Not Short Of A Pound
My
maternal grandmother, born in 1882, grew up by the River Medlock in Ancoats,
Manchester, one of the city’s earliest industrial areas. Local housing
consisted almost entirely of small terraced properties. People worked very hard
for long hours and were paid low wages. Employment was precarious in this
polluted district and ‘getting the sack’ was something everyone feared. As a
child Grandma only ever had the simplest of Christmas presents; an apple and an
orange in one of her ordinary stockings. Even in later life, when her
circumstances were generously secure, she never expected nor sought any kind of
luxury.
We now no
longer live in that world. In the West everybody aspires to an income which
allows the purchase of luxury items and a freedom of choice through spending
power which their forebears would have associated with the upper classes,
really quite small groups of the wealthy, elite and fortunate.
With these
changes we have developed a consumer economy, one that plans for a great deal
of retail purchasing activity and encourages the provision of goods and
services to meet such an extensive public demand. We live in a world extremely
well supplied with cars, white goods, clothes, electronic equipment and games,
sports kit and an ever-expanding range of children’s toys. For all this, much
money is required and where money is lacking, credit serves instead. Indeed
this nation is notorious for its levels of borrowing. If once we were a nation
of shopkeepers, we are now a nation of customers and credit-card owners.
Meeting
this demand, and, indeed, constantly creating this demand, is a wide range of
designers and manufacturers. The really powerful bodies these days, it seems,
are not governments or public authorities, but corporations and billionaire
business people. It appears that money rules everywhere we look.
It is
against this background that the Archbishop of Canterbury has written his
recent book, Dethroning Mammon. He argues very successfully that the process of
acquisition and ownership, the business of manufacturing items to sell and
advertising to accelerate their sales has filled our culture and led to the
marginalisation of moral and genuinely creative concerns; most significantly,
it has eclipsed the spiritual. Without realising, we have become worshippers of
Mammon, mere slaves of objects; worldliness and greed reign everywhere around
us. As we rush to buy, God is left outside the store.
There are
individual Christian people who have not been drawn into this new world of
wealth, but they are not the norm. Those who enter a religious order or
volunteer for long periods of service caring for the world’s poor do not
predominate. Most of us fit only too naturally into the comforts of the First
World. How far does this put us from the vision of the Kingdom of God revealed
in Holy Scripture?
Jesus of
Nazareth owned nothing but what he stood up in and even that was taken from him
without resistance. He expected his followers to abandon everything - and
everybody - to be with him in his public work. Even natural and good affection
was to count for nothing beside loyalty to God’s work. The background to this
hard standard was his teaching that time was very short. The end would come
soon, with the fulfilment of all things consequent upon his return in glory.
For this short and intense period, all secondary things, all ordinary
considerations, must yield absolutely to personal loyalty to himself as the
incarnation of God’s will.
Many
followed obediently and Acts describes the foundation of a form of communalism amongst Christians
which ruled out personal ownership and secular aspiration. St.Paul appears to have
come across this phenomenon in at least some of his churches and he begins by
concurring with this ‘mind of urgency and single concern’. He recommends
celibacy and utter commitment as the ideal, himself rejecting marriage and
family bonds.
His later letters,
however, are less clear on this subject and by the end of the first century
Christians, whilst still revering the early single-minded ideal, were making
provision for family life and faith together, were not normally living
communally and were beginning to be more open about the use of the resources
they had. The Second Coming had not occurred and daily life had be lived on
sustainable and consistent principles which took into full account the whole
range of developing Christian moral perceptions.
It became
accepted that resources could be privately owned by a Christian, but that with
ownership must come a deep duty of care towards others. The question turned
from that of divesting oneself of property to making responsible decisions
about how a significant part of it could be used for others in need. Whilst
devout family life and personal ownership were certainly growing, there also
came a move to the desert and a new asceticism; a discipline which lived and
celebrated simplicity and single-purpose.
So a
‘harder’ and an ‘easier’ form of Christian living developed and these persisted
through the Middle Ages in parallel. The Reformation brought a new and
considerable range of responses to the question of money and possessions. One
result was the founding of lay communities in the United States like the Amish,
who re-established something of the original lay communalism. In the United
States also, a movement has developed which links worldly success very closely
with God’s favour. The relationship between possessions and faith seems to have
the character of a shifting kaleidoscope image, where the same components spin
and turn into new configurations.
Where,
then, ought we to stand? There can be no doubt that the general observations of
Archbishop Welby are correct. We have bowed down to Mammon far too often. Yet
it is not evident that we should abandon the modern achievements in health and
welfare, for instance, which are difficult to detach from the economic activity
of ‘developed’ countries. At the same time, the policies of these same
countries may well be a factor in diminishing the well-being of other peoples.
Are we at all able to make meaningful moral choices here?Would we be better off
without electronics or sophisticated transport? What would the world’s now
enormous population do if it did not work, produce and consume? Could we and
should we try to influence the economy of the world or our country politically?
What happens if we withdraw form exercising such influence, even in our vote?
What is
certain is that we are called to love God and love our neighbour. Whatever
resources we have should be used generously for these priorities. As to the
larger picture, intention and outcome are often quite remote from each other.
Could there ever be a Christian economic policy? What would a fully Christian
view of money, possessions and power look like? Perhaps those in the group who
know more about economics might be able to help us? Or should we ask those who
have little?
Fr. Alan
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