Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How not to think clearly on faith and economics
How not to think clearly on faith and economics
Dec 15, 2025 9:18 AM

‘A view of Blanchard Hall in Wheaton College’ by Liscobeck Public Domain

Mark Labberton, President of Fuller Seminary, recently addressed a meeting of Evangelical leaders held at Wheaton College and has released a reconstruction of his remarks. It is an interesting address which spends four paragraphs explicitly addressing questions of economics and economic policy.

This section begins by rightly noting that, “It is very hard to read the Bible and ignore God’s heart for the poor and the vulnerable.” In the Catholic tradition there has been a sustained reflection on this issue using the language of a preferential option for the poor (See ‘The Poor as Neighbors: Option & Respect’) and Labberton’s call for Evangelicals to reflect in a similar way is most e.

When Labberton later states, “Long before free market capitalism had developed, the God of Israel, the God revealed in Jesus Christ, was shown to bend toward mercy, with justice for the poor.”, there is potential for confusion.

While the preferential option for the poor is indeed an essential and distinct part of the Christian tradition it is wrong to paint it in opposition to free markets. Last week I sought to outline an argument for the essential consonance of the broadly liberal tradition, including free market economics, with the Christian tradition (See ‘Is economics an ideology?’). Just as the preferential option for the poor is the product of the sustained reflection of Christians on their scripture, tradition, and experience so too are free markets and the institutions, ethics, and law which undergird them (See Sources in Early Modern Economics, Ethics, and Law for a rich sampling of this tradition).

The maintenance of the important distinction between the preferential option for the poor as an ethical imperative and markets as an essential institution of a just social order keeps us thinking clearly and from making the sorts of mistakes that I believe Labberton makes in his concluding paragraph on economics,

When white evangelicals in prominent and wealthy places speak about what is fair and beneficial for society, but then pass laws and tax changes that create more national indebtedness and elevate the top 1% even higher—while cutting services and provisions for children, the disabled, and the poor that are castigated as disgusting “entitlements”—one has to ask how this is reconciled with being followers of Jesus. plexities of social support for the vulnerable in our society certainly can and should be debated, but when the instigators of change are serving elite interests and disregarding the 99%, it is very hard to recognize the influence of the gospel narrative passion, let alone justice.

It is difficult to evaluate this paragraph without knowing about which particular laws or tax changes Labberton is referring to. National indebtedness is certainly not something to be pursued for its own sake and I am not aware of any law or tax policy that pursues it as such. Christians have long struggled with and reflected on questions of credit and under which circumstances and when it is morally justified (See On Exchange and Usury and On Righteousness, Oaths, and Usury). What is clear is that a simple acceptance or rejection of the use of credit as such is unwise.

Similarly I am unaware of any law designed explicitly to enrich the ‘1%’. Samuel Gregg, the Acton Institute’s Director of Research, has rightly condemned the injustice of ‘Crony Capitalism’ which,

… involves dislodging the workings of free exchange within a framework of property rights and rule of law—what is generally understood to be a free market. These arrangements are gradually replaced by “political markets.”

This is a perennial problem which early free market theorists fought against (See ‘The Law’) and continue to analyze (See ‘Rent Seeking’).

Labberton acknowledges that, plexities of social support for the vulnerable in our society certainly can and should be debated…”, but uses very loaded and hostile language to describe critics of the current welfare state. It should be noted that our largest entitlement programs, Social Security and Medicare, are not means tested and flow not only to the poor but to the ‘1%’! Poverty is plex social problem and bringing the marginalized towards the center of our social, religious, and economic life requires the pairing of our good intentions with sound economics (See ‘Redistribution’).

Economics should be the concern of serious Christians but Labberton’s address brings more heat than light to the issue. For some light I would heartily mend Victor Claar and Robin Klay’s Economics in Christian Perspective: Theory, Policy and Life Choices.

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
Business & theological education
Christian Post columnist R. Albert Mohler, Jr., president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, pares business schools and theological seminaries, which are both “tempted to redefine their mission in strictly academic terms.” In explicating a recent study published in the Harvard Business Review, Mohler passes on the conclusions about the trend among business schools, “Today, it is possible to find tenured professors of management who have never set foot inside a real business, except as customers.” Mohler writes...
A rising tide lifts all boats
This BBC Newshour story (RealAudio) following on the first Rolls-Royce automobile purchased in India in fifty years contains some interesting analysis about the state of the Indian economy. Citing the liberalization of the economy beginning in 1991, Indian diplomat Pavan Varma states that “the number of people below the poverty line have been reduced fairly dramatically.” This in spite of the protestations of the interviewer, Claire Bolderson, that the gap between rich and poor illustrates “quite a contradictory picture that’s...
‘No Bible Sunday’
“Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers” (Galatians 6:10 NIV). According to The Christian Post, “On May 22, churches in several parts of the world are planning to hold ‘No Bible’ services where The Bible, even hymn books, over-head-projector slides, or anything else containing Scripture, will be locked away from view.” The purpose is to illustrate the state of Christians and others across the globe,...
‘No Sense of Urgency’
The official in charge of governmental relief funds in Indonesia is “shocked” at the lack of reconstruction progress in the Aceh province, fully five months after the Indian Ocean tsunami. BBC News reports that Kuntoro Mangkusubroto primarily blames bureaucratic wrangling for the delays. “There is no sense of urgency,” he said. Meanwhile private funding continues to flow freely as NGOs effectively implement their relief efforts. Visit Acton’s Tsunami Guide to Effective Giving for information about how your money can help...
Update on Laura Ingraham
As was noted in an earlier post, talk-radio host and friend of the Acton Institute Laura Ingraham was recently diagnosed with breast cancer. Her website is now reporting some promising news following her most recent surgery: This afternoon, Laura went back into surgery for a further “cleaning of the margins” around the original breast tumor. Dr. Katherine Alley excised a few more millimeters of tissue, and she drained the recurrent “golfball” (Laura’s term, not Dr. Alley’s) of liquid that had...
Religious red herring
Visit Fox News for this exchange between John Gibson and Richard Thompson, president of the Thomas More Law Center, about charges of religious intolerance in the military. Here’s a key part of the discussion: GIBSON: But, Mr. Thompson, I know you’re in this business, so you would be hypervigilant about this. And we all know how this cadet structure is. The seniors have enormous power over lower cadets. Do we have a situation where senior cadets who are Christians are...
Benedict XVI on markets and morality
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, in his former role as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, was more focused on the theological implications of political heresies such as liberation theology than he was on questions of economics. Yet Benedict has written eloquently on the subject of markets and morality, as this 1985 presentation at a Rome conference amply shows. In a paper titled Market Economy and Ethics, he affirms that “market rules function only...
Prayer for commerce and industry
Almighty God, whose Son Jesus Christ in his earthly life shared our toil and hallowed our labor: Be present with your people where they work; make those who carry on the industries merce of this land responsive to your will; and give to us all a pride in what we do, and a just return for our labor; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and...
Air getting cleaner
And that’s apparently a bad thing: “Researchers say that more solar energy arriving on the ground will also make the surface warmer, and this may add to the problems of global warming.” Note also that this article states that the cleaning of the earth’s skies coincided with “the collapse munist economies and the consequent decrease in industrial pollutants.” ...
(In)Direct aid
An editorial in today’s New York Times attests to the severely myopic lens through which the editorial board views the world. In “A Better Way to Fight Poverty,” the editorial effusively praises a United Nations program for its work in showing how “direct aid can largely bypass governments, getting money and help straight into the hands of the people who not only need it the most, but also know what to do with it.” Direct aid? Since when are ANY...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved