It is often said that Jesus had more to say about
money than any other subject. From his statements about wealth and possessions,
to his parables about agriculture and land, to his calling his followers to
invest in treasures in heaven, Jesus’ teachings are replete with the theme of wealth
and possessions. We might say that Jesus was, to some extent, an economist.
By saying that Jesus was an economist, I don’t mean
that Jesus was an economist in the sense that you and I think of an economist. Jesus
did not earn a degree in economics. He was not a major investor in the Roman
economy. And, he wrote no book on the issue of financial success. But, he had a
great deal to say about economics, and specifically how he envisioned God’s
economy.
But what do we mean by God’s economy? Our modern
word, “economy”, really has more to do with profits and losses and wages and
benefits. It is concerned with trade deficits and budget deficits. It is
focused on unemployment and welfare, and a host of other issues. All of these
are legitimate concerns in a modern day economy like our own, but this is not
exactly what is meant when talking about God’s economy.
Before we move to unpack what we might mean by God’s
economy, we need to dispel some fallacies that I think are ingrained our
cultural subconscious. First, while the idea is popular among religious
conservatives, Jesus was not a capitalist, and his teachings should not be
interpreted as being specifically supportive of capitalism.
It is hard to believe that Jesus even would have
been a capitalist since he sided with the poor over the rich, and he gave up
worldly possessions and called others to do the same. So, when some Christians
want to argue that the Bible and Jesus support capitalism as God’s ordained way
of doing economics, they are sadly mistaken.
Second, one can be a follower of Christ and be a capitalist
or a socialist. Following Jesus is not about one’s concept of the best form of
modern day economics, despite those same religious conservatives saying the
opposite in recent years. We should never equate any political or economic
ideology, such as capitalism or socialism, with being Christian or
non-Christian.
Again, this is not to say that Jesus was not
concerned with economics, for he clearly was. So, in considering what Jesus
said and did that defined God’s economy, perhaps the idea we should dispel the
most goes back to the word economy, and what exactly this word means.
The Greek word from which we get our English word
economy is oikonomia. The word means
house-law, or perhaps better, house rules or management. It would have been
used to talk about a family managing their household. But this would apply to
more than simply managing the finances of the home.
If we consider, then, that Jesus was concerned with the
economy, that is managing the household, we should ask exactly what this means.
We could take it as Jesus talking about individual households and families
taking care of their own business and managing their own affairs. But this
seems a bit limiting, particularly when Jesus does not appear to be concerned with
the financial success of individual families.
What if we consider Jesus to be talking about all of
creation as God’s household? This, at
least from my reading of scripture, seems to make sense, and I think the story
of creation from Genesis captures this idea wonderfully. We are told that the
representatives of humanity were to care for the garden in which God had placed
them. They were charged with caring for God’s household, and specifically with
caring for each other.
And
this, it appears, is how Jesus views God’s economy; an economy that is not so
much concerned with profits, but with the welfare of all.
Economic
systems that are focused on profits are inherently inconsistent in the effects
on the lives of people within a society, for they create the haves and the
have-nots. But God’s economy, as envisioned by Jesus, confronts the economies
of the world with their inherent inconsistencies toward humanity that caused
some to be rich and others to be poor, and judges them as unjust.
What
is needed to move our economics in line with God’s economy is more fairness and
equality.
When
Paul was writing to the Corinthians to ask them to share with those in
Jerusalem who were experiencing famine, he based that appeal on what Christ had
done for them by becoming poor so that they could become rich. Paul was, of
course, speaking of a spiritual richness.
But,
he also understood that the economy of God was about justice and fairness, and
in calling the Corinthians to give up some of their wealth for the benefit of
others, Paul said,
I do not mean that there should be relief for others and pressure on you, but it is a question of a fair balance between your present abundance and their need, so that their abundance may be for your need, in order that there may be a fair balance. As it is written, "The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little." (2 Cor. 8:13-15)
Both
Jesus and Paul understood that God was concerned with more than the spiritual
welfare of people, and Jesus’ message was certainly more about economics than
we often admit. But they also understood that God’s economy was about fairness
and justice, particularly towards the poor.
Christians can disagree as to how we create an
economy that is more just and fair, but we cannot deny that Jesus was very
clear about what constituted God’s vision of a just and fair economy. It was
not the greedy accumulation of wealth that left others poor and destitute. It was
the viewing of wealth and possessions as that which God graciously gives to
some so that they might share with others.
The test of faithfulness to Jesus is
always in how we treat the vulnerable of society. Christians
who seek to follow Jesus in authentic discipleship should strive for the
fulfillment of God’s economy in which the one who has much does not have too much, and the one who has
little does not have too little.
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