The Economics of Faith
July 11, 2004
John M. Buchanan, Pastor
Psalm 82
Amos 8:1–12
Luke 10:25–37
“But
when her owners saw that their hope
of
making money was gone,
they seized Paul and Silas and dragged them
into the
marketplace before the authorities.”
Acts 16:19 (NRSV)
God’s
message is never: Turn away from this sinful world
and find me somewhere else.
God’s message is always: Immerse yourselves in this
sinful world that so desperately needs
words and acts of healing, and you will find you are not
alone, for I am already there,
summoning you to help me.
The Bible is a very earthy book because God is a very earthy
God.
Robert McAfee Brown
Spirituality and Liberation
Barry Schwartz, a professor of psychology
and social theory at Swarthmore College, walked into the
local Gap to purchase a pair of blue jeans. Now Schwartz
is middle-aged, so he was probably already feeling a little
out-of-place. And his discomfort was multiplied when the
clerk asked if he wanted slim fit, easy fit, or relaxed
fit; regular or faded, stone-washed or acid-washed; button
fly or regular. All he wanted was a pair of jeans, and
what happened next is what happens to me standing in line
at Starbucks, rehearsing in my mind the list of adjectives
and nouns I will need to say in order to get a cup of coffee:
Grande — Breve — Iced — Latte, clearly
and in sequence. I always get a little panicky, and my
choices are mundane compared to the people around me who
are ordering exotic combinations of double and triple this
and that, skim milk, soy milk, no whipped cream, decaffeinated.
Standing at the counter at the Gap, Professor Schwartz
concluded that he was spending much longer in the store
than he planned, “investing time, energy, and no
small amount of self-doubt, anxiety, and dread.” He
finally chose easy fit. Being an academic, he started to
process and evaluate his experience. His next stop was
the supermarket, and now energized, he made a loose inventory: “85
varieties of crackers, 285 of cookies, 230 different soups,
120 pasta sauces, and 175 kinds of salad dressing, and
he began to suspect that at some point ‘choice no
longer liberates.’ It might even be said to tyrannize” (“Burden
of Choice,” Christian Century, 13 July 2004).
The book The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less is receiving
a lot of attention. What got me was the author’s
analysis that “there are a lot of people walking
around, really, really dissatisfied with their lives and
unable to put their fingers on what it is that’s
so troublesome.”
Could it be that we have too much? That we have too many
choices? That the “marketization” of our economy,
our culture, our values is a big mistake? That the transformation
of our life as a nation and our aspiration to transform
the world into a global marketplace driven by market forces
alone is not a very good idea? William Willimon at Duke
says it has already happened. American culture, he says,
is a supermarket, and citizen has been redefined as consumer.
A thoughtful feature in the Times this morning discussed
how airports have been transformed before our eyes into
shopping malls and that part of the reason is that nothing
makes us feel more safe and secure than shopping.
Evidence that “more is less” is accumulating
from other sources, health care and medicine, for instance.
Slowly the irony is dawning on us that we are the first
people in history for whom “Too much food is a menace
instead of too little.” A recent editorial pointed
out that the only threat to our health greater than smoking
is obesity. “Our lives are characterized by too much
of a good thing,” the article concluded, “too
much to eat, to buy, to watch, to do, excess at every turn.” (See “All
This Prosperity Is Killing Us,” New York Times, 14
March 2004)
Prosperity turns out to be a mixed blessing. There are
paradoxes that accompany progress. Quality of life stubbornly
refuses to be defined by consumption no matter how eloquently
advertisers try to convince us.
Ironically, we now know that for some reason clinical depression
rises along with our standard of living.
Even economic and business leaders are weighing in. This
sermon really began when I read a speech delivered to the
Chicago Commercial Club by William McDonough, Chairman
of the Public Company Accounting Board, an entity created
by Congress to oversee auditors of public companies in
response to the rash of accounting scandals. Mr. McDonough
was an executive with First Chicago and a member of this
congregation before moving to New York to become President
and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank. He is a banker, a
businessman, and his speech startled the local business
community. He said that ten years ago the American economy
was the model and envy of the world, strong, flexible,
innovative. But then, he said, American business leaders “got
confused and their moral compass stopped working.” He
illustrated by underscoring the widening gap between CEO
compensation and the compensation of the corporation’s
employees.
In 1980, the average large company CEO made 40 times more
than the average employee of the company. Comparable figures
in other industrial nations are 20 to 1, down to Japan’s
10 to 1. Twenty years later, in 2000, the ratio between
CEO and employee compensation had ballooned in this country
to 400 to 1. “There is no economic theory, however
farfetched, which can justify such an increase,” Mr.
McDonough said. “In my view it is also grotesquely
immoral.”
And then Mr. McDonough asked the critical question: Is
there some compass that should guide us besides the market,
more profits, make as much money as we can? He cited Kofi
Annan’s recent statement that “at the center
of all the great religions of the world is each person’s
responsibility for others” and his own Christian
and biblical mandate to love God and neighbor as self.
Mr. McDonough told the gathered business leaders to go
to church or synagogue or mosque and examine themselves. “It
doesn’t require a theologian,” he said, “just
the personal integrity to ask whether or not I am loving
my neighbor.”
In fact, the Bible has a great deal to say about these
matters: about economics and economic justice and public
policy and personal behavior. In fact, it’s hard
to miss, although we do a pretty good job of selective
editing and avoidance, because it makes us uncomfortable.
The Psalter reading this morning, Psalm 82, tells about
a remarkable meeting. It is a very old psalm; the context
is the polytheism of the ancient Middle East. The God of
Israel has convened a meeting of the gods and proceeds
to dress them down, scold them, for ignoring economic justice. “Give
justice to the weak and the orphans,” God says. “Maintain
the right of the lowly and the destitute; rescue the weak
and the needy.” Justice, here at the very beginning
of our faith tradition, is a central and powerful mandate,
a moral foundation, and it is defined as taking care of
the poor, the weak, the needy. God apparently intends all
to have access to the resources that make life possible.
Furthermore, injustice will ultimately destroy the world,
an interesting thought that occurs to me, I confess, every
time I drive down Division Street and see the appalling
remaining buildings of Cabrini-Green in which we have been
warehousing poor people for fifty years.
Deep in the biblical tradition is an absolute moral imperative
to treat the poor with decency, respect, and generosity,
not only in acts of personal compassion, but in the way
society itself is structured. It’s the last part
that makes us uncomfortable, and no one articulates it
more clearly than the prophets, particularly Amos. Amos
makes us squirm. In fact, Amos made his contemporaries
so uncomfortable he was a kind of social pariah. The king
even sent his favorite priest to Amos one time to order
him to leave the kingdom and go prophesy somewhere else.
Speaking truth to power is never popular.
The passage from Amos we heard this morning contains some
of the most disturbing words of scripture. Amos is sure
that something terrible is about to happen to his beloved
nation. Judgment is coming. God’s judgment. And the
problem is the oppression of the poor and the rampant greed
and corruption of the merchant class. It’s the accounting
scandal all over again. Merchants are toying with the value
of the currency—inflating it and, at the same time,
reducing the value of the standard weight measurement in
the market place: “the merchants are making the ephah
small and the shekel great.” Sounds like Enron or
like oil companies conspiring to reduce production in order
to keep the price of gasoline high.
A part of the history of the early Christian church is
the story of faith colliding with economic injustice. The
first Christian missionaries on European soil, Paul and
Silas in the Greek city of Philippi, about 50 A.D., confront
a young slave girl, demon-possessed, mentally ill, delusional,
schizophrenic. It’s a great story in the sixteenth
chapter of Acts. The girl is entertaining; she says funny
things, makes outrageous predictions about the future.
Her owners are marketing her—in fact, making money
from her pathetic condition, renting her out, as it were,
as entertainment for traveling salesmen. The young girl
is a slave to her mental illness and to her owners’ greed.
So when Paul and Silas cure her, her owners are furious.
The local chamber of commerce goes into action; Paul and
Silas are seized and interrogated. Justice, freedom are
also economic concepts, and vested interests are always
threatened by them.
The same thing happens later when Paul is in Ephesus and
his preaching interferes with the lucrative silver market.
Ephesus is home to the goddess Artemis, and tiny sliver
idols are a mainstay of the local economy. When Paul starts
to preach, sales drop, and the silversmiths organize, and
Paul lands in jail.
Finally, the beloved parallel of the Good Samaritan, so
very familiar. A man is attacked, beaten, robbed, and left
to die on the road to Jericho. Two religious officials
see him, walk on by, on the other side of the road. They
have their reasons. If he’s dead, they aren’t
allowed to touch him. And besides they have an important
committee meeting to attend in Jericho. Along comes a Samaritan—a
hated, reviled outsider to Jewish culture; a despised minority
for reason of race, nationality, and religion. He sees
the beaten man, stops, takes care of his wounds, loads
him on his donkey, transports him to an inn, and pays for
his care and treatment.
What inspired Jesus to tell this unforgettable story was
a question, a very good question. A lawyer asked it: “What
must I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus turns the
question back to him, and he knows the standard answer: “Love
God with all your heart, soul, strength, and mind, and
your neighbor as yourself.” “But who, Jesus,
exactly who is my neighbor?” the lawyer asks. Jesus’ answer
is the parable of the Good Samaritan, who is the one who
shows what neighbor-love looks like, and in the process,
Jesus knocks down all the racial, ethnic, religious walls
that separate people and oppress people and enslave people.
Someone said that if the Samaritan walked the same road
the next day and again found a beaten, robbed victim by
the road side, biblical morality and justice would require
him not only to bind up the man’s wounds but to go
directly to the police department and city council and
start advocating for better protection on the road, a better,
safer roadway.
Christian faith is a moral compass, and it takes moral
courage to consult it and not ignore it. Christian faith
mandates moral courage to see economic injustice and name
it. There will always be resistance to that, because it
leads to changed behavior and changed personal priorities
and spending habits and voting patterns.
The newly elected Moderator of the General Assembly of
our church, Rick Ufford-Chase, works in Mission, coordinating
Presbyterian and ecumenical volunteers in Central America
and on the Mexican–U.S. border. Rick tells us an
unforgettable story about leading a group of thirteen American
volunteers in a building project in a remote mountainous
Guatemalan village. At the end of the day, the volunteers
had to take public transportation back to the village where
they were staying with Guatemalan families. Public transportation
meant a rusty, old, beat-up Toyota minivan. There were
already two men in the van. The thirteen Americans squeezed
in, and a few miles down the road, the driver stopped to
pick up two more men, one of whom had a one-hundred pound
sack of corn. The Americans dreaded what might happen next.
The farmer proceeded to hike the sack of corn up onto the
roof of the Toyota, squeezed in, and off they went until
the sack broke open and the corn spilled all over the road.
Whereupon the driver stopped and invited his passengers
to get out and help pick up the corn—every kernel—which
they did. Rick said, “We can’t imagine an economy
where every kernel of corn counts.”
Christian faith requires us to see need and injustice,
to name it, and to do something about it. Nicholas Berdyaev,
a Central European theologian, once said, “If I am
hungry, that is a physical problem; if my neighbor is hungry,
that is a spiritual problem.” It is so easy not to
want to look at and see the horrific famine and genocidal
civil strife in Sudan; the HIV/AIDS epidemic devastating
Africa; the homeless, hungry poor on the streets of affluent
American cities. But avoidance, silence, walking on by,
are not alternatives for followers of Jesus.
And faith has political implications, as well. It is an
election year. Already religion is an issue—and religious
values. Both parties are looking to the religious community
for support. Jim Wallis, editor of Sojourners Magazine,
an evangelical journal, recently observed that so far “religion” in
the campaign has been confined to “Ten Commandments
in public court houses, marriage amendments, prayer in
the schools, and abortions.” Suddenly the most visible
moral/values issue is adding an amendment to the U.S. Constitution
banning same-sex marriage. “What about the biblical
imperative for social justice, for the God who lifts up
the poor?” Jim Wallis is asking. What about the poor?
What about health care and education, the two commodities
the poor simply must have if there is any hope of rising
from poverty, and neither one of which we seem able or
willing to provide? We don’t need a marriage amendment.
We do need social justice for all people, education and
health care for poor people. Those are the real religious
issues.
Jim Wallis cites an impressive new public opinion poll
conducted cooperatively by Republican and Democratic consultants.
An overwhelming majority, 78 percent, said that in deciding
to vote for president, they would rather have a candidate’s
plan for fighting poverty than a candidate’s position
on gay marriage.
There is an undeniable and unavoidable Christian moral
imperative about social and economic justice. And there
is a powerful personal dynamic as well. We are more than
consumers. We are citizens of this community, this country,
citizens of the world. The one we know as Savior has torn
down all the boundaries and barriers and told us over and
over that we are all in this together, that we are responsible
for one another, for neighbors near and far, for the neighbor
he defined with elegant simplicity as the one who needs
us.
This church aspires to be a neighbor, week in and week
out, all year long. In the summer we provide a program
for the children of Cabrini called Summer Day. One hundred
plus children come here every day for educational enrichment,
recreation, field trips, good food. Summer Day is a good
place to be in the city. At the end of the Tutoring Program,
one of our tutors asked her student what he was planning
to do with his summer vacation. His answer was stunning. “I’m
not doing anything; just staying inside,” he said.
When she asked why he planned to stay inside all summer,
he said, “Simple: I live in a bad neighborhood and
I don’t want to get involved with the gangs.”
Faith mandates seeing clearly, voting and spending responsibly,
and giving generously from our abundance.
A good question, maybe the best question of all, prompted
Jesus to tell the story of the Good Samaritan: “Teacher,
what do I have to do to inherit eternal life?” His
amazing answer was, “Be a neighbor—for my sake;
for Christ’s sake literally, see suffering and injustice;
for my sake, for Christ’s literal sake, care about
it, let it get inside your heart and soul; for Christ’s
sake do something about it.
That’s what our Lord Jesus Christ said: “Do
this and you will live!”
Amen.