T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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428.1 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Apr 01 1992 17:09 | 4 |
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TOO MANY TIMES!
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428.2 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Peace: the Final Frontier | Wed Apr 01 1992 19:56 | 10 |
| Re. 1
I agree. Jesus never intended to forever exempt us from our
responsibilities toward the poor when he made this statement.
Yet I have heard well-meaning people seemingly justify the very
existance of the poor by these words.
Peace,
Richard
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428.3 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 24 1995 12:40 | 10 |
|
> Yet I have heard well-meaning people seemingly justify the very
> existance of the poor by these words.
Recently Senator Phil Gramm, the republican presidential candidate,
justified the tax cuts to the wealthy proposed by his party by saying
"a poor person never gave *me* a job," indicating his contempt for the
poor. But then again, you said well-meaning people...
Eric
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428.4 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Tue Oct 24 1995 13:51 | 6 |
| I think we also need to ask ourselves how much of the affluence we enjoy
was built at the expense of the disposable poor.
Shalom,
Richard
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428.5 | Some are better stewards than others. | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 24 1995 14:13 | 9 |
| We also have to keep in mind that no matter how much money we
give to certain poor people, they will always end up poor again.
And that even if you take away all of the wealth of certain rich
people, over time they will end up being rich (materially) again.
Rumor has it that Rodney King is already broke.
Trying to change that through tax policy and social engineering
is futile.
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428.6 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 24 1995 14:49 | 22 |
|
re .5
So you agree with Sen. Gramm? The wealthy are more deserving of tax
relief than the poor?
Yes there will always be poor people. However, you make the error of
assuming that the poor will always be the *same* people. In fact you
indicate that people are predisposed -- by genetics or conditioning, I
don't know -- to be either rich or poor, and that attempts to alter the
natural order of things is futile. The senator goes one step further
and show his contempt for the poor.
We may always have poverty, but the social, material and physical chasm
between the rich and the poor is unconscionable in this country. Using
the poor, as a class, as the whipping boy for what ails America is
despicable. Once it was the pinko-commies, today it's the welfare
queens.
I'm starting to rant, aren't I.... sorry.
Eric
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428.7 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:58 | 10 |
| Certainly the poor have neither a monopoly on, nor an immunity from
foolishness and wastefulness.
Jesus tended to be lax in criticizing the poor. He call them blessed.
Jesus tended to be more critical of the affluent.
Shalom,
Richard
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428.8 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 24 1995 18:41 | 17 |
| <<< Note 428.7 by CSC32::J_CHRISTIE "Ps. 85.10" >>>
> Jesus tended to be more critical of the affluent.
And rightly so. For to whom more is given, more is expected.
I knew this very wealthy couple who now live on the harbor in
Boston. He had his own consulting business, she had her own
construction business. (As an aside, "very wealthy" is kind
of relative. I'm sure that Bill Gates makes more in a year
than they will ever make in their lifetime. But I digress.)
They were one of the most generous couples I knew. Others
felt the same way about them. A friend of theirs embroidered
a picture of a camel with a thread in its mouth leaping through
the eye of a giant needle. If any couple could be the camel
to make it through the needle, they are it.
|
428.9 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 24 1995 19:03 | 49 |
| <<< Note 428.6 by APACHE::MYERS "He literally meant it figuratively" >>>
> So you agree with Sen. Gramm? The wealthy are more deserving of tax
> relief than the poor?
Please reread my entry. It does not say that. It says that
tax manipulation should not a vehicle for social reform. Nobody
deserves tax relief more than another if taxation is fair.
Many current inequities in the tax code exist simply because
of attempts at social reform, and further attempts to exact
some new result merely introduce more inequities.
> Yes there will always be poor people. However, you make the error of
> assuming that the poor will always be the *same* people. In fact you
> indicate that people are predisposed -- by genetics or conditioning, I
> don't know -- to be either rich or poor, and that attempts to alter the
> natural order of things is futile.
Please reread my entry. I clearly say SOME people, though your
entry gives the impression that I said (or implied) ALL. And
I would venture to guess that for those people it is most likely
a matter of conditioning. Can you agree that certain people will
always find a way to be wealthy, and certain people will always
end up poor? If not, we'll have to agree to disagree on this
point.
As for Gramm's statement, the current tax code manipulation is
an attempt to improve the economic workings of the federal
government. If this government bankrupts, that would be the
absolutely worst thing that could happen to the poor. From
that perspective the quote you entered in .3 is quite valid
and equally correct. It has nothing to do with contempt for
the poor. It has everything to do with good governmental
policy.
Now, I disagree with Gramm's statement for another reason. He
allowed the arena for the debate to be defined by his opponents,
and he severely disadvantaged himself by allowing them set the
ground rules. The tax cuts that are being proposed are NOT
primarily for the wealthy. THAT should have been his answer.
In trying to defend the cuts as his opponent described them,
he allowed the misconception to stick that these are cuts for
the rich.
The bulk of the cuts are targetted for middle-class and below,
and any tax cut that ends up ultimately increasing the floor
below which taxes are not due can only be described as improving
the tax burden of the poor. (And the child credit has an income
ceiling above which it cannot be collected.)
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428.10 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Wed Oct 25 1995 13:19 | 29 |
|
>> So you agree with Sen. Gramm? The wealthy are more deserving of tax
>> relief than the poor?
> Please reread my entry. It does not say that.
You were somewhat ambiguous regarding your sentiments on Sen. Gramm's
comments. That's why I asked.
> Nobody deserves tax relief more than another if taxation is fair.
Who get's to decide what's fair? Lobbyists? PAC? Sen. Gramm? Sen.
Kennedy?
> Many current inequities in the tax code exist simply because of
> attempts at social reform, and further attempts to exact some new
> result merely introduce more inequities.
For example?
> Please reread my entry. I clearly say SOME people, though your entry
> gives the impression that I said (or implied) ALL.
Joe,
Please accept my apologies for misreading your note in this regard.
Eric
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428.11 | | USAT05::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Wed Oct 25 1995 13:44 | 14 |
|
Hi Folks,
If I may jump in here, I'm awfully busy, but taxation can be measured
objectively. If I pay more taxes or less taxes on my income than someone
else then there is a tax inequity. And if I pay tax on my income to
provide income for someone else, who is paying no taxes by and large,
then that is a use of the tax system to purposefully produce an inequity.
This is exactly what is happening in our welfare state. Not only is it
grossly unfair and inequitable to the taxpayer but the result, the
systemic destruction of the work ethic among some poor people, is a
catastrophe.
jeff
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428.12 | Taxation is Theft! | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Oct 25 1995 14:07 | 12 |
| Eric:
As an example...
As a wage class 3, I have the ability to make overtime. I find that
working overtime is not worth it because I jusp to a higher tax
bracket and break even.
Hence I am being penalized for achievement and therefore choose to be
slothful, lazy, and leave at 5:00. I find this to be interference.
-Jack
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428.13 | it ain't just the poor | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:22 | 6 |
| Another example: I get a tax break because I have a home
that is mortgaged; as a result the incentive to work hard
among homeowners is diminished, as is the incentive to pay
off mortgage debt.
Bob
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428.14 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:25 | 10 |
| Matthew 19:26 But Jesus beheld [them], and said unto them, With men
this is impossible; but with �God� all �things� are �possible.�
Interesting that Jesus made this statement just after emphasizing how hard
it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of heaven, even harder than threading
a camel through the eye of a needle.
Shalom,
Richard
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428.15 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:42 | 27 |
| <<< Note 428.10 by APACHE::MYERS "He literally meant it figuratively" >>>
> > Nobody deserves tax relief more than another if taxation is fair.
>
> Who get's to decide what's fair? Lobbyists? PAC? Sen. Gramm? Sen.
> Kennedy?
Ah, this is the crux of the whole problem, for what appears to
be fair to one person is unfair in the eyes of another, and
vice versa. Even more, what is clearly fair from one perspective
(federal revenue generation, for example) can be clearly unfair
from another (social engineering, for example.)
I'm sorry, but I simply can't give a concise answer to your
question. In fact, your question answers itself, as I'm sure
you knew when you posed it. But I think I've shown how, given
the issue at hand when Gramm made his statement, his statement
was quite correct.
> > Many current inequities in the tax code exist
>
> For example?
Low-income tax credits, home mortgage interest deductions,
extra exemptions for the blind, all the various tax deductions
and credits that are specific to various corporate interests,
graduated income tax tables. Need more?
|
428.16 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Wed Oct 25 1995 16:14 | 5 |
| I'm concerned that it's so easy for some Christians to take issue with
the poor for not pulling their weight.
Richard
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428.17 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Oct 25 1995 16:45 | 7 |
| Richard:
There are the poor and then there are the exploiters of the system.
The ones who could become evil Reaganites quite easily had they chosen
to but chose otherwise. These are the one's people take exception to.
-Jack
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428.18 | BALANCE | CPCOD::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Wed Oct 25 1995 17:37 | 39 |
| There is a hard balance to strike. I think we are called to be generous
and compassionate and to help those in need. On the other hand I
think people have a personal responsibility for themselves as well.
There are people who are mentally and emotionally incapable of taking
care of themselves. There are people who for one reason or another,
have found themselves in difficult circumstances and need just a little
help to get back on their feet again, and to get through a difficult
time period. There are others who feel the world owes them a living,
who feel justified to put their hand out without doing anything in
return, or who feel justified in using theft, fraud, or any other means
to get what they want without doing legitmate work for it.
I find the number of people looking for aid to be overwhelming. I find
myself contributing to a few groups such as Compassion and the Nashua Food
Pantry, and then helping those whom I know personally or whom I know of
through some means such as my synagogue. I have torn up monetary appeals
for money by different charity organizations without ever even looking at
them. I have given to some of these groups from time to time only to
discover that suddenly, we're getting 3 or 4 such appeals in the mail
daily. We have been part of groups who have pooled resources and made
anonymous gifts to people we knew who were layed off from their jobs,
having a difficult time finding a new one, going through their savings,
and about to have default on their mortgages. Or maybe a smaller gift
for someone who could not afford to go on a special trip or event like
retreat although they are managing to meet their regular bills. These
personal outreaches have been the most satisfying even if we didn't always
get to see the recipients reaction.
Difficult circumstances are not always financial either, and
reaching out may be doing something to share someone's grief with them,
or helping them with some chore, or volunteering a little child-minding
sometime.
I think people can be over-coddled. I also think we need to exercise
compassion and generosity as a way of life, and avoid getting callous by
the frequent appeals for charity. Be wise in giving, but not hardhearted.
Leslie
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428.19 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Thu Oct 26 1995 09:17 | 11 |
| .17
> There are the poor and then there are the exploiters of the system.
> The ones who could become evil Reaganites quite easily had they chosen
> to but chose otherwise. These are the one's people take exception to.
Oh, Jack. I'm familiar with the ideology of the Newt Age prophet Reagan,
but what of the teachings of Jesus?
Richard
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428.20 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Oct 26 1995 09:40 | 20 |
| ZZ Oh, Jack. I'm familiar with the ideology of the Newt Age prophet
ZZ Reagan, but what of the teachings of Jesus?
Richard, two things come to mind here.
At the current rate, our government has become completely wreckless.
What you are advocating above is taking care of the elderly at the
heavy price of your children and my children. You fail to understand
this. 80 year old Mrs. Jones doesn't need to have an MRI everytime she
has a headache.
So, how does spending wrecklessly align with the teachings of Jesus?
I've never heard of that one.
Re: The teachings of Jesus. "If a man does not work, he should not
eat." I ask you to define what the apostle is speaking of here in
scripture. I've already given you my definition of accountability and
responsibility. Apparently, you don't agree with this.
-Jack
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428.21 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Thu Oct 26 1995 15:23 | 20 |
| If you insist, Jack.
I'm hearing what might seem to be sensible and pragmatic. I'm not
hearing much of Jesus.*
I think it's a shame that some Christians appear not to make a strong
connection of Jesus with the poor.
I was in a classroom with Rabbi Howard Hirsh a couple of weeks ago. Rabbi
Hirsh knows more than most Christians I know about the Jewish life of Jesus.
According to Hirsh, one of the ways in which Jesus departed from traditional
Jewish teachings was in his regard for the poor. Traditional teaching says
that "a poor man is a dead man."
Shalom,
Richard
*I recognize a bit of irony in my own words. It's more like me to say, "I
know what Jesus said, but what can you say?" :-)
|
428.22 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Oct 27 1995 09:21 | 16 |
| Well, I believe that Jesus' example IS the random element in how to
treat the poor. I am not really insisting on anything but just making
the observation that there are poor people who of their own free
volition, choose to be poor. I don't feel there is anything
characteristic about coddling people who have no aspirations to become
a part of society. I do believe there is definitely a ministry in the
Church toward those who are needy...and there are some who can be needy
for a long period of time. Children for example.
Having thought about this more last night, I believe God calls us to
use our resources and stewardship prudently. As I stated a month ago,
I believe the poor man on the street who extorts money through guilt
and false compassion is a thief. He is stealing from the poor woman on
the street with her two children.
-Jack
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428.23 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Fri Oct 27 1995 11:01 | 17 |
|
> I believe the poor man on the street who extorts money through guilt
> and false compassion is a thief.
Yes, I too am sick of political fund-raising. Here in New Hampshire, we
are the first to suffer this blight every 2 - 4 years. :^)
The con-artists, ne'erdowells, and thieves of the system should all be
pointed out as wrong. However, like the 16-year-old welfare mother,
these circumstances are in the *huge* minority and yet are used as the
mallet with which to beat the entire concept of social assistance to
the poor. Am I say the system is fine? Heck, no! I'm saying we should,
as Christians, be working to improve the system and quit the mean
spirited, pull-yourself-up-by-your-own-bootstraps, if we aid the rich
the poor will benefit, assault on the underclass.
Eric
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428.24 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Fri Oct 27 1995 23:06 | 6 |
| Well, Jack(.22). I don't agree, not so much with the details, but with
the tenor.
Grace and peace,
Richard
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428.25 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 30 1995 09:16 | 8 |
| Richard:
Unfortunately the details are ALL that matters and the tenor means
little to nothing in the content of the message.
Grace and Peace,
-Jack
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428.26 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Mon Oct 30 1995 12:32 | 9 |
| > Unfortunately the details are ALL that matters and the tenor means
> little to nothing in the content of the message.
To my mind, it's unfortunately not unlike doing what might be the right
thing for the wrong reason.
Shalom,
Richard
|
428.27 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 30 1995 12:34 | 6 |
| ZZ To my mind, it's unfortunately not unlike doing what might be the right
ZZ thing for the wrong reason.
Richard, you used a triple negative....tsk tsk! :-)
-Jack
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428.28 | | ACIS03::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Oct 30 1995 16:09 | 26 |
| Charity is a choice. As Christians, we should be willing to give of
our time and money to help others. This is good.
Welfare is forced. Money is taken from me, against me will, each and
every payday and given to other citizens who do not pay taxes. This is
not charity, regardless of intentions or rationalizations. This enslaves
recipients as well as taxpayers to a system that spends 3/4 of the money
collected to support beaureacracies. This is an iniquity that has been
ignored for too long. We have come to think that the only way to help
people is via federal handouts- a mentality I find short-sighted at
best.
If you really want to help your neighbor, social welfare is not the
way. The more we can wean people off this corrupt system (and
eventually do away with the system), the better off our country will
be.
FWIW, I feel the same way about corporate welfare, farmer welfare
(subsidies), the Social Security Pyramid scheme, etc. that comes from the
federal government.
We got along just fine before New Deal and Great Society came along to
save us all (and ruin our economy), thank you very much.
-steve
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428.29 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 30 1995 16:45 | 19 |
|
> We got along just fine before New Deal and Great Society came along to
> save us all (and ruin our economy), thank you very much.
Who's this "We," kimosabi. :^)
"We" got along fine before labor safety laws. "We" got along fine before
environmental laws (toxic waste, DDT, etc.). "We" got along fine before
the 14th amendment. My point is the New Deal and Great Society came
along specifically because we *weren't* getting along just fine.
You seem to want changes in technology, commerce, economy, standard of
living and yet no change in legislation or society. You want this
little piece of the cosmos -- this fairy tale of America as it once
was -- to remain constant while all around you, the world you live in is
changing. Buy a thousand acres in Montana and build yourself a cabin;
grow your own food and make you own soap... Build your Shagri-la and
keep everyone out. Short of that, I don't see much hope of setting the
clock back to the days of social and economic Darwinism.
|
428.30 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:01 | 12 |
| Eric:
As Glen has mentioned in the past, there are ways to reform things and
not necessarily scrap them.
Social Security IS a scam pyramid operation...always has been. I would
be for the adoption of required stipends to be put into special 401Ks
that CANNOT be touched by the government. When one turns 65, then they
receive what is left in there and are completely independent from
everybody else.
-Jack
|
428.31 | | ACIS03::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:34 | 71 |
| re: .29
> "We" got along fine before labor safety laws.
And now we have gone overboard. OSHA costs business needless billions
every year, which is just one of the governmental restricting arms on
our economy. The pendulum hath swung too far.
> "We" got along fine before
> environmental laws (toxic waste, DDT, etc.).
And now we have official government "wetlands" made out of people's
backyard puddles, which takes autonomy and control of said land from
those who OWN it and gives it to the government. The pendulum hath
swung too far.
> "We" got along fine before
> the 14th amendment.
This does not fit in with the rest of your list.
> My point is the New Deal and Great Society came
> along specifically because we *weren't* getting along just fine.
Yes we were. Contrary to popular opinion, New Deal did very little to
help in its era. In the name of emergency, though, it was passed
(after being first ruled unconstitutional once or twice, before new
justices were placed in SCOTUS) to the detriment of all generations
thereafter. We did NOT need it then, and we only "need" it now due to
the fact that so many are dependent upon taxpayer handouts, which is a
direct and logical result of what New Deal did.
Name one federal program of New Deal that worked effectively and
efficiently. Name one that has had a positive benefit that can still be
felt today. Name one that didn't help to bloat government. Name one
that did not give government more control over our lives.
> You seem to want changes in technology, commerce, economy, standard of
> living and yet no change in legislation or society. You want this
> little piece of the cosmos -- this fairy tale of America as it once
> was -- to remain constant while all around you, the world you live in is
> changing.
If change = socialism, then you are right. I don't want it.
> Buy a thousand acres in Montana and build yourself a cabin;
> grow your own food and make you own soap... Build your Shagri-la and
> keep everyone out. Short of that, I don't see much hope of setting the
> clock back to the days of social and economic Darwinism.
Even if I did the above, I still would not be free. I cannot own land,
as I will always have to pay the government "rent" on my own property-
forever. This is not freedom, nor is this true land ownership.
Wake up. Your social experiments of the past 60 years have FAILED. They
have brought this nation to the bring of moral and financial
bankruptcy. When will folks finally realize that there is no such
thing as a free lunch? When will folks realize that you cannot morally
force compassion out of your fellow man (by stealing his money and
doling it out to the poor)? If you have compassion for the poor, give
them YOUR money. Let me spend mine as I see best.
We are responsible for ourselves and family. We should have the
freedom to succeed without limits or fail utterly. If someone wants to
personally take pity on those who fail, then I have no problem with
that (charity). In fact, I'm more than willing to help out myself- as
long as it is of my OWN FREE WILL. I resent having no choice but to
support the wasteful programs that have proven to be abysmal failures.
-steve
|
428.32 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Mon Oct 30 1995 20:46 | 7 |
| .28
I don't believe charity is a choice for the Christian.
Shalom,
Richard
|
428.33 | | ACIS03::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 31 1995 10:14 | 3 |
| <-- Sure it is. However, we are accountable for our choices.
-steve
|
428.34 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 31 1995 10:14 | 4 |
| Charity is a commandment from God but it is still of ones own free
volition.
-Jack
|
428.35 | Of course, one can always disobey orders | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Tue Oct 31 1995 10:25 | 11 |
| .33
I don't believe charity is a choice for the Christian. If it were
it would not be a commandment. It is not a request. It is not option.
It is a requirement. It is an obligation.
I believe the Christian and the Jew understand it as such.
Shalom,
Richard
|
428.36 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 31 1995 10:55 | 6 |
| Actually, in the context of being bondservants of the most high,
Richard is right in that it is our obligation. It is however an
obligation we should be practicing freely and gladly, is this what you
are getting at??
-Jack
|
428.37 | | ACIS03::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Wed Nov 01 1995 10:52 | 10 |
| re: .35
A requirement for what, Richard?
Of course, this has nothing to do with what prompted me to reply to
this note (welfare).
-steve
|
428.38 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Wed Nov 01 1995 11:36 | 23 |
| 428.37
> Of course, this has nothing to do with what prompted me to reply to
> this note (welfare).
Oh, but it does. You might not see the connection, but it does.
Your Note 428.28
>> Charity is a choice.
>> Welfare is forced.
I'm saying charity is not a choice for the Christian. For the Christian,
the legal obligation to subsidize social programs (which do the intended
good for a lot of people we hardly ever hear about) is not unlike the
commandment of charity from God Almighty.
Both are imposed from the outside. Both can be evaded. Both have
potential consequences for doing so.
Richard
|
428.39 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Wed Nov 01 1995 12:40 | 5 |
|
Charity is a choice, as love is a choice... as following the example of
Jesus is a choice.
Eric
|