Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Edd Noell: Early Christians on Wealth and Poverty
Edd Noell: Early Christians on Wealth and Poverty
Feb 11, 2026 4:55 AM

This morning at Acton University I attended a fascinating lecture by Dr. Edd Noell, “Origins of Economics: The Scriptures and Early Church Fathers.” I have briefly examined one ancient Christian perspective on wealth in the past (here), but Dr. Noell’s survey today was far more expansive. For the benefit of PowerBlog readers, I would like to reflect on some of the major themes of his talk here as a sort of preview of what one could expect once the audio is available for sale.

The first point is that the majority of people living in the ancient world assumed a zero-sum worldview, in which there is a fixed amount of wealth so that if one person gains, another must necessarily have lost. There is good reason for this, in many ways they actually did. Before 1800, most if not all societies, due to lack of technological progress among other things, were stuck in what has been called the Malthusian Trap, in which economic growth was largely stagnant. Indeed, Dr. Noell noted that there is general agreement that annual economic growth in the Roman Empire was somewhere less than one percent.

This is an important point of context bined with the next: somewhere near 60 percent of people lived in poverty, and more so than our situation today, this poverty was often a matter of heavy taxation, usurious lending, arbitrary rents, and fraud. That is, the wealth of the rich often e at the expense of the poor. Thus the many biblical and ancient Christian statements about wealth and poverty, where the rich are often morally suspect just for being rich. The context that they lived in required an entirely different rhetorical line when it came to wealth and poverty.

In the midst of this environment, however, we can see glimpses of the remarkable character of early Christian generosity. In the second century Apology of Aristides, the author writes,

[Christians] imitate God by the philanthropy which prevails among them; for they passion on the poor, and they release the captives, and bury the dead, and do such things as these, which are acceptable before God and well-pleasing also to men, — which (customs) they have received from their forefathers. (14)

And again:

And whenever one of their poor passes from the world, each one of them according to his ability gives heed to him and carefully sees to his burial. And if they hear that one of their number is imprisoned or afflicted on account of the name of their Messiah, all of them anxiously minister to his necessity, and if it is possible to redeem him they set him free. And if there is among them any that is poor and needy, and if they have no spare food, they fast two or three days in order to supply to the needy their lack of food. They observe the precepts of their Messiah with much care, living justly and soberly as the Lord their manded them. (15)

bated the crushing poverty of their limited-good, agrarian society with ascetic acts passion, giving whatever they could to help those in need. This is certainly an ethos that ought to transcend their context.

The last point I would like to highlight is from the Cappadocian fathers, St. Augustine, and St. John Chryosostom (and, of course, the Scriptures as well). That point is the conditional character of property rights. That is, they understood private property to be a necessity in our world, but cautioned Christians to remember that all they had came from the hand of God and that God was the defender of the poor. The key contention can be summarized by St. Augustine: “When you possess superfluities, you possess the goods of others.” Or, put another way, those who have an abundance have a duty to use that abundance for the good of others. As St. Paul writes,

For I do not mean that others should be eased and you burdened; but by an equality, that now at this time your abundance may supply their lack, that their abundance also may supply your lack — that there may be equality. As it is written, “He who gathered much had nothing left over, and he who gathered little had no lack.” (2 Corinthians 8:13-15)

St. Paul writes this as an exhortation to voluntary generosity, just as ancient Christians practiced.

The tricky question was raised during the Q&A, and is all the plicated by our post-agrarian, non-Malthusian economic context: “What was the standard by which a person was able to recognize when something they possessed qualified as ‘superfluities.'” The answer Dr. Noell gave was quite interesting: the conscience. While our context has changed — those who earn do not necessarily do so at the expense of others anymore — our duty to the poor abides and the standard by which we are to evaluate what is “too much” does not change either: the voice of God in the heart, the human conscience. Thus we can see the centrality and importance of natural law as a moral standard for economic relations to early Christian social thought, underscoring its continued importance for us today.

But more on that e later this week….

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The great economic problem
Note: This is post #17 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. How does the price of oil affect the price of candy bars? When the price of oil increases, it is of course more expensive to transport goods, like candy bars. But there are other, more subtle ways these two markets are connected says economist Alex Tabarrok. (If you find the pace of the videos too slow, I’d mend watching them at 1.5 to 2 times the speed....
Samuel Gregg on Pope Francis and radical capitalism
AP Photo/Andrew Medichini In a recent speech delivered to a gathering of the Roman round table ofThe Global Foundationat the Vatican, Pope Francis addressed economics. Specifically, he suggested that a capitalist ideology which is unconcerned about the marginalized has run rampant across the world. Acton Institute’s director of research, Samuel Gregg, suggests that the evidence does not support this argument. Gregg explains this in his latest for the Stream: “Pope Francis and the Myth of Radical Capitalism.” Gregg lays out...
5 facts about Inauguration Day
Tomorrow is Inauguration Day, a day of ceremonies to mark the peaceful transition of federal executive power within the United States government. Here are five facts should know about the most important date (after Election Day) on the political calendar: 1. Inauguration Day used to be held on March 4. That was the original date (March 4, 1789) when the Confederation Congress, which operated under the Articles of Confederation, handed off power to the new constitutional government. When the new...
Restoring character: Moral communities as a path to common virtue
“It is the evacuation of depth, stability, and substance of culture where we witness the death of character.” –James Davison Hunter Christians and conservatives have long despaired over the “loss of American values,” decrying the erosion of public virtue and the disintegration of morals. As researchers likeCharles Murray and Robert Putnam have duly confirmed, the fabric munity life and civil society is continuing to fray across America. In Yuval Levin’s latest book, The Fractured Republic, he finds the solution in...
God or man? Whittaker Chambers’ ‘Witness’ at 65
“A former Communist who found spiritual solace in his adopted Quakerism,” says Bruce Edward Walker in this week’s Acton Commentary, “Chambers reduced the dilemma facing modern humanity to a simple dichotomy: God or Man?” Consider: An avowed socialist candidate came close to clinching the presidential nomination in what was once considered the world’s greatest proponent of liberty; the same country is hobbled by an ever-encroaching, state-enforced regulatory apparatus; municipal bankruptcies and state budget crises proliferate, wrought in part by massively...
Trump should abolish the White House faith office
Image courtesy of Getty Images “Why can’t sane energy policies be developed and effectively implemented without a $30 billion bureaucracy to oversee it?” asks Acton Institute president and co-founder Rev. Robert Sirico in a recent article for The Hill. Sirico notes that under President-elect Donald Trump some overreaching government bureaucracies could be rolled back or even abolished. Most significantly, Sirico calls for an end of the Office of Faith-Based Initiatives: This well-intentioned subsidy obfuscates the nature of religious charities by...
Video: Ilya Shapiro on judicial abdication and the growth of government
On December 1st, Acton ed Cato Institute Senior Fellow in Constitutional Studies Ilya Shapiro to the Mark Murray Auditorium to speak on the role of the federal judiciary in the growth of government. The lecture, delivered as part of the 2015 Acton Lecture Series, emphasized the importance of judges’ both having the right constitutional theories as well as the willingness to enforce them. Shapiro argues that too much judicial “restraint” — like that of Chief Justice John Roberts in the...
6 Quotes: Ben Franklin on money and virtue
Today is the 311thbirthday of the Founding Father and polymath, Ben Franklin. As a leading statesman and scientist of his day, Franklin made innumerable contributions—many of which made him a wealthy man. At his death, Franklin is estimated to have been worth about $67 million. Here are six quotes by Franklin on money, wealth, and virtue: On increasing wealth: The way to wealth is as plain as the way to market. It depends chiefly on two words—industry and frugality. On...
What you should know about the President’s Cabinet
Note: This is the first in a weekly series of explanatory posts on the officials and agencies included in the President’s Cabinet. When Obamacare was signed into law in 2010, the Catholic nuns didn’t expect it would affect their religious liberty. Nor did they suspect that in a few years the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) would restrict their freedom of conscience. Yet it was that Cabinet-level government agency that issued a mandate requiring the women to disregard...
Called to the coalfields: How an Appalachian church is spurring economic action
Due to a rapidly changing economy and a range of excessive regulations from the federal government, the American coal mining industry is facing serious challenges. For states like West Virginia, the effects are particularly painful, as mining towns munities struggle under a projected 23% decline in related jobs in recent years, leading vast numbers of residents to leave the state altogether. Yet for Travis Lowe, pastor of Crossroads Church in Bluefield, West Virginia, the severe economic losses and doom-and-gloom forecasts...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved