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In his Sermon on the Mount,
Jesus denounced the use of force--even in
self-defense. He also
vividly stated that a bad tree cannot bear good
fruit. Thus, in accordance with Jesus' principles,
taxes, which depend on force for their collection, cannot
produce anything good.
Some will protest, "But taxes go
to feed the hungry, succor the poor, and what's more, America could
never have put a man on the moon or developed the Internet
without taxes. Besides who, if not government,
will build and maintain the roads, bridges, schools, hospitals
and other critical components of modern society's
infrastructure?"
Answer: If mankind's ability to
think is so limited as to be unable to create such "goods"
without resorting to force (viz., taxation), then either Jesus
didn't know what he was taking about, or we aren't worthy
of the redeeming principles for living that he preached.
This "who-but-government" mind set is a form of
idolatry. It is the worship of state force. One of
the greatest minds of the twentieth century dubbed it
"statolatry."
The abominable lie that there is
a moral or religious duty to pay taxes to the state most
likely first emanated from the unholy alliance of the Christian
church and the Roman empire. After
that church-state merger, Bible scholars who were
financially supported by government taxes interpolated
words of praise for taxes and the state into the
mouth of Jesus where they had never before been uttered. Now,
seventeen-hundred years later, it is time to rescue
Jesus' reputation from the minions of the church-state
conspiracy, who to this day have the temerity to claim that
Jesus endorsed paying taxes. He did not! In
fact it is likely that Jesus was crucified
for opposing the payment of taxes to Caesar and influencing
others not to pay.
The man who executed
Jesus was a Roman procurator (or prefect) of
imperial taxes for Judea, which is the equivalent of an
IRS district director of taxation for an area of the
United States. Mr. District Director Pontius Pilate had
Jesus brutally flogged and mocked and hung on a cross in
a form of death reserved for those who dared to threaten Rome's
tax-funded hegemony over its vassal territories.
The sanction of taxation attributed to Jesus by many
church-state scholars would sound plausible if attributed
to Pontius Pilate, but would never have
been uttered by Jesus.
The purpose of this website
and the essay, Jesus of Nazareth, Illegal-Tax Protester,
is to repair the damage done to Jesus'
reputation by orthodox Christian exegetes, and to
reveal what Jesus truly taught about taxes by his own
words and deeds, to wit: TAXING VIOLATES GOD'S LAW, 'THOU SHALT NOT
STEAL!" NOT ONLY IS IT SINFUL TO COLLECT OR RECEIVE
TAXES, IT IS ALSO SINFUL TO WILLINGLY PAY TAXES!
That is not our opinion. That is
what Jesus taught.
LOVE
YOUR ENEMIES, IT BEFUDDLES
THEM! |