Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Jan 04, 2021 11:49 am
But those who ask in faith do not get ultimate and eternal explanations .
Actually, they get all the explanations they may need. See James 1:1-3.
The faith of investigators into a crime is not sufficient for them to get an explanation.
Well, really, B., that has nothing to do with the case. You've extracted any question of God from your example, and you're right: we're never told "just have faith in things, and they'll all come true." Disney might believe that, but nobody else does.
No, Biblically, faith is always "faith i
n God's character," not just "faith." It's a willingness to invest some hope in the prospect that God will do what He has promised, and will show Himself to be the kind of Person He has revealed Himself to be. Those who have mere "faith in faith" are just foolish.
The saving of the poor, the homeless, the sick, the criminal, the prisoner, and the downtrodden is not popular with most people who are unable to stop being greedy and who want more than their fair share of the finite total of worldly goods. Greedy people fool themselves into believing the total of worldly goods is not finite. And that belief which , despite being unreasonable is common, results in political policies that favour economic growth above other considerations.
Well, "economic growth" is a very good thing for everybody...even the poor. You can see that because if you've been to the Developing World, as I have, you have seen that even our poorest citizens have far more than the average person in a nation with low economic growth. So we do want our countries all to have "economic growth." Without it, everybody ends up miserable.
It's not "economic growth" that's bad: it's things like addiction, crime, single-parenthood, refusal to work, mental illness and so forth that account for poverty in developed countries. And even there, there are social networks and charitable agencies that will give help. There are also welfare programs, food banks, employment services, and other forms of "social safety net" that the poor can access, if they want to. There are no such things in much of the developing world: or at least, not nearly enough of them, and they are not nearly generally available. For the developing world, "economic growth" is the only hope of a better life for the poor. So don't be down on "economic growth."
It's not even "distribution" that's the problem. In developed nations, people can earn wealth, and they generally do. That's why there's a middle class. The fact that some people have more money and some have less is not a product of inequality or oppression, but rather of the natural differentials in education, experience, intelligence, skill, creativity, practicality, diligence, work type, opportunity, and even fortune sometimes. There is no conspiracy to rob the poor. As a consequence of such differentials, some people succeed and others fail -- rather like all of life, actually. You have to take your opportunities, or you can anticipate consequences.
But you're right about human nature: it has good elements, but it also gives us things like greed, covetousness, theft, war, exploitation, and so on. That's why putting a cadre of ideologues in charge of the rest of us only ever results in things like greed, covetousness, theft and exploitation. The only way to prevent that from being as bad as it could be is to put limited terms on all those we give power, along with other constraints like a plurality of parties, the franchise, the rule of law, a constitution, limited terms, and so on. Giving total power to the hands of the government inevitably results in exactly what you fear.
Reason shows that habitual greed is caused by fear of deprivation
Not really. Greed can be caused by many things. Some of the richest people, the farthest from "deprivation" are the greediest, according to you. And if your "fear" theory were correct, then the poorest would be the most rapacious and dangerous, since they would be closest to the prospect of deprivation. That CAN be the case, but is not necessarily so. Greed can be an expression of narcissism, aggression, or even cynicism or contempt. I wouldn't waste a lot of time feeling sorry for the "fear" of greedy people. They can choose to be otherwise, and should.