This next chapter of Schneider’s book was really good.
When I perform weddings I routinely resort to the book of Genesis, the book of beginnings. In the first pages of Genesis, before the Fall, God tells us He created us male and female, and after the Fall, Jesus still appeals to that creation order when He teaches us on divorce and remarriage. The Fall put everything out of joint, but it did not reverse the basic values that God placed in the world when He created it good. When it comes to our marriages, we are expected to look at this underlying reality, this fundamental goodness. This is not living in a state of denial, pretending that sin is not a reality. It is actually one of the basic things we must do in order to resist the encroachments of sin.
It is the same with our material possessions. It is the same with our stuff. It is the same with our vocational and cultural callings. When we ask questions about how to relate to our wealth, one of the first things we should do is go back to Genesis and make sure we have the foundation right. Schnieder does this in Chapter Two — “Genesis: The Cosmic Vision of Delight.” I anticipate having some differences with Schneider later on in the book, but with a foundation like this, the differences are not likely to be significant. This chapter was a tonic.
Economics has been called the dismal science, but it would be more accurate to say that it was a discipline in which a number of dismal people took up residence. And those dismal, Malthusian souls turn everything to gray. Mencken’s glib slander on historic Puritanism does apply to these people — these are people who are haunted by the idea that somehow, somewhere, somebody might be happy. There are people out there who have great big tanks on the back of their toilets. There are people out there who buy things without thinking about it. There are people who have three cars. Those who object are constantly making distinctions, and are constantly issuing caveats, and they are doing so because they are fussers.
Now it is possible to be careful without being a fusser. Distinctions need to be made, and we have to be careful in making them. But so-called progressives in our midst are constantly making obsessive ethical distinctions, and they do so because they are (usually) fussers. They are fussers because they miss the vision for human existence that was clearly set forth in the Garden of Eden. The history of our world began with a Garden, and it ends with a Garden City. Because we are living in between these two, and because God has promised us that He is going to restore the Edenic glory (though the grace of the gospel), we should therefore know which direction to set our faces in hope.
Although he clearly sees this, Schneider is careful. His position is not, “Wealth. Bring It On. What Could Go Wrong?”
“Materialism is invisible. It is first and foremost a spiritual condition” (p. 43).
“If the radical Christians and those who are sympathetic with their approach oversimplify the moral relationship in Scripture between affluence and evil, then advocates of the Prosperity Gospel oversimplify the relationship between affluence and the moral good” (p. 5).
“Whatever human dominion is in Genesis, then, it enobles us for the purpose of ennobling everything else. Like our God, we too are servants in royal form” (p. 52).
“Eden set the man and woman free from servitude to want, it unleashed them to dream, to use their creativity, to work in productive and rewarding ways, to reap the fruits of their labor, and to take human pleasure in the whole of life, in the image of God, and in his good pleasure” (p. 59).
“Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence, and given to the poor?” (John 12:5).