Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Has Contemporary American Capitalism Become Incompatible with Christian Values?

...is the oh-so-relevant question asked by The New York Times on its "Room for Debate" page.  I'm particularly moved by Dr. Gary Dorrien's response linked here.  Writes Dorrien:
Capitalism thrives on selfish impulses that Christian moral teaching condemns, and neo-classical economic theory mythologizes a supposedly “natural” free market that never existed anywhere. Thus the question is perennially relevant, simplistic binaries notwithstanding. Early economies were built on social obligations, as were the feudal economies in which Catholic theologians developed theories of distributive justice and the common good. Then the founders of neo-classical theory fashioned a supposedly natural “laissez-faire” ideal that was, in fact, carefully designed to serve the interests of the bourgeois class.
http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/06/25/has-capitalism-become-incompatible-with-christianity/morality-should-not-be-priced-in-the-marketplace
Isn't it time Jesus' disciples speak from the very heart of the tradition?  Isn't it time we say, with Dr. Dorrien, that there's nothing natural or moral about "laissez-faire" Tea Party capitalism?  Even more pointedly, isn't it time that Jesus' disciples condemn systems that happily send the hungry multitudes into the wilderness to suffer their fate?