Progressive Revival

Christian-omics?

Tuesday September 16, 2008

The turmoil on Wall Street is continuing, and even though it is closer to me than even Russia is to Alaska, I understand less than little about economics. And yet the human toll of the crashes and crises is poignantly clear, and is spreading. 

Can the religious community have a voice in fixing this? Or is it just a matter of offering spiritual succor to the victims, from Wall Street to Main Street? Over the years I have written pieces on what the variety of religious traditions say about a rightly-ordered economy, but for every assertion of a principle there is an equal and opposite reaction, or, as is often the case, especially among some Christian communities, the view that economics is not the proper forum for Christian preaching (beyond vague appeals to the Golden Rule). The economy becomes a person, in a sense, afflicted by original sin that will inevitably bring the cycle of prosperity down again, with the only hope of salvation a true and full liberty to make proper choices. (That'd be unfettered capitalism).

That's actually understandable in the Christian context especially, as Christianity seemed initially like an enterprise built for the short term. Only by the end of the first century did we start selling long-term bonds. But Adam Smith was no mean theologian, and the Catholic bishops wrote what a truly powerful pastoral letter on the economy in 1986, called "Economic Justice for All." Unfortunately it is hard to find (good luck searching the bishops' web site; the link here is to the Minneapolis-Saint Paul social justice office) and amid the debates over who is a good enough Catholic to receive communion, it doesn't look as though the pastoral letter will get much of a hearing. It should. As Dickens might have said, the present crisis is so much like the past that they are almost indistingushable. And as the bishops say up top:

"Our faith calls us to measure this economy, not by what it produces but also by how it touches human life and whether it protects or undermines the dignity of the human person. Economic decisions have human consequences and moral content; they help or hurt people, strengthen or weaken family life, advance or diminish the quality of justice in our land."

Yes, I think there is a "Christian-omics," so to speak, and one that is applicable to today's crisis and future policies. But it takes into account the common good as much as individual freedom, and that does not play well among even those Americans such a vision would help, and especially in an election year in which shared sacrifice for shared benefit is not a crowd-pleasing line.  

BTW, the differing approaches may be summed up by the McCain and Obama responses, as summed up in a Times article today: McCain pointed to greed on Wall Street, Obama to lax regulation in Washington.

 

UPDATE: Click, don't walk, to check out Mark Sargent's review of the new Charles R. Morris book, "The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash," reviewed here in the latest Commonweal magazine. (Morris is brilliant, and wrote the indispensible, "American Catholics.") The full article is subscribers-only, but it costs a pittance, and you'll save lots more in the long run. Here's a taste:

A lawyer and former banker, as well as a distinguished writer on business and finance (and Commonweal contributor), Morris cuts through the bafflements of modern finance to explain why the credit markets crashed in October 2007. In the process, he demystifies financial terms and jargon, linking them in an overarching narrative that extends from the Nixon administration to today and offering a brilliant analysis of how the ideological paradigm of free markets and deregulation contained the seeds of its own destruction.  

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Comments
Winston
September 16, 2008 2:54 PM

Michael Novak is a good Catholic theologian when it comes to economics. On the Prot side, Craig Gay has written some good material on the sociological side of economics. Personally, I think creating hundreds of jobs in the community and providing affordable housing has been a pretty good form of Christian-omics.

Although the Bible is silent on the matter I think that Jesus made a profit when he was a carpenter. I am also sure that his services were top notch, not simply because of his deity, but because of his commitment to morality by not stealing from his customers in giving them poor quality work.

David Gibson
September 16, 2008 10:27 PM

Winston: Thanks for the leads, and the comments.

And Jestrfyl, this will go on my bulletin board:
"The three scariest things for Christians are sex, death, and money..."

twist
September 16, 2008 10:43 PM

Paul: while i agree that the church has fallen in a lot of what it should be doing. There are still many of us who are tithing and serving the communities to which God has called us.

Secondly, the government is not really interested in doing what is right before God. The government is profit oriented. It is about the bottom line. I grew up in a country with socialized health care which is great if you have a critical situation, but heaven help you if you have a chronic condition because the money isn't there to care for its people. It is one of the highest taxed nations in the world and there still is not enough money to do everything. I for one, would rather put my money directly into the hands of charities, humaniarian organizations and Churches, because there is NO way that the government knows what to do with it.

jestrfyl
September 16, 2008 11:38 PM

Mr Gibson,
Glad to help where I can. BOO!

Charles Cosimano
September 24, 2008 3:36 PM

It would seem that Jesus would have been the last person I would have hired to do work for me because with all the time he spent off preaching, getting drunk at weddings and other such behavior he would not have time get the projects done. (To say nothing of his apparent psychotic break in the Temple when he attacked a group of honest businessmen with a home made flogger.)

And of course the history of economics shows that people prospered best when they prayed the least.

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Diana Butler Bass and Paul Raushenbush both stand firmly within the Mainline Protestant tradition and, along with guest bloggers of all religious backgrounds are dedicated to the revival of religious progressivism and its influence in American politics.

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Diana Butler Bass
Diana Butler Bass is a commentator and scholar in American religion. She is the author of seven books including A People's History of Christianity: The Other Side of the Story (HarperOne, 2009).
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Moderator of the Progressive Revival blog and the Associate Dean of Religious Life at Princeton University.
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