In the time of Jesus almost everybody worked in small shops or on the land and then sold or bartered their own products in the towns. There were no vast industrial centers, no great factories, no steam power or electricity. Everyone knew his neighbor by name. There was no highly developed division of labor, nor were there great extremes of wealth and poverty. Such economic conditions are ideal—or at least as nearly ideal as they can ever be—for the spread of Christian communism. And so they are still in many parts of Russia.


p. 68 - Why We Fail as Christians (1919)


In the time of Jesus almost everybody worked in small shops or on the land and then sold or bartered their own products in the towns. There were no...

In the time of Jesus almost everybody worked in small shops or on the land and then sold or bartered their own products in the towns. There were no...

In the time of Jesus almost everybody worked in small shops or on the land and then sold or bartered their own products in the towns. There were no...

In the time of Jesus almost everybody worked in small shops or on the land and then sold or bartered their own products in the towns. There were no...