Taxation and Christian Ethics, Pt. 3: What is Christian Protest?
Friday, May 13, 2011 at 2:41PM
So, I've expended a great deal of metaphorical ink on attacking the idea that having a somewhat irresponsible government gives us license to avoid paying taxes. Many people may say, "So what? Who is this aimed at?" Don't most people, even most Tea Party conservatives, pay their taxes, fully and on time? No one wants to go to jail, after all. Perhaps some do try and get creative to minimize their tax burden through loopholes, but honestly, the average working-man doesn't have time for such shenanigans. So how is this relevant?
Well, my parents always used to have a good principle: Obedience while grumbling and complaining is as good as disobedience. Can we really claim to be upright citizens if we pay our taxes, but get out in the streets on April 15th to yell and carry angry signs? If we mouth off on talk radio stations about how "oppressed" we are? If we're supposed to pay our taxes, then aren't we supposed to pay without grumbling or complaining, without angrily protesting, without making it clear that we're paying only because we have to?
And yet, are we supposed to be meek sheep, silently obeying whatever we are told, no matter how unjust? Jesus may have been led like a lamb to the slaughter, but he had no qualms about calling oppressors to account in no uncertain terms. Complete silence and passivity in the face of injustice is not a manifestation of Christian charity, because it lets ones neighbors continue to suffer. So what is the balance here? This is the question not merely of taxation, but of all Christian political action.
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