LumbergTech
Diamond Member
- Sep 15, 2005
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You answer my question, and I'll be happy to address yours.
Well, to answer your question, I would need to know the percentage of income being taken in tax where it becomes stealing.
You answer my question, and I'll be happy to address yours.
It's called hypocrisy, and it has nothing to do with religion or the Christian faith, it has to do with self centered, arrogant people who are more concerned with power and politics.
Note that Jesus decried this, and spoke more against the hypocrisy of the Pharisees than any other topic (including money). They were a group who claimed super religiosity, but were more concerned with the external appearance. They loved money, prestige, and power rather than truly being holy before God or practicing true righteousness.
These people you speak of are not true Christians, they just happen to grow up in a Christian atmosphere. If they had to undergo real persecution (i.e. the type that happened during Roman times and happens in other countries today) they would fall away from the faith fast.
Ignorant people who think they are knowledgeable say that religion causes wars, violence, etc. (and I have heard that argument many times here) but really it's just manipulated by evil people just as any other institution (like economic or political ones) can be.
Jesus wasn't involved in politics. He simply preached the gospel and did good works. Anyone following his example (which is what it means to be a Christian, to follow Jesus) wouldn't care about liberal vs conservative politics, but instead preach the gospel and help those who need the most help.
OP, this is about the best post you can get in four minutes, without us knowing your perspective or motivation for posting the question.
Accordingly,
/thread
Well, to answer your question, I would need to know the percentage of income being taken in tax becomes stealing.
I'm interested in what Jesus had to say about taking from someone unwilling to give. Please feel free to quote anything that seems related.
I'm interested in what Jesus had to say about taking from someone unwilling to give. Please feel free to quote anything that seems related.
It's called hypocrisy, and it has nothing to do with religion or the Christian faith, it has to do with self centered, arrogant people who are more concerned with power and politics.
Note that Jesus decried this, and spoke more against the hypocrisy of the Pharisees than any other topic (including money). They were a group who claimed super religiosity, but were more concerned with the external appearance. They loved money, prestige, and power rather than truly being holy before God or practicing true righteousness.
These people you speak of are not true Christians, they just happen to grow up in a Christian atmosphere. If they had to undergo real persecution (i.e. the type that happened during Roman times and happens in other countries today) they would fall away from the faith fast.
Ignorant people who think they are knowledgeable say that religion causes wars, violence, etc. (and I have heard that argument many times here) but really it's just manipulated by evil people just as any other institution (like economic or political ones) can be.
Jesus wasn't involved in politics. He simply preached the gospel and did good works. Anyone following his example (which is what it means to be a Christian, to follow Jesus) wouldn't care about liberal vs conservative politics, but instead preach the gospel and help those who need the most help.
Lock or move this thread. It belongs in Politics and News
give to cesar what is cesar's
If that means that it's okay to take from unwilling donors, then do you advocate punishing people who don't give anything to "Caesar" - limited, of course, to those who chose not to, and excluding those who can't?
Define's Crono's position as ridiculous, even though Crono didn't take that position.
So if someone is unwilling to pay taxes, then it is stealing?
I don't believe that Jesus specifically advocated for taking from the unwilling. I believe that he advocated for not being the unwilling. Which touches on the subject of this thread, which is Christian hypocrisy.
The thing that interests me about this debate is the anger of conservatives towards the use of tax to "help the poor". They don't seem to ever get quite as upset about other misuses of tax money as they do when it is used to help the supposedly less fortunate. If they spent a little more time bemoaning the other invalid uses, while at the same time not being so immature as to pretend that we don't need to tax people, I might be able to take their gripes a bit more seriously.
Yes, it is stealing, using the police power of the state. If you don't donate, the IRS and state revenue departments will come take it from you. They will lock up your bank accounts and assets, and even put you in jail.
And then, one Thursday, nearly two thousand years after one man had been nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people for a change, a girl sitting on her own in a small café in Rickmansworth suddenly realized what it was that had been going wrong all this time, and she finally knew how the world could be made a good and happy place. This time it was right, it would work, and no one would have to get nailed to anything.
My post didn't specifically didn't mention "the poor". What does your response have to do with my question?
I apologize if that did not represent your specific viewpoint. I was just explaining my thinking about taxes and what I perceive to be Christian hypocrisy.
He doesn't;Perhaps you can point to where Jesus advocated stealing from one group in order to benefit another.
but he does advocate paying your taxes. Further ecc says that governments exist in-order to help protect the righteous from the wicked, Finally Paul says that we should NOT engage in revolution against our governments, but respect their right to rule our bodies (this is just before they killed his ass) and spread the love of Christ through faith.Some of your "less fortunate" have chosen that way of life, and ought not be using the IRS as a weapon to take money from the people who earned it.
He doesn't;
but he does advocate paying your taxes. Further ecc says that governments exist in-order to help protect the righteous from the wicked, Finally Paul says that we should NOT engage in revolution against our governments, but respect their right to rule our bodies (this is just before they killed his ass) and spread the love of Christ through faith.
Also, being less fortunate is, by definition, not a life-choice.
That's why I used the phrase as a quotation. Not everyone who is poor is less fortunate, so the two descriptions should not be used interchangeably.
Paul made that statement when the only known form of government was tyranny, either by kings or by Romans. We don't know what he would have said if he'd experienced any kind of democracy. Context is important.
When the safety net is being used as a hammock, it's time to revolt - in the ballot box.
I agree, but I am concerned that neither liberal nor conservatives are presented with options to vote for people who can understand the nuance of helping in a way that is not so easily abused. Politicians are concerned with obtaining power and keeping that power and the true will of the people is not respected no matter how you look at it. I don't agree with many things that are going on now, just as it seems that you do not either, but I think that we (both sides) make the mistake of responding to trigger words and phrases and it ends up that no one gets the results they want. We are stuck simply voting for those who pay lip service to the ideas we support. I think that we must quit taking what they offer at face value and VERIFY that their deeds match their words and that we feel that they are truly representing OUR views as opposed to exploiting our views.
Jesus wasn't involved in politics. He simply preached the gospel and did good works. Anyone following his example (which is what it means to be a Christian, to follow Jesus) wouldn't care about liberal vs conservative politics, but instead preach the gospel and help those who need the most help.