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Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2011
This 1988 book is a critique of an admittedly "obscure economics professor (Douglas Vickers) who wrote two books defending Keynesian economics in the name of the Bible."
Hodge begins, "I am doing everything I can to offend classroom humanists who parade themselves as Christians, and who live off the donations of naive Christians who trust their children to these ideological child seducers." (Pg. xix)
He charges, "Here is a scholar who proclaims his adherence to the Bible and to (Cornelius) Van Til, and yet he tells us that morality cannot be legislated. What then can be legislated? Of course! neutral law. You know: the thing Van Til has spend his entire career arguing against." (Pg. 92)
He asserts, "But the greatest disaster of all in the Keynesian system is the LOSS OF MORAL VALUES that it causes. (What would you expect from an economic system designed by a homosexual?") (Pg. 245)
Not a book for the faint-hearted, it will be of some interest to some Christians looking for a critique of Keynsian policies.