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... "Christian."
In particular, it might matter how tradition, revelation, and scripture were balanced -- and who was in charge of interpretation.
The primitive Christianity of the apostles seems to have been an early form of communism . The early Church fathers taught that almsgiving and charity work with the poor was not a personal choice but an ethical obligation and that conveying surplus to the poor was not merely an act of mercy but more simply (and profoundly) represented the RETURNING to them of what had been UNJUSTLY TAKEN away from them before.
Similarly, the notion that "the earth is the Lord's" had, by the middle ages, been elaborated into a theory that recognized only a temporary right to use the fruits of the land rather than any absolute right to deplete and destroy what is "owned".
Of course, the corporate media will never mass-produced such ideas as images of "Christian" thought for popular consumption, because these ideas tend to produce a consciousness materially opposed to the greedy and rapacious tendencies that corporate ideology claims are necessary for a modern economy. What passes, instead, through the media filter, is the "Christianity" of televangelists, busily reinforcing consumer culture by aping commercial techniques: namely, creating anxieties about personal worth and offering spending options as a means of alleviating these anxieties.
A serious public discussion about "Christian property law" would terrify the corporate elite and might cause them to rethink their current strategy ...
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