I had the great privilege of delivering the Labor Day Sunday sermon at my church (Unity Church, Unitarian Universalist, in St. Paul). I offered the best I could find from Abraham Lincoln, the Bible, Catholic and Lutheran teachings on social justice, and recent economic studies to make the case that we have an inequality problem in Minnesota and the nation. And it was a treat to get Donna Summer's great song, "She Works Hard for the Money'' into the liturgy as the postlude. As Americans we mark our progress by looking back at forms of liberation from exploitation of labor. In our western hemisphere, we look back in horror at the forced conversion and attempted enslavement of aboriginal people to Christendom and efforts to bring them under the English and Spanish or French yoke. We are proud of the American Revolution and our fight against the illegitimate seizure, without representation, of our labor. We are proud of the great fight led by liberal religious founders of our own Unitarian Universalist denomination against the enslavement of African people. Interestingly, southern defenders of slavery used the Bible’s apparent approval or neutrality on the subject to advance their secessionist cause.
In the last century, we’ve made enormous progress against the much more subtle forms of semi-slavery that come with unbridled capitalism and the slanted bargaining table set up between employers and employees: the simple and basic right to organize, child labor laws, the 40-hour work week and overtime compensation, the minimum wage, the civil rights movement and ongoing efforts to finish the Emancipation Proclamation and end the de facto slavery imposed on people of color, the migrant workers’ reforms, and in more recent years but throughout history, hugely important, the oppression of women in the workforce.
I urged the congregation to consider the mountains of evidence that show economic inequality growing once again, after we reached a high-water level of overall economic equality in the 1970s. And I urged folks to do whatever they possibly could to change policies and laws to bring about more equal outcomes, chiefly through more and better investment in human capital. The full text of the sermon is available here [PDF].
Here's one point I made about labor and fairness, and democratic and religious traditions.
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