B
Bill_7154
Guest
Thanks again for taking the time to share. I think it will take me at least a few reads of the above before the full meaning sinks in, possibly many more than that.I ran out of room, so I’m going to add one thing more.
The parable of the Good Samaritan is intriguing. The Samaritan was some kind of merchant, it appears. He had a donkey and a mission to accomplish. He had some amount of money that we don’t know.
He sees a man in immediate need, and he meets that need precisely. He does not divide his wealth with the injured man, let alone give him his donkey, his money and his goods. He does not go out and spread his wealth among the citizenry at large. He meets the most proximate need to him. He does it adequately, but does not take the injured man to raise.
He promises to return as his mission will allow, and see if he has accomplished what he set out to do with the injured man and perhaps supplement the effort. But we know he will do only that which is immediately needed. No more and no less. And he will not change his life purposes greatly in order to do it, notwithstanding that he has sacrificed some of his ease and the fruits of his labor to get it done. The need is in front of him and clear.
And regardless of how suspicious you are, I I am utterly convinced that government taxation to achieve social justice is outright harmful to many, if not most, or mostly all, of the recipients of such schemes that seem to mostly come in the form of ‘entitlement’ programs.Being intrigued, as I am, with this parable, but seeing how unfocused and indiscriminate governmental efforts seem in attempting to achieve “social justice”, I guess I am inclined to be more than a bit suspicious of proclamations that this broad policy or that grand scheme will somehow be “just” or “charitable”.
And for anyone familiar with (or who choose to actually research previous posts of mine on the subject prior to engaging in what were essentially ‘attacks’ here in this thread towards me) my posts on the subject of government, varous taxation plans to supposedly ‘help’ the poor, etc would quite clearly see that I am utterly and completely opposed to such things.
In the OP I made it clear, over and over, that I was speaking about and interested in hearing feedback about CHARITY. I do not believe that I mentioned taxation even once. If I did, it certainly wasn’t in the context of ‘social justice’.
So thank you again for your contributions to this thread, and mostly for not passing judgement on me. In particuar for not passing judgement on me based on assumptions. You, sir, are a gentleman and a scholar.
I look forward to reading more of your posts, be it in this forum or in one or more of the others on this site. You are clearly a man of not only wisdom, but one of kindness and restraint. A man who strikes me as someone who has a clear conscience and has a lot of attributes that would make you a good leader of other men.
God Bless,
Bill