Just when you thought the Presbyterian Church USA (PCUSA) couldn't get any weirder…

15,217 Views | 247 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by Aggrad08
Fins Up!
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[url] https://www.presbyterianmission.org/story/new-way-podcast-covers-meditation-cannabis-and-breaking-capitalisms-clutch-on-christianity/[/url]

So glad we left that cesspool. No doubt they are worshiping satan at this point.
CrackerJackAg
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Capitalism and Christianity are incompatible. This is true. Although I'm fairly certain it's not for Christian reasons that they want communism.

The rest of it just from the title sounds insane.
Howdy Dammit
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CrackerJackAg said:

Capitalism and Christianity are incompatible. This is true. Although I'm fairly certain it's not for Christian reasons that they want communism.

The rest of it just from the title sounds insane.

Capitalism has lifted more people out of poverty than any other form of economics. Not sure I follow how this isn't compatible with Christianity?
Fins Up!
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Beat me to it.
CrackerJackAg
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Wordly wealth and prosperity have nothing to do with Christianity. That's an American Protestant cultural crossover.

Christ told his disciples to put away their nets (financial livelihood) and follow him.

Early Christianity was full of examples (Augustine, Anthony, Ambrose etc..) of people giving up their wealth to the poor and giving their life to Christ.

He didn't say, invest your money wisely into corporations, and get a return it, and share some of that with the poor or work real hard and spend as little time with your family as possible to make money and lift as many people out of poverty on earth as possible.

Not a popular American sermon on Sunday.

Howdy Dammit
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Capitalism as an economic system and personal finance choice are two different things.
CrackerJackAg
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Howdy Dammit said:

Capitalism as an economic system and personal finance choice are two different things.


And neither have anything to do with Christianity.
Howdy Dammit
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CrackerJackAg said:

Howdy Dammit said:

Capitalism as an economic system and personal finance choice are two different things.


And neither have anything to do with Christianity.

Maybe. But it's pretty dang hard to cloth the naked and feed the hungry when you're naked and starving.
BlackGoldAg2011
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Howdy Dammit said:

CrackerJackAg said:

Capitalism and Christianity are incompatible. This is true. Although I'm fairly certain it's not for Christian reasons that they want communism.

The rest of it just from the title sounds insane.

Capitalism has lifted more people out of poverty than any other form of economics. Not sure I follow how this isn't compatible with Christianity?

My 2 cents is that capitalism has been the most effective economic system on a large scale because all the other systems rely on a benevolent ruler to properly manage labor and wealth for the good of all. Might work on a small scale and short time but will always breakdown eventually due to the brokenness of people. Capitalism however works because it counts on the greed of man driving ever increasing innovation and production and driving costs down through that greed in competition. This isn't a knock against capitalism, I think it is the best system precisely because it doesn't just accept the depravity of man, it counts on it, and this side of Christ returning I can't imagine a more effective system.
However, I also see the argument in it being "counter" to Christian values in that very greed that drives it is counter to Christian values. In my view, if all were walking fully and perfectly with the Lord, we wouldn't need an efficient economic system because no one among us would have need. You could basically have the idealized version of socialism with no controlling government. But I also recognize that for all pre-revelation time periods this will be nothing more than a fantasy and capitalism will remain the most effective system to have in place. But that could still leave room for the goal of making sure the church isn't unduly influenced by that system.
Frok
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Quote:

He didn't say, invest your money wisely into corporations, and get a return it


The parable about the servants who invest the money rather than bury it in the ground is kind of saying that. I know the meaning is more about spiritual investment but concept is the same.
Fins Up!
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No thoughts on the non-binary gender, canibas meditation or transexual/gender utopia that Christ allegedly preached about?

While I know there will not be money in Heaven, and all our needs provided for directly by God, He also gives us gifts and abilities on earth to navigate our society and to help the poor by lifting them up, feeding them and showing them how to thrive. The parable about giving a man a fish, vs teaching him how to fish comes to mind.

The PCUSA is using CrackerJack's point to shill for totalitarian Marxism.m

Capitalism has enabled the spread of the Good News, as people funded Paul's early ministry with money they had earned. Capitalism built churches, cathedrals, hospitals, schools, and directly funds our modern churches.
craigernaught
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I don't think that terms like capitalism and Marxism are very useful terms to apply to the historical Jesus or the early church. I think they describe issues and circumstances in a modern economy that aren't applicable to the late second temple period. When we do so we end up stretching the meaning of the language and cherry picking which parts of their political and economic beliefs to promote.

The Romans were certainly intent on the owner of property being able to use and abuse property however they so chose, but that included people and slaves and it only applies to a certain class of owners. The Greek Platonic ideal was wildly authoritarian and collectivist but it never actually worked. And the biblical vision is simultaneously anti-empire yet shares common property and obligations at a local level mixed in with a good amount of royal monarchy just to make it confusing.

I don't think these fit very well in a modern economy or political context.
CrackerJackAg
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craigernaught said:

I don't think that terms like capitalism and Marxism are very useful terms to apply to the historical Jesus or the early church. I think they describe issues and circumstances in a modern economy that aren't applicable to the late second temple period. When we do so we end up stretching the meaning of the language and cherry picking which parts of their political and economic beliefs to promote.

The Romans were certainly intent on the owner of property being able to use and abuse property however they so chose, but that included people and slaves and it only applies to a certain class of owners. The Greek Platonic ideal was wildly authoritarian and collectivist but it never actually worked. And the biblical vision is simultaneously anti-empire yet shares common property and obligations at a local level mixed in with a good amount of royal monarchy just to make it confusing.

I don't think these fit very well in a modern economy or political context.


I agree with the statement 100%. It's a little bit of a paradox of terminologies I was having with myself about my own comments.

The Romans and the ancient world at the time believe there was a finite amount of money. Which means that if you took money from the poor, then that was just money gone, and the accumulation of riches by one man was immoral when others were starving.

I think there's a good argument that capitalism is an obvious tool given to us by the intellect God bestowed upon us that can be used well, or can be used for evil.

It still has nothing to do with Christianity itself.

one MEEN Ag
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CrackerJackAg said:

craigernaught said:

I don't think that terms like capitalism and Marxism are very useful terms to apply to the historical Jesus or the early church. I think they describe issues and circumstances in a modern economy that aren't applicable to the late second temple period. When we do so we end up stretching the meaning of the language and cherry picking which parts of their political and economic beliefs to promote.

The Romans were certainly intent on the owner of property being able to use and abuse property however they so chose, but that included people and slaves and it only applies to a certain class of owners. The Greek Platonic ideal was wildly authoritarian and collectivist but it never actually worked. And the biblical vision is simultaneously anti-empire yet shares common property and obligations at a local level mixed in with a good amount of royal monarchy just to make it confusing.

I don't think these fit very well in a modern economy or political context.


I agree with the statement 100%. It's a little bit of a paradox of terminologies I was having with myself about my own comments.

The Romans and the ancient world at the time believe there was a finite amount of money. Which means that if you took money from the poor, then that was just money gone, and the accumulation of riches by one man was immoral when others were starving.

I think there's a good argument that capitalism is an obvious tool given to us by the intellect God bestowed upon us that can be used well, or can be used for evil.

It still has nothing to do with Christianity itself.


Then you've created your own inconsistency here. If Christianity has nothing to do with capitalism, then leave capitalism alone and there is no moral argument that you can make for or against an economic system formed from the top down in the name in Christianity.

But here's the thing. There absolutely is Christian grounds for having a capitalistic structure and Christian grounds for rejecting marxism.

God absolutely wanted the following things ordered that sound a lot like 'in defense of capitalism'
-Property rights specifically dealing with land and possessions.
-Contractual agreements, specifically ones not enforced by violence and created by willing parties
-Man to work for his pay, and to be paid for his work
-You reap what you sow and own your production, even if others worked under you for days wages instead of getting a percentage cut of the profits (like an owner would)
-plan for the future, invest your funds, store up appropriately to offset bad times.
-You have economic free will. While there are social ties that bind, the state is not to decide your occupation for its own sake. Thats a form of slavery, which you should not take slaves. But a man can sell himself into indentured servitude.

Against marxism or any government run collectivist society has the following harms that God does not call for:
-A lie that all are equal when there is clearly still a ruling/enforcement class
-A lie that all can be equal in authority, when Christ clearly states that there is to be authority structures that all authority is extensions of his authority
-violent action against those who refuse to submit to the collectivist agreements of communism

What God does want is giving hearts, not governmental taking at the end of a weapon. You're to leave the edges of your field for the homeless. You're to deal justly and fairly in contracts. You're to settle disputes quickly and with forgiveness before going to a magistrate. Christ calling us to give up our possessions and follow Him is personal devotion to God, not an economic theory. Be poor because of your giving, not because there is nothing to go around. The jews were to have Sabbath Years every 7 years and the Year of Jubilee every 50 where economic ownership between Jewish tribes reset. That was radical, but even then, people still owned property, not the state.

Christians are to be charitable to the point of poverty, but that is against a backdrop of an economic system that allows prosperity anyway. We have a dual command to both not concern ourselves with economic systems out of our control, but also we have distributed authority through democracy to see that governance is good.

Its not so simple. Its more than just a hot take to say 'Christ wasn't a capitalist neener neener neener.' The only people cheering that on are those who quietly want to enslave you one day and force you shut up about Christ.
ramblin_ag02
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Quote:

Capitalism has enabled the spread of the Good News, as people funded Paul's early ministry with money they had earned. Capitalism built churches, cathedrals, hospitals, schools, and directly funds our modern churches.
Imperialism also did all of these things better than capitalism. From Imperial Rome to Imperial Russia to Imperial Britain, nearly all the fantastic cathedrals were built by empires. That doesn't make empires better for Christianity than other systems. In parts of the world the church is greatly supported by organized crime. That doesn't make organized crime some amazing boon to Christianity. The current Russian state has financially and politically supported Christianity more than pretty much every other nation combined since 2000, but it's also a very corrupt nation that is seen to have corrupted the Russian Orthodox Church. Let's not confuse worldly goals and achievements with heavenly goals and achievements.
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Zobel
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I reject the idea that capitalism runs on greed. Self interest and greed are not the same thing.
one MEEN Ag
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Zobel said:

I reject the idea that capitalism runs on greed. Self interest and greed are not the same thing.
Capitalism runs on self-actualization. You have the freedom to pursue as little or as much wealth as you want, in whatever occupation you want, and however close to illegal/immoral means you want. Against other parties who have been given the same freedoms, but choose their path differently.

Capitalism reveals greed because other economic systems are just too inefficient/bad to allow the average joe blow the reveal just how contrite their heart is. Only the wealthy in ancient times had the ability to blow gobs of money on selfish desires.

This is also why Christ points out the widow giving her last two cents (or mites). While poverty might mask how others can perceive your greed or almsgiving, it does not keep your heart from being known by Christ.
Fins Up!
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You have a good point.
The Banned
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CrackerJackAg said:

Wordly wealth and prosperity have nothing to do with Christianity. That's an American Protestant cultural crossover.

Christ told his disciples to put away their nets (financial livelihood) and follow him.

Early Christianity was full of examples (Augustine, Anthony, Ambrose etc..) of people giving up their wealth to the poor and giving their life to Christ.

He didn't say, invest your money wisely into corporations, and get a return it, and share some of that with the poor or work real hard and spend as little time with your family as possible to make money and lift as many people out of poverty on earth as possible.

Not a popular American sermon on Sunday.




Augustine's parents were very well off and Monica still became a saint. There were other "rich" saints and they used those funds to help the church grow. It's not about what you have but how you use it.

Everyone is tossing the term capitalism around. Capitalism does have some bad actors, but supply and demand exist. Capitalism is the best form of acknowledging the truth of this, whereas communism ignores this reality. The only way we should leave capitalism behind is if someone else can use the principles of the free market and make it more moral.

The Bible does say the first shall be last and the last shall be first. I have no doubts that people who struggle through this life in poverty will be rewarded more than those who had it very easy. People taking a vow of poverty when they had the means to be wealthy is an incredible gift. For those that can't/don't do that, hopefully they are be as generous as they can be and don't lose themselves in their wealth, including be willing to have more children, since they can comfortably afford it, and avoiding having "the best of everything" instead choosing to settle for "comfortable" and giving the rest to those in need.
Wakesurfer817
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CrackerJackAg said:

Howdy Dammit said:

Capitalism as an economic system and personal finance choice are two different things.


And neither have anything to do with Christianity.
Stewardship has nothing to do with Christianity?
ramblin_ag02
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Quote:

Everyone is tossing the term capitalism around. Capitalism does have some bad actors, but supply and demand exist. Capitalism is the best form of acknowledging the truth of this, whereas communism ignores this reality. The only way we should leave capitalism behind is if someone else can use the principles of the free market and make it more moral.
You make a good point about defining capitalism. Most people think capitalism=trade, but trade exists in every system. IMHO, the keystone of capitalism is the ability of any individual to own an unlimited amount of weath without interference. Under feudalism or communism, the state owns everything and the individual is only allowed to keep what is permitted. That wealth could be land, factories, weapons, or even other people. It only matters that it can be owned by any individual or collection of individuals, not just the state or the aristocracy. It's certainly open to abuse, but it seems more fair to me than only some small group of people being allowed to own anything. As far as how Christian it is, I think it depends on how Christian in the people involved are. Just like anything else
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Howdy Dammit
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The Banned said:

CrackerJackAg said:

Wordly wealth and prosperity have nothing to do with Christianity. That's an American Protestant cultural crossover.

Christ told his disciples to put away their nets (financial livelihood) and follow him.

Early Christianity was full of examples (Augustine, Anthony, Ambrose etc..) of people giving up their wealth to the poor and giving their life to Christ.

He didn't say, invest your money wisely into corporations, and get a return it, and share some of that with the poor or work real hard and spend as little time with your family as possible to make money and lift as many people out of poverty on earth as possible.

Not a popular American sermon on Sunday.



The Bible does say the first shall be last and the last shall be first. I have no doubts that people who struggle through this life in poverty will be rewarded more than those who had it very easy. People taking a vow of poverty when they had the means to be wealthy is an incredible gift. For those that can't/don't do that, hopefully they are be as generous as they can be and don't lose themselves in their wealth, including be willing to have more children, since they can comfortably afford it, and avoiding having "the best of everything" instead choosing to settle for "comfortable" and giving the rest to those in need.

Curious as to others thoughts on this in relation to saving for retirement. Is it wrong to amass a retirement account with several million dollars to enable yourself to hang it up at 55 and ensure your wife family can have the means to age with dignity? I don't view that as selfish, but it does require hoarding money.
UTExan
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This is exactly why seminarians should be required to take Economics and Business Administration.
“If you’re going to have crime it should at least be organized crime”
-Havelock Vetinari
one MEEN Ag
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Howdy Dammit said:

The Banned said:

CrackerJackAg said:

Wordly wealth and prosperity have nothing to do with Christianity. That's an American Protestant cultural crossover.

Christ told his disciples to put away their nets (financial livelihood) and follow him.

Early Christianity was full of examples (Augustine, Anthony, Ambrose etc..) of people giving up their wealth to the poor and giving their life to Christ.

He didn't say, invest your money wisely into corporations, and get a return it, and share some of that with the poor or work real hard and spend as little time with your family as possible to make money and lift as many people out of poverty on earth as possible.

Not a popular American sermon on Sunday.



The Bible does say the first shall be last and the last shall be first. I have no doubts that people who struggle through this life in poverty will be rewarded more than those who had it very easy. People taking a vow of poverty when they had the means to be wealthy is an incredible gift. For those that can't/don't do that, hopefully they are be as generous as they can be and don't lose themselves in their wealth, including be willing to have more children, since they can comfortably afford it, and avoiding having "the best of everything" instead choosing to settle for "comfortable" and giving the rest to those in need.

Curious as to others thoughts on this in relation to saving for retirement. Is it wrong to amass a retirement account with several million dollars to enable yourself to hang it up at 55 and ensure your wife family can have the means to age with dignity? I don't view that as selfish, but it does require hoarding money.
There's a perfect Bibleproject podcast about it, and it jumps between biblical parables and an interview of an Aggie as well! So now you're compelled to listen to it.

https://bibleproject.com/podcast/story-god-money/

But the short answer that type of retirement can be morally wrong, but its again, about your heart not your money. But money is a great indicator of your heart, and God knows that.

Before the industrial revolution, a happy 'retirement' was having kids and seeing them take over what you've started. Your wife and you could be supported by the sum efforts of all the offspring you produced. If you had no kids, you were in serious and immediate trouble when you could no longer work. You also lived communally, so your extended family was right there. And everyone was going through various stages of this problem with varying levels of success. Maybe your widowed aunt needed some help, and you gave it. You are your brothers keeper living in a tribe that was established way before you.

The industrial revolution and birth control have changed so much about that dynamic. The tribal family tree has been completely taken away and replaced with ferocious independence. Kids are choices, not natural outcomes of marriages. Every man is an island first, not a part of a community. And modern retirement reflects that dollars first approach. And your dollar now has to do everything, because you don't live in a community that is actively helping one another.

So back to your question. Is your sole pursuit of hoarding wealth so you can sit on your laurels at 35? No kids specifically because it would hurt you economically? Fewer kids as well? Are you denying your family its rightful time and focus to attain the next level of wealth? Do you tithe? When you're approaching income levels that are far far far beyond what you need to live where is that money going? Is it continuing to build your kingdom up or is now more of your money helping others?

God wants you to give to those in need, but also wants to see that your planning for your future. Grow, create, and invest. I think there is an intentional balance and, personally, a struggle. I've got mouths to feed and wants. But I also believe Jesus when he talks about wealth, camels, and needles.
one MEEN Ag
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As a follow up, if we're looking at building a Dave Ramsey like list of 'wealth de-creation' for Christianity, I would assume it would look something like this:

-Accept that you will have a lower standard of living than those who are secularly pursuing wealth.
-Kids are a blessing, don't look at them as costs. Don't make birth control decisions solely off of finances.
-Give your ten percent freely. Its supposed to hurt, but your heart softens when you see the fruits of it. And its a reminder that your job in this world isn't to maximize your own kingdom.
-Reject as much of the modern man-on-an-island worldview as you can. Live as communally as possible within your church and your family tree.
-Your first job is to raise your kids up in the Lord.
-The first thing God gave Adam was a name, the second thing was a job. See to it that you have a job and a responsibilities.
-You can still be wise in your investments. Invest what you can, when you can.
craigernaught
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UTExan said:

This is exactly why seminarians should be required to take Economics and Business Administration.

As a seminary grad with a business degree, I can assure you that such a course would be an absolute nightmare. Trying to explain very basic, uncontroversial concepts to classmates during the 2008 financial crisis was a massive struggle.
BluHorseShu
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The Chicken Ranch said:

No thoughts on the non-binary gender, canibas meditation or transexual/gender utopia that Christ allegedly preached about?

While I know there will not be money in Heaven, and all our needs provided for directly by God, He also gives us gifts and abilities on earth to navigate our society and to help the poor by lifting them up, feeding them and showing them how to thrive. The parable about giving a man a fish, vs teaching him how to fish comes to mind.

The PCUSA is using CrackerJack's point to shill for totalitarian Marxism.m

Capitalism has enabled the spread of the Good News, as people funded Paul's early ministry with money they had earned. Capitalism built churches, cathedrals, hospitals, schools, and directly funds our modern churches.
Its a slippery slope to grant Capitalism with the spread of Christianity. The spread may have been a side effect, but it absolutely wasn't/isn't the goal. The goal of capitalism is to allow everyone to compete and the best succeed, often regardless of how they use their 'gifts'. Capitalism is an effective economy for a free society. But trying to fit it into the 'Christian' box is a bit much.
Martin Q. Blank
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Quote:

So glad we left that cesspool. No doubt they are worshiping satan at this point.
No doubt. Where did you land?
Fins Up!
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Martin Q. Blank said:


Quote:

So glad we left that cesspool. No doubt they are worshiping satan at this point.
No doubt. Where did you land?


ECO Presbyterian. We love it!
Logos Stick
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Howdy Dammit said:

CrackerJackAg said:

Howdy Dammit said:

Capitalism as an economic system and personal finance choice are two different things.


And neither have anything to do with Christianity.

Maybe. But it's pretty dang hard to cloth the naked and feed the hungry when you're naked and starving.


Bingo!
Dies Irae
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As a business owner I am so thankful that the Church has such a wealth of teaching on the rights and obligations that extend both ways between capital and labor. Rerum Novarum and Centesimus Annus are chock full of nuggets and I heartily recommend them but I find them easily summarized by Bishop Ven Fulton Sheen below
Zobel
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nobody has a right to a just wage.
Dies Irae
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Zobel said:

nobody has a right to a just wage.


The catechism would disagree with you.
Quote:


"A just wage is the legitimate fruit of work. To refuse or withhold it can be a grave injustice. In determining fair pay both the needs and the contributions of each person must be taken into account. Remuneration for work should guarantee man the opportunity to provide a dignified livelihood for himself and his family on the material, social, cultural and spiritual level, taking into account the role and the productivity of each, the state of the business, and the common good. Agreement between the parties is not sufficient to justify morally the amount to be received in wages."


Valuing an employee as just the sum of his productivity without regard to his personal or familial needs is unjust. It reduces a person to a number. No law of economics can justify the way in which Ebeneezer Scrooge treats Bob Cratchit.

This is part of the dual responsibility that exists between labor and capital. Labor needs to work hard and diligently for capital, and capital needs to ensure that his needs are met.

I have a responsibility to my employees that transcends good business practices. I have warehouse workers who have worked for me for years and are in their early 60's who don't do as much worse as a 25 year old but make 2x as much due to yearly raises stacked on top of each other. Should I fire them,

God forbid I have to fire an employee who has a family, so I consider their family when I factor the severance pay?
ramblin_ag02
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This reminds me of something ironic. In the northern US industrialization pushed out slavery, because it made slavery too expensive. Prior to the industrial revolution, slaves worked from dawn till dusk 6 days per week. They didn't have to be paid, but they had to be fed and housed. They also needed whatever medical care was available in order to be able to continue working. They needed clothes and basic implements of life. Due to mass immigration and industrialization it was cheaper to hire immigrants, pay them next to nothing, and let them figure out all the rest. If it didn't work out there was always some other poor sucker that needed a job.

To bring it back to the "living wage", it's a bit ridiculous that someone can work a full time job in the modern day and not make enough money to afford room and board, medical care, and the essentials of life. These are things that even slaves took for granted. I'm by no means trying to make slavery seem any less awful. Freedom is priceless. But I think we should reexamine our opinions when we feel justified paying someone to have a lower standard of living than a slave. Every working person should be getting enough to have somewhere to live, enough to eat, life's essentials, and medical care.
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File5
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Positive rights are something I struggle with consistently having grown up an American. Much more used to rights free FROM things rather than rights TO things. I have not heard that Fulton Sheen quote but I disagree with it and the Catechism as well.

IMO Capitalism has been so successful with Christianity because it allows us to express our Christian charity of our own free will as opposed to it being forced, as other posters have said.

Just spitballing but in this case I would be more in line with the Catechism if it said what you're doing yourself: that you should provide those in your employ with just wages, which is fundamentally different than them having a right to them. The genesis for a just wage is you acting as a just Christian employer, not them for working. It's the same issue I have with the right to healthcare. How can you have a right to other people's care and goods? Instead, others should freely give to those who need. Which comes back to the beauty of capitalism and why it works so well with Christianity. Implementing laws to force these "rights" is at odds with giving of our free will.
 
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