Pages

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Wallis Throws Down on Beck

Jim Wallis of Sojourners' issues a challenge to talk radio host Glenn Beck to debate him on whether the Bible obligates governments to engage in social justice (i.e. social welfare programs). Beck won't do it, of course, but I wish he would. Wallis is miffed at Beck because Beck has claimed that there is no such mandate in the Bible and that, in fact, the rubric of social justice has been used by fascists, communists, nazis, and socialists of all stripes throughout the 20th century to justify their aggrandizement of centralized power.

Here's Wallis being interviewed by Stephanie Miller:

I'm afraid that Wallis, not to mention Miller, misses the point here. Beck isn't saying that Christians shouldn't care for the poor. What he's saying, I think, is that there's nothing in Scripture that makes such care a responsibility of government. The Biblical imperatives enjoin individuals to help the poor. The Bible leaves it to those individuals to decide whom they will help and how much. Nowhere, as far as I'm aware, do they say that government has the duty or right to take property from one person to give it to others.

When government assumes the responsibility of caring for the poor then such care quickly becomes a right. So the poor have a right to food, education, heating fuel, and now to health care. By what logic can they be denied a right to a house (or at least home insurance), a tv, air conditioning, and a car (or at least auto insurance)? And if they have a right to all those things then their fellow citizens - you and I - have a duty to provide them. Should government be permitted to seize the property you work hard to earn and build in order to provide all these benefits for those who can't, or won't, work for them themselves?

Wallis says yes, Beck says no. I'm with Beck.

RLC