As sirs? credibility continues its long descent, now hovering only 250 meters off the floor of the Philippine Trench:
Sirs (reply 182)<<Why don't you provide scripture that demonstrates how Jesus would support goverment officials taking from one to give to another?? Perhaps because there ISN'T ANY?? >>
Sirs (reply 208)<<The part Tee doesn't get, and never will, is this has never been about if Jesus agreed or disagreed about paying taxes, . . . >>
And a little more goal-post moving as well, the point now being (according to sirs) not whether Jesus supported paying your taxes, but whether Jesus
himself ever took from A to give to B: [still in sirs' reply 208]
<<I'm guessing they'll never find a passage either that has Christ taking something from anyone to give to another. Let's wait and see if that position of mine is at least refuted,
since nothing else has been yet>>
No? Nothing? And hnumpah never met your challenge?
Ohhhhh - kay.
As for BT's excellent question, how much of Caesar's tribute went to feeding the poor, I will quote the U. of Michigan web page on Augustus Caeasar, the Emperor at the time of Jesus' birth, who died when Jesus was 14:
<<Within the city of Rome itself, Augustus introduced a more regular supply of subsidized grain for the poor . . . He issued regular distributions of food and money at festivals and to commemorate important moments in his reign. In doing so he not only alleviated the suffering of the poor, but he also bound the lower classes to his house.
Preferential treatment of the population of Rome was thus established as one of the foundations of imperial government.>>
http://www.umich.edu/~classics/programs/class/cc/372/sibyl/en/Augustus.htmlThat answer your question?