The following article has come to me from the Evangelical Alliance. I think that every person in the Western world has been affected by the recession, the blame for which has been put squarely upon the shoulders of greedy bankers who appear to have no sense of what is morally right, having been blinded by their lust for greater and greater wealth. I'm equally certain that decent people would have been as disgusted as I was by the attitude of Barclay's CEO, Bob Diamond, over the matter of the bonuses paid to him over the past five years, and that which he claims is justified for this year.
Well, here's a message specifically for Mr Diamond:
"Contrary to what you might like to think Bob, Diamonds most certainly do not last for ever!"  
      'The Bible is not often quoted in  Parliament. A Theos publication from 2007 showed  that even Anglican bishops refer to Scripture only rarely in their contributions  to House of Lords’ debates. 
       If that remains so, no-one seems to  have told Labour MP John Mann. For it was he who, last Tuesday, halfway through  a Treasury Select Committee grilling of Bob Diamond, chief executive of  Barclays, dared to quote Jesus Christ himself. (Click here and scroll to 68 minutes in.)  
      “Can I  ask you a philosophical question?” he began ominously. “Why is it easier for a  camel to pass through the eye of a needle than a rich man to enter the kingdom  of heaven?” Diamond was stumped. This he had not expected. He paused, grinned,  and looked around, before asking: “Do you have another question?”
      Bob Diamond earns  a lot of money (about £75m in the past five years). It is estimated that he is  on track for an £8m  bonus for 2010. He employs many people who earn similar figures. His bank, like  many others, was bailed out by the taxpayer in 2008-09, the long-term effect of  which is likely to be financial insecurity, joblessness, debt, and hardship for  millions. Yet when the Conservative MP David Ruffley asked him whether he was  grateful to the British public, gratitude was not exactly forthcoming. Mr  Diamond may yet replace Sir Fred Goodwin as the public face of financial  self-satisfaction and greed about which the British public rage remains white  hot.
      Much of  the interrogation on Tuesday was technical and beyond the wit of most ordinary  mortals. The fundamental argument for paying telephone-number bonuses – bonuses  mind, not salaries – is that the City currently provides 20% of total national  tax revenues. Government – we – cannot do without it, which means we  cannot risk losing our best talent abroad, which is precisely what would happen  if we capped or super-taxed bonuses.
      Most of  us cannot adjudicate confidently on the legitimacy of this argument (although  there is surely a temptation to respond: “If this is the mess that the so-called  crème de la crème of the banking world has got us into, I think we can risk  losing that talent, don’t you?”). But the strength or otherwise of such  arguments is not really the point. If questions of remuneration, profitability  and staff retention were only ever technical issues, there would be no point in  MPs (most of whom have minimal technical knowledge in this field) grilling bank  execs, still less in recording and broadcasting it.
      Underneath the technicalities of the issue, lies a moral landscape  across which we all walk. We all of us have some idea of what is fair, what is  just, “what is good”. And for most of us it looks very different to what we have  seen in banking circles over recent years. 
That is why Mr Mann’s  question – from Jesus’ mouth – was so powerful. It cut through the fripperies of  financial technicalities and exposed the raw, moral wound that lies beneath, and  still hurts many people who could not hope to earn £8 million in a lifetime.  Perhaps it is no surprise that that Daily Mail sketch writer Quentin Letts, who  attended the session, remarked to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that Mr Mann’s  question was one of the few moments of his 2½ hour ordeal during which Mr  Diamond looked genuinely disconcerted. 
      It is  quite possible, in our largely biblically illiterate age, that Bob Diamond did  not get the reference in Mr Mann’s question. Even if he had, he was wise not to  answer it. Because the answer surely is that great wealth acts like a powerful  magnet brought close to our moral compasses; it sends us into an ethical  tailspin in which we become blind to who and what really is “good”, and lose  sight and hope of eternal life.'
Nick  Spencer - Theos, the public theology think tank
 

 
 
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