In my previous post, I discussed that we as God's stewards, must develop
the world to enable man to glorify God. Our stewardship role defines the
true meaning of Christian economics, “oikonomia”. As stewards, we merely have
the temporary use of God’s property which we use to carry out His mandate. In
this current blog, we will take a brief look at some implications that appear
to follow from this understanding. These implications are directional in
nature; they point us to important biblical goals. How these goals are, in practice, to be achieved will provide scope
for much further discussion.
As we discuss these implications, the reader may well wonder to what
extent this mandate applies to us individually and to what degree the
government has a task as well. After all, this blog deals with political
economy. As a preview of future discussion, I reiterate my stance that
Christians should have a conditional preference for the free market. From that
it follows, that the government has a only a residual responsibility in the
cultural mandate; only to the extent that individuals and private groups in
society have not or are unable to adequately carry out the task, should
government be involved. In practice, that will normally mean that governments
will need only to create conditions that permit individuals and the market to
carry out this God-given mandate.
Employment: The cultural mandate (which has been called
"the first job description"[i]),
and the related stewardship principle, are basic to the Christian view of work
as a God-given task. Labour is, obviously, necessary to develop the world and
exercise stewardship. In fact, Chewning points to the cultural mandate as the
basis for his Foundation Principle 1: God created us to work and have dominion
over the created order.[ii]
Claar & Klay note, that “human beings are called to develop resources and
apply their talents” and refer to the shepherds commended in the Bible, to those
who worked in bronze & iron (Gen. 4:20-22), and to the wife, mother and business person described
in Prov. 31.[iii]
Certainly, the cultural mandate includes in it the requirement for people to
work. Unemployment, consequently, is a significant problem because, "The
unemployed are seriously restricted in their ability to devote their talents to
God's glory in the development of the earth.”[iv]
Consequently, a Christian approach to political economics should give high
priority to the goal of putting to work all those who are able[v].
The Environment: Proper application of the cultural mandate
will entail a strong concern for the environment–for God’s creation. Veling,
for example, has concluded that "A central component of the cultural
mandate is systematic resistance to pollution and exploitation of
creation."[vi] Griffiths,
noting the emphasis on "till it and keep it"--preserving and caring,
observes that "the creation mandate is no excuse for an ecological
crisis."[vii]
The Oxford Declaration notes that
The dominion
which God gave human beings over creation (Gen 1:30) does not give them license
to abuse creation. First, they are responsible to God, in whose image they were
made, not to ravish creation but to sustain it, as God sustains it in divine
providential care.[viii]
As God's stewards, we are not free to develop our possessions according
to our own selfish wants but must seek to serve Him with the possessions He has
entrusted to us. That is, of course, particularly relevant when considering our
treatment of the environment. Obedience to the cultural mandate as God's
steward implies that economic policies need to be sensitive to this
environmental degradation and seek instead to "maintain" and restore God's
creation.
To Meet Needs rather than
Wants: Being God's
stewards also means that we do not strive to attain the maximum satisfaction of
human material wants. Our goal cannot simply be to give people what they want.
Rather, our focus should be on "needs", that which is needed to allow
people to serve the Lord. That also, is a starting point, of course. Even
"needs" are not clearly defined and change over time. Nor, does it,
necessarily, follow that a government should prevent the production of goods
and services which are directed at excessive wants.
Those are issues to be further discussed in particular contexts.
Efficiency: Good stewardship also means that we need to
use our God-given resources as effectively and efficiently as possible. That
does not mean efficiency in a pure "economic" sense--using the
minimum input for maximum output. Efficiency in a Christian sense will
recognize also the externalities or unquantifiable impacts: on the poor, the
environment, etc. Nevertheless, it seems inconceivable that God would condone
that His stewards waste His possessions.
Jesus in Mt 25, for example, condemns the lazy servant who merely
buried his talent in the ground. Deut. 21:20 condemns the
"profligate" to death. Prov 23:20-21 and 28:7 castigate gluttons.
Condemnation of wastefulness is evident also in the parable of the prodigal son
who "squandered his wealth in wild living" (Lk 15:13). Furthermore,
Jesus refused to waste the bountiful excess of his miraculous feeding of the
multitudes but instructed his disciples to "Gather the pieces that are
left over. Let nothing be wasted" (Jn 6:12)[ix].
While these
references relate, in the first instance, to individuals, good stewardship no
doubt implies also that we ought to choose that economic system which (all
other things being equal) is least wasteful of resources. Of course, Christians
should not make an idol of efficiency and productivity. Other biblical
goals--employment, the environment, etc--are likely to be as important when
trade-offs need to be made. A false dichotomy should, however, be avoided--i.e.
efficiency versus biblical goals. Stewardship includes efficiency.
Counting the Cost: A related implication of stewardship is that of "counting the
cost"--the title of a book by Robin Kendrick Klay.[x]
In this most useful book, she sought to "identify the costs (and the unintended
consequences) of important social measures to help the poor, protect workers,
and safeguard the environment." These costs and consequences must be made
explicit and considered before effective solutions can be developed. When
politicians try to address economics, failure to "count the cost" is
probably the most common source of error. Henry Hazlitt, author of a book
entitled Economics in One Lesson, has, in fact, boiled all economic
analysis down to this one lesson:
One must trace not
merely the immediate results but the results in the long run, not merely the
primary consequences but the secondary consequences, and not merely the effects
on some special group but the effects on everyone.[xi]
Because of scarcity,
economics is very much a matter of making choices--of allocating scarce
resources among competing demands. That is a question of analyzing costs and
benefits--although, by no means, only those that can be quantified or only the
financial ones. Good stewardship requires the use of all our talents to come to
a responsible use of the available resources; we must act prudently. That, includes
using all our knowledge to consider all aspects of a problem--to get, as Hay
has stated, "an accurate perception of reality" in the areas where we
wish to apply our biblical principles.[xii]
Luke, in Chapter 14
verse 28, makes explicit reference to counting the cost:
Suppose one of you
wants to build a tower. Will he not first sit down and estimate the cost, to
see if he has enough money to complete it?
And, adds in verse
31:
Or suppose a king is
about to go to war against another king. Will he not first sit down and
consider whether he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming
against him with twenty thousand?
While the point of
Jesus' teaching here is, of course, to stress the cost of being His disciple,
the illustrations used suggest that deliberate weighing of costs and benefits
is a normal, necessary prerequisite for action. As Douma concluded in
connection with the above passage, "not only good intentions but also the
consideration of the consequences is a part of every ethical action.”[xiii]
In fact, weighing the consequences--counting
the cost--is an essential part of planning, a process also commended
in Scripture. Prov 21:5, for example, teaches that "The plans of the
diligent lead to profit as surely as haste leads to poverty."[xiv]
Christians have, in
the past, been prone to put forward simple answers to complex questions. For
instance, "Free Enterprise is the Christian solution" or
"The love of our neighbour demands that we support socialism."
Moreover, politicians have a tendency, whether intentionally or not, to
oversimplify and focus on the simple solutions--the easy, attractive answers.
Unfortunately, there are few simple solutions. A responsible economic
approach--especially a Christian one–needs to consider many facets of the
situation. It must count the cost of
any proposed solution. For instance, in considering a possible increase of the
minimum wage to help the "working poor", the likelihood that the
higher wage costs will increase unemployment (because business will be able to
hire less employees at that higher wage) should be kept prominently in mind. Similarly,
well-intentioned efforts to fight unemployment through massive government
spending may well increase inflation and saddle the country with an uncontrollable
debt. Our goal should be to carefully weigh all relevant Christian principles
and the practical realities and, then, come to a considered response to the
economic choices to be made. It is not enough to have the right motive, e.g., stewardship.
We must also seek the optimal implementation. Otherwise, our perspectival
efforts will consist merely of a "Christian sauce" on a poorly cooked
meal.
Looking for
unintended consequences is crucial when determining the degree of government
involvement in the market. A recent study, for example, reviewed a government
regulation in Quebec in 1980 to outlaw advertising directed at children. Who
would not want to prevent these immature minds from being manipulated by greedy
advertisers? Yet, the study concluded that in Quebec the price of children’s
breakfast cereal was higher and the originally established brands had a bigger
share of the market than in provinces without the ban. A well-intended ban made
it more difficult for new cereals to enter the market and caused parents to pay
higher prices!
Similarly, government subsidies for ethanol production and requirements to mix ethanol with gasoline have had the unintended consequence of increasing the demand for corn--raising the price of basic foods for the poor. Since, it is impossible to perfectly “count the cost” of government action, we need to be most careful before accepting government solutions to economic problems.[xv]
Similarly, government subsidies for ethanol production and requirements to mix ethanol with gasoline have had the unintended consequence of increasing the demand for corn--raising the price of basic foods for the poor. Since, it is impossible to perfectly “count the cost” of government action, we need to be most careful before accepting government solutions to economic problems.[xv]
Endnotes
[i] John
Bernbaum & Simon M. Steer, Why Work?: Careers and Employment in Biblical
Perspective, Christian College Coalition Study Guides, Baker, 1986, p.3.
[ii]
Chewning, Vol. 2, p. 28.
[iii] Op. cit. p.23.
[iv] Groen van Prinsterer Stichting, Wegen Naar Werk
[Ways towards Work], Rapport van Commissie Collectieve Uitgaven, Groen van
Prinsterer Stichting, # 38, and GSEV, # 35, De Vuurbaak, Goningen, 1979, p.75.
[vi] In J. van der Jagt, M. van der Groep, W. I. Meijer and
A.H. Poelman, eds., Politiek Mozaïek: Opstellen aangeboden aan dr. A.J.
Verbrugh, [Political Mosaic: Essays presented to Dr. A. J. Verbrugh],
Gereformeerd Politiek Verbond & Groen van Prinsterer Stichting, De
Vuurbaak, Barneveld, 1992 , p.173.
[viii]
Paragraph 6. See also Mouw, op.cit., p.184; Herbert; Schlossberg, Samuel Vinay and Ronald J. Sider, Christianity
& Economics in the Post-Cold War Era: The Oxford Declaration and Beyond,
Eerdmans, 1994, p.127 and Tiemstra, et. al., p.320.
[ix] Grudem, op. cit., p.35.
[x]
Klay, op. cit. Claar & Klay, op. cit., p.218. now refer to it as the virtue
of wisdom
[xi] Economics in One Lesson, New Rochelle, Arlington House, 1979, p.103. See
also James D. Gwartney and Richard L.
Stroup, What everyone should know about economics and prosperity,
Vancouver, Fraser Institute, 1993, pp.28 & 83.and A.M.C. Waterman, “’Mind
your own business’: Unintended Consequences in the Body of Christ”, Faith
and Economics, Spring 200, p.1.
[xii] Hay,
op. cit., p.62. See also Gregg, op. cit, p.33 & 67.
[xiii]
J. Douma, Christian Morals and Ethics,
translation by John P. Elliott and Andrew Pol, Premier, Winnipeg, 1980, p.10.
[xiv] Cf.
Prov 15:22; 21:5; 24:6. See Beisner, 1988, p.87. and Jeffrey E. Hammond, “The
Proverbs 31 Woman: Entrepreneurial Epitome?, Faith & Economics, Fall
2012, P.7
[xv] See
William Watson, “Coca Puff conservatism”, National Post, May 7, 2008,
FP. 4
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