Don't
look to evangelical theologians for help. Decades ago the scholar
Mark Noll chastised the “scandal” of the evangelical mind. He
meant that evangelicals refused to engage the scholarly world. That
has changed for a few scientific fields, but most theologians work
hard to remain ignorant of economics and economic history, the most
important fields of the social sciences. As a result, they remain
fooled by liberal, unbelieving theologians who embraced socialism
over a century ago and promoted Marx’s dishonest depiction of
capitalism.
To
see where evangelical preachers and theologians have gone wrong, read
these posts: Tim
Keller Is Wrong: Helping The Poor Is Voluntary Compassion, Not
Legally Required Justice and What
Christian Leaders Usually Fail To Understand About Economics.
To
understand real capitalism, as encompassed in the principles of
ancient Israel and the principles of the theologians of Salamanca,
see these posts: What
is free market capitalism, Free
market capitalism requires respect for commerce, Free
markets celebrate individualism.
You
can find the true, Christian history of capitalism in my book, God
is a Capitalist: Markets from Moses to Marx, available at
Amazon. Other posts below contest popular socialism and its erroneous
views of capitalism as well as analyze contemporary events and
politics in light of Biblical capitalist principles.
Theologians
often teach that capitalism and socialism are man made systems
invented during the Enlightenment. It’s true that people invented
socialism, which goes back at least to Plato's Republic. Like modern
socialists, Plato was obsessed with achieving equality of wealth,
falsely believing that it would dowse the fires of envy and restore
people to an original state of innocence.
Western
Europe rediscovered Plato's socialism in the Renaissance of Greek and
Roman culture, which inspired the founder of modern socialism, Henri
de Saint-Simon, in the early 19th century.
Saint-Simon resuscitated the principles of Plato's
Republic, pretending he had used science to discovered
them. He and his followers created modern socialism decades before
Marx, who contributed very little to the ideology.
Humans
didn’t invent capitalism. God created the first quasi-capitalist
nation in Israel. Before the leadership rebelled against God and
demanded a king, the constitution of Israel provided for no human
executive or legislature. There were no taxes, police force or
standing army. The only institutions of government were the courts
and 613 God-given laws. Most of the laws applied to tabernacle
ceremonies and other religious laws. Others referred to morality,
such as the poor and Sabbath laws. The courts responded only to the
civil laws, such as “Thou shalt not steal” and “Thou shalt not
commit murder.”
The
government of Israel as designed by God was very similar to that of
modern libertarianism. But with the demand for a king, the freedom
and prosperity enjoyed under the government of the judges
disappeared. For more on the capitalism of Israel see these posts
below: Is God a libertarian: How the Bible established a country
without an executive branch and Is God a libertarian? Ancient Israel
was a nation without a congress.
For
more about God's constitution for Israel, see these posts: Is
God a Libertarian? I and Is
God a Libertarian? II.
Theologians
associated with the University of Salamanca, Spain, in the
16th century distilled the principles of what would
become known as capitalism from the Bible and natural law. Those
Godly theologians were the first to summarize the human rights to
life, liberty and property. Recognizing that the commandment
forbidding theft demonstrated that God had sanctified private
property, they reasoned that property requires the owner have control
of it and control requires free markets. Private property also
requires limited government and taxation sufficient only for the
state to perform its God-given role of punishing evil doers.
The
Dutch Republic first implemented the economic principles of the
Salamancan theologians and became the first modern capitalist nation,
as Adam Smith recognized in his classic book, The Wealth of
Nations. The Dutch quickly became the wealthiest and most
powerful nation in Europe. Standards of living first began to rise in
the Dutch Republic and caused what economic historians call the
“hockey stick of per capita GDP.” They call it a hockey stick
because if someone graphed historical per capita GDP (the most
accurate measure of standards of living), the line from prehistory
until the Dutch would be flat, like the shaft of a hockey stick. But
at the advent of the Dutch Republic, the line bends sharply upwards
to form the blade.
The
Dutch spread the Salamancan principles to England, the US and
eventually most of Western Europe and standards of living in nations
that applied them exploded upward and continue to grow. The West is
now 30 times wealthier than it was before the Dutch Republic. The
rest of the world didn’t follow the Dutch and remained stuck in the
shaft portion of the graph for centuries. After WWII, first Japan
then Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, and Hong Kong freed their
markets and their standards of living rose rapidly. In the past
generation, China and India followed them and lifted over 500 million
people from starvation poverty.
No comments:
Post a Comment