This is a short book zeroing in on the myth-making propensities in early capitalism. The first three chapters look at Grotius, Locke & Adam Smith. Mainly, the authors are interested in how these writers (mis)used the Bible to spin their theories & myths. Actually, these writers don't seem to have used the Bible much & what they did use was in the first three chapters of Genesis and mostly to turn the biblical book on its head. These brief analyses are helpful for seeing the theological and moral problems in capitalism. I was particularly struck by how Grotius and Locke write about men seizing goods that had been common and that somehow this is a good thing. Grotius especially inadvertently shows slavery to be at the root of private property and the authors point out that the earliest known legal treatise on property, dating from Roman times, is about slaves. A further weakness of Grotius and Locke not addressed in this book is that it seems that it is not grabbing property that is primal but the seizure of people, which is what the rise of monarchy is about. Adam Smith is lampooned mercilessly as a naive spinner of feeble yarns. The trouble is, many people believe them to this day and will not accept any reality checks upon them. The naivety of the notion that collective self-interest works out for the public good is exposed quite well. More important, the myth of the invisible hand is demonstrated to be equivocal as both sacred and secular, but this equivocation inevitably lead to a secularized outlook, a secularizing of the Bible and divine providence that leaves God out of the picture. Thomas Malthus, the fourth figure of the book is a dose of fresh cold water in his jaundiced view of human nature which puts paid to rosy-eyed notions of self-interest being a good thing. But if Malthus had any helpful suggestions for humanity's redemption in Christ, these authors didn't find it. (Yes, Malthus was a preacher and he preached redemption but it doesn't seem to connect with economic issues. The last paragraph of the conclusion commends Karl Marx as a better alternative. My basic agreement of the assessments of Smith et. al. doesn't attract me much to this recommendation as a government seizing property doesn't seem better than capitalists doing it. A helpful book for getting a sense of direction gaining a Christian critique of capitalism's difficulties but not helpful for where we go from there.