River Jordan
Active Member
- Jan 30, 2014
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You're forgetting history. We tried "let the churches and charities handle it" and it didn't work. We had sick, disabled, and elderly people literally dying in the streets.Trekson said:No, this is not socialism, this was CHURCH LIFE and was ONLY for those IN the church! I wish all churches would be this way and Paul later points out it is the CHURCH'S responsibility to care for widows and orphans. We have drifted far away from that. NOWHERE in scripture is it suggested any type of government take on that responsibility. We, the church, have ceded that responsibility to the gov't and we will most likely be judged for it. As believer's we are to look to God for our healing, not the gov't! That doesn't mean I'm anti-medicine, because I'm not, but recognize this that whenever the populace looks away from God for a solution and turns to the gov't, that is anti-christ, so what you are promoting is an anti-christian style of living for our nations.
And regarding this whole socialism discussion....
5 Reasons Why Many American Christians Wouldn’t Like The First Ones
1. The first Christians rejected personal ownership of property and engaged in a redistribution of wealth.
Americanized Christians often fight to make sure our taxes are lower, fight to repeal healthcare for poor people, and throw a fit over a small portion of our income going to provide foodstamps. While touting “voluntary” and “private” charity as the way to go, we give on average 2-3% of our income to the church or charities– not nearly enough to actually address the needy in any meaningful way. But what about the early Christians?
Well, the first Christians were quite different. In the book of Acts (the book that tells the story of original Christianity) tells us that “all the believers were together and held everything in common, selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need” (Acts 2:44-45). We’re further told that there were no poor among them, because those who had land or property sold it so that this wealth could be “redistributed” to the needy (Acts 4:35). While on one hand communal property and redistribution of wealth was voluntary, scripture tells us that “all” of the believers in the church did this– meaning that it wasn’t exactly voluntary but a condition of being accepted into the group.
If Americanized Christians were to see how the first Christians lived, it would be denounced as some sort of communist cult being led by folks who distorted the Gospel.