A World that is Just, Safe, and Compassionate for All

Big News! Your Gift Will Go Twice as Far! 

From now through December 31st, every dollar you donate to Renewed Heart Ministries will be matched dollar for dollar!

That means your support will have double the impact in helping us continue to educate, inspire, and work toward a more just world grounded in love and compassion as we follow Jesus together.

Whether it’s $5 or $5,000, your generosity will be doubled thanks to a matching gift opportunity.

Give today and make twice the difference!

Go to renewedheartministries.com and click on “Donate.”   

Or you can mail your support to:

Renewed Heart Ministries

PO Box 1211

Lewisburg, WV 24901

Thank you for being part of this work. Let’s finish the year strong—together.


A World that is Just, Safe, and Compassionate for All
Photo by ANIRUDH on Unsplash

A World that is Just, Safe, and Compassionate for All

Herb Montgomery | Novembrer 14, 2025

If you’d like to listen to this week’s article in podcast version click on the image below:

Cover art for 'The Social Jesus Podcast,' featuring an artistic depiction of a man with long hair, set against a colorful background. The title and host's name are prominently displayed.

Our reading this week is from the gospel of Luke:

Some of his disciples were remarking about how the temple was adorned with beautiful stones and with gifts dedicated to God. But Jesus said, “As for what you see here, the time will come when not one stone will be left on another; every one of them will be thrown down.”

“Teacher,” they asked, “when will these things happen? And what will be the sign that they are about to take place?” He replied: “Watch out that you are not deceived. For many will come in my name, claiming, ‘I am he,’ and, ‘The time is near.’ Do not follow them. When you hear of wars and uprisings, do not be frightened. These things must happen first, but the end will not come right away.” Then he said to them: “Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be great earthquakes, famines and pestilences in various places, and fearful events and great signs from heaven.

But before all this, they will seize you and persecute you. They will hand you over to synagogues and put you in prison, and you will be brought before kings and governors, and all on account of my name. And so you will bear testimony to me. But make up your mind not to worry beforehand how you will defend yourselves. For I will give you words and wisdom that none of your adversaries will be able to resist or contradict. You will be betrayed even by parents, brothers and sisters, relatives and friends, and they will put some of you to death. Everyone will hate you because of me. But not a hair of your head will perish. Stand firm, and you will win life. (Luke 21:5-19)

The author of the gospel of Luke is seeking to make sense of the devastation that Jewish Jesus followers had just witnessed when Rome razed the temple in Jerusalem to the ground. Let’s consider Luke’s source material, the gospel of Mark: 

Jesus said to them: “Watch out that no one deceives you. Many will come in my name, claiming, ‘I am he,’ and will deceive many. When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, do not be alarmed. Such things must happen, but the end is still to come. Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be earthquakes in various places, and famines. These are the beginning of birth pains. (Mark 13:5-8) 

Luke expands on and rounds out Mark’s narrative. This portion agrees with other non-canonical accounts of the same events. Consider this description from Josephus:

“These people [those slaughtered when the Romans razed the temple in Jerusalem] owed their demise to a phony prophet. He was someone who on that very day announced that God had ordered the people in the city to go up to the temple area, there to welcome the signs that they would be delivered. Many prophets at the time were incited by tyrannical leaders to persuade people to wait for help from God . . . When humans suffer, they are readily persuaded; but when the con artist depicts release from potential affliction, those suffering give themselves up entirely to hope.” (Josephus, Jewish Wars, 6.285-87)

The history surrounding these events is that the economically exploited had reached a breaking point where they could not be squeezed further. Uprising broke out with the poor people’s revolt in overthrowing the Temple state elites, taking over the Temple and Jerusalem and burning all records of all debts, virtually forcing a year of Jubilee according to the Torah. When Rome was sent in to quell the riots, those who had had some taste of victory in Jerusalem set their sights on a bigger target: liberation from not only Jerusalem’s power brokers but also liberation from the Roman Empire itself. Inspired by the historical stories of the Maccabean rebellion against Greece, prophets/messiahs led multitudes not to liberation but to their death at the hands of the much more powerful Rome.

Our reading this week speaks to the unsustainable exploitative system of the society that Jesus followers found themselves in during the first half of the 1st Century.

What about our system today?

Our dominant global economic system has generated an enormous amount of wealth for a few. Its defining features, the private ownership of production and the profits produced for those with the capital to invest, have produced billionaires and plunged many around the globe into poverty. This system has profound contradictions: what creates immense wealth for some also deepens inequality for many others. On top of the growing disparity, this system is also driving ecological crisis. In its current form, our present system tends to exploit natural resources in ways that threaten our planet’s long-term stability.

At its core, our system is based on the pursuit of profit. Corporations seek to maximize returns for shareholders by increasing efficiency, cutting costs, and expanding markets but too often at the expense of the livelihoods of those who make up their workforce. Growth at any cost is defined as the measure of success for both companies and nations alike. We have people going hungry in the richest country in the world, while the stock market continues to rise. This growth metric is not neutral; it shapes how societies share power, treat its labor, drive consumption, and use natural resources. To maintain profitability and an ever-progressing pattern of growth, companies must continually produce more goods, stimulate more demand, and secure cheaper means of producing all of that growth whether those means are human labor or raw materials extracted from the Earth.

Our system is built on profits, once earned, being reinvested to generate even further profits. This self-reinforcing cycle of accumulation and growth drives technological change and innovation for sure, but it also encourages relentless extraction, consumption, and a win-lose world where a few win and many lose. Profit motives too often prioritize short-term gains over long-term losses when it comes to sustainability for the environment and for working people. Costs to produce these profits for investors are often ignored or passed on to our society at large.

Our system creates chronic inequality. The economist Thomas Piketty has shown that when the rate of return on capital exceeds the rate of economic growth (as it often does), wealth tends to concentrate in the hands of those who are already wealthy. Over time, this process creates vast disparities between capital owners and wage earners. While some individuals and corporations amass unprecedented fortunes, the majority experience exactly the challenges we are witnessing right now in the U.S.: stagnant wages you can’t live on combined with a continuing rise in the costs of living.

Since COVID, these trends have only intensified. Someone may boast that our system has increased efficiency but it has also displaced workers and destroyed unions, once the only means for labor to bargain in a system of imbalanced power. Our one-sided system has enabled wealth to grow exponentially for those with capital while divorcing profits from the real economic welfare of the wider population. The result is a widening gap in the U.S., and also, if we take a few steps back, we see a widening global gap between the Global North and South, where long established patterns of colonialism and extraction persist in new and ever-evolving forms.

This ever-increasing wealth disparity is not merely an economic issue but a moral, theological and political one as well. Wealth disparity means that political power and social influence also becomes concentrated in the hands of a few. It harms democracy. Wealthy individuals and corporations shape policy, media narratives, and public priorities, often in ways that reinforce their own advantage and to the disadvantage of the masses. This concentration of power undermines democratic accountability and makes it harder to enact reforms that could redistribute resources or regulate environmentally harmful industries. The wealth disparity and environmental degradation created by our present system are intertwined. Both stem from the same structural imbalances that privileges profit over collective well-being of the masses.

As we consider the unsustainablity of this system for most people, we need to consider its unsustainability for our planet, too. The environmental costs of our present economic system are becoming increasingly undeniable. Our system’s dependence on continuous growth and consumption exerts unsustainable pressure on our finite ecosystem. Fossil-fuel dependence, industrial agriculture, deforestation, and mass production all contribute to climate change and biodiversity loss. These are the intrinsic side effects of a system that depends on continual growth, profit, and accumulation. Every stage of our system’s production cycle, whether extraction, manufacturing, distribution, consumption, or disposal, involves the conversion of natural resources into products to produce profit or waste after those profits have been realized.

Environmental economist Herman Daly has argued that a system based on infinite growth is fundamentally incompatible with a finite planet. This is the contradiction now visible in our accelerating climate emergency, and inequality only compounds the problem. The wealthy contribute disproportionately to waste and resource use. Meanwhile, the poor bear the brunt of climate disasters, pollution, and resource depletion. Low-income communities often live near toxic waste sites or in regions vulnerable to flooding and drought. Jesus’ call to care about the poor thus is inseparably connected to caring about environmentalism. Globally, less developed countries suffer the consequences of the environmental damage richer nations produce. Again, environmental justice is inseparable from economic justice.

If our present system has led to wealth disparity and ecological damage, what does that mean for the future? Some argue for a fundamental transformation, a post-capitalist system rooted in ecological and social priorities rather than profit. Others advocate for “green capitalism” or market reforms that internalize environmental costs through things like carbon pricing, circular economies, and corporate accountability. I believe that even these reforms cannot solve the problem. So long as economic success is measured by GDP and shareholder returns, sustainability for the people who are wage earners and the planet who supplies natural resources will always be a secondary priority.

A more equitable and sustainable future requires reimagining what we mean by prosperity. Instead of endless growth, societies might pursue well-being, balance, and the common good. The kind of redistribution of wealth that we encounter in the gospels, that Jesus called his audiences to, could be achieved today through such things as progressive taxation, public investment, and labor empowerment. This month’s recommended reading for Renewed Heart Ministries is Ingrid Robeyns’ Limitarianism: The Case Against Extreme Wealth. Whatever course we chose, it must be a path toward correcting our iniquity of widening inequity. 

Our future depends on policies that prioritize renewable energy, conservation, and sustainable production for both people and the planet. Grassroots movements, Indigenous perspectives, and cooperative models today offer alternatives that center community and stewardship rather than the demand for nonstop growth ing our present system.

Our present crises of growing inequality and the coming environmental collapse are both intrinsic symptoms of how we are choosing to shape our economic system. The relentless pursuit of profit, if left unchecked, will continue to erode both social cohesion and our planet’s foundations for life. 

Just like in the 1st Century, life-giving change requires of us today a profound moral and political shift away from a system that values growth above all to one that values justice, sustainability, and collective flourishing. The gospels call us, just as they called to those in the 1st Century, to the work of shaping our world into a safe, compassionate, just home for all. 

Discussion Group Questions

1. Share something that spoke to you from this week’s podcast episode with your discussion group.

2. If the Galilean prophet of the poor named Jesus lived and taught in our society today, what would he say is our coming crisis of one stone not being left on another? Share and discuss with your group.

3. What can you do this week, big or small, to continue setting in motion the work of shaping our world into a safe, compassionate, just home for everyone? 

Thanks for checking in with us, today.

I want to say a special thank you to all of our supporters out there. And if you would like to join them in supporting Renewed Heart Ministries’ work you can do so by going to renewedheartministries.com and clicking donate. 

My latest book Finding Jesus: A Fundamentalist Preacher Discovers the Socio-Political and Economic Teachings of the Gospels is available now on Amazon in paperback, Kindle and also on Audible in audio book format.

As always, you can find Renewed Heart Ministries each week on Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram and Meta’s Threads. If you haven’t done so already, please follow us on your chosen social media platforms for our daily posts. 

Thank you for listening to The Social Jesus Podcast. If you enjoyed this podcast please take a moment to like and subscribe and if the podcast platform you’re using offers this option, please leave us a positive review. This helps others find our podcast as well.

If you’d like to reach us here at Renewed Heart Ministries through email, you can reach us at info@renewedheartministries.com.

Right where you are, keep living in love, choosing compassion, taking action, and working toward justice.

I love each of you dearly,

I’ll see you next week.


A promotional image for 'The Social Jesus Podcast' featuring an artistic depiction of a man resembling Jesus alongside a microphone.

New Episode of The Social Jesus Podcast

A podcast where we talk about the intersection of faith and social justice and what a first century, prophet of the poor from Galilee might have to offer us today in our work of love, compassion and justice. 

This week:

Season 2 Episode 46: A World that is Just, Safe, and Compassionate for All

Luke 21:5-19

“Our present crises of growing inequality and the coming environmental collapse are both intrinsic symptoms of how we are choosing to shape our economic system. The relentless pursuit of profit, if left unchecked, will continue to erode both social cohesion and our planet’s foundations for life. Just like in the 1st Century, life-giving change requires of us today a profound moral and political shift away from a system that values growth above all to one that values justice, sustainability, and collective flourishing. The gospels call us, just as they called to those in the 1st Century, to the work of shaping our world into a safe, compassionate, just home for all. If the Galilean prophet of the poor named Jesus lived and taught in our society today, what would he say is our coming crisis of one stone not being left on another?”

Available on all major podcast carriers and at:

https://the-social-jesus-podcast.simplecast.com/episodes/a-world-that-is-just-safe-and-compassionate-for-all



Finding Jesus: A Fundamentalist Preacher Discovers the Socio-Political & Economic Teachings of the Gospels.

A promotional image for Herb Montgomery's book 'Finding Jesus,' featuring a close-up of an eye with a tear, alongside text stating 'Available Now on Amazon' and the Renewed Heart Ministries logo.

 

by Herb Montgomery

Available now on Amazon!

In Finding Jesus, author Herb Montgomery delves into the profound and often overlooked political dimensions of the gospels. Through meticulous analysis of biblical texts, historical context, and social discourse, this thought-provoking book unveils the gospels’ socio-political, economic teachings as rooted in a profound concern for justice, compassion, and the well-being of the marginalized. The book navigates the intersections between faith and societal justice, presenting a compelling argument for a more socially engaged and transformative Christianity.

Finding Jesus is not just a scholarly exploration; it is a call to action. It challenges readers to reevaluate their understanding of Christianity’s role in public life and to consider how the radical teachings of the gospels can inspire a renewed commitment to justice, equality, and compassion. This book is a must-read for those seeking a deeper understanding of the social implications of Christian faith and a blueprint for building a more just and inclusive society.


Are you getting all of RHM’s Free Resources?

Free Sign Up Here

Collage of various publications and resources related to Renewed Heart Ministries, including newsletters, podcast titles, and motivational quotes.