A FAIR BALANCE
Democrats
say the super wealthy 1% of Americans do not pay their fair share of
taxes. Republicans claim the
wealthy pay more than their fair share.
I hear both sides. The
whole question revolves around what is fair, regardless of who is right about
the amount of taxes paid. Both
sides agree on fairness.
Where
do we get that? Why do we think a
society should strike a fair balance when it comes to economic and social
welfare? Did Karl Marx poison our
minds? I don’t think so. I would point out that the answer to
why we believe in fairness (if not a welfare state) can be found in the Abrahamic
traditions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
In
Exodus 16 we have it spelled out, when Moses led ancient Israel out of Egypt
and down along the east side of the Gulf of Suez, around the tip of the
peninsula and up the western coast of the Gulf of Aqaba. Imagine a society of up to two million
people trekking along that long desert coast, carrying tons of equipment, and
treasures made of gold, silver and bronze.
After
crossing the Aqaba side of the Red Sea into what is today Saudi Arabia (at the
straights of Tiran, according to most reckoning today), and spending three days
on the run without water, God and Moses finally brought them to the springs of
Elim for a brief respite, only to leave them in trouble in the Desert of Sin, where
the famous story of manna from heaven played itself out.
On their first night there God covered
the ground with flocks of quail (alive, presumably, but quickly killed, cooked
and eaten by God’s children.) In
the morning the Israelites found a white covering on the ground, which turned
into a crusty bread-like substance that they named “manna”, and which Moses
told them to eat.
God
warned his children (through Moses) that each of them should collect only as
much of the manna as they actually needed. On that first day some of them collected more, so as to have
leftovers for the next day. But
that manna became rancid overnight.
As a result, the ancient Israelites learned their first lesson from God about
money.
Scriptures
tell us that “no one who collected
more had too much, and no one who had collected less had too little.” Just enough for one day, and not so
much that anyone got short-changed.
This went on each day until the sixth day, when God told them to collect
two days’ worth of manna, because on the seventh day they should rest and keep
the Sabbath holy.
We
sometimes forget the significance of this story, I think, by focusing on its
miraculous side rather than the elephant in the room, which is that we need to
keep a lid on our greed and never forget those around us. Marx may have gotten
his notion from God, but he clearly didn’t have God on his side when it came to
making people do what God told them to do. People who believe in God need to be reminded.
I
think that is just what the Apostle Paul set out to do, some 1300 years after
Moses, in his Second Letter to the Corinthians, Chapter 8, when he referred to
the book of Exodus in his warning to the people of Corinth (and us) that there
must be a fair balance between rich and poor.
800
years after Paul, the Islamic Imam, Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj of the Sunni tradition,
reminded us of God’s teaching on the fair balance we must maintain, in Chapter
26 of his record of the Prophet Mohammed’s words concerning the story in
Exodus, when he identified manna as desert truffles, a delicacy equal to the
unleavened bread of the ancient Jews.
If
indeed we all agree that a fair balance must be maintained, surely we can come
to some mutual understanding about how to follow God’s law on this
subject. That law is quite clear
on the matter of giving all your wealth to the poor: don’t do that.
But it is equally clear that you must not keep all your wealth for
yourself. If you are wealthy
beyond reason you are duty bound to work on a solution that will allow us to
spread the wealth in society in some balanced way that does not leave it up to
personal whim.
We
in the United States have not found that solution yet. And as long as one side says we have
and the other says we have not, a fair balance has in fact not been
struck. Our economic system is
based on the notion of more is better.
But God says we need to think again. Lots of us agree.