin of the Haves looking down on the Have-Nots and abusing
them. In too many instances, this is precisely how capitalism works.
It can do better. It can be restrained, but this is precisely the way
it operates naturally. It seeks people with needs to exploit for
profit. This was the sin of Sodom.
Isaiah,
Micah, and the other main prophets establish economic oppression as
the basic rationale for God’s judgment upon Israel, Judah, and the
surrounding nations. Repeatedly, we hear of how they abused widows,
orphans, or foreigners. Repeatedly, we hear that their sins of
idolatry revolve around this penchant for the oppression of others.
Micah specifically decries the form of Temple worship that ignore the
needs of the society in which it lived. The nation went through the
motions of worshiping Yahweh, all the while ignoring those in its
society who were denied justice and the means to care for their
economic needs.
This
Yahwist faith was tied much more closely to the ideals of classic
socialism than with any known version of capitalism. It placed
people, all people, as the focal point for engaging in economic
activity. Fields were to be left open to be gleaned by those who had
lost access to their own land. Tithes and offerings were to be made
available for those who had fallen into poverty due to widowhood or
disability. Widows were to be cared for by the family of their
deceased husband. There were all sorts of laws established to ensure
the welfare of immigrants, widows, orphans, poor, outsiders, and all
the other forgotten members of society. Each segment was to find
provision in the land of Yahweh, which would flow with milk and honey
to meet the needs of all.
Remember
that parable Jesus offered about the rich man and Lazarus? It
presents us with the caricature of how the wealthy despise and
overlook the needs of the poor and desperate. It falls in line with
Jesus’ words about how the wealthy should invite the poor and
haggard to their feasts, letting the wealthy care for themselves. It
was not the wealthy and powerful who finds himself carried into the
bosom of Abraham, but the poor man, Lazarus, lying sick and dying of
hunger at the rich man’s gate.
In
Acts 4, we find the disciples selling lands and houses to care for
the needs of their newly established gospel community. It is a
picture of what Israel with its laws of Jubilee was supposed to have
looked like. It is a portrait of what “Love your neighbor as
yourself” looks like in practical reality. There were people in the
community with needs, so the community cared for them at personal
expense. That is the gospel. That is what economic activity in accord
with Jesus and even Mosaic law looks like.
It
looks little like capitalism. It looks a lot more like the ideals of
economic socialist policies and structures. Such is the gospel.
Taking care of the people around me is much more important than
giving the greatest value to wealth and wealth production. After all,
Jesus also tells us repeatedly that we are to be laying up treasures
in heaven, not on earth.
—©Copyright 2018, Christopher B. Harbin
My latest books can be found here on Amazon
Ronald Doub
ReplyDeleteRonald Doub
You and 11 others created the most engaging posts in United Methodist Clergy in the past month.
"So if you want to use socialist in a technical sense you would do well to rely on the definition that is provided in a dictionary. If you want to apply this label to an individual as a general pejorative meaning ‘someone who is to the left of me polit…See More
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blog.oxforddictionaries.com
The changing meaning of ‘socialist’ | OxfordWords blog
Oxford Dictionary: A political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
1.1 Policy or practice based on the political and economic theory of socialism.
1.2 (in Marxist theory) a transitional social state between the overthrow of capitalism and the realization of Communism.
I find Miriam Webster's definition a little broader. Marx's take on socialism is not the last word. Publix functions pretty much in accord with the principles of a Hebrew understanding that the land (as the means of wealth production) does not belong to individuals, but to Yahweh (designed for the benefit of all). Where the workers own the company, I find that much more consistent with the Hebrew economic perspective as well as socialism as an economic theory.
ReplyDeleteOxford's definition appears to overly confuse the economic and political.
MW:
1 : any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods
2a : a system of society or group living in which there is no private property
b : a system or condition of society in which the means of production are owned and controlled by the state
3 : a stage of society in Marxist theory transitional between capitalism and communism and distinguished by unequal distribution of goods and pay according to work done