Tyranny is a word that has, unfortunately, been heard often in recent years. The term usually refers to “the usurpation of power by a single individual or group, or the circumvention of law by rulers for their own benefit.”*1 But it can also describe any power, such as greed, that dominates and dehumanizes.
Greed is the inordinate desire to possess wealth, goods, or objects of abstract value with the intention of keeping it for oneself, far beyond the dictates of basic survival and comfort. It is not merely a personal flaw; it is also a power that enslaves both individuals and societies.
The
biblical phrase “the love of money” is clearly a reference to greed (“the
inordinate desire to possess wealth”)—and also a clear reference to its
tyrannical nature, as it is “the root of all kinds of evil” (1 Timothy 6:10,
CEB).
According
to my AI “buddy” Claude, “greed was absolutely central to Jamestown's founding
in 1607.” The Virginia Company was a corporation “created explicitly to
generate profits for its investors.” It became profitable after 1614, when it
began shipping tobacco to Great Britain.
The
greed of the Virginia Company led to enslaved Africans being brought to
Virginia in 1619 to work in the tobacco fields. Human beings were reduced to
property so that plantation owners could increase their wealth.
A
century later, cotton became king, and greed increasingly drove the engines of
slavery. So, citing Claude again, “the desire for wealth [=greed] from cotton
drove the expansion and entrenchment of one of history's most brutal systems of
human exploitation.”
“The
more profitable cotton became, the more deeply the South invested in slavery,
making it nearly impossible to imagine their economy without it—which
ultimately helped precipitate the Civil War.”
But
as far back as 1607, greed also wreaked havoc on Native Americans. The founding
of Jamestown inadvertently initiated the genocide of the Native nations. Much
later, the desire for more land to grow cotton was a major factor behind the
Indian Removal Act of 1830.
For
much of the nineteenth century, greed fueled the seizure of Native American
lands under the banner of progress, or “Manifest Destiny,” as settlers and
governments justified the displacement/removal of the Indian nations for the sake
of acquiring land to use for their own economic gain.
Whenever
and wherever greed is rampant, people are exploited,
lands are stolen, and justice is distorted. Sadly, though, even today, tyrannical
greed continues to shape economies, politics, and daily habits of consumption—and
that greed is epitomized in the current POTUS. His “business” activity is just one indication of his greed.
According
to an Oct. 9 post (here),
Trump has launched ads “to sell his new collection of watches.” This will add
to the wealth he has greedily accumulated as President. He reportedly made $10
million in the last year selling watches, sneakers, Bibles, and guitars.
His
most profitable business, though, is cryptocurrency. Last year, he made over $57
million from his stake in World Liberty Financial, the cryptocurrency
platform. His $TRUMP meme coin launched in January 2025 is estimated to have
earned $320 million in fees.
Since
the tyranny of greed is so prevalent, attention needs to be given to Malcolm
Foley’s book, The Anti-Greed Gospel (2025).*2 (Here is
a picture of author Foley and his “million dollar smile” along with the
subtitle of his book.)
In his book, Foley cites
John Chrysostom (d. 407), who asserted that “great is the
tyranny of Mammon.” That tyranny exacerbated the idolatrous worship of Mammon
rather than the true God. It also led to the construction of racism.
Plantation
owners needed a moral and legal justification for treating human beings as
property, so they constructed an ideology of racial inferiority. This allowed
them to justify the brutal exploitation and to prevent solidarity between poor White
and enslaved Black people.
While
he does not cite them, Foley’s basic explanation of racism is similar to that
of contemporary scholars Inram X. Kendi and Starlette Thomas.*3 They
all argue that racist ideas were created to justify slavery. The latter was
based on greed, which led to exploitation and then used racist ideology to
justify it.
In
the last part of his book, Foley challenges churches to confront greed as both
a personal and systemic sin, and to replace it with practices of justice,
solidarity, and truth.
Since greed is personal as well as societal, all of us need to remember the oft-quoted admonition of Thomas Merton:
*2 Foley (Ph.D., Baylor University)
is a pastor, historian, and speaker who serves as special adviser to the
president for equity and campus engagement at Baylor. Foley also co-pastors
Mosaic Waco, a multicultural church in Waco, Texas
*3 Kendi is an author, professor, and anti-racist activist. He
is the author of three books, the most influential being How to Be an Antiracist (2019).
Thomas is an author, preacher, activist, and race abolitionist who serves as
the director of The Raceless Gospel Initiative at Good Faith Media. She is the
author of Take Me to the Water: The Raceless Gospel as Baptismal
Pedagogy for a Desegregated Church (2023).
In this blog post, I mentioned one aspect of Trump's greed. I just now read the opinion piece written by Paul Krugman that was in this morning's edition of the Washington Post. In it, he asserted that Trump is "only able to act as if he has absolute power within a limited enclave, a bubble created by greed and fear."
ReplyDeleteKrugman (b. 1953) is "an American economist who is the Distinguished Professor of Economics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He was a columnist for The New York Times from 2000 to 2024. In 2008, Krugman was the sole winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences" (from Wikipedia).
DeleteThinking Friend Eric Dollard in Chicago shares this pertinent quote:
ReplyDelete"Thanks, Leroy, for your observations about greed. As Gandhi once said, 'There is enough for everyone's need, but not everyone's greed.'
Thanks for sending this quote of Gandhi. If not having greed means living the kind of lifestyle he practiced, then almost all of us in the wealthy countries of the world are clearly guilty of greed. You may recall that in January 2018, I posted the following blog article about Gandhi, who was called a "half-naked fakir [=Hindu ascetic]."
Deletehttps://theviewfromthisseat.blogspot.com/2018/01/in-praise-of-half-naked-fakir.html
And here are comments from local Thinking Friend David Nelson:
ReplyDelete"Thanks for another excellent and painful reminder of our past mistakes which too easily become today’s practice. Greed is a tragic part of our past and it can be reframed and corrected to enhance community.
"We can be revolutionaries who suggest 'We have enough.' We have enough resources to live in peace. We have enough for all the children of the world to be feed and housed. We have enough hope to change the world. Saturday, at the 'No Kings' rallies, we demonstrated that We Have Enough. Now let’s remember that fact and restore democracy."