We presented the issue of personal wealth drawing mainly from the economics of Keynes, and from New Testament, introducing the fact that a human being has two lifetimes. The second lasts an infinitum time, based on the assumption that soul is immortal. We showed also that “disutility of labor” and unhappiness introduced first by God; economists then tried to balance it with utility of consumption (in 1854) focusing on human body, and ignoring human soul, mind and their needs. We also presented as to how a World War can boost growth of GDP. When Ricardo raised the issue of how GDP is divided among factors of production, and that only labor creates value along with Marx, society divided, while religion wanted it united and peaceful. Protestantism made work as god. Concluding we said that an “uncontrolled personal wealth” is detrimental from both economic and religious point of view. Dealing with matters of Christian Orthodoxy for years, made us proficient. We believe, or rather audacious, to underline certain fundamental principles of it.
We believe that few know what their religion suggests on “basic economic issues”, like e.g. on the question: “To create a personal wealth”? Many believe that religion has nothing to do with economics. However, three influential past economists: Lloyd, W.F. (1810-1858) (in 1833), Longfield, S.M. (in 1834), and1 Senior, N.W. (1790-1864), were Protestants [
Gossen, H. [
Gossen [
Also the “labor theory of value2” emanated from the Protestant outlook of the world…which meant to place labor at the center of theology. Protestants gave, we imagine, an alternative answer to Adam Smith (1723-1790), who asked “why some nations are rich and others are poor” (1776). At the same time, Protestants furnished, probably, Marx with a serious argument: that only labor creates value. “Hard work and only work” obviously is required by the Protestants for
progress towards more wealth. Protestant Germany3 is a live example. Moreover, Christian Orthodoxy-CO asked: is a personal wealth in present life a wiser act than building it-up after death?
To acquire a personal income is surely a legitimate mean of preserving one’s life etc. (by buying goods to eat, drink and dress, at least). CO allows no one to be idle [
Among early Christians free food was provided to those who could not afford it at home, out of a spirit of common sympathy5 and solidarity [
Now, to belong to a religion because it provides free meals, money or other material benefits, we believe is not according to “pure faith”, or to personal dignity. Economists, moreover, insist that there is no such thing as a “free meal”. Today, Greek Church provides free meals to those in need during the 2009-2018 economic depression.
Moreover, CO condemns anyone becoming rich by pretending to have extraordinary abilities to work out miracles by: juggling, magic, or as a medium, or as an astrologer or using any other of devil’s devices. Faith is not permitted to be used for personal profiteering.
How then Jesus Christ-JC provided a massive free meal (bread and fishes) two times? These were special circumstances and he did that out of sympathy for his audience, being without food for 3 days, in the desert, and in order to listen to him! The number of persons fed was 5000 males. Naturally, they subsequently wanted to proclaim him King [
To provide free meals permanently is against God’s decision, who told Adam upon his fall: “from now on you have to earn your living, cultivating soil in the hard way”6. JC also said “seek the Kingdom of Heavens first” and “all that you need they will be added to you” [
The concept of “disutility of labor”, adopted by classical economists to build up their theory of employment, was first established by God after Adam’s fall, as mentioned! Keynes [
Wealth is a stock and income is a flow. Income, however, has no great religious interest. Income is derived from the “ability” of a man, acquired by education etc., to hire his/her time to an employer, against a salary, and an eventual pension. This is a universal phenomenon. Wealth, however, has a great variety, defined below, and is an act of accumulation.
Keynes [
Earning no-income due to lack of demand, is no doubt a sad human situation, and any religion (and government) has to care about by providing free food, clothing, cash, medical care, shelter, etc. We have witnessed persons who lost their job and were unable to find a new one during a crisis (*) due to their somehow advanced age; (*) during end 2008 meltdown.
Religion deals par excellence with rich people. Surely, any wealth illegally obtained on the basis of any spiritual, moral or human laws is out of question (i.e. drugs, prostitution, selling protection, smuggling, arms’ trade, trading human organs, forced immigration etc.). This will be not discussed. A serious work has been published on these issues. The exploitation of one from the other is deemed impermissible, as love there is absent [
A number of Greek shipowners, and other Greek entrepreneurs, established plethora of beneficial funds and benevolent establishments out of their personal wealth after death (Niarchos, Onassis, and many others), Keynes [
Economists were confused by treating “personal wealth” the same way they treated “National wealth”. This was a serious mistake as we know now, after Keynes, that the part of income, which is not spent on consumption, it must spent on investment (in fact we know how and why) to proceed to a growth of income and employment.
In a summary, we see that the “disutility of labor” and “unhappiness” during present life introduced first by our father (God), soon after our ancestors, Adam and Eve, fell. As a result Gossen discovered in 1854 the “utility of consuming” a good and the “disutility to work”. These two concepts provided one of the 3 revolutions in economics: the “Marginal7 Revolution” in 1870s. There was of course the Epicurean philosophy (300 BC) arguing that: “let us eat and drink for tomorrow we die”. Moreover, Bentham (1748-1832) believed that the end of life is happiness (=pleasure).
As a result economists understood that there is something to maximize there in consuming goods, and enjoy life, but this needed mathematics. In addition the displeasure from work could now be compensated by the pleasure of consumption. The three substances of humans, brain, soul and body restricted to one: the body. The remarkable issue is that both Religion and Keynesian economics agree that wealth (not spent) is detrimental for either life after death or for the growth of economies. This is our main finding.
This paper does not pretend to have exhausted all religions in what they believe. For Catholicism and Protestantism we have given their basic differences one to other and with Christian Orthodoxy. The emphasis is on Christian Orthodoxy no doubt.
Our purpose is to deal with wealth within an economic and religious framework. The main stream economics deals with the “economics of scarcity”. This paper triggered also by the psychological fact noted by Keynes [
The paper is organized as follows: next is a Literature Review followed by (a) Economic Theories and (b) Religious theories, based on CO. Then it follows the Economics of Wealth I. Next two parts follow: the further basic concepts of Christian Orthodoxy I and II. Next are human Economics and the Economics of Wealth II. Finally, we conclude.
Walras in 1873 had to prove that “free competition” provided the maximum utility; so, inequality of income is justified [
Weber10 [
Keynes [
In Greece hoarding is estimated to be equal to ?0 billion (!), especially after capital controls. Hoarding is diminished in Greece by taxation and by burglars. It is increased due to low rates of interest and the uncertainty for the integrity of bank accounts (fear of a hair-cut), etc.
Robinson [
Robinson [
She further argued (p. 14) that in most societies, morality came from religion, which is a useful way of strengthening the desire of the individual to do whatever he/she thinks right, and of imposing a particular view of what is right (italics added). Apropos Robinson quoted: “If there is no God, nothing is forbidden” (p. 14) (bolds added). Robinson (p. 15) quotes also that some argued that organized religion is necessary to good conduct and social harmony (italics added). She also argued that the moral feelings do not derive from either theology or reason.
Religion she said had not much to do with the economic ideology (p. 19), and she quotes: “how hardly shall they that have riches enter the kingdom of God” (bolds added). “Economics is not only a branch of theology, but all along it has been striving to escape from sentiment and to win for itself the status of a science.” (p. 25) (italics added). So, Robinson, J. was irreligious, we reckon.
Robinson [
Blaug [
Varian [
Iyer [
Summarizing: Economists abandoned the relation between utility and happiness, and adopted the theory that consumers are in a position to prefer a bundle of goods A from B, on the basis of their “ordinal” utility. This indeed was something more human.
Newer research must be carried-out to see if a “particular religion” is related closely to persons in a society who excel17. If this is true then this indicates another way to achieve growth perhaps in the long run. Robinson argued that ideology was responsible for the dichotomy of economics, and the dichotomy of human race we add. This is against religion wanting people to be peaceful and united ( [
Keynes [
We selected from NT all relevant quotations about the subject of our research and put them down. In matters of faith, what is relevant is what the founder of CO said (JC). The main points of two religions, i.e. Protestantism due to Calvin, and Catholicism, which followed the great schism in 1054, were mentioned. Our personal experience and study of CO, over 30 years, enabled us to write about CO in more detail, but errors and omissions have to be forgiven.
Early writers argued that the metaphor of “the invisible hand” means “the hand of God” ruling the “social world”, as he is ruling the “natural world”. Provided free will of any human is not violated, we add. Adam Smith, who wrote first about the invisible hand, is considered a deist (i.e. having faith derived from reason), or atheist [
The 1st subject of economic discussion was the “proper” level, and the “moral” justification of interest. Moreover, there was an economic doctrine that the rate of interest is not self-adjusting at a level best suited to social advantage, but it constantly tended to rise, so that a “wise” Government had to be concerned to curb it by statute, custom, or even by invoking the sanctions of Moral Law [
For Classical economists, the existence of interest was a sign of productivity, and is determined by the demand for funds to be invested, and thrift (=supply of savings18). For Keynes [
Provisions against usury20 were frequently recorded in the ancient economic practices. The ancient and medieval world believed that the excessive demand for money (=liquidity-preference) was the prime evil destructing the inducement to invest-and a prime impediment to growth of wealth.
Keynes [
Capitalistic system seems to need wars and destructions to achieve thereafter exceptional growth rates! Keynes argued that civilization cannot be found, except where there were earthquakes to proceed to a reconstruction boom. He also wrote that Pyramid-building, even wars, may serve to increase wealth (bolds added). Wars [
In CO JC is reported [
refers not so much to “monetary capital”, but to “spiritual one”, or to “human good natural properties”, which everybody endowed with by birth, and should be used to be rather increased. Also, JC was clearly against idleness [
JC was also strongly against exploitation of man by man, in general, and especially in the “trade” taking place in “Solomon Temple” by those exchanging foreign currencies and selling worship goods24. He used a hand-made whip from ropes and threw sellers out and overturned their tables. Certainly JC’s motive was not only to clear-out his father’s house from thieves, as it was a holy place requiring respect, but also to condemn worshipers’ exploitation lacking love [
Moreover, he showed several times that his justice can be severe, as the case may be, to combat, or prevent, further human malice [
In addition, CO is based on love: love for children from their parents; love for one’s wife, where two bodies become one by marriage and the sexes are only two and wife is only one; love for enemies; and love for God and his son. Cases of love separate CO from religions provoking hate and causing death to un-believers. The ancient Greeks had also a God for war: the Ares! But Greeks25, cleverly, made Gods after them, while for CO the first couple was made by God after Holy Trinity in two only counts: “mildness” and “full power over all animals”.
Wars, however, are required, serving God’s pedagogical plans each time (JC) [
Given that a person is able to hold assets (net27) then the monetary value of them in the market is his/her wealth. The assets, exclusively those marketed, are listed28 below. Gurley and Shaw [
As shown (
goods A, for consumption during present life. T now is assumed to be equal, and not less, to one’s certain age, say 30 years29 of age, so that to be able to build-up a personal wealth, saving part of his/her income (I).
There are two further time milestones: T1 and T2. We assume T1 to be at one’s middle life, say at 45 years of age, and T2 to be at wealth-holder’s death, say round 90 years. If T1T2 = 0, as happened to “rich man” mentioned in the NT [
The composition of the bundle of goods A is not fixed and it may be different over time, taking into account a change in tastes as
Further, we can bring-in also wealth in a number of indifference curves. Wealth producing cash leads to a higher satisfaction as allows a movement to higher indifference curves towards the right side (
by saying that wealth can be used to enjoy life.
Conscience, we believe, is not an exclusive result of learning like the language we speak, or it does not depend only on the kind of society we grow-up, but it is a criterion of “right and wrong” inherent in Man’s nature, placed there by God, causing the well-known “remorse”. Life, we believe, will be radically different, if conscience is completely removed or substantially minimized. Surely, the way Christians live gives an example to non-Christians; also the way one’s parents or priests behave gives an example especially to children. Teaching nowadays of what is right and what is wrong is exclusively done by one’s example than by talking.
To correct the society, we believe, one has first to correct the information flow. People copy what the majority of people does; what friends tell and do; what magazines write; what TV presents; what press writes; what books write; what films show etc., assuming that all these indicate the right way to behave and live. But all these are written by humans with passions, own purposes and complete ignorance about reality! One should study NT if he/she wants to know the “hyper-philosophy”, which solves all human problems according to Saints.
Some say that metaphysical statements cannot be tested, and for this reason they reject faith, and God, pretending to be atheists31, but all have their god: real or false!
Life after death or “Lad” is the core chapter. It is worth noting that St. Paul devoted 6 pages to this [
JC opened an account with D since the time of Adam and Eve, as D succeeded in “killing” them both [
D failed to “kill” JC, though he had a time advantage, given that JC was starving, after 40 days and nights of fasting from food and water! Moreover, D had his early doubts as to whether JC was an “ordinary man”, or “son of God”. D’s effort thus was also to clear this out, despite the fact that D heard God to name JC his son, during JC’s baptism [
First D asked32 JC to make a miracle to prove who he was, by producing “bread” out of a “stone”. This would, if carried out, prove that JC’s belly was dominant as in Adam’s case, and prove also the vainglory of JC, as God could do that not JC (being a human). JC replied that a man cannot “live” by just eating bread, but with every word that comes out from God’s mouth (as written in “Deuteronomy”).
D then brought JC on a tall mountain and showed him all Kingdoms and their riches. D promised to give all these to JC, as D claimed falsely to be his, if JC recognized him as lord and worshiped him as god. Riches, human glory and magnificence were here the baits. JC sent D away saying that only God has to be exclusively worshiped.
Then D brought JC through air on the edge of the roof of Solomon’s Temple in Jerusalem, and said: “Drop yourself down to prove the love and the protection, which your father will offer to you, as this is written twice in Psalms”. JC then replied: “one should not expose himself in danger to test God by finding-out from facts, if God will protect him” [
JC argued that God is not God of the dead, but of the alive [
No “lad” means that God was unable to give life. But this gives also evidence that also Adam and Eve could not be alive. How then D is a living creature? JC used a piece of information about “lad” by saying that “Abraham, Isaac and Jacob”, were alive, though “died” centuries ago [
Moreover, JC told to the co-crucified thief, who asked for JC’s mercy upon JC’s arrival at his kingdom in heavens: “I assure you that today you will be with me in Paradise (!)” [
But of course JC himself was the unique paradigm of resurrection, proving that God can give life to any human already dead, as he did par excellence in the case of his son, being human. This fact is another undisputable proof that God is God of the alive. JC came to earth and died, (in fact assassinated for claiming to be what he was, but this was not understood in Judaea for a number of reasons), and returned alive to his father in heavens (Ascension Day) [
Man created completely free35; a freedom that God respects (!). This freedom entirely confused people, as some they say: “there is no God”, or ask: “where is God (?)”. And others say: “Man can do anything he/she likes, as God is nowhere”36. He surely is everywhere, and listens even to man’s whispers, and knows the thoughts of everyone. He is the super-Mind, and a spirit, but no one except JC knows how God is [
True love is free love, we believe, and this cannot be otherwise. Man has to choose among two roads only. God could have implemented a strict control of man, but such a forced love and surveillance would have indeed no value, and surely it would not be liked by humans. Man loves freedom. So, God preferred the free human feelings, or even he expects “some sort of sacrifice” (e.g. of a passion) in loving him, as his son did for both us and to him.
St. Paul argued that though man is free to do what he/she likes all his/her actions are not necessarily to his/her interest [
Important is that there is a disguised “antagonism” between “soul” and “body” ( [
As shown, the most frequent situation is for body to overrule soul. E.g. sleepiness overruled the soul of the 3 Apostles at “Gethsemane farm”, as remarked by JC [
Worth noting is that something which pleases body may displease soul (and God) [
The existence of soul, and its nature, we reckon, is of prime importance. Is soul immortal? Apropos Man has established a number of sciences dealing with soul39. If science examines soul’s eternity and if research leads them to a positive answer, then they have to adapt their philosophy accordingly. For CO, soul enters into embryo at the time of conception. This means that an abortion eliminates a prospective body and releases an existing soul. Moreover, Soul is the “chair of one’s personality” [
Let us now40 assume that the eternity of soul is true. Then we have two horizons: 1) the time which body lives, i.e. from one’s birth to death and 2) soul’s life from 0 to ∞ (“lad”). Present life may last, in calendar time, from 0 (conception)41 to n years, if a child is born alive, where n ≤ 90, say years, usually42. Mathematically we have:
∑ t = 0 t = T = 90 ( B 1 t ) / ( 1 + r ) t < ∑ t = 0 t = T = ∞ ( B 2 t ) / ( 1 + r ) t {1}
where t stands for time, T for time horizon, B1t for present life benefits in period t, and B2t benefits during “lad” for ∞ time, r is the social discount rate and ∑ is the summation symbol. Inequality (1) means that the present value of the “benefits” one gained from present life (mainly from charity and satisfaction of wants related to body, soul and mind), are far less than the present value of the “benefits” that one will gain during “lad”, because n ≤ 90 < ∞.
Even if we increase the social rate of interest r in the second part of inequality {1}, due to the uncertainty about “lad” and increase also the % of risk for the faithless, the above result will not change much. There is also another reason for this result: the costs at present life, though not shown, in order to achieve “lad” benefits are taking place now (mainly charity etc.). These costs would reduce benefits in present life and increase benefits in “lad”.
Man is supplied with Mind, Conscience and Personal Merits; also with 2 written “laws”43, and live seminars44 for 3 years recorded down in NT, delivered personally by the son of God! Seminars were also delivered from time to time in the past by Prophets to people of Judaea―till the crime of “John the Baptist”; the authority of JC in teaching was, however, unique. The prophesies continued by CO’s saints, since then and till this day (e.g. St. Paisios).
JC had used also proofs, i.e. miracles. After JC, his saints continued till this day to deliver seminars to mankind. But worth noting is that fear is not the basis of CO, but the love for God for being so kind; love for other people and love for enemies [
Humans we believe have to search, in advance, to find out what is the real meaning and purpose of present life! This, as JC said, is the greatest mistake, which a man can commit [
Human economics started after the “fall” of the first couple of husband and wife, and their forced “landing” outside Paradise, creating there also a family. Before that, they lived in “Paradise economy”. Adam and Eve, as we imagine, they had there all goods free, plenty and permanent, though they had to “keep and labor it”. They obtained two sons; Adam then called his wife Zoe (=Life).
Humans seem to lack the knowledge of how to manage the plenty45 during their terrestrial life. True that the plenty many times was a factor in economic history, which worked towards the destruction of human nations, and kingdoms, especially richer ones, exactly for the reason that, like Adam and Eve, humans ignored how to deal with abundance for their benefit to gain “lad”.
Notable economic exception was Ancient Egypt [
Abundance also made humans to rest, stale, and enjoy present life. Economics talk about scarcity of goods and capital, and stresses the fact that wants are so many that personal incomes are inadequate. It indicates the struggle between the plethora of wants and an ever inadequate income, given inflation.
Adam and Eve were exiled from Paradise where they used to see God and talk to. There is a similar case in NT with the younger son who left his father (God) to test his luck in a foreign country, spending away his whole personal fortune with prostitutes [
Keynes [
The real rhythms of total saving and expenditure do not depend on certain 8 merits mentioned by Keynes (like “Pride” and “Avarice” among them), but how much attractive is the rate of interest for investment vis-à-vis MEC [
Moreover, millionaires find their satisfaction in building mighty mansions to contain their bodies when alive, and pyramids to shelter them when dead; or, for repenting (them) of their sins, they erect cathedrals and endow monasteries or foreign missions (ibid, p. 220). The trouble arises because the act of saving implies a desire for wealth as such. An increased desire to hold wealth is not the same thing as an increased desire to hold investments or an increased demand for investment.
As a result, Keynes was against personal wealth, which had as a motive to save more today, in order to be able to consume more sometime in the distant future. If to hold wealth depends on a prospective yield, this implies the need of a suitable rate of interest, as we proposed.
Keynes mentioned the case of Midas47 for rich communities, as a metaphor when the propensity to consume and the rate of investment are mainly left to the influences of “laissez-faire”, instead of deliberately controlled in the social interest [
The case-study of the “rich man” in NT, shows that he had also the problem of “how to manage abundance” [
JC argued that a man may listen to the words of God NT [
Moreover, not only the young rich were surprised by JC’s attitude, but also his disciples, asking: “who then really can be saved” (ibid, p. 88)? JC replied that God can correct any mal-relationship between a human and his/her wealth. Then JC said clearly a deep economic proposal: “whoever will abandon houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or property to be united with me forever, he/she will receive 100 times more during his/her present life and in addition he/she will inherit eternal life (ibid, p. 89). The 12 apostles have qualified for this.
JC was clear (ibid, p. 24): “do not gather treasures on earth where, among other probabilities of losses, thieves pierce the walls of the vaults and steal them”. “Accumulate treasures in heavens: where there are no thieves” etc. More important was what JC said: “where one’s treasure is, there is also his mind stuck” (ibid, p. 24). The accumulation of treasures on earth causes a man to hate God and love the treasures instead. One cannot serve effectively two masters, as the two Masters demand opposite things. One master is God and the other is Wealth (avarice). St. Paul was especially clear by saying that the “root of all evils is avarice” [
JC, however, was especially critical to rich (ibid 262), who used their wealth to comfort and enjoy their body; they get their perfect consolation from wealth and they leave nothing to gain from “lad”, he said; pity for those who are full from body enjoyments as a unique end of their life, saying all the time and caring exclusively: “what to eat and drink”? These will be deprived from spiritual goods in “lad”, and there they will be hungry. JC remarked that the large properties are made out of injustices [
This paper and its conclusions are based on the fact that CO is the only true religion and the truths taught by JC are still valid. Economics, and CO, are both against uncontrolled wealth. For Keynes, effective demand, consumption plus investment, helps in achieving full employment. The inducement to save in the form of wealth reduces or postpones expenditure for some unspecified time -something not to the interest of economic growth.
God was the first to foretell Adam about “disutility of labor49”. As a result religion gave economics a very basic principle. Utility, the other face of the same coin, was taken by classical economists to make it a postulate of their employment theory! Economists sought for a balance between two diverse situations on the principle from Physics: “an action causes an equal reaction”.
JC meant that whether human, or divine, one has to work. God of course, by asking Adam to work, just after his fall, he wanted him to realize also that he lost the Paradise; there he had only to provide a steady prayer.
Free food can be provided only by God, and his son, in special human circumstances, like the case of “manna”. JC, in the eyes of his audience, was the best king of all they had so far, providing “free” meals and “perfect wine”, just by a simple prayer to his father, and thus making personal work and disutility of labor redundant! Humans demonstrated to JC that the disutility of labor and the “appreciation of the free possession of food and drink” were placed really high. JC repeatedly tried, however, to redirect their attention, care, agony and pre-occupation from what to “eat, dress and drink” to goods in heavens.
Economics, however, did the opposite: when economists saw that disutility of labor cannot be avoided, “asked” people to maximize their utility. So, the pleasure from consumption compensated disutility from work at the margin mathematically.
Humans were confused by rejecting the principle: “Search and Believe”. It is really not conceivable to reject a religion, for which no prior personal research made, and no prior knowledge acquired! It is sure that who knows real God well, it is impossible to reject him. D tries exactly that: he prevents humans from a personal investigation for the existence of God, and for the nature of his love, by saying: “Believe in general but do not search for real God; worship your passions; these are your gods”.
Economists failed in their models to take the two “lives”50 of man into account. Also they failed generally by expelling time from their analysis. The duration of one’s present “life” and the one in “lad” are both important.
Keynes was successful to describe how human entrepreneurs think by writing: “the thought of ultimate loss, which often overtakes pioneers, as experience undoubtedly tells us, and them, is put aside as a healthy man puts aside the expectation of death [
Robinson J believed that religion is a sentimental system based on faith, while science is a scientific system based on logic, and on experiment. The first, however, uses time from birth to death and after death, and the second uses time during present life only: from birth to death. Who is more right?
The maximization of utility remained as an economic principle after all, providing a deceptive picture of present life. How then can one accept religion, which says that one is going to suffer during present life? A life, during which, one has to work all along, soon after education, and till one retires? Moreover, work is unpleasant, but one will be compensated for this displeasure by an equal pleasure from eating goods, bought by income as argued by economists. But who is going to compensate one for the misery and miss-happiness of the present life?
Obviously economics, despite other definitions, is the science of how to please one’s body. Bentham’s attempt, however, of the “beautification” of present life is deceptive, as religion warns that this life is full of mishaps and sorrows mainly due to the improper management of wealth!
Wealth is excluded from frequent economic discussions and even condemned. Wealth brings more wealth, when it reaches a mass quantity (Pareto’s power law). Wealth is for the few. Relevant data indicates that rich people get richer as time goes-by, and more so during depressions.
CO is clear, wealth? Yes, but not here, there (lad). Moreover, and more important, wealth devoted to charity is a passport to eternal life. Create an honest wealth to give it away in charities correcting human inequality. At the same time the poorer by having higher propensity to consume they will boost GDP. With one shot one can kill two birds. This is a point missed by Keynes.
The general and fundamental background question for all religious issues arises, in our humble opinion, as to “what is truth”. Our poem in the appendix provides a personal answer as to what truth is. Human happiness, though excluded by God, we all know is not permanent, but either comes and stays for a while, or goes fast away, as a cloud appears and disappears in the sky Disutility of present life.
The authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.
Goulielmos, A.M. (2018) The Economics of Wealth According to Economic and Religious Principles. Modern Economy, 9, 1465-1489. https://doi.org/10.4236/me.2018.98093
No matter how strange it sounds,
Few seek to find Truth in the surrounds!
The majority seeks Happiness, but they get pity,
As permanent Happiness does not exist in any City.
*
Truth has a sister called Freedom,
but Truth’s family is a small Kingdom,
it has three other sisters apart from Justice:
Love, Faith and Hope.
*
Truth is the love for the real,
hope for future, with no fear,
and faith in the darkness.
Truth throws light in our night,
and provides the sun in our life.
*
Truth is not just a concept,
Or a little philosophy,
It is a Person, and a supreme wisdom,
It cannot be approached by reason,
Frequently however visits faith’s “prison”.
*
Truth does not change, remains the same;
Technology cannot alter its nature or its fame.
Everywhere truth emerges as spirit, personally,
And who has found it keeps it un-provisionally.
*
Many of those seeking the truth,
They look for it in the wrong place,
As Truth is everywhere, but “elsewhere” is her face.
And there are times that Truth finds you,
But to find Truth early is better for you.
*
“What is Truth?” many have asked,
Even Pontius Pilate51, but they got no reply,
Because this question was wrong,
as is not “what”, but “who”…
*
Truth is revealed to those that can love-it-by,
And to those asking by curiosity remains hidden,
As easily it is not surrendered to anyone nearby.
*
Who finds Truth, happiness for him is nil,
As one feels free, and death is not felt,
He/she hopes in life after death,
When truth is really and finally met,
but this is too late!