Originally Posted by Joseph Farah: October 13,
2008
1:00 am Eastern
www.worldnetdaily.com
© 2008
Americans are searching for answers to the economic crisis
characterized as the worst since the Great Depression.
But, as so often happens, we are looking in all the
wrong places.
I know it's not fashionable to suggest the
Bible as a source of wisdom on matters of contemporary concern. Ask
me if I care.
While others are turning to their favorite
economists for answers, I've been turning to the one and only
inerrant book inspired by the sovereign Creator of the universe. I
think everyone else is crazy for not looking there.
So what does the Bible say about our current
economic morass?
For one thing, it explains how to avoid such
catastrophes - and, I believe, how to fix this one.
First of all, you've got to understand the
fundamental problem we have is one of gargantuan debt. That's
the central problem in the mortgage scandal. It's the reason
banks and investment houses are going out of business. It's the
reason the stock market is failing. And it's the reason so many
Americans, burdened by excessive credit-card debt, are hurting.
The Bible has much to say about debt. It has a
radical solution for it, too. Though, I confess, I doubt many will
be willing to listen - since our society moves further from the
principles of the Bible on a daily basis.
But, for what it's worth, I'm going to
offer it as my own prescription for the economic crisis that is now
affecting the entire world. I know how America can reclaim its
position as a shining city on a hill in that world right now in
addressing its own financial problems - not just with a bailout
Band-Aid, but with a permanent and lasting solution that is just,
fair and compassionate.
The answer is found in Leviticus 25. It's
called the year of jubilee. It is a system of forgiveness of debts
that occurred in ancient Israel every 50 years. And, ironically, it
just so happens a new year of jubilee began last week on Yom
Kippur, or the Day of Atonement - the highest holy day in the
Hebrew calendar.
Whether or not George Bush or John McCain or Barack
Obama or Ben Bernanke could see our current crisis coming, God
clearly could. He understood thousands of years ago that debt would
ultimately spiral out of hand if left unchecked. So, along with
many other important economic lessons we have forgotten, He gave us
a prescription that would protect people from the kind of pain they
are feeling today, from the kind of injustice our government is
sticking us with today, from the kind of oppression all but the
very wealthiest are experiencing today.
The jubilee year was part of the Sabbath system -
something few Christians even understand today, despite the fact
that honoring the Sabbath is still part of the Ten
Commandments. The last day of the week, not the first, was
to be kept holy, set apart from servile work, maintained as the
Lord's day. Likewise, every seventh year was to be kept as a
sabbatical for the land. No crops were to be grown, no orchards
planted. Storehouses were to be maintained for grain and dried
fruits and vegetables during the six non-sabbatical years for the
seventh, eighth and even ninth years when the pattern of sowing and
reaping would begin again.
Then there was yet another Sabbath. After seven
cycles of sabbatical years - a total of 49 years - the 50th year
was special in another way. The Hebrew year 5769, which commenced
last Thursday, is one of these special jubilee years.
So what should happen according to God's
prescription?
It's simple. But, as I said, it's radical.
You will be told there are thousands of reasons we could never
accept such a solution. And that's why we will continue to put
Band-Aids on the patient who is rapidly bleeding to death.
In a year of jubilee, you declare all debts
forgiven. Period. End of story. It was not only a year to set
captives free and to end the bondage and oppression of men, it was
also a time to cancel all debts.
I can think of no better solution for America
today.
It would be better than a tax cut. It would be
better than another "stimulus package." It would be
better than the bailout. It would be better than any other
government-directed wealth-redistribution program on the table or
off.