.............................................................................................................................................
It’s okay to build
wealth
.
.
Greed and materialism do
indeed corrode people’s insides - but it is still very possible for Christians
to honor God as they seek to make money and build wealth. When God is in the
middle of our asset-building labors, the process stays healthy and he blesses
it - it is better to accumulate a surplus so that you can help other people and
honor the Giver with your generous gifts
by Pastor
Mark Jeske
“Humility
is the fear of the LORD; its
wages are riches and honor and life” (Proverbs
22:4).
The
economic stress of the last decade or two has taken a toll on us all.
Everyone
suffered losses in the last ten years.
That
resentment in the Christian world draws on Jesus’ intense imagery as he warned
against materialism and greed.
How
does his metaphor of a camel squeezing through the eye of a needle (Mark
10:25) not stick in your mind?
The
upshot is that there seems to be a dark moral cloud over businesses that try to
make a profit or over people who seek to build their family’s assets.
Greed
and materialism do indeed corrode people’s insides.
But
it is still very possible for Christians to honor God as they seek to make
money and not spend it all (a.k.a. building wealth).
The
book of Proverbs gives God’s blessing on hard work, thrift, discipline, and a
servant spirit.
When
God is in the middle of our asset-building labors, the process stays healthy
and he blesses it: “Humility is the fear of the LORD; its wages are riches and
honor and life” (Proverbs 22:4).
Other
verses of Scripture reveal how tenderly God cares for the poor.
But
that does not make poverty a desirable destination.
It
is better to accumulate a surplus so that you can help other people and honor
the Giver with your generous gifts.
Pastor
Mark Jeske
brought the good news of Jesus Christ to viewers of Time of Grace for 18 years.
He is currently the senior pastor at St. Marcus Church, a thriving
multicultural congregation in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Mark is the author of
several books and dozens of devotional booklets on various topics. He and his
wife, Carol, have four adult children.
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