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Social
Statements | Economic Life

Adopted by a more than two-thirds majority vote
(872-124) as a social statement of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America by its sixth Churchwide Assembly on August 20, 1999, in
Denver, Colorado.
Economic life pervades our lives the work we do, the income we
receive, how much we consume and save, what we value, and how we
view one another. An economy (oikonomia or "management
of the household") is meant to meet people's material needs.
The current market-based economy does that to an amazing degree;
many are prospering as never before. At the same time, others
continue to lack what they need for basic subsistence. Out of deep
concern for those affected adversely, we of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America here assess economic life today in light of the
moral imperative to seek sufficient, sustainable
livelihood for all. *
To an unprecedented degree, today's market economy has become
global in scope, intensity, and impact. Common brand names appear
throughout the world. Many companies based in the United States
generate most of their revenues and profits abroad. Daily foreign
exchange trading has increased a hundredfold over the past quarter
century. Billions of dollars of capital can flow out of one country
and into another with a few computer keystrokes. This economic
globalization has brought new kinds of businesses, opportunities,
and a better life for many. It also has resulted in increasing
misery for others. Intensive global competition can force a company
to relocate if it is to survive generating jobs elsewhere, while
leaving behind many workers who lose their jobs. Sudden shifts in
globalized capital and financial markets can dramatically affect the
economic well-being of millions of people, for good or for ill.
Human beings are responsible and accountable for economic life,
but people often feel powerless in the face of what occurs.
Market-based thought and practices dominate our world today in ways
that seem to eclipse other economic, social, political, and
religious perspectives. To many people, the global market economy
feels like a free-running system that is reordering the world with
few external checks or little accountability to values other than
profit. Economic mandates often demand sacrifices from those least
able to afford them. When any economic system and its effects are
accepted without question when it becomes a "god-like"
power reigning over people, communities, and creation then we face a
central issue of faith.
The Church confesses
If the economic arena becomes a reigning power for us, the question
arises: in what or whom shall we place our trust and hope? The First
Commandment is clear: "You shall have no other gods before
me" (Exodus 20:3). Or as Jesus said, "You cannot serve God
and wealth" (Matthew 6:24c; Luke 16:13). To place our trust in
something other than God is the essence of sin. It disrupts our
relationships with God, one another, and the rest of creation,
resulting in injustices and exploitation: "For from the least
to the greatest of them, everyone is greedy for unjust gain"
(Jeremiah 6:13).
As a church we confess that we are in bondage to sin and submit
too readily to the idols and injustices of economic life. We often
rely on wealth and material goods more than God and close ourselves
off from the needs of others. Too uncritically we accept
assumptions, policies, and practices that do not serve the good of
all.
Our primary and lasting identity, trust, and hope are rooted in
the God we know in Jesus Christ. Baptized into Christ's life, death,
and resurrection, we receive a new identity and freedom, rather than
being defined and held captive by economic success or failure. In
the gathered community of Christ's Body, the Church, we hear the
Word and partake of the Supper, a foretaste of the fullness of life
promised by Jesus, "the bread of life" (John 6:35).
Through the cross of Christ, God forgives our sin and frees us from
bondage to false gods. Faith in Christ fulfills the First
Commandment. We are called to love the neighbor and be stewards in
economic life, which, distorted by sin, is still God's good
creation.
God who "executes justice for the oppressed, who gives food
to the hungry" (Psalm 146:7) is revealed in Jesus, whose
mission was "to bring good news to the poor . . . release to
the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the
oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor"
(Luke 4: 18-19). The kingdom of God he proclaimed became real
through concrete acts of justice: feeding people, freeing them from
various forms of bondage, embracing those excluded by the systems of
his day, and calling his followers to a life of faithfulness to God.
God's reign is not a new system, a set of prescriptive laws, or a
plan of action that depends on what we do. Nor is it a spiritual
realm removed from this world. In Jesus Christ, God's reign
intersects earthly life, transforming us and how we view the systems
of this world. Our faith in God provides a vantage point for
critiquing any and every system of this world, all of which fall
short of what God intends. Human impoverishment, excessive
accumulation and consumerism driven by greed, gross economic
disparities, and the degradation of nature are incompatible with
this reign of God.
Through human decisions and actions, God is at work in economic
life. Economic life is intended to be a means through which God's
purposes for humankind and creation are to be served. When this does
not occur, as a church we cannot remain silent because of who and
whose we are.
Our obligation and ongoing tensions
Based on this vantage point of faith, "sufficient,
sustainable livelihood for all" is a benchmark
for affirming, opposing, and seeking changes in economic life.
Because of sin we fall short of these obligations in this world, but
we live in light of God's promised future that ultimately there will
be no hunger and injustice. This promise makes us restless with less
than what God intends for the world. In economic matters, this draws
attention to:
- the scope of God's concern -- "for all,"
- the means by which life is sustained -- "livelihood,"
- what is needed -- "sufficiency,"
and
- a long-term perspective -- "sustainability."
These criteria often are in tension with one another. What
benefits people in one area, sector, or country may harm those
elsewhere. What is sufficient in one context is not in another. What
is economically sufficient is not necessarily sustainable. There are
difficult and complex trade-offs and ambiguities in the dynamic
processes of economic life. As believers, we are both impelled by
God's promises and confronted with the practical realities of
economic life. We often must choose among competing claims,
conscious of our incomplete knowledge, of the sin that clouds all
human judgments and actions, and of the grace and
forgiveness given by Christ.
Economic assumptions can conflict with what we as a church
confess. Who we are in Christ places us in tension with priorities
given to money, consumption, competition, and profit in our economic
system.
- While autonomy and self-sufficiency are highly valued in our
society, as people of faith we confess that we depend on God and
are interdependent with one another. Through these relationships
we are nurtured, sustained, and held accountable.
- While succeeding or making something of themselves is what
matters to many in economic life, we confess that in Christ we
are freely justified by grace through faith rather than by what
we do.
- While a market economy emphasizes what individuals want
and are willing and able to buy, as people of faith we realize
that what human beings want is not necessarily what
they need for the sake of life.
- While a market economy assumes people will act to maximize
their own interests, we acknowledge that what is in our interest
must be placed in the context of what is good for the neighbor.
- While competitiveness is key to economic success, we recognize
that intense competitiveness can destroy relationships and work
against the reconciliation and cooperation God desires among
people.
- While economic reasoning assumes that resources are scarce
relative to people's wants, we affirm that God promises a world
where there is enough for everyone, if only we would learn how
to use and share what God has given for the sake of all.
- While economic growth often is considered an unconditional
good, we insist that such growth must be evaluated by its
direct, indirect, short-term, and long-term effects on the
well-being of all creation and people, especially those who are
poor.
When we pray in the Lord's Prayer, "Give us this
day our daily bread," we place ourselves in
tension with economic assumptions of our society. Rather than being
self-sufficient, we need and depend on what God gives or provides
through people, practices, and systems. "Daily bread"
is not earned by efforts of individuals alone, but is made possible
through a variety of relationships and institutions.[1]
God gives in ways that expand our notions of who "us"
includes, from people close at hand to those around the globe. In
stark contrast to those who seek unchecked accumulation and profit,
our attention is drawn to those who are desperate for what will
sustain their lives for just this day.
For all: especially those living in poverty
"For all" refers to the whole household of God all people
and creation throughout the world. We should assess economic
activities in terms of how they affect "all," especially
people living in poverty.
We tend to view economic life by how it affects us personally.
The cross of Christ challenges Christians to view this arena through
the experience of those of us who are impoverished, suffering,
broken, betrayed, left out, without hope. Through those who are
"despised" and "held of no account" (Isaiah
53:3) we see the crucified Christ (Matthew 25:31-46), through whom
God's righteousness and justice are revealed. The power of God's
suffering, self-giving love transforms and challenges the Church to
stand with all who are overlooked for the sake of economic progress
or greed. Confession of faith ought to flow into acts of justice for
the sake of the most vulnerable.
Outrage over the plight of people living in poverty is a theme
throughout the Bible. At the heart of Jesus' ministry and central to
the message of the Old Testament prophets was God's partiality
toward the poor and powerless. The poor are those who live
precariously between subsistence and utter deprivation. It is not
poor people themselves who are the problem, but their lack of access
to the basic necessities of life. Without such, they cannot maintain
their human dignity. Strong themes in Scripture indicate that people
are poor because of circumstances that have afflicted them (such as
"aliens, orphans, widows"), or because of the greed and
unjust practices of those who "trample on the poor" (Amos
5:11). The basic contrast is between the weak and the greedy. The
psalmist decries that "the wicked draw the sword and bend their
bows to bring down the poor and needy" (Psalm 37:14). The
prophet rails against those "who write oppressive statutes to
turn aside the needy from justice" (Isaiah 10:1-2). Their moral
problem is that they have followed greed rather than God. As a
result, the poor lose their basic productive resource (their land),
and fall into cycles of indebtedness. Poverty is a problem of the
whole human community, not only of those who are poor or vulnerable.
In relation to those who are poor, Martin Luther's insights into
the meaning of the commandments against killing, stealing, and
coveting are sobering. We violate "you shall not kill"
when we do not help and support others to meet their basic needs. As
Luther explained, "If you see anyone suffer hunger and do not
feed [them], you have let [them] starve."[2]
"To steal" can include "taking advantage of our
neighbor in any sort of dealing that results in loss to him [or her]
. . . wherever business is transacted and money is exchanged for
goods or labor."[3]
"You shall not covet" means "God does not wish you to
deprive your neighbor of anything that is [theirs], letting [them]
suffer loss while you gratify your greed."[4]
Related Hebraic laws called for leaving produce in the fields for
the poor (Deuteronomy 24:21), a periodic cancellation of debts
(Deuteronomy 15:1), and a jubilee year in which property was to be
redistributed or restored to those who had lost it, so that they
might again have a means of livelihood (Leviticus 25).
Today, well over a billion people in the world are deprived of
what they need to meet their basic needs. Far more lack clean water,
adequate sanitation, housing, or health services. They use whatever
limited options are available to them in their daily struggle to
survive. Thousands die daily. Millions pursue economic activities
that are part of the underground or informal economy, and are not
counted in economic statistics. Children often have no option but to
labor under unjust conditions to provide for themselves and their
families. Political struggles, militarism, and warfare add to this
travesty, displacing masses of people from their homes.[5]
In many of the poorest countries, incomes continue to decline, and
people subsist on less and less. Although most of the impoverished
live in developing countries, where their numbers continue to grow
at alarming rates, many millions are in the industrialized
countries. Millions of poor people live in communities in the United
States and the Caribbean where the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America is present.
Developing countries that have opened their economies to global
markets have generally reduced poverty over time more than those
that have not, but the terms of trade often work to the disadvantage
of developing countries. Seeking more just exchanges "for
all" through investment and trade is a significant challenge.
The danger is that less developed parts of the world, or less
powerful groups within a country, will be exploited or excluded from
participation in global markets.
When a developing country becomes heavily indebted, the poorest
are usually the most adversely affected. A huge share of a country's
income must be used to pay off debt, which may have been incurred
unjustly or under corrupt rulers. Structural adjustment programs to
pay off debt typically divert funds from much needed educational,
health, and environmental efforts, and from infrastructures for
economic development.
God stands in judgment of those in authority who fall short of
their responsibility, and is moved with compassion to deliver the
impoverished from all that oppresses them: "Give justice to the
weak and the orphan; maintain the right of the lowly and the
destitute" (Psalm 82:3). The rich are expected to use wealth to
benefit their neighbors who live in poverty here and throughout the
world.
In light of these realities, we commit ourselves
as a church [6]
and urge members to:
- address creatively and courageously the complex causes of
poverty;
- provide opportunities for dialogue, learning, and strategizing
among people of different economic situations and from different
regions who are harmed by global economic changes;
- give more to relieve conditions of poverty, and invest more in
initiatives to reduce poverty.
We call for:
- scrutiny of how specific policies and practices affect people
and nations that are the poorest, and changes to make policies
of economic growth, trade, and investment more beneficial to
those who are poor;
- efforts to increase the participation of low-income people in
political and civic life, and citizen vigilance and action that
challenges governments and other sectors when they become
captive to narrow economic interests that do not represent the
good of all;
- shifts throughout the world from military expenditures to
purposes that serve the needs of low-income people;
- support for family planning and enhanced opportunities for
women so that population pressures might be eased; [7]
- reduction of overwhelming international debt burdens in ways
that do not impose further deprivations on the poor, and
cancellation of some or all debt where severe indebtedness
immobilizes a country's economy;
- investments, loan funds, hiring practices, skill training, and
funding of micro-enterprises and other community development
projects that can empower low-income people economically.
Livelihood: vocation, work, and human dignity
Vocation: Our calling from God begins in the waters
of Baptism and is lived out in a wide array of settings and
relationships. Freed through the Gospel, we are to serve others
through arenas of responsibility such as family, work, and community
life. Although we continue to be ensnared in the ambiguities and sin
of this world, our vocation is to seek what is good for people and
the rest of creation in ways that glorify God and anticipate God's
promised future.
"Livelihood" designates our means of subsistence or how
we are supported economically. This occurs through paid jobs,
self-employment, business ownership, and accumulated wealth, as well
as through support of family, community networks, and government
assistance.
Strong families, neighborhoods, and schools should support and
help prepare persons for livelihood. Churches, businesses, financial
institutions, government, and civil society also play key roles.
Through these relationships people can be enabled and obligated to
pursue their livelihoods as they are able. When these
infrastructures for livelihood are absent, weak, or threatened (as
they are for many today), people are more likely to be impoverished
materially, emotionally, or spiritually.
Through these relationships and structures, individuals can learn
important virtues, such as:
- trust, accountability, and fidelity in relationships;
- discipline, honesty, diligence, and responsibility in work;
- frugality, prudence, and temperance in the use of resources;
- compassion and justice toward other people and the rest of
creation.
These virtues, along with perspectives and skills acquired
through education and training, make it more likely that individuals
will be able to flourish in their livelihood.
We commit ourselves as a church and
urge members to:
- develop God-given capacities and provide stable, holistic,
loving development of children and youth through families,
neighborhoods, congregations, and other institutions;
- support and encourage one another as we live out our vocation
in ways that serve the neighbor and contribute to family and
community vitality;
- pray and act to provide livelihood for ourselves and others
through the institutions of our day, trusting in God's
providential care for all.
We call for:
- policies that promote stable families, strong schools, and
safe neighborhoods;
- addressing the barriers individuals face in preparing for and
sustaining a livelihood (such as lack of education,
transportation, child care, and health care).
Work: In Genesis, work is to be a means through
which basic needs might be met, as human beings "till and
keep" the garden in which God has placed them (Genesis 2:15).
Work is seen not as an end in itself, but as a means for sustaining
humans and the rest of creation. Due to sin, the work God gives to
humans also becomes toil and anguish (Genesis 3:17,19). Injustice
often deprives people of the fruits of their work (Proverbs 13:23),
which benefits others instead.
God calls people to use their freedom and responsibility, their
capacities and know-how to participate productively in God's world.
As stewards of what God has entrusted to us, we should use available
resources to generate jobs for the livelihood of more people, as
well as to create capital for the growth needed to meet basic needs.
Wealth should serve or benefit others so that they also might live
productively.
What matters in many jobs today, rather than a sense of vocation,
is the satisfaction of wants or desires that the pay from work makes
possible. Work becomes a means toward increased consumerism. Many
also feel a constant sense of being judged, having to measure up
according to an unrelenting bottom line of productivity or profit.
We are freed from such economic captivity by the forgiveness, new
life, and dignity that is ours in Christ.
Competitive economic forces, as well as changing technologies and
consumer demands, significantly affect the kinds of jobs available
and the nature of work. Increased productivity and technological
innovation continue to make some jobs obsolete, while creating
others. A growing proportion of jobs are part-time, temporary, or
contractual, without the longevity and security assumed in the past.
Workers in the United States increasingly produce services rather
than tangible goods. Many people choose to be self-employed. A large
number lose their jobs when companies merge, downsize, or move to
areas with lower labor costs.
Job transitions can be enriching, but also painful. Feeling
invested in one's job as a calling or being able to count on a
future livelihood can be difficult when work is continually in flux.
Many workers feel treated as if they are dispensable. Amid these
changes, our faith reminds us that our security and livelihood rest
ultimately on God. Our hope is grounded in God's promise that people
"shall long enjoy the work of their hands" (Isaiah 65:21).
This gives us courage to ask why changes are occurring, to challenge
forces of greed and injustice when they deny some people what they
need to live, and, when necessary, to seek new possibilities for
livelihood.
Therefore, we commit ourselves as a
church and urge members to:
- deliberate together about the challenges people face in their
work;
- counsel and support those who are unemployed, underemployed,
and undergoing job transitions;
- provide skill and language enhancement training that will
enable the most vulnerable (including new immigrants) to become
better prepared for jobs.
We call for:
- public and private sector partnerships to create jobs and job
retention programs;
- national economic policies that support and advance the goal
of low unemployment.
Human dignity: Human beings are created "in
God's image" (Genesis 1:27) as social beings whose dignity,
worth, and value are conferred by God. Although our identity does
not depend on what we do, through our work we should be able to
express this God-given dignity as persons of integrity, worth, and
meaning. Yet work does not constitute the whole of our life. When we
are viewed and treated only as workers, we tend to be exploited.
Employers have a responsibility to treat employees with dignity
and respect. This should be reflected in employees' remuneration,
benefits, work conditions, job security, and ongoing job training.
Employees have a responsibility to work to the best of their
potential in a reliable and responsible manner. This includes work
habits, attitudes toward employers and co-workers, and a willingness
to adapt and prepare for new work situations. No one should be
coerced to work under conditions that violate their dignity or
freedom, jeopardize their health or safety, result in neglect of
their family's well-being, or provide unjust compensation for their
labor.
Our God-given dignity in community means that we are to
participate actively in decisions that impact our lives, rather than
only passively accept decisions others make for us. People should be
involved in decision making that directly affects their work. They
should also be free to determine their lives independent of
particular jobs. Public policy can provide economic and other
conditions that protect human freedom and dignity in relation to
work.
Power disparities and competing interests are present in most
employment situations. Employers need competent, committed workers,
but this does not necessarily presume respect for the personal lives
and needs of individual workers. Individual workers depend on the
organization for employment as their means of livelihood, but this
does not necessarily presume respect for the organization's interest
and goals. Management and employees move toward justice as they seek
cooperative ways of negotiating these interests when they conflict.
Because employees often are vulnerable and lack power in such
negotiations, they may need to organize in their quest for human
dignity and justice. When this occurs, accurate information and fair
tactics are expected of all parties involved.
We commit ourselves as a church to:
- hire without discriminating on the basis of race, ethnicity,
gender, age, disabilities, sexual orientation, or genetic
factors;
- compensate all people we call or employ at an amount
sufficient for them to live in dignity;
- provide adequate pension and health benefits, safe and healthy
work conditions, sufficient periods of rest, vacation, and
sabbatical, and family-friendly work schedules;
- cultivate workplaces of participatory decision-making;
- honor the right of employees to organize for the sake of
better working conditions and for workers to make free and
informed decisions; encourage those who engage in collective
bargaining to commit themselves to negotiated settlements,
especially when participatory attempts at just working
conditions fail;**
and discourage the permanent replacement of striking workers.
We call for:
- other employers to engage in similar practices;
- government enforcement of regulations against discrimination,
exploitative work conditions and labor practices (including
child labor), and for the right of workers to organize and
bargain collectively;
- public policies that ensure adequate social security,
unemployment insurance, and health care coverage;
- a minimum wage level that balances employees' need for
sufficient income with what would be significant negative
effects on overall employment;
- tax credits and other means of supplementing the insufficient
income of low-paid workers in order to move them out of poverty.
Sufficiency: enough, but not too much
"Sufficiency" means adequate access to income and other
resources that enable people to meet their basic needs, including
nutrition, clothing, housing, health care, personal development, and
participation in community with dignity. God has created a world of
sufficiency for all, providing us daily and abundantly with all the
necessities of life.[8]
In many countries, the problem is not the lack of resources, but how
they are shared, distributed, and made accessible within society.
Justice seeks fairness in how goods, services, income, and wealth
are allocated among people so that they can acquire what they need
to live.
Human need and the right to ownership often are in tension with
each other. The biblical understanding of stewardship is that what
we have does not ultimately belong to us. We are called to be
stewards of what God has given for the sake of all. This stewardship
includes holding economic, political, and social processes and
institutions responsible for producing and distributing what is
needed for sufficiency for all. Private property is affirmed insofar
as it serves as a useful, yet imperfect means to meet the basic
needs of individuals, households, and communities.
Government is intended to serve God's purposes by limiting or
countering narrow economic interests and promoting the common good.
Paying taxes to enable government to carry out these and other
purposes is an appropriate expression of our stewardship in society,
rather than something to be avoided. Government often falls short of
these responsibilities. Its policies can harm the common good and
especially the most vulnerable in society. Governing leaders are to
be held accountable to God's purposes: "May [they] judge your
people with righteousness, and your poor with justice. . . . May
[they] defend the cause of the poor of the people" (Psalm
72:2).
The lack of material sufficiency for some within the human
community is itself a spiritual problem. "How does God's love
abide in anyone who has the world's goods and sees a brother or
sister in need and yet refuses to help?" (1 John. 3:17). Sin
disrupts our bonds with and our sense of responsibility for one
another. We live separated from others on the basis of income and
wealth, and resent what others have. Huge disparities in income and
wealth, such as those we face in this country, threaten the
integrity of the human community.
Those who are rich and those who are poor are called into
relationships of generosity from which each can benefit. Within the
Church, those in need and those with abundance are brought together
in Christ. On this basis and in the face of disparities in the
church of his day, Paul calls for "a fair balance between your
present abundance and their need, so that their abundance may be for
your need." In so doing, "the one who had much did not
have too much, and the one who had little did not have too
little." (2 Corinthians 8:9, 13-15).
God's mandate is clear. "Is not this the fast that I choose:
to loose the bonds of injustice . . . and to break every yoke? Is it
not to share your bread with the hungry, and bring the homeless poor
into your house; when you see the naked to cover them, and not to
hide yourself from your own kin?" (Isaiah 58:6-7). God's
lavish, justifying grace frees us from self-serving preoccupations
and calls us to a life of mutual generosity as we relate to all who
are our neighbors. Faith becomes active through personal
relationships, direct assistance, and wider policy changes in
society.
Not enough: In the United States, tens of
millions of people live in poverty, although many refuse to think of
themselves as "poor." Some make daily choices as to which
necessities they will have to live without. Many work part- or
full-time, but on that basis, are still unable to lift their
families out of poverty. Others are physically or mentally unable to
work. Many lack the family, educational, and community support
important for making good choices in their lives. Although those
living in poverty are particularly visible in cities, their more
hidden reality in suburban, small town, and rural areas can be just
as painful. A greater proportion of people of color live in
conditions of poverty. The poor are disproportionately women with
their children.[9]
Systemic racism and sexism continue to be evident in the incidence
of poverty.
In light of these realities, we commit ourselves
as a church and urge members to:
- provide counsel, food, clothing, shelter, and money for people
in need, in ways that respect their dignity;
- develop mutual, face-to-face, empowering relationships between
people who have enough and people living in poverty, especially
through congregational and synodical partnerships;
- advocate for public and private policies that effectively
address the causes of poverty;
- generously support organizations and community-based efforts
that enable low-income people to obtain more sufficient,
sustainable livelihoods;
- continue working to eradicate racism and sexism.
We call for:
- government to provide adequate income assistance and related
services for citizens, documented immigrants, and refugees who
are unable to provide for their livelihood through employment;
- adequate, consistent public funding for the various low-income
services non-profit organizations provide for the common good of
all;
- scrutiny to ensure that new ways of providing low-income
people with assistance and services (such as through the private
sector) do not sacrifice the most vulnerable for the sake of
economic efficiency and profit;
- correction of regressive tax systems, so that people are taxed
progressively in relation to their ability to pay;
- opposition to lotteries and other state-sponsored gambling
because of how these regressive means of raising state revenues
adversely affect those who are poor.[10]
Too much: Because most of us in the United
States have far more than we need, we can easily fall into bondage
to what we have. We then become like the young man Jesus
encountered, whose bondage to his possessions kept him from
following Jesus (Matthew 19:16-22; Mark 10:17-22; Luke 18:18-25).
We consume goods and use services to meet our needs. To increase
consumption and expand sales, businesses stimulate ever new wants.
Rather than human need shaping consumption, advertising and media
promotion both shape and expand wants. Our very being becomes
expressed through what we have or desire to possess. When consuming
to meet basic needs turns into consumerism as an end in itself, we
face a serious crisis of faith.
Endless accumulation of possessions and pursuit of wealth can
become our god as we yearn for a life without limits. "Ah, you
who join house to house, who add field to field, until there is room
for no one but you" (Isaiah 5:8). Many look to material
possessions and money as the means for participating in the
"fullness of life," and thus become ever more dependent on
economic transactions. But Jesus asks, "What does it profit
them if they gain the whole world, but lose or forfeit
themselves?" (Luke 9:25).
In the United States, people's worth and value tend to be
measured by the size of their income and wealth. If judged by their
multimillion dollar compensations, top corporate officers and sports
superstars would seem to be the most highly valued in our society.
Enormous disparities between their compensations and the average
wages of workers are scandalous.
The economic power of large transnational corporations continues
to grow, making some of them larger than many national economies.
Along with this financial strength comes an inordinate potential to
influence political decisions, local and regional economies, and
democratic processes in society. The power they wield, enhanced
through mergers and buyouts, can have positive effects, but it can
also hold others captive to transnational corporate interests. The
global community must continue to seek effective ways to hold these
and other powerful economic actors more accountable for the sake of
sufficient, sustainable livelihood for all.
In light of these realities, we commit ourselves
as a church and urge members to:
- examine how we are in bondage to our possessions and can be
freed to be faithful stewards of them;
- serious and ongoing consideration in our families and
congregations of how to resist the allure of consumerism and
live lives less oriented toward the accumulation of goods and
financial assets;
- educate one another, beginning with the young, on how to deal
responsibly with money, credit, and spending within one's means;
- give generously of our wealth (for example, through tithing
and planned giving), especially for purposes that serve the
needs of others.
We call for:
- corporate policies that lessen the disparities between
compensations of top corporate executives and that of the
workers throughout an organization;
- corporate governance that is accountable for the effects of a
company's practices on workers, communities, and the environment
here and throughout the world;
- scrutiny of the tax breaks, subsidies, and incentives many
companies receive, to assure that they serve the common good;
- enforcement of laws to prevent the exercise of inordinate
market power by large corporations;
- appropriate government regulatory reform so that governments
can monitor private sector practices more effectively and
efficiently in an ever-changing global economy.
Sustainability: of the environment, agriculture,
and low-income communities
"Sustainability" is the capacity of natural and social
systems to survive and thrive together over the long term. What is
sufficient in providing for people's wants often is in tension with
what can be sustained over time. Sustainability has implications for
how we evaluate economic activity in terms of its ongoing effects on
the well-being of both nature and human communities. Economic life
should help sustain humans and the rest of creation now and in the
future.
Efforts to provide a sufficient livelihood must be sustainable
economically. Individuals and families should not borrow***
more than they are able to pay back and still meet their future
needs. Governments should not finance their spending by excessive
borrowing or money creation that reduces national income and
production, and threatens the livelihood of future generations. Tax
rates and government regulations must not be so burdensome as to
stifle the production of the very goods and services people need to
live.
"The earth is the Lord's and all that is in it, the world,
and those who live in it" (Psalm 24:1). As God created, so God
also sustains: "When you send forth your spirit . . . you renew
the face of the ground" (Psalm 104:30). God makes a covenant
with Noah, his descendants, and every living creature that they will
not be destroyed (Genesis 9:8-17). In God's promise of "new
heavens and a new earth . . . they shall build houses and inhabit
them; they shall plant vineyards and eat their fruit" (Isaiah
65:17, 21). The vantage point of the kingdom of God motivates us to
focus on more than short-term gains. Humans, called to be stewards
of God's creation, are to respect the integrity and limits of the
earth and its resources.
Sustaining the environment: The growth of
economic activity during the twentieth century, and the
industrialization and consumerism that fueled it, radically changed
the relationship between humans and the earth. Too often the earth
has been treated as a waste receptacle and a limitless storehouse of
raw materials to be used up for the sake of economic growth, rather
than as a finite, fragile ecological system upon which human and all
other life depends.
Instead of being stewards who care for the long-term well-being
of creation, we confess that we have depleted non-renewable
resources, eroded topsoil, and polluted the air, ground, and water.
Without appropriate environmental care, economic growth cannot be
sustained. Caring for creation means that economic processes should
respect environmental limits. "When we act interdependently and
in solidarity with creation, we do justice. We serve and
keep the earth, trusting its bounty can be sufficient for all, and
sustainable."[11]
We commit ourselves as a church and
urge members to:
- use less, re-use, recycle, and restore natural resources;
- plan for careful land use of church property, and receive and
manage gifts of land and real estate in sustainable ways.
We call for:
- appropriate policies and regulations that help reverse
environmental destruction;
- planning that accounts for the impact of regional growth on
communities and ecosystems;
- ending subsidies for economic activities that use up
non-renewable natural resources;
- companies to pay more fully for the wider social and
environmental costs of what they produce;
- the development and use of more energy-efficient technologies.
Sustaining agriculture: Agriculture is basic to
the survival and security of people throughout the world. Through
the calling of agriculture, farmers produce the grain for our daily
bread and the rest of our food supply. Without a bountiful and
low-cost food supply, most Americans would not enjoy the livelihood
they do. Farmers face the challenge of producing this food in ways
that contribute to the regeneration of the land and the vitality of
rural communities. At the same time, society as a whole must address
the high levels of risk farmers face and the low prices they often
receive. Changing agricultural policies and the growing power of
large agribusiness corporations make this even more challenging.
We commit ourselves as a church and
urge members to:
- pray for and support those who farm the land;
- pursue new ways for consumers to partner with small farmers in
sharing the risks and yields of farming.
We call for:
- changes to assure that farmers will receive a greater
proportion of the retail food dollar;
- adequate prices for agricultural products so that farmers can
be compensated fairly for their labor and production costs;
- sustainable agricultural practices that protect and restore
the regenerative capacities of the land, rather than practices
that deplete the land (for example, by measuring productivity
only by short-term agricultural yields);
- more just work conditions for farm workers, especially
immigrants, and opportunities for them to acquire their own
land;
- greater entry-level opportunities for the next generation of
family farmers.
Sustainable development of low-income communities:
In many low-income communities, disinvestment and neglect have taken
their toll. In contrast to this are examples of sustainable
community economic development that take into account the overall
health and welfare of people, the environment, and the local
economy. Such an approach creates jobs, prepares people for work,
generates income that is re-circulated several times in the
community, and sustains and renews environmental resources, all for
the sake of a community's long-term viability.
Instead of a top-down approach focused on a community's
deprivation and its lack of economic growth, effective community
development draws upon its assets and emphasizes quality and diverse
production. Effective policies build and enhance a community's
social relationships, values, and institutions, which together can
further economic development. Local residents determine the future
of their community by initiating, supporting, and sustaining new
projects. Their capacities, skills, and assets help shape the vision
and plan for the community.
Through broad-based community organizing people can be mobilized
to address economic and other issues that directly impact them.
Government and the private sector also must invest in health,
education, and infrastructures necessary for sustainable
development. When people and resources are connected in ways that
multiply their power and effectiveness, this will help bring about
productive results and meaningful participation in community and
economic life.
Therefore, we commit ourselves as a
church and urge members to:
- learn about, participate in, and provide financial support for
community economic development and organizing strategies that
enhance the current and future well-being of communities and the
environment;
- support community development corporations and locally-owned
or producer-owned cooperatives;
- integrate social values into our investment decisions, and
invest more in socially responsible companies and funds that
sustain businesses as well as workers, consumers, the
environment, and low-income communities.
We call for:
- support of the above strategies by governments, financial
institutions, and the wider society;
- alternatives to gambling as a means of community economic
development;
- grants and low-interest loans that enable small companies and
farms to get started, develop, and expand in order to provide
livelihood for more people in low-income communities.
In conclusion, a vision renewed
Pursuing policies and practices that will lead to "sufficient,
sustainable livelihood for all" is such a formidable challenge
that to many it seems unrealistic or not worth the effort. The
Church as an employer, property owner, consumer, investor, and
community of believers can be as caught up in the reigning economic
assumptions as the rest of society. But despite the Church's
failings, through the Word and the sacraments, we are forgiven,
renewed, and nourished. At the Table, we together receive the same
bread and drink of the same cup. What we receive is sufficient; it does
sustain us. We are strengthened to persist in the struggle for
justice as we look forward to the coming of God's kingdom in all its
fullness.
We are sent forth into the world to bear witness to
God's promised reign. The world is the whole household of God that
economic life is intended to serve. The Spirit of God expands our
vision and transforms our priorities. We realize that we do not eat
alone; everyone needs to eat. The multitudes present around God's
global table become our neighbors rather than competitors or
strangers. Empowered by God, we continue to act, pray, and hope that
through economic life there truly will be sufficient,
sustainable livelihood for all.
Addendum
This social statement has been adopted in accordance with "Policies
and Procedures of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America for
Addressing Social Concerns" (1997), which calls for an
addendum to be added to indicate amendments that received
significant support but not enough for adoption (see the asterisks
in the text).
* It should be noted at the outset that the economy
and economic life of a people in a Christian sense must serve the
whole of the human spirit and of human life. Economic goals are not
ends in themselves but must serve to enrich the spiritual life of
humans in a just and caring way. The ends of human existence should
not be directed to material and power enrichment but to spiritual
growth and blessings. However, the material needs of the poor and
disenfranchised must not be overlooked; rather they must be
emphasized.
** to refrain from intentionally undercutting union
organizing activities.
*** should not borrow irresponsibly [with the
remainder of this sentence deleted].
Copyright © September 1999 Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America. Produced by the Department for Studies
of the Division for Church in Society, 8765 West Higgins Road,
Chicago, Illinois, 60631-4190. Permission is granted to reproduce
this document as needed providing each copy displays the copyright
as printed above. Scriptural quotations from the New Revised
Standard Version of the Bible are copyright © 1989 by the
Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the
Churches of Christ in the United States of America and are used by
permission. |