TAXATION, TYRANNY, AND THEOCRACY: A BIBLICAL RESPONSE TO SUSAN HAMILL

Authors

  • Gary North Independent Scholar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.60154/jaepp.2013.v14n2p331

Keywords:

Hamill, tax policy, tyranny, theocracy, Judeo-Christian ethics, Two Kingdom Theory, Objectivist Ethics

Abstract

I respond to Prof. Hamill’s assertion that she is not recommending the exercise of theocratic power, as defined by Rev. Gregory Boyd. She is in fact a theocrat in terms of Rev. Boyd’s definition. In two previous peer-reviewed articles, she has called on Christians to organize politically in order to re-stricture specific tax codes. She has said that Christians have the votes to do this: around 80 percent of the electorate. She has identified what the top federal tax bracket rate should be: 50 percent. This is in addition to state and local taxes. She has made this call to political action on the basis of a specific ethical system: Christianity. Her social outlook is consistent with a Protestant tradition known as the social gospel. She says that the Bible has provided Christians with the basis of tax reform. I agree entirely with her regarding the legitimacy of such a call to political action by Christians. But I do disagree with the biblical texts she uses to argue her case. I use the Bible’s tax texts, plus the Mosaic text that affirms the rule of law (Exodus 12:49) and also the text mandating the equal application of justice, irrespective of wealth (Leviticus 19:15).

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Published

2023-04-29

How to Cite

North, G. (2023). TAXATION, TYRANNY, AND THEOCRACY: A BIBLICAL RESPONSE TO SUSAN HAMILL. Journal of Accounting, Ethics & Public Policy, JAEPP, 14(2), 331. https://doi.org/10.60154/jaepp.2013.v14n2p331

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