Mainstream
Churches Fail to Condemn Greed
While
Inequality and Homelessness Mushroom
by
Rev. Paul J. Bern
Inexcusable!
Our nation is being savaged by economic hard times, but many pastors
are afraid to talk about its causes, lest they offend anyone and risk
losing members who pay their 'tithes'. In light of this I would like
to present some comments of my own, since I am not the least
bit shy about stirring up controversy. It has been my observation
that too many preachers and teachers of the Gospel stop short these
days when it comes to preaching about the evils of greed. Instead,
they encourage their congregations to get through their financial
woes by making larger financial contributions. “If you have a
need”, one famous TV preacher once said, “you must plant a seed”.
Unfortunately greed, like charity, begins at home. Apparently they
don’t want to alienate the most well-off members of their
congregations by talking about what’s really behind the nation’s
economic woes. I can sum it up in one sentence: “I've got mine and
I'm doing well, how about you?” An alternate sentence could read,
“I've already got mine, too bad for you!”
The
reality is that certain people may wind up creating
anti-economic-growth and anti-capitalism concepts in their minds.
Greed and our capitalist economic system fears anything that even
remotely resembles first century communism or socialism (see the
book of Acts chapter 2, verses 44-47; chapter 4 verses 32-36, and 2nd
Corinthians chapter 8, verses 13-15). The very idea of sharing
anything, or of equal economic distribution in any form, makes these
“Christians” furious! Never mind that caring and sharing are two
fundamental concepts of true Christianity: “So when you give to
the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in
the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by men. I tell you
the truth, they have received their reward in full. But when you give
to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is
doing, so that your giving may be in secret. Then your Father, who
sees what is done in secret, will reward you.” (Matthew
chapter 6, verses 2-4, NIV). The continuing aftermath of the
Great Recession is far more than just an economic crisis. It has
become a spiritual dilemma for some of the nation’s pastors and
their parishioners. Nearly eight years after an implosion of the US
financial system helped push the country into its worst economic
nosedive since the Great Depression, many pastors are still trying to
figure out how to address people’s fears from the pulpit. But first
they have to deal with their own fears, and in some cases their own
greed.
Though
millions of Americans are justifiably angry over the new minimalist
economy (meaning, nobody can afford much of anything anymore), little
moral outrage seems to be coming from mainstream religious
denominations, and ditto for many unaffiliated nondenominational
churches. Too many pastors opt for offering platitudes from the
pulpit or from TV studios because they are afraid their 'partners'
will stop giving money if they hear teachings against greed. Money,
and the acquisition thereof, is one of the last taboos in church (not
counting preaching against the extreme immorality of waging warfare,
which ranks number one in my mind). The economic anxiety from the
pews has become so palpable for some pastors, though, that they now
feel like they have no other choice.
The
Rev. Andy Stanley, a prominent evangelical leader, said some in his
congregation cheered when he launched a preaching series called
“Recovery Road” to talk about politically touchy issues such as
personal greed, the unsustainable federal deficit, and the sins of
sub-prime home loans and predatory student loans. Rev. Stanley says
he took a risk preaching about greed to his suburban Atlanta
congregation, but it has paid off. The senior pastor has told his
church members they should look in the mirror before they start
blaming politicians for the nation’s economic woes. Any economic
recovery “begins with me, not they,” Stanley said. It continues
when pastors ask how such a wealthy country can stumble into such a
financial mess. “Any time the entire country is talking about
something, pastors should pause and talk about it,” Rev. Stanley
said. “We know what Republicans and Democrats think, but what does
the Bible and Jesus say?’’ Other ministers say an economic
recovery also must involve pointing fingers. They say Jesus calls his
followers to struggle against those people and policies that helped
lead to the Great Recession and overwhelming economic inequality.
It’s
good to pull a bunch of people out of the river when they’re
drowning, but it’s also smart to go upriver to see who’s been
throwing them in the water in the first place. Should pastors speak
truth to economic power? Absolutely – they'd be cowards not to!
There was a time when American pastors routinely took stands on the
big economic issues of the day. During the Gilded Age of the late
19th century, Walter Rauschenbusch, a Baptist minister, inspired
others to fight against the economic inequality of the time with the
“Social Gospel.” Social Gospel ministers helped inspire President
Theodore Roosevelt to break up business monopolies and abolish child
labor. I personally wear such a mantle upon my own shoulders, and I
wear it proudly.
The
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. spent the last three years of his life
focusing on poverty. When he was assassinated in 1968, he was on the
cusp of leading a nonviolent, interracial army of poor people into
the nation’s capital to demand a fairer distribution of wealth.
Rev. Dr. King and others like him took on the big economic issues of
the day, and they were inspired by the example of Jesus, who angered
the powerful by condemning the economic exploitation of the poor.
Jesus took sides – he said he “didn’t come to bring peace, but
a sword.” The hard truth is that pastors who are afraid of angering
congregants by talking about touchy economic issues like greed ignore
the Gospel. You can’t preach the Gospel without alienating people.
That’s part of the job. You’re not helping helpless people if
you’re not alienating the greedy. Economic hard times and its
accompanying low wage jobless recovery divides preachers as well as
politicians.
Preaching
what Jesus would say about the Great Recession is controversial by
nature. The Bible doesn’t record any instance where someone asked
Jesus about the morality of a sub-prime loan, or of waging
undeclared, unofficial wars overseas, or the best way to reduce the
federal deficit (all that has to be done is to nationalize the
Federal Reserve!). That leaves pastors with the challenge of
interpreting Jesus’ message for today’s economic woes and other
related problems. On that front, the pulpit is as divided as the
nation’s politics. Consider the cause of the 2008 economic
meltdown. Was it primarily the result of Wall Street greed? Greed was
a factor in the 2008 financial crisis, but not it’s primary cause.
There were other major factors, including the tendency of Americans
to live above their means and policies that encouraged banks to relax
mortgage lending standards. In addition, large financial institutions
were encouraged to engage in risky behavior because they knew the
federal government would bail them out. The causes of the 2008 crisis
was so complicated that some of the smartest people in the world
either failed to anticipate it, or they looked the other way so they
would not see.
Why
don't more Christians condemn the growing gap between rich and poor?
Denouncing a presumed (and enforced by the police) gap between rich
and poor is a moral imperative, not to mention prophetic wisdom, in
today's Church. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, income disparity
in the United States has increased 40% in the past 30 years. In 2010
the nation’s poverty rate rose to a 17-year high, with more than 46
million people – 15.1% of the population – living in poverty and
49.9 million living without health insurance (this was before
so-called 'Obamacare'). These grim statistics point to the hard truth
that people born in America today can no longer “succeed” like
their parents and grandparents did. Working hard and getting a good
education are no longer enough. Higher education is currently only
for the well-to-do and the creditworthy, and working hard, long hours
only guarantee jobs for as long as it takes any given employer to
find and hire someone else who is willing to work for $1.00 per hour
cheaper than those they replace. In short, the American Dream is dead
on arrival. It has devolved into a lie. The fact that millions of
people want jobs and can't find them is a sign of that capitalism is
dying of old age, and the profit motive is doomed to die with it
because there is way too much money in the hands of far too few
people while everyone else gets (literally) left out in the cold.
It’s
very clear to me that greed was a major factor in the 2008 economic
collapse, and that the widening gap between the have's and have-not's
is social and political dynamite. Quite frankly, economic inequality
is a recipe for revolution, and it is a revolution that is long
overdue. Henry Ford once said, “If the American people knew how
their banking system worked, there would be a revolution by tomorrow
morning”. This statement was uttered roughly 80 years prior to the
birth of social media! History shows that an increasing gap between
the rich and the poor is a prime indicator of imminent spiritual,
financial and cultural collapse. What is sorely needed today is a
movement among the nation’s churches to re-examine the country’s
economic values. Unfortunately, many of the nation’s pastors and TV
evangelists operate like politicians, afraid to alienate their
wealthy donors. Their sermons sound more like rehearsed sales pitches
than they do Spiritual messages. Shame on them all!
Where
have all the prophets gone? If pastors choose not to preach about the
causes of economic calamity, they can still talk about the issue
through the standpoint of personal behavior. Some church members have
been hit hard by bad economic times. But instead, they hear about the
cures and not the causes for the nation’s economic ills. It has
been my observation that too many pastors have reduced Jesus to a
financial adviser or life coach rather than the Son of God who was a
prophet and teacher, and who saved us all from death by the free gift
of eternal life for all those who truly believe, and who back up
their beliefs with charitable acts and much faith.
Pastors
should also call for equality and justice as a part of this message.
In point of fact, it’s a crime that no bankers or financial leaders
behind the 2008 collapse have gone to jail, and it is indicative of
culpability and complicity on the part of our nations “leaders”.
We’ll send an African-American teenager off to the slammer who robs
a 7-Eleven, and ditto for smoking an innocuous substance like
marijuana, but people won’t do one stinking thing to any banker who
helped cause the collapse of the entire banking system. There are
tens of thousands of once-robust working Americans who are now
homeless and living on the streets because of the gross
irresponsibility and criminal activity of Wall St. bankers. But most
preachers won’t dare say that, because much of the church is too
captive to greed to address the moral challenges of the nation’s
economic problems. In my opinion, this is due in no small part to the
“prosperity gospel” that is being “taught” in many churches
today. In other words, it's OK to be greedy, so long as one is doing
so for the sake of Christ. They are forgetting that Jesus said, “It
is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of the needle than for
a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven”, and again when He said,
“You cannot have both fresh and salt water flowing from the same
spring. You either love one master and detest the other, or you will
cling to the other and despise the former. You cannot worship both
God and money”.
We
can’t expect politicians, pastors, teachers, evangelists or other
business and political leaders to stand up to apostasy within the
Church because too many are beholden to the rich and powerful who
keep their houses of worship operating in the black! A prophet is
someone who is willing to tell us the unpleasant truth about
ourselves. That's what Jesus did, and that's why he was crucified by
the Roman Empire. If we can’t bring unpopular messages, who will do
so in our place? It's all up to us, and anyone who willingly does not
do so is ignoring at best, or willfully bastardizing at worst, the
true and timeless Gospel of Jesus Christ.
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