Jesus Government
Not again! Another top Republican denies
any wrongdoing, but resigns his post. As the great American
philosopher Jimmy
Hatlo used to say, theyll do it every time.
Why does corruption in
government always surprise us? Why do we expect anything else from it?
Government is organized force. It takes our wealth and makes war. And we
think honest men would do that work?
Well, honest men have sincerely
tried, but look at the results and ask yourself whether honesty has any
inherent tendency to prevail in politics. War, taxation, waste, debt, inflation,
hatred, hypocrisy, cynicism, social disorder. And also amazingly
enough! corruption.
As I often say, expecting
government to produce good results is like expecting a tiger to pull a plow.
After the twentieth century, in which the worlds governments killed
hundreds of millions of their own subjects, everyone ought to talk about the
state the way Jews talk about Hitler. Yet we still have high hopes for this
beast, because, after all, the mighty tiger is certainly strong enough to pull
that plow if he wanted to! If only.
Even most Christians believe in the
state, though Jesus never urged his followers to take political action. A very
devout and intelligent Catholic socialist friend of mine argues that Jesus
legitimized the state when he said, Render unto Caesar the things
that are Caesars, and unto God the things that are
Gods.
But thats reading an awful
lot into a few words. Jesus wasnt preaching to his followers at that
moment; he certainly wasnt preaching statism, let alone the
authority of pagan emperors who claimed divinity and demanded idolatry. No,
he was retorting to a trick question from his enemies, and he answered with
a witty tautology. It might have been taken to mean, Give Caesar
everything he claims, and also give God his due. But it could also
mean, Give Caesar nothing, and God everything. Or it might
mean something else; Jesus didnt specify.
It was a brilliant ad lib.
Jesus enemies were trying to bait him into endorsing either idolatry
or sedition, and he deftly sidestepped them with a sentence the world still
remembers. Not exactly a hearty vote of confidence in those who wield
power, it seems to me.
![[Breaker quote for Jesus' Government: Where is it?]](2006breakers/060404.gif) Government
doesnt get much help from the Gospels.
Dont resist evil. Dont fret about tomorrow. Trust your Father
in heaven. The truth will make you free. He who takes up the sword will die by
the sword. This is not advice our own Caesars are apt to take.
Jesus did exalt the publican, or tax
collector, who prayed, Lord, have mercy on me, a sinner.
Todays publicans, of course, are called public
servants, and they deny any wrongdoing. Or they have their lawyers
deny it for them. Maybe they also let their lawyers handle their carefully
worded orisons.
Again, Jesus never used force or
the threat of force, except, in a way, when he saw his Fathers house
profaned. That was a special case, from which its hard to draw
general conclusions, but he was acting on his own authority, not acting
politically. And he was defying those in power, not supporting them.
In the end, the government
murdered him. This fact ought to count for something in any discussion of
temporal power. Maybe capital punishment is still justified, even if mistakes
are made now and then and the Son of God is accidentally victimized. But
Id start with that accident.
Jesus mercy extends
readily to the publican and the centurion, but for our time the absence of
political rhetoric, or political solutions to human problems, is
one of the most striking things about the Gospels. The state, taxation, and
war are themselves assumed to be perennial problems, and there isnt
the faintest suggestion that democracy could relieve them,
or turn them into blessings.
Right from the start, Jesus has
been a disappointment to anyone hoping for salvation through politics. Many
expected the Messiah to bring political and military deliverance peace
through strength, as it were. Instead they got a fiery preacher of peace who
resisted the political temptation proffered by Satan, the very temptation
the whole world is still succumbing to.
My government is not of
this world. I think thats a fair paraphrase of his words.
Joseph Sobran
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