<<And despite Tee's foaming at the mouth rant . . . >>
Let it be noted - - as sirs' credibility sinks ever lower, now hovering somewhere around 500 meters off the bottom of the Philippine Trench - - that my "foaming at the mouth rant" consisted of a fairly dry and methodical recap of sirs' challenge to hnumpah, hnumpah's answer to the challenge, sirs' immediate issuance of a newer, even crazier challenge, hnumpah's refusal to take the bait, and sirs' final, desperate and completely ludicrous non sequitur - - that if Christ advocated government action addressed to the material needs of the people, how much more would he have advocated government action aimed at facilitating the "salvation" of the people, since it was so much more important than material aid. (The wording might not be exactly reproduced here, the craziness is captured with guaranteed 100% accuracy.)
<< . . . the point remains that at no time does Jesus advocate the forcible taking from someone to give to another. >>
I don't know how many times you can deny what's been set forth in black and white in front of your very eyes, but from the looks of this thread, it must be a very large number of times. It may, in fact, be forever.
In response to the question whether the Jewish people should pay taxes to the Romans, Jesus said to render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's. He was telling people to pay their taxes. It should be fairly obvious to any person with an I.Q. higher than that of the average house plant that the Romans were going to spend large portions, if not all, of those tax revenues on projects that would not meet with the approval of the average Jewish person or the average Son of God. It is generally accepted that the Roman tax collector was not some lackadaisical, laid-back proto-hippie who collected taxes only from those who voluntarily wanted to pay them and gave everyone else a free pass. They were known to be quite brutal and exacting in their methods. They were known, on occasion to resort to (gasp!!) the use of force to collect those taxes. Yet despite all that, Jesus told his followers to pay their taxes.
Get it? Pay your taxes. There's nothing wrong with it. Even if some of the money goes to (gasp!!) the poor. Jesus says it's OK.