Property, Responsibility, and Taxes. Acts
We can only be guaranteed an
equal opportunity of freedom before the law; that is all a government can
guarantee. And when a government starts to manipulate the circumstances to try to
give everybody the same equal circumstances then it is destructive to families
and to cultures because no one else—no government, no committee—has the right
to come in and say: “I really think you ought to do it this way. This is what I
find works for me and you have to do it this way.” That is a loss of freedom.
And we see this happen again and again and again, no matter how much we might
think some action or activity or way of eating—diet, health practice or
injurious health practice—is good or negative. What gives any of us the right
to say someone else needs to do that and has to do it the way we think it ought
to be done? Yet we have a culture today that is loaded with self-righteous
people both on the Left and on the Right who try to dictate so that everybody
does it their way.
Individual responsibility is
one of three key elements that have to be a part of any economic system, an
emphasis on the responsibility of the individual. One other thing we need to
note when we talk about personal responsibility is that if you are responsible
for your success, to take whatever it is that God has given you and make a
success of it, in order to be truly free in utilizing those assets and be free
to succeed you have to be equally free to fail. We learn more from failure than
we do from success, and yet part of utopian socialism comes in and we want to
protect people from the consequences of their bad decisions. And yet throughout
Scripture there is an emphasis on the fact that we learn from our bad
decisions. Most of us learn more from our bad decisions an falling on our face,
learning that we can’t do it our way, we can only do it God’s way; and when we
come in and try to protect the circumstances so that we can’t fail then we are
also limiting our opportunities to succeed. To the degree that we are able to
fail to that same degree we are able to succeed. They only way we could level
the playing field would be to take away from those who are successful so that
we can limit the negatives of the people who fail.
So to have true
responsibility and true freedom we have to be able to freely succeed or freely
fail. Freedom always involves responsibility. In fact, it is more important to
talk about responsibility than it is to talk about rights. Scripture doesn’t
emphasize our rights, it emphasizes our responsibility and that if we have
freedom we have responsibilities, and we are responsible to some one, we are
accountable to God.
At the beginning we saw that
God established responsibility for man. He was to work but it wasn’t toilsome,
it wasn’t burdensome, it didn’t give him despair; it was joy because this was
serving God. He had responsibility over all of the
planet. Who owns the planet? God does. The foundational principle in a biblical
view of economics is that God owns the resources. This has great implications
if we wanted to divert to thinking about the environment.
Leviticus 25:23 is
specifically talking about the land that God gave the Israelites but the
principle there was just a derivative of the overall principle, which is the
land. The planet is owned by God. This is the foundation for all of the
parables that Jesus talks about in the New Testament when He says, “There was a
landowner.” That’s God. And He sends His son, a steward or representative. It
always has to do with the landowner, and that represents God. NASB “The land, moreover, shall not be sold
permanently, for the land is Mine; for you are {but}
aliens and sojourners with Me.” God ultimately owns the resources; Man, the
human race, is like a tenant farmer. We can buy and sell but if we think we are
the ultimate owner of all of our resources that is when we get in trouble. When
we look at passages dealing with giving, it is always looking at man as a
responsible steward or administrator of land, property, financial resources
that all comes from God. This is what truly separates a biblical view of
economics from any of the secular systems that are out there. No matter how
accurate they may be in places there are elements within a biblical worldview
that make it very different, and this is one of them: the land, the property,
the business, the financial resources, whatever it is we own, it is simply on
loan from God. God is the ultimate owner of all the resources and He tells us
how they are to be used and how we are to think about the things that we own.
The reason
the Bible has intrinsic value is because it is the Word of God. God has
intrinsic value, Jesus Christ has intrinsic value; there is not imputed value
to either the Scripture or to Jesus Christ. Everything within creation has an
imputed value but that which is related to God has unchangeable, eternal
intrinsic value.
Genesis 3:17 NASB “Then to Adam He said,
“Because you have listened to the voice of your wife, and have eaten from the
tree about which I commanded you, saying, ‘You shall not eat from it’; Cursed
is the ground because of you; In toil you will eat of it All the days of your
life.” The ground is judged. Before, the ground was not judged; the ground was
unhindered and ready to produce bountifully, and we can’t even imagine what
that must have been like. But now the ground is going to fight the farmer. That
is why work, serving God, becomes laborious, dreary, toilsome, negative,
because now there is resistance from creation because it is under a curse. The
word translated “toil” is that verse is a word that brings in the physical
difficulty as well as the emotional difficulty of work. It was not that way
before the fall. [18] “Both thorns and thistles it shall grow for you…” So now
the soil is not only cursed but it is going to produce things that also make it
more difficult to be involved in positive production and utilizing the
resources that God has given us. [19] “By the sweat of your face You will eat bread, Till you return to the ground, Because
from it you were taken; For you are dust, And to dust you shall return.” So we
get a new concept of labor. Labor is no longer the unhindered, work, service to
God that brings us pure joy in serving Him in utilizing and developing
creation, it now becomes burdensome.
To understand the Mosaic Law we have to get into its
structure. There are basically three components to the Mosaic Law, the first is the Ten Commandments which are a summary
of the primary principles that underlie everything else that is in the Law. The
approach to law that we find in the Mosaic Law is called case law where God
doesn’t say everything there is to say about every kind of situation, but He
gives parameters, the principle, and then He will go into specifics—e.g. “Thou shalt not steal”—on what happens when there is theft and
what the principles are and the different types of theft. He doesn’t cover
everything but He gives enough specifics there to where something that comes up
that doesn’t fit that scenario can be thought through by man.
When we look at the Ten Commandments, three of them
have to do specifically with property. The fourth commandment, Exodus 20:8-11 NASB
“Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.” That word
“holy” means to keep it set apart, it is distinct, there is something unique
about that day; keep it separate from what you do on the other six days. “Six
days you shall labor and do all your work…” “Labor” is the same word that is
used in Genesis
The next verse that talks about property is Exodus
20:15 NASB “You shall not steal.” This is a short command, but
stealing means that there is some property that we do not have a right to,
someone else owns it. So what this command recognizes is personal, private
ownership of property, and that it is wrong for one person to take that
property that another person owns for themselves or give it to someone else. There
is a principle there that private property must be respected.
Passages we are going through in the New Testament are
not being looked at in terms of their overt lessons—this one in Luke 12, yes,
more than others. Various parables that we will look at we are looking at the
fact that for the parable to work it has to assume the legitimacy of certain business
practices. If those aren’t legitimate then the parable wouldn’t work and Jesus
would be using something illegitimate to try to teach truth, which is
irrational. In Luke 12 Jesus has a large multitude of people who gather together
to hear Him teach and they are about to trample one another, so they are an
unruly crowd. It doesn’t means they can’t be believers, even Christians can
become unruly.
Luke 12:1 NASB “Under these circumstances,
after so many thousands of people had gathered together that they were stepping
on one another, He began saying to His disciples first {of all,} ‘Beware of the
leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.’” He is addressing His disciples
first.
Luke
Then Jesus spoke a parable. Luke
God says don’t put your hope in the things that you
have, that is not what gives you meaning in life because that is temporary. Never
once in this entire parable is there ay indication that it is wrong to have
wealth. It is wrong to have wealth and use it wrongly; it is wrong to have
wealth and use it as if it is the means of life and to hold it. Because God
gives it to us as a test to see how we are going to utilize that for others.
But it is an individual decision; it is not a decision that anyone else, even a
government, has the right to make for someone. Nowhere in Scripture, even in
the Mosaic Law when it talks about tithing and taking care of the poor, is it
done through a government mechanism. It is an individual responsibility.
Whatever we have in this life is simply to be a means,
something that God gives us to enhance our spiritual life and/or the spiritual
life of others—missionaries, orphanages, hospitals, whatever it may be, in
order to enhance life and ministry.
Jesus goes on in the next verses on how we are to
think about the details of life. Luke
It is not something negative about having treasure or
wealth, it is having it and using it wrongly that is the problem. It is not money
that is the root of all evil; it is the love of money, covetousness,
that is the root of all evil.
So what we see here is that in the foundation of the
Ten Commandments we have a recognition of property
rights to the degree that we should not even want what somebody else has, in
the sense that taking what they have away from them so that it becomes “ours.” Scripture
is based on the principles of individual volition, value that is imputed by
man, and property rights.