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| Guest Commentary Which Comes First -- Morality or the Economy?
(AgapePress) - A recent commentary in BusinessWeek described business leaders as seriously concerned because of the distraction of the Religious Right. Evangelicals, having turned up in droves at the voting booth, are worrying corporate types who now wonder if they can get and keep the attention of this president on the issues that matter most to them. What could happen is what bothers them: that, given the precious time and energy of a second term, the president might expend too much collateral on issues of abortion and homosexual marriage and not enough on consequential economic matters. This anxiety of corporate suits affords the Church an opportunity to point out a lesson long apparent in the sweep of history. Notably: morality and strong economies go hand in hand. While it is true that Judeo-Christian ethics ought never be sacrificed on the altar of profit, it is also true that the principle of "moral hazard" is a concept that belongs in Economics 101. Professor Walter Williams explains: "Moral hazard arises when people behave in ways to satisfy themselves, but because they don't bear the full cost, their behavior comes at the detriment of others. Moral hazard is a pervasive problem, and it's only relatively recently that economic and legal scholars have begun to pay attention to it." Consider the following (much of this adapted from Crown Financial Ministries):
Our corporate friends need to know that those of us concerned about morality are also concerned about the pocketbooks of our communities. We just recognize that as morality continues spiraling downward, so does our capacity to support the greatest economy in the history of man. The prayers of a righteous nation availeth much. And the prayers of an unrighteous nation? Can you spell D-E-P-R-E-S-S-I-O-N? Find Dr. Matt Friedeman’s blog at "In the Fight." Friedeman (mfriedeman@wbs.edu) is a professor of evangelism and discipleship at Wesley Biblical Seminary. He and his wife Mary home school their six children. © 2004 AgapePress all rights reserved.
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