Look upstream! See who is throwing all these people into
the current!
10. The Promised Land and
the Kingdom of God
The Promised Land, like Eden, is
a place of unhindered scope in which to glorify God and manifest
his will. But it is not the Kingdom of God. It represents liberation
from external bondage — from oppression and restricted access
to material opportunity. It is the temporal matrix within
which the Kingdom may find full expression. But it is not itself
the Kingdom. Although it is a heresy that locates this Kingdom exclusively
in the afterlife or an ethereal paradise, Jesus declared it to be "not
of this world" (John 18:36) but "within" (Luke 17:21). It is no reproach
to Henry George that he lost sight of this distinction between the
Promised Land and the Kingdom of God, enraptured by his vision of
a just society:
With want
destroyed; with greed changed to noble passions; with the fraternity that
is born of equality taking the place of jealousy and fear that now array
men against each other; with mental power loosed by conditions that give
to the humblest comfort and leisure; and who shall measure the heights
to which our civilization may soar? Words fail the thought! It is the Golden
Age.... It is the culmination of Christianity — the City of God on
earth, with walls of jasper and gates of pearl! It is the reign of the
Prince of Peace!
By equalizing opportunity, political and economic
liberation tend to draw both poor and rich into the middle class. As an expression
of social justice, this constitutes a genuine advance, ethical as well as material.
But it is no easy guarantee of spiritual gain. Middle-class traits include
virtues such as industry, thrift, restraint, commercial and professional rectitude,
but, on the other hand, low prudentialism, self-satisfaction, and an inclination
to regard material well-being as a sign of righteousness. Hence, even in the
Promised Land, what Paulo Freire calls "conscientization" (roughly,
consciousness-raising through social commitment), emphasized and refined by
liberation theology, must continue although in a different vein. The
Kingdom of God will flourish only when outward liberation gives rise to inward
liberation, a victory over the limitations of the bourgeois ethos.
"The Earth Is the Lord's" (Psalm 24:1).
This statement tells us something about God. He is attached to the
land and loves it. He is not a spiritual abstraction oblivious to the Wasteland
in which we live. God is the maker of the world of eating and sleeping, working
and begetting. It also tells us something of our place in this world. With God as the true
owner of the earth, every person has a right to the produce which equitable
usufruct yields to his or her efforts.
To recognize
that "the earth is the Lord's" is to see that the same God who established
communities has also in his providence ordained for them, through the land
itself, a just source of revenue. Yet, in the Wasteland in which we live,
this revenue goes mainly into the pockets of monopolists, while communities
meet their needs by extorting individuals the fruits of their honest toil. If ever there were any doubt that structural sin
exists, our present system of taxation is the proof. Everywhere we see governments
penalizing individuals for their industry and creativity, while the socially
produced value of land is reaped by speculators in exact proportion to the
land which they withhold. The greater the Wasteland, the greater the reward.
Does this comport with any divine plan, or notion of justice and human rights?
Or does it not, rather, perpetuate the Wasteland and prevent the realization
of the Promised Land?
This not meant to suggest that land monopolists and speculators have a corner
on acquisitiveness or the "profit motive," which is a well-nigh universal fact
of human nature. As a group, they are no more sinful than are people at large,
except to the degree that they knowingly obstruct reforms aimed at removing
the basis of exploitation. Many abide by the dictum: "If one has to live under
a corrupt system, it is better to be a beneficiary than a victim of it."
But they do not have to live under a corrupt system; no one does. The profit
motive can be channeled in ways that are socially desirable as well as in ways
that are socially destructive. Let us give testimony to our faith that the earth
is the Lord's by building a social order in which there are no victims. ... Read
the whole synopsis
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