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Sovereignty And Dominion: An Economic Commentary on Genesis, Volume 1 - Paperback

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Sovereignty And Dominion: An Economic Commentary on Genesis, Volume 1 - Paperback
Sovereignty And Dominion: An Economic Commentary on Genesis, Volume 1 - Paperback
Sovereignty And Dominion: An Economic Commentary on Genesis, Volume 1 - Paperback
$22.93/ea
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Product Description

by Gary North (Author)

A case for a thoroughly Christian economics - not the baptized humanism that passes for Christian economics in too many of our Christian college classrooms.

This book, the first volume of a multi-volume commentary on the Bible - specifically an economic commentary, the first one ever published - provides biblical answers to these questions, and dozens more:

Why is Genesis 1:14-18 more hated by humanists than Genesis 1:1?
Why was Darwin successful in winning converts when others had failed?
Why did God never intend that Adam should rest on the seventh day?
Why did Adam refuse to rest on the first day as a principle of life?
Why is gold money? (After all, you can't eat gold.)
Why does socialism increase pollution?
Why do pagan cultures have high interest rates?
Why does the Bible say that growth can be a blessing?
Why is population explosion morally required?
Why is the Social Security System going broke?
How old was Jacob really when he left home? (you'll hardly believe it.)
What does the Bible teach about personal financial planning?

Modern economic thought is humanistic to the core, whether conservative, libertarian, Keynesian, Marxist, or whatever. All schools of thought begin with the presupposition that man is the measure of all things, and man's mind is capable, apart from biblical revelation to interpret the world correctly. This is why modern economic theory is in the process of disintegration.

This book sets forth the biblical foundations of economics. It offers the basis of the total reconstruction of economic theory and practice. It specifically abandons the universal presupposition of all modern schools of economics: Darwinian evolution. Economics must begin with the doctrine of creation.

What does the Bible require of men in the area of economics and business? What does the Bible have to say about economic theory? Does it teach the free market, or socialism, or a mixture of the two, or something completely different? Is there really an exclusively Christian approach to economics?

What you're about to read represents a self-conscious effort to rethink the oldest and most rigorous social science in terms of the doctrine of creation. Every social science requires such a reconstruction. The ""baptized humanism"" of the modern Christian college classroom must be abandoned by all those who take seriously God's command that Christians go forth and subdue the earth (Genesis 1:28). We must begin with the doctrine of creation if we are not to end in total chaos. This is the central message of this book. God's curse of the ground (Genesis 3:17-19) made scarcity an inescapable aspect of man's existence. This is the specific economic starting point for Christian economics. Apart from these fundamental presuppositions, economics is inescapably irrational and self-contradictory.

This book was originally titled: The Dominion Covenant: Genesis

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This series, An Economic Commentary on the Bible, is published by Reconstructionist Radio, a producer and provider of Reformed (Postmillennial, Presuppositional, Covenantal, Calvinist, and Theonomic) Christian Reconstructionist podcasts, audiobooks, lectures, sermons, music, and other media. Content is made available from authors such as Gary North (Institute for Christian Economics, Point Five Press), David Chilton, R.J. Rushdoony (Chalcedon Foundation), Joel McDurmon, Phil Kayser (Biblical Blueprints), Greg Bahnsen (Covenant Media Foundation), Stephen Perks (Kuyper Foundation), Bojidar Marinov (Christendom Restored, Bulgarian Reformation), and many more.

Number of Pages: 364
Dimensions: 0.75 x 9.02 x 5.98 IN
Publication Date: January 01, 1982
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