One of President Obama’s
chief spiritual advisors is Rev. Jim Wallis of Sojourners, a liberal Christian
community in the DC area. He has now likened helping the Occupy Wall Street
protesters to siding with Jesus.
The Sojourners organization
publishes a magazine that I used to subscribe to for about a year when
I was at Wheaton Graduate School in the late 1970s.
Looking back at it, that
subscription reminds me of Winston Churchill’s maxim that if you’re not
a liberal in your twenties, you have no heart. But if you’re not a conservative
by your forties, you have no brain.
A year of the magazine was
about all I could take. I realized after a while that they never said anything
good about the United States.
Then it dawned on me one
day---wow, they never seem to criticize the Soviet Union, which was very
much a threat to the whole world in those days.
They were constantly carping
against Jimmy Carter, with criticisms from the left. I never bothered to
see what they said when Ronald Reagan ascended to the presidency. But I’m
sure they went apoplectic.
The strange thing
is that every leftwing cause they promoted was done in the name of Jesus
Christ.
Now, Rev. Wallis has
spoken out about the Occupy Wall Street protesters, saying that they are
siding with Jesus on behalf of the poor. Therefore, if you’re really going
to be a follower of Christ, bring them a casserole or a pizza (which he
calls a “peace-za”).
Wallis said, "The occupiers'
desire for change and willingness to take action to do something about
it should be an inspiration to us all."
He views them as standing
for the poor and hungry. Therefore, they stand with Jesus. Wallis says,
“When they talk about holding banks and corporations accountable, they
sound like Jesus and the biblical prophets before him who all spoke about
holding the wealthy and powerful accountable.”
Certainly, there is no justification
for backroom deals---from both sides of the aisle---whereby some Wall Street
tycoons have gotten rich (off of we the taxpayers) through crony capitalism.
And certainly, the Bible
speaks about justice and caring about the underdog.
But is Rev. Wallis
watching the same videos I am of these protesters?
They seem to me like
adolescents who never grew up. They strike me as parasitical, in the sense
that they seem to be unable to make it. They basically derive their substance
from the labor of others. Can’t our colleges do a better job of preparing
young people for the work force these days?
In a fascinating video
from the Occupy Atlanta protest, the progressives in the group (which seem
to play an elaborate game of “Simon Says,” as a form of democracy) essentially
bar the liberal Congressman John Lewis, long time civil rights advocate,
from speaking to the group. What? Is he too conservative for them?
Then there’s the Occupy
LA spokesman who was advocating French Revolution- type violence.
On top of that, the
Occupy Wall Street movement has a computer-hacker group, which calls itself
Anonymous, spurring on the protests. In their Internet threat videos, always
with a computer voice, they say near the close, “We are legion.”
Anyone familiar with
the Gospels knows that Jesus exorcised a demon-possessed man, and when
the Lord asked, “What is your name?” the demons replied, “We are legion---for
we are many.” It’s perhaps no coincidence that Anonymous signs off with
that phrase. The Bible certainly teaches an ethic to help the needy,
especially the family-less. There’s a Scriptural phrase for that: “the
widow and the orphan.”
The Bible also says
that if a man will not provide for his own household, he has denied the
faith. It doesn’t say if he cannot, but if he will not. After all, sloth
is one of the seven deadly sins (as are greed and envy).
But the group Rev.
Wallis claims represents Jesus appears to be comprised of able-bodied misfits
or 21st century hippies.
I wonder if many of
these protesters have simply given up on looking for jobs.
Granted, it’s a tough
economy. But there are still jobs to be had for those who seek them. Meanwhile,
Christian charities through various churches do a tremendous job to help
those in need.
Around 1700, when
the Puritans ran things in Massachusetts, there was a man from London who
stayed in the colony for several years. He stated: “I have lived in a country
where in seven years I never saw a beggar, nor heard an oath [a cuss word],
nor looked upon a drunkard.”
For all their faults,
like the Salem witchcraft hysteria, the Puritans instilled a strong work
ethic that in some ways is still with us today.
The historical success
of Wall Street is related to the Christian work ethic, to which the Puritans
made a great contribution. Based on their applying the Bible to labor,
they taught that we should work hard (fulfilling our calling), delay gratification,
to save, to invest and re-invest, and to give to those in need. To
see the same principles presented basically without religion, just read
Ben Franklin’s timeless book of maxims, Poor Richard’s Almanack.
I agree with Rev.
Wallis’ point that imitating Jesus includes standing with the poor and
needy. But, sorry, I don’t see how standing with the Occupy Wall Street
folks fits that category.
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