In many of the more conservative Christian circles there is this radical idea that taxation is completely against Christian morality and principles. The argument is always a strange syncretism of Libertarianism and Christianity and usually follows these lines:
God created man to work, and work is good. The fruits of a man’s labor are his and his alone. No one has rights to another man’s resources, taking it is theft. The government takes a man’s income through threats of prison and physical violence as taxes. Clearly this is theft and also against the commandments of God. Therefore taxation is immoral and unbiblical.
The argument is compelling, but not well thought out.
Firstly, as all Americans (and all citizens of free nations) know, the power of government derives from the consent of the governed. This is a basic tenant of Classical Liberalism, from which the modern ideology of Libertarianism gets its basis. If free men make up a society then the rules and rulers of that society can only have the powers given to them by that society. One of the most familiar examples of this is a democracy like the government of the US. Free people elect others to represent them, who then create the rules of society. By electing these leaders to do their will, the people are consenting tacitly to follow them. Therefore, anyone voluntarily and peacefully living in such a society has also consented to the laws created by these elected officials. Therefore if taxes are part of these laws, they cannot be stealing since the citizens have consented to give up their money freely.
Secondly, while the Bible is explicitly against stealing, the Bible is also just as explicitly for paying taxes. In Luke 20:22 Jesus is asked “Is it right for us to pay taxes to Caesar or not?” Noting that the coin had Caesar’s face on it, he famously answers: “Then give to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s.” Its hard to get more explicit than that: if it is the government’s then give it to the government. If the government requires taxes from you, then pay them. This is repeated again by Paul in Romans 13:6-7 “This is also why you pay taxes, for the authorities are God’s servants, who give their full time to governing. Give everyone what you owe him: If you owe taxes, pay taxes; if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then respect; if honor, then honor.”
Lastly, on a more theological note, when trying to baptize the accumulation of personal wealth as something ordained by God, one should keep in mind that God doesn’t have a particularly high view the rich. One simply has to look at Jesus’ exhortations to give up all earthly possessions and his oft repeated statement about it being easier for a rich man to go through the eye of a needle than to enter heaven. Wealth is just as much a hinderance as a blessing for a Christian. Therefore Christians should weigh the retention of their material wealth against the possibility of that wealth providing a social safety net for the unfortunate, or providing protection for their neighbors.
No one likes paying taxes. However taxation is a necessary way to fund services that maintain order and make living in a modern society possible. Everyone is aware that their taxes go to fund roads and police, but in the US huge amounts of tax dollars are also spent on research grants for medicine, science, and technologies that do not have any immediate monetary return. The DARPA network was one such project, and apparently that turned out pretty well. So, while there is always waste to be eliminated, Christians simply cannot assert that taxation is stealing or that it is inherently immoral.