Render unto Caesar
Francis Neilson, at http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/neilson-francis_quotes-i-to-o.html
Take the words as they are given in the three gospels: "Render
unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that
are God's." The statements are clear, there is no reservation, no
modification, no proviso; ...It is the basis of justice, the point from
which the ownership of the thing produced can be determined. Without
it, there can be no law of ownership but a political or legal one for
the determination of the courts. Jesus says: "Give to Caesar what is
his," not "what is legally his." Well, what is Caesar's? Only that
which he produces. Here lies the very heart of the whole question.
Jesus preached non-resistance: lay not up treasures, food enough only
for the day, non-cooperation, abandonment of homes, of fields, flight
into the mountains, the wilderness, anywhere away from the curse,
Caesar, the heathen ruler who robbed, jailed, and murdered God's chosen
people. Tribute was a thing unlawful, unholy, a thing accursed and
abhorred form old time. Had not all the true prophets shown how tribute
arose out of the removal of the landmarks? ...Jesus knew his history
and he must have known the difference between that of the old law and
that of the priests' law. The prophets knew, and, as Jesus knew the
prophets, there is no sound reason for thinking Jesus did not know. [
The Eleventh Commandment, p.274]
The second part of the injunction, "render unto God the things which be
God's," is the most consistent piece of economic reasoning which Jesus,
the perfect example of a wise man, gave to mankind. This means, give
to God all things he has created. Why? Because it is impossible for the
kingdom to come, so long as men own parts of God's kingdom. There can
be no private ownership of land in the kingdom of God, because land is
created, and man can own nothing but what he produces. The law is very
simple and very clear, once it is interpreted by Jesus. [The Eleventh
Commandment, p.275]
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