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- Jul 13, 2015
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Wow. Some of you here are getting very testy. Just a little defensive, eh?
Testy? You could always try answering the questions about where in the Bible it tells us to set up central social programs, or where it tells us we should force others to do the things Jesus told us to do.
I am not "begging" but I live in a very small, old, modest home and when I am done with possessions, I donate them to thrift. I pay my taxes - some of which goes to infrastructure (such as the bridge under which people die), some to social programs such as the healthcare program in which I work, income assistance, disability income, old age security, employment programs, corrections and reintegration programs, childcare programs, rental assistance programs, and more. I am very generous, even though until less than a year ago, I hardly had to quarters to rub together. Why? Because I know what it's like to be on the edge of homelessness. Maybe every capitalist and rich person here should go live for a year under the bridge without food or warmth.
All this is great. You get to live however you choose. We get to live however we choose. It's not difficult to understand.
Capitalism and greed too often rob people of compassion and generosity.
How exactly does capitalism rob people of compassion? In a free market you are free to be as compassionate as you choose. You are free to work for a non-profit, you are free to work as a volunteer, you are free to spend your life chasing whatever goals you choose. Just because some choose to chase ever-more financial wealth doesn't mean you have to. Isn't freedom wonderful? Maybe that's why God gave it to us.
You people here focus too much on the idea that giving should be voluntary. The problem is that most people don't teach generosity to their children, so no one is giving enough to save lives, to provide shelter and food and clean water. If it is not done voluntarily, then yes, it should be managed through some institution, agency or system. Canada is a "capitalist" and greedy country too, but I sure am proud of the social programs available here. Focus on the biblical principles. Generosity is a biblical value. Distributing wealth was a social program that worked, whether it is voluntary or not. People are not doing it voluntarily and people are dying so yeah... if you value life, you need to value ALL life - even the lives of those who are on the streets starving or freezing to death. But you don't. You value the life of the unborn child but find the life of a dying homeless man or woman meaningless. Shame on y'all.
Now you're just making silly assumptions. You're assuming that "generosity should be voluntary" implies "we are not generous". Remember that whole thing about when the rich young man walked away from Jesus, and Jesus ran after him and forced him to sell what he had? No? Maybe that's because Jesus never did that. He left the rich man to make his own decisions.
Making our own decisions whether to give....
Ananias and Sapphira getting to decide whether to give...
"Each should give as he purposes in his heart...."
Wow, it's almost as if the Bible says giving should be voluntary. What a radical concept.
I'm glad I don't play the lottery. I'd never want to win. I'd never want to be that rich. Money ruins people's hearts.
Honestly, at this point you're just sounding self-righteous. Nobody is forcing you to play the lottery. It's another one of those freedoms - you know, you can punt your dollar into the wind if you want and maybe it will disappear and maybe you'll become a multimillionaire overnight.
If you win the lottery, take a guess what happens next? You get to decide what to do with the money. So if you want a shiny new Lamborghini you get to go and buy one. If you want to buy an entire apartment block and house as many homeless people as you can fit in it at no cost to them you get to to that too. You even get to gripe about what you speculate someone else might have done with the money, even as you make whatever choices you see fit regarding what you're going to do with it.
Incidentally, money doesn't ruin peoples' hearts. Remember the people in Acts who had money and who shared it? If you're a nice person money makes you a nice rich person. If you're a jerk money makes you a rich jerk.