Saturday, April 6, 2013

What Would Jesus Tax?


Provocative title of an article by Bruce Chilton at HuffPo out this week that touches on the issue of government authority and faith.

We addressed this issue last week keying off of a nice post by Lord Keynes over at Social Democracy here and here.

Let's look at the points that Chilton here tries to make:
Money and justice do not mix. That was Jesus' perspective when he said "you cannot serve God and mammon" (Matthew 6:24). The Aramaic word he used for money basically means "bribe."
This is naive and shows a lack of knowledge of "modern" monetary systems. Modern monetary systems are nothing more than an accounting system we use to "keep score".

In fact, how can we know if we are operating our economy in a fashion that is just and righteous without a monetary system? How can we measure and calibrate our economy without a monetary system? How can we today, in a diverse and integrated economy, measure or facilitate the just distribution of the great real surplus that we are provided without a monetary system?

Indeed, how can we implement economic justice without "money" or properly a 'monetary system'?

We CAN'T.

Maybe this Professor, at Bard College of all places (!), is thinking of metals as "money" instead of our current arrangements of operating a non-convertible state currency, the same type of system that the Romans operated when the Lord was with us in blood and flesh, which He termed nomisma (and btw in Greek NOT Aramaic Mel Gibson).

This professor at Bard is stuck in 'gold standard thinking', as most today still are, even though we have not been under gold or silver for decades.

Here's a good one:
From a biblical point of view, it is in any case strange to think of government as admirable.
What is this guy talking about? Where in scripture does it say that civil government is NOT admirable. Lord Keynes addressed this nuanced issue pretty well I'd say here last week.
When Jesus said, "Caesar's repay to Caesar, and God's to God" (Mark 12:17), he certainly did not assume that Caesar was just.
How do you know Chilton?
Before his famous saying, Jesus demands, "Bring me a denarius so I can see," and then asks, "Whose is this image and inscription?" Opponents had asked him whether or not to pay tax to Caesar at all. They wanted to maneuver Jesus into a position of refusing to pay the tax, since he was known not to favor the Romans. 
Where is it written in scripture that He did not favor the Romans?
Such a position would amount to insurrection, and Rome executed anyone who promoted tax revolt. In one case of rebellion, just after the death of Herod the Great, the military commander ordered up to 2,000 crucifixions to display the imperial might.
I must have missed that part in the scriptures... sounds like somebody is watching gladiator movies.
Jesus counter-question about the image and inscription forced his opponents to acknowledge the coin as Caesar's property. It wasn't good, but it was Rome's.
Where does it say that the nomisma was "not good"?
Understanding that Caesar's power is limited to what Caesar can do -- mint coins in this case -- sets the boundary of political authority in comparison with humanity's fundamental connection to God.
Minting coins has NOTHING to do with authority.  Spending the coins in order to provide government provision for public purpose DOES though.  Caesar was set under tremendous authority in this regard.
As long as people can keep their inherent identity intact, Caesar can have what is owed him, and only that.
This is incomprehensible.
Jesus' position explains why, for him, the right question about taxing is not who should pay, but: What should be taxed? And the answer is: mammon. What comes from Caesar can go back to him, involving God and his people as little as possible.
More fantasy, Jesus asked them to exhibit to Him the poll tax nomisma and they exhibited to Him a denarius with Caesar's image on it and the Lord instructed Israel to simply pay the poll tax, what was the problem?.  "Mammon" NEVER enters into it because nomisma is NOT MAMMON; again more "gold standard thinking" from Chilton here.

Then here we go:
 These days, of course, the interest is in deficit reduction, and an estimated revenue increase $352 billion over 10 years would obviously help.
Oh yes obviously...
People do not need to pay for the money they use; money can now pay for itself.
???????
 Keeping mammon in its place sets limits on government, even as it keeps Caesar at arm's length by according him his due.
So here we go where this guy in summary conflates "mammon" with "money" via his 'gold standard thinking' and then, as our institution of civil government is set under the authority to operate our modern monetary system, we are treated to this Libertarian-style warning about "limits on government" and a projection of a gladiator-movie-style image of  a "bad Caesar" onto our modern institution of democratic representative government.

Chilton here misses the monetary economics and then can only miss the truth in the scriptures as well.

To understand the scriptures one needs to understand the difference between nomisma and mammon, just as one needs to understand the difference between a sheep and a goat, or wheat and darnel.

Perhaps he could go over to the Levy Institute at Bard and get up to speed on our modern monetary system or as the Lord termed it, our nomisma system that we have been operating now for decades and get himself straightened out on this.


9 comments:

Unknown said...

Don't the scriptures also say, "For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval"

Romans 3:13

Matt Franko said...

Ben,

Right, LK cited that scripture in his post last week related to his analysis of the apparent hypocrisy exhibited by Libertarians who also claim a Christian identity...

Chilton's main problem here imo is he doesn't understand "money" and this ignorance may be leading him towards an apparent distrust of our earthly institution of civil government... via his conflating "mammon" with "nomisma" as if it is "all the same thing"...

sheep? goats? what's the difference?

wheat? darnel? what's the difference?

nomisma? mammon? what's the difference?

Not a very deep understanding of the material...

rsp,

John Zelnicker said...

Matt -- Good essay. However, for those of us less schooled in the New Testament, please explain the difference between Mammon and nomisma. I understand nomisma as basically the fiat currency we are using now, but how is Mammon defined? I have always thought that it was just a general term for money.

Thanks very much. I always enjoy your posts because you bring a thoughtful perspective to the discussion unlike any others.

Matt Franko said...

John,

Here is Strongs on this word:

http://biblesuite.com/greek/3126.htm

In my view, better translated "riches" or "wealth"...

In my state of Maryland, last time I checked nutrition assistance or so-called "food stamps" was 138.50/mo.

So over 30 days, that is $4.61 per day, or over 3 meals, $1.53 per meal. And Ron Paul wanted to cut this by 60%.

So $4.61 per day is NOT "mammon" yet we provide this paltry amount of nomisma to some among us who have for whatever reason have found themselves cut off from their direct means of subsistence.

We make an economic adjustment for them via our nomisma system so they can be provisioned.

We know this is just, and we use "money" to do it...

I would ask Chilton here how else can we provide for provision for the weakest or non-privledged, non-subsidized among us?

Dont tell me this guy will say "charity".... give me a break....

Next he will claim that Lazarus was being treated justly by looking for scraps from the rich man's garbage with the dogs...

We provide all with balances of nomisma so they can be provisioned.

There can be no economic justice here in the west without nomisma in my view...

rsp,

Ignacio said...

Is Paul Ron a psycho? I mean, i'm pretty sure food stamps are a joke in the bulk of expenditure.

Even if you are out of paradigm cutting that won't do shit or fix anything. All these social darwinist make are sick.

John Zelnicker said...

Matt -- Thanks very much. Makes sense to me now. Mammon as the wealth one has accumulated with the implication of large amounts rather than just a bit. Also, the phrase 'wealth one trusts in' seems to imply enough wealth that regular income producing activity (employment) is not necessary.

Tom Hickey said...

The NT gloss about mammon has to be read in context. It is part of one of what scholars call the hard or difficult sayings, i.e., that part of Jesus' teaching that only the saints actually are able to follow. "Mammon" means the wealth one accumulates to give one some control over future happenings. "God" means divine providence.

Matthew 6 (NIV):

24 “No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.

25 “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? 26 Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they?27 Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life[e]?

28 “And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. 29 Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. 30 If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith?31 So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ 32 For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. 34 Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.


"Mammon" means the wealth one accumulates to give one control over future happenings. "God" means divine providence. The meaning in terms of perennial wisdom is that if you think you own anything, you cannot actually own everything. This is about internal renunciation, i.e., non-attachment to the material, which is required for gaining spiritual realization, i.e., "entering the kingdom." It is not giving up things but a natural outcome of attaining a more universal level of awareness. Then, one naturally "puts away the childish things," in the world of Paul in 1 Cor 13:11.


Bhagavad Gita ch. 2 (Swami Shivananda's translation):

Krishna: 45. The Vedas deal with the three attributes (of Nature); be thou above these three attributes, O Arjuna! Free yourself from the pairs of opposites and ever remain in the quality of Sattwam (goodness), freed from the thought of acquisition and preservation, and be established in the Self.

46. To the Brahmana who has known the Self, all the Vedas [scripture] are of as much use as is a reservoir of water in a place where there is a flood.

47. Thy right is to work [karma means action] only, but never with its fruits; let not the fruits of actions be thy motive, nor let thy attachment be to inaction.

48. Perform action, O Arjuna, being steadfast in Yoga [union], abandoning attachment and balanced in success and failure! Evenness of mind is called Yoga.

49. Far lower than the Yoga of wisdom is action, O Arjuna! Seek thou refuge in wisdom; wretched are they whose motive is the fruit.

50. Endowed with wisdom (evenness of mind), one casts off in this life both good and evil deeds; therefore, devote thyself to Yoga; Yoga is skill in action.

51. The wise, possessed of knowledge, having abandoned the fruits of their actions, and
being freed from the fetters of birth, go to the place which is beyond all evil.

52. When thy intellect crosses beyond the mire of delusion, then thou shalt attain to
indifference as to what has been heard and what has yet to be heard.

53. When thy intellect, perplexed by what thou hast heard, shall stand immovable and
steady in the Self, then thou shalt attain Self-realisation.

continued

Tom Hickey said...

continuation
Buddha, the four noble truths (Buddha's first discourse, Setting in Motion the Wheel of the Dharma (Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta) Wikipedia

1. "This is the noble truth of dukkha: birth is dukkha, aging is dukkha, illness is dukkha, death is dukkha; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are dukkha; union with what is displeasing is dukkha; separation from what is pleasing is dukkha; not to get what one wants is dukkha; in brief, the five aggregates subject to clinging are dukkha."

2. "This is the noble truth of the origin of dukkha: it is this craving which leads to renewed existence, accompanied by delight and lust, seeking delight here and there, that is, craving forsensual pleasures, craving for existence, craving for extermination."

3. "This is the noble truth of the cessation of dukkha: it is the remainderless fading away and cessation of that same craving, the giving up and relinquishing of it, freedom from it, nonreliance on it."

4. "This is the noble truth of the way leading to the cessation of dukkha: it is the Noble Eightfold Path; that is, right [samyak*] view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, rightmindfulness and right concentration."


*"Right" (samyak) is not the "right" of conformity to conventional morality but "skill in action" of the Gita.

Meher Baba: "Do your best, then don't worry, be happy. I will help you."

Tom Hickey said...

continued

Jewish tradition and Hasidism (from A Fire Burns In Breslov}:

Perhaps the most difficult middah to acquire is bitachon, real trust in Hashem [ lit. "the Name, i.e., God] that is expressed in action. The Mishnah Berurah writes that we recite the Torah portion detailing the arrival of the manna every day, “so that one should believe that all of his sustenance comes from Hashem’s providence. As the verse writes regarding the manna, ‘And the one who added did not gain, and the one who depleted did not lack.’” Yet the Zohar uses the manna as a paradigm of an even higher level of bitachon—the person who is so aware that everything he has is from Hashem that he doesn’t keep food in his possession from one day to the next. It is well known that the Baal Shem Tov [Master of the Good Name, i.e., Rebbe Yisroel ben Eliezer], zy”a, never kept any extra money in his possession overnight. He would give it all away to the poor on the day that it came to his hands, relying on Hashem that he would have enough for the next day. Although this is a very great level, the Meorah Shel Torah writes that there was a time when a similar level was demanded of one who brings a sacrifice. He wrote, “We may wonder why the breads of the korban todah may not be left over to be eaten the next day. One who brings a thanksgiving offering must be emotionally moved to closeness to Hashem since the todah is an admission of His amazing providence. One who truly appreciates that Hashem has made a miracle for him must redouble his bitachon. It is not appropriate to leave over from this sacrifice because this shows a lack of faith that Hashem will provide for him the next day. This is forbidden; holding over the todah breads is a demonstration of a lack of bitachon that contradicts the very meaning of the offering and blemishes it.”