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God, Man, and Money, or How to Succeed in Business Without Going to Hell

  • MICHAEL NOVAK

Money is a far more complicated reality and more tightly related to matters of the spirit than we usually recognize.


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Barter is undoubtedly the most primitive form of human exchange, and there seems to be something wholesome about it. As long as most people were hunters and gatherers, fishermen and farmers, the goods and services they exchanged seemed "natural" and "basic." Obviously, the subjective factor of a powerful lust for a particular object could lead to an exchange that calmer and more judicious observers would judge as grossly one-sided: the person with the stronger desire might give away goods worth far more than the object of his desire. The native Americans are said to have "sold" all of Manhattan Island to the first European settlers for strings of bright beads; although of course the joke may have been on the Europeans, because Native Americans made no pretense of "owning" anything, and may have felt they got something rare in their world for something overabundant land and by nature belonging to all.

The invention of money as a medium of exchange was an enormously helpful social invention. In the beginning, however, money was scarce and the temptation to hoard it as in the fairy tales of misers "in their counting houses counting up their money" was apparently powerful. In those days, those who hoarded a scarce resource deprived others of its use. Thus, misers were universally regarded as villainous, even evil, and "avarice" seemed to be a particularly vicious sin against the whole society. It did not harm merely the miser, as overeating harmed the glutton; it hurt all those into whose lives it brought deprivation. In those days, "wealth" [understood as pecunia, gold or silver coin] implied a zero-sum game. If one person had all, others had zero. Any money one person had subtracted from the sum available to others. To possess an excess, more than one needed, felt to the miser or the avaricious man like security, power, and prestige. Many of the parables of Jesus remind such persons that in wealth of this sort lies no real security, or peace, or virtue.

There was one other feature to pre-modern times. Land was the main cause of wealth, and agriculture and agricultural products including cloth of various kinds were the main goods of trade. Artisans worked in metals and leathers and woods. Yet on the whole there was relatively little invention and manufacture of new products. With few exceptions, such as the manufacture of instruments of war, including warships, in the employ of the king, modern institutions such as factories and the division of labor had few precursors. Thus, money was almost entirely a medium of exchange. It had very little role as investment capital as a social instrument for the creation of new wealth for the whole society through sustained invention and discovery. In short, the role of money as an instrument of the creative human mind did not really emerge until modern times, at least in sufficient density to lend a new character to the era. Until that happened, the only real way for a king or a baron or even a brigand to acquire new wealth was to mount up an army and go seize it. No one knew how to "create" wealth or cause "development" (as we say today), but only how to "take" wealth. Getting wealthy was often a matter of seizing the property of others by force. Wealthy people lived in fortresses and castles to protect themselves.

"Wealth" in the sense of takings meant more than money, of course. It meant silver cups and armor and linens and jewels and fine garments; it meant tapestries and horses and cutlery and movables of all sorts. But it also meant the capture of hoards of silver and gold. In this context, to speak of wealth was often to speak of ill-gotten gains. To say that "money is the root of all evil" or, even more exactly, cupiditas radix malorum, was not far from looking at the behavior of the powerful as the peasants and yeoman who suffered most from mayhem, plunder, war and rapine must have looked at it. Wars of plunder were the curse of Europe (and much of the rest of the world) for some two thousand years, at least. Even in the Old Testament one finds plenty of tales of conquering armies sweeping out of the plains.


Not until 1776 did any major thinker raise the question of wealth in a systematic and practical way, with an eye toward shifting the worlds attention from warfare to investment, from the taking of existing wealth to the creation of new wealth. No one before Adam Smith asked about the cause of the wealth of nations. The conventional wisdom held that wealth is given and taken away, as in good years and bad years, years of plenty and years of famine, and that nothing at all except alms can be done to alter the permanent condition of the poor majority. "The poor ye shall always have with you." Even in the nineteenth century, Abraham Lincoln, who had been born among them, said: "God must especially love the poor, He made so many of them." It was Adam Smiths dream to understand the causes of wealth, so that new wealth might be created in a sustained and systematic way until every last person on earth was lifted out of poverty, and all might live in "universal affluence."

In the first fifty pages of his flawed but revolutionary Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, Smith recounts the invention of the pin machine. Until someone invented that machine, it took two artisans many days of close work to fashion one or two suitable pins. With the machine, one many alone could press out many thousands of perfect pins in a week. The inventor of the machine, in effect, created immense new wealth, and made it possible not only for baronesses and duchesses to afford pins, but also their servant girls and peasant women in the countryside. This insight is reflected in Centesimus Annus, where the Pope points out that while, in the ancient world, land was the most important form of wealth, in our time invention, discovery, knowledge, and know-how have become the new cause of the wealth of nations, "and the wealth of the developed world is mainly of this sort." (no. 32) It is important to be as precise as CA here: It is not "capital" in the sense of machinery, as in Marxist thought, but "capital" in the sense of human skill and knowledge and innovation that is the main generator of wealth today. In short, human capital.


It is instructive to note that whereas the figure of the miser was a stock figure in novels and short stories and fables from early times until the middle of the last century, this figure has virtually disappeared. Why is this?


In a famous speech, Abraham Lincoln pointed out that the historical turning point in this respect was the Patent and Copyright Clause of the U.S. Constitution, the only clause in the body of the Constitution proper (in 1787, before the Bill of Rights was added four years later) to use the word "right." This clause elevated this new cause of wealth to the status of constitutional law and thereby gave new significance to the term "property." By recognizing "the right of authors and inventors," for a limited time, to the fruit of their own creations, this Constitution generated a new form of property, emanating from the creative human spirit, that would in time surpass land in its ability to create new wealth. This new form of wealth is, in the first place, in the form of ideas, ideas that "reduce to practice" some practical device for the improvement of everyday human life. (Lincoln himself filed for, and won, at least one patent for a new and superior form of water buoy.) Practically all business corporations in the United States today are built around a creative new idea for a good or a service; most such goods and services did not even exist, were not even dreamt of, when the Patent Law was voted on. Lincoln foresaw this dramatic, transformative potential. [I have described Lincolns reasoning in The Fire of Invention (1997).]

It is instructive to note that whereas the figure of the miser was a stock figure in novels and short stories and fables from early times until the middle of the last century, this figure has virtually disappeared. Why is this? In the old days, when money had virtually no creative use as investment for innovation and discovery, anyone who hoarded money was a villain, subtracting financial liquidity from the scarce public store. Today such a person piling up his money in an attic strong-room would be less a villain than a fool. What good is money that is sitting still? A wise man would invest it in a reasonable, safe, creative project, and perhaps use a smaller portion of it in riskier projects that may or may not work out, but promise larger rewards if they do. Today, for example, there are all sorts of investment opportunities in fiber optics, cellular and satellite technologies, internet services, revolutionary software, and smaller and swifter and more efficient computer hardware. Without investors, these new technologies would never be tried. Investment is the waterfall that moves the mill of innovation. (More than half of all the risk capital invested in innovation in the world today is raised and spent in the United States, under the protection of the Patent and Copyright clause.) Money, in the sense of investment capital, is a new handmaiden of the creative human spirit, the investment capital that enables human capital to flourish.


If in a country such as Bolivia a thousand pigs are born, an old-fashioned economist might say that this expands the per capita income, while if a thousand human babies are born, this is bad for economic growth, because one thousand more mouths to feed lowers the per capita income. But human babies are not just open mouths, consuming more than they create.


One consequence of this transformation is that today we see more clearly than ever that the most important resource in any nation is the creative minds of its own citizens. This resource is not only renewable, but (as Aristotle said) in some sense without limit: The mind is in some way all things. It is open, questing, always probing and asking questions.

This insight transforms arguments about population control. It is false that crowded or "overpopulated" countries must be poor, and underpopulated countries are more likely to be rich. In fact, some of the most densely populated regions of the world Japan, the Netherlands are among the wealthiest. The main cause of wealth is the training and the organization of the human mind. This factor is even more important than natural resources. The Swiss have few natural resources, but a great concentration of intelligent application. Some of the regions of the world richest in resources remain mired in great human poverty. This phenomenon is almost always related to the maleducation or malorganization of human capital the neglect of education and proper laws and proper incentives.

If in a country such as Bolivia a thousand pigs are born, an old-fashioned economist might say that this expands the per capita income, while if a thousand human babies are born, this is bad for economic growth, because one thousand more mouths to feed lowers the per capita income. But human babies are not just open mouths, consuming more than they create. Each is born in the image of the Creator, and each is endowed by God with the capacity to create more wealth in his or her lifetime than he or she consumes. This is the very condition for human progress. Unless it were so, human progress would not be possible, let alone likely. Everything depends, of course, on whether the economic system in Bolivia (or any other country) nourishes, or represses, the creative capacities of each child. Bolivias greatest resource is each child. Everything depends on wise investments (education, training, morals, good laws, etc.) in those children in the human capital of Bolivia, in the technical language of contemporary economics [Cf. Gary Becker].

There is one more point that must be made before we reach our conclusions. If you purchase new software for your computer today WordPerfect, for example you may pay (say) about $90.00 for the computer disc. You will then become aware that the material elements of your purchase the silicon of the chip, the alloy of the disc is worth less than one dollar. What you are paying for is predominantly spiritual, the intellectual content embedded in the software codes miniaturized on the chip. Goods today tend to become smaller, miniaturized, cleaner, and more spiritual, less material by far than fifty or one hundred years ago. Factories and workstations are cleaner now, too, as electronic processes replace mechanical.

Something similar is happening to money. In the United States, it has not been necessary to use silver or gold in daily life for many generations. Paper currencies, backed "by the full faith and credit of the United States Government," are in fact promissory notes that pledge convertibility into silver or gold. This is mostly a matter of faith. It is a not unreasonable faith. But it is certainly a promise of things hoped for more than a visible reality.


Money has become more of an intellectual artifact than a physical thing. Moreover, to an extraordinarily high degree, its current value is based on spiritual attitudes such as faith and trust. Burst these like a pin prick in a bubble and the value of money can collapse very quickly.


More impressively still, less and less is it necessary these days to carry even paper currency around in ones pocket. One carries neither silver nor gold nor paper promises of same. Instead, one carries a "credit card" or "debit card" linked by computer code to a bank account. The form of wealth in ones pocket is a form of faith in the reliability of computers and in a purely human (and fallible) institution, a bank. Money today is mostly an account, a set of computer numbers always rapidly changing with entries and withdrawals (and occasionally a computer error or a mistaken manual entry by a computer clerk). Money has become more of an intellectual artifact than a physical thing. Moreover, to an extraordinarily high degree, its current value is based on spiritual attitudes such as faith and trust. Burst these like a pin prick in a bubble and the value of money can collapse very quickly. Consult the Asian crisis of early 1998, or the collapse of the Russian ruble.

These two examples, Asia and Russia, indicate that more is involved in the value of money held on accounts these days than purely economic factors. In Asia, the lack of truly democratic accountability, the lack of transparency, the phenomenon of one-party rule and the rewarding by political authorities of relatives and cronies, and severe problems of transition upon the death of dictators, and other chiefly political factors undermined confidence in economic transactions. Too many unseen hands manipulate economic factors beneath the table. Imputed valuations collapsed.

In Russia, the repression of all religious and moral inspirations during seventy long years of Communist Party rule deeply injured the moral ethos of the nation, and the failure of the political system after 1991 to establish the rule of law; to suppress violence, extortion, murder, and gangsterism; and to tie the value of money to real and universally dispersed assets, gravely wounded trust in normal economic life. As Centesimus Annus points out (no. 42), to work for true human liberty, an economic system requires both a constitutional political system and a moral/ cultural system that protect human liberty, too. Without a supportive political system and a wisely shaped moral ethos, a creative and orderly economic life is not possible. Economics does not live by economics alone.

All these complex considerations lead us to the reflection that "money" today is a far more profound and spiritual concept than we would have thought, even fifty years ago. It is worth no more than the faith people put in it. That faith depends on political factors, moral factors, and cultural factors (such as the quality of education and the high, or low, standard of morals and mores). The work ethic that has become a tradition in Japanese families over the past six or seven generations, for example, is of very great economic value, even though it seems far remote from "money," and its continuing vitality is a source of realistic hope for the recovery of the Japanese economy and the renewed strength of the yen. Let me add to that the relatively new concentration of the Japanese upon sustained innovation.

In Italy, too, ancient habits of enterprise and economic creativity, especially in small and mid-sized firms, is making Italy one of the top two or three nations in Europe in terms of entrepreneurial vitality and innovation. The cultivation of creativity in Italian schools, not least aesthetic creativity, gives Italian products a distinguishing flair that most of the world finds attractive. Behind currencies, in short, lie entire ways of life, replete with moral, spiritual, and psychological habits of infinite variety.

In Europe, the Euro is an attempt to enforce a certain continent-wide common economic discipline, while reaching for the rewards of more efficient international accounting transactions. Reflection on the Euro brings out even further the new level of moral and spiritual common life for which Europe is now reaching. Money and spirit, or at least money and deeply rooted human habits and acts, are far more tightly interlinked than we have heretofore thought.


Preachers, therefore, need to be intellectually careful in speaking about "materialism." The more common vices today are likely to be spiritual: preoccupation, hyperactivity, a failure even to heed the natural rhythms of the body and the senses, distractedness, an instrumentalizing of people and time and activity.


Preachers, therefore, need to be intellectually careful in speaking about "materialism." The more common vices today are likely to be spiritual: preoccupation, hyperactivity, a failure even to heed the natural rhythms of the body and the senses, distractedness, an instrumentalizing of people and time and activity. Ironically, many people today need to slow up a little and smell the roses, enjoy the sunshine, go slowly over a good meal, pay real but relaxed attention in conversations, make more space for their contemplative instincts and all these things might seem to be a kind of self-pampering, a form of self-indulgence, even a preoccupation with material pleasures. But their real point is to heal our spirits, which a fast modern life too much mortifies. Living life by the wrist watch and an electronic bombardment of messages and a daily rush through "fast food" outlets can be a mortification of the flesh that would have taxed a Desert Father, and thrown him exhausted into his prayers.

Besides, it is my experience that more people today are led to God by the emptiness they find in success than through being broken by hard experiences although, of course, the ways to God are infinite, and there is no shortage of the latter. Just when they attain what they always dreamed of, when they get to the position they have long worked for, they find themselves restless and unsatisfied. They ask themselves tell themselves "There must be more than this!" It really is true that humans do not live by bread alone. Those who find an abundance of bread quickly taste boredom.

Finally, I must answer one question I am always asked. "Isnt it idolatrous that on the dollar bill and on some U.S. coins it is written In God we trust?" Actually, that inscription is actually a reflection of a profoundly American belief in original sin. The American experiment in self-government is no utopian or rationalistic experiment. We know that every human being without exception sometimes sins. When we say, therefore, "In God we trust," what we really mean, operationally, is: "In nobody else. For everybody else there are checks and balances." Executive power is checked by legislative and judicial, and each of those also by the other two, and all other offices in the Republic are also divided, so that the interests of each part become a sentinel over the ambitions of the other. In other words, "In God we trust" is an expression of biblical realism.

Perhaps this seems quaint to Europeans, I grant that. But maybe it is not a bad thing to say even on paper money that our trust is not in it, that even its value depends on multiple factors of the human spirit and human practice, and that it, too, rests on many kinds of checks and balances. Money is a far more complicated reality and more tightly related to matters of the spirit than we usually recognize.

It is useful to meditate on the humble realities of daily life. They all do, in the end, lift the mind to God, dont they?

This is Meaghen Gonzalez, Editor of CERC. I hope you appreciated this piece. We curate these articles especially for believers like you.

Please show your appreciation by making a $3 donation. CERC is entirely reader supported.

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Acknowledgement

Michael Novak. God, Man, and Money, or How to Succeed in Business Without Going to Hell. Catholic Dossier (May/June 1999).

Reprinted by permission of Catholic Dossier. This article previously appeared in an Italian publication, Nuntium, March 1999.

The Author

novak1Novak10smMichael Novak (1933-2017) was a distinguished visiting professor in the Busch School of Business at The Catholic University of America at his death. Novak was the 1994 recipient of the Templeton Prize and served as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission. He wrote numerous influential books on economics, philosophy, and theology. Novak’s masterpiece, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism, influenced Pope John Paul II, and was republished underground in Poland in 1984, and in many other countries. Among his other books are: Writing From Left to Right, Living the Call: An Introduction to the Lay Vocation, No One Sees God: The Dark Night of Atheists and Believers, Washington's God, as well as The Universal Hunger for Liberty: Why the Clash of Civilizations Is Not Inevitable, The Catholic Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,  Tell Me Why: A Father Answers His Daughter's Questions About God (with his daughter Jana Novak), and On Two Wings: Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding. Read a more complete bio of Michael Novak here. For more information, see www.michaelnovak.net.

Copyright © 1999 Michael Novak

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