Economy to Voice Your Values is a great opinion piece by Father Robert Sirico in The Detroit News over the weekend.
There has been a heightened demand for participation in church worship. We also hear about the need for participatory democracy, so people play a role in forming policy.
Since economics concerns everything we do, surely it is more crucial that we participate here than even in other areas of life. But how can we encourage participatory economics?
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And yet many who see the need for participation in worship and politics have a blind spot about economics. They oppose dictatorship in church and state, but have no problem with central planning in economics. They continually call for more economic regulation, redistribution, taxation and central planning.
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The problem for critics is they fail to understand how markets are systems of cooperation. Most people think of the market economy as something controlled by large corporations. But look beneath the surface and we see the opposite: Businesses desperately seek public input and aspire to anticipate changing needs and tastes.
One of the things I find the most interesting about the Emergent Conversation is this very dynamic. I hear a constant critique of the "institutional church." Solution: we need more freedom for individuals to live as communities impacting society at the micro-level. Yet when it comes to economics, the dominant refrain is more bureaucratic governmental involvement in every aspect of economic life.
This mindset causes me to sometimes question whether some are truly Emergent or are just politically left-leaning Evangelicals who don't want to be identified with the authoritarian Religious Right.
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