Proverbs 22:7 ¶ The rich ruleth over the poor, and the
borrower is servant to the lender.
Here is a Bible fact that many people fail to
understand. The rich and I mean by rich, people who have millions of dollars of
disposable income, through their control of banking and commerce, are as much a
part of the governance of a country as the elected or appointed government
entities. The rich receive benefits from the government in that even with tax
rates as high as 90% during the Eisenhower administration with tax write offs
and deductions worked with by high priced accountants the rich could actually
pay a smaller percentage of their income in taxes than a poor person. The
scandal when I was in high school regarding this was that a cleaning lady in
Newark, NJ paid more actual income taxes than Standard Oil of NJ which became
Esso which became Exxon-Mobil. A decade or more ago, the story was about how
billionaire financier Warren Buffet revealed that his servant paid more than
income taxes he did. Now, don’t misunderstand me, the rich pay huge amounts of
money in taxes all across the board but in regards to the percent of their
personal income they pay a much smaller amount than the working class unless
they’re idiots or have incompetent accountants. (Special note: you pay taxes
not only on income but through other taxes and by government inflating your
money.)
The rich have a great deal to say about job
creation, where venture capital goes, and provide the pool of money for all
sorts of investments. This is not to comment on a system of economics; whether
capitalism or socialism is bad (we have a mix). This is not to condemn the
rich, as the rich and poor meet together and God rules over both as it said a
few verses earlier. But, it is important to understand that the rich do rule
over the rest of us. Our own American Revolution, our war for independence from
Great Britain, was mainly the doing of wealthy men who led the rest of the
country who would follow into revolt against their king. There are those who
rule over us whom we have elected, or thought we elected, and there are those
who rule over us in a manner of fact whom we did not elect but just by virtue
of their management of vast sums of capital, on which commerce, banking, and
industry feed.
Remember that government itself, which although
technically answerable to the people, and I say that is a mere technicality, is
the richest entity of all and by taxation controls the most wealth and enacts
laws that narrow the actions of the rich. It is a stress of our form of
government to try to keep the rich from controlling the government and the rich
free enough from the government’s control to provide some kind of benefit for
the rest of us and themselves without corrupting the government. Simon Cameron,
a onetime Secretary of War under Abraham Lincoln, is purported to have said,
“An honest politician is one, when he is bought, will stay bought.”
The point is simply that the rich rules over the
poor. Deal with it. I’m not talking politics here, just pointing out a fact the
Bible points out.
On the second point Israel was not to be the servant of
other nations. Israel was to be, had she been faithful to God, the top kingdom
on earth.
Deuteronomy 15:6 For the LORD thy God
blesseth thee, as he promised thee: and thou shalt lend unto many nations, but
thou shalt not borrow; and thou shalt reign over many nations, but they shall
not reign over thee.
Israel was to have the money and the power to
control other nations through it. Americans must not think much of their
freedom. They so easily sell their birthright of freedom for “bread and
pottage” (Genesis 25), for comfort and ease of living. We put ourselves in
servitude to lenders for vacations, homes, and cars caring more about the
monthly payment than the overall cost, putting ourselves in hock to the lender,
working a part of our lives to satisfy them through the principal and the
interest, and encouraging the producer to raise prices as long as we can handle
the monthly payment. So, just as the rich rules over the poor, the lender rules
over the borrower. The Bible makes clear that there is no political freedom
without economic freedom and the person who is in debt is neither economically
free nor is he or she in the will of God.
Romans 13:8 Owe no man any thing, but to love
one another: for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the law.
You are a servant to the government, the richest
entity in your physical life, and will work to pay your “debt” to them through
April as I understand it. The date that the country satisfies its tax burden is
called Tax Freedom Day. In 1900 it was only January 22. In 2000 it was supposed
to be May 1. In 2019 it fell on April 16 according to The Tax Foundation found
at www.taxfoundation.org. Your servitude to the rich through profits and the
power those profits provide will continue through the rest of the year.
While it has been argued that you need a certain
amount of debt to maintain a good credit rating, and that is arguable, the
young person’s wisest choice would be to avoid going into debt. Save, do
without unless you have cash, and deny the materialistic obsessions of your
parents. Do not willingly become the servant of anyone through debt. Of course,
we could go into a lot more about you being forced into debt to foreign
governments by greedy and power drunk men in charge in Washington, how the cash
you use is just paper not based on any real value, and unless we adopt a
balanced budget amendment and a precious metal standard for our money we are
just playing Monopoly as any economist will tell you, “money is fiction,” but
that doesn’t add any more understanding to the Proverb.
No comments:
Post a Comment