Chapter 1 |
|
Money and Culture
"Money is a terrible master, but an excellent
servant."-P.T. Barnum
Law of Unity: Matthew 18:19-20
"If two of you shall agree on earth
about whatever you ask, it will come to pass and be done for you
by My Father in heaven. For wherever two or three are gathered together
in My name, there I AM in the midst of them."
Whatever your current situation, you are there because either willingly, or by forceful
circumstances, you came into agreement with influential powers surrounding your life. Before
we can change present financial conditions we need to analyze how we got here? For some, present
conditions may be "in debt" or simply living paycheck to paycheck. Perhaps "here" is living
comfortably month to month, with a retirement plan, and even a savings account, but no dynamic
plan to really operate "abundantly above and beyond all we can ask or think." Even obedient
tithers are often caught unexpectedly and have little excess to give or donate to Great Commission
callings. Even fewer are able to answer those callings personally.
Let's consider the lifestyle of the not so rich or famous American-Christian. If greed and fear
are truly the primary motivators of our culture's corporate mind-set, we can easily define what
attitudes and actions influence our society. This table contrasts the stages of two distinct
lifestyles. |
| American Christian |
Christian American |
| Money measures our self-worth |
Christ has made us
worthy, valuable |
| Money is A passport to Happiness |
Our relationship in Him = Happiness |
| Money is a Measure of Success |
Spiritual growth determines success |
| Money is the Foundation for Security |
He is our Source, Comforter, and Counsel |
|
When we pray in agreement with God for our financial wisdom, His power is
released to intervene. We must sign each request-check with "In the name of Jesus Christ,"
just as we sign a check for an amount to anything. The request is not honored at the bank
unless our signature is on the check. God is obligated to honor our request when we ask
anything according to His will in the name of Jesus, His Son. Also, once we sign a check we
do not say, " Boy, I hope that check clears!" We sign the check with confidence that the funds
are there to cover the need. That is the same way we should expect our prayers to be covered
by God when we sign in Jesus' name. |
The Battle for Your Mind
"Every good and perfect gift comes from the Father." James 1:17
"He has given us all things pertaining to life and Godliness." 2nd Peter 1:3
As a system of exchange for goods or services in
our culture, Money is Good. The Bible teaches us that the Love
of Money is the root of evil. God created all things for
our good. When we exalt those things above our Creator
and His purpose in our lives, they become evil. In our culture we
seldom consider money, talent, or gift as the same concept. However,
because of the culture in which Jesus ministered, He taught parables
interchanging these words to impact change in the lifestyles of
those He reached. In his search for Motives concerning money and
the heart, He encountered a greater number of people whereby they
did not have money- Money had them. In His parable of the
Seed, Jesus taught, "These are they that fell to the earth and sprang
up, but the worries of this life, the deceitfulness of
riches (NOT riches themselves), and the desires for other
things came in and choked the Word, making it unfruitful." Such
controlling relationships, in addition to Money-to-Greed, could
be Food-to-Gluttony, Toys-to-Idols, Fashion-to-Vanity, and Friendships-to-Manipulation.
Each of these items alone is a blessing and not evil in themselves,
but when given over to compulsion and obsession, they become SIN.
Let's examine how a concept develops into a lifestyle of self-consumption
and sin.
|
| Exercise: Select an initial concept or
idea and develop it toward a lifestyle outcome. |
| Concept: an Idea |
| Healthy- (example-Credit
Card) |
Unhealthy
(Credit Card Debt) |
| Attitude:
Mindset of thought or opinion |
| Healthy |
Unhealthy |
| Action: |
| Healthy |
Unhealthy |
| Habit: |
| Healthy |
Unhealthy |
| Lifestyle: |
| Healthy |
Unhealthy |
|
| To print a copy of the above exercise Click Here. |
With healthy concepts to lifestyles, our riches are used to serve those in
need, not satisfy our own lusts for power, image, or material excess. Many people are complacent
with a concept of "us four and no more." The movement for the Great Commission would have never
evangelized the world if the Disciples had shared that narrow view. They worked together so that
there would always be excess to give liberally to those who were oppressed. They gave into others
lives to encourage and equip them to "go and do likewise." Our society has nurtured the concept
that standards are met at minimum requirements. "What's the least I have to do to get accepted-pass
this course-get a raise-be a member-stay married-pay taxes-pay my tithe?" We often boast. "That's
the least I could do," to which the unspoken response is, "and we can count on you for doing the
least!"
If, however, we are to follow Jesus' example, He asked that we do everything
"as unto the Lord:" courses, jobs, membership, taxes, relationships, and especially offerings and
tithes. The widow's mite was a sacrificial gift in thanksgiving for all the Lord meant to her. Some
people can pay their tithe and not feel a shortage. She felt the full impact. God did not give the
minimum requirement concerning our salvation and covenant. He gave the Maximum. When paying tithes
we should consider if we would like the hundred-fold return on the gross income, or simply the net
income? That question often brings light to our motives and perspective. We should give out of
obedience and expectation for a Heavenly return first, then our material return.
As for rendering to Caesar what is Caesar's, our taxes are a privileged
opportunity for us to bless our most underpaid servants in this society. Safety forces, Military
forces, educators, governing officials each depend on tax dollars, not simply for salaries, but for
the equipment and supplies vital to the quality of service they are able to provide for us. If we
cheat on our tax dollars, for example, that deficit effects the quality of equipment a fire
department uses to rescue our children at their school. We not only cheat "the system," we cheat
their ability to provide the best for our children and neighborhoods. |
We really
need to mature toward a more global, God-like perspective of the
effect our monetary concept has on the big picture. We teach generation
after generation to beat the system, don't do anymore than you have
to, get all you can, with a Handout, poor mouth mentality. In great
contrast, our heritage was founded on sacrifice, self-denial, no
work-no eat, learn all you can, do or die, whatever it takes to
win mentality. Instead of being part of the solution as our ancestors
of the Faith were, we have become part of the problem. In our lust
for the things of this world we have failed to recognize that lusts
can never be satisfied. We become entangled as carnal, material
believers with newer, bigger, faster, more, most, best! Too often
the opposite is true: having a newer wife may not be better; a bigger
house gives close families "more personal space"; a faster car may
be deadly; having the most clients may result in stress problems;
having the best ministry may nurture pride.
Examining personal motives and concepts is crucial to the successful
outcome of our financial quest. Whatever we set ourselves in agreement with for personal goals
and attitudes will likely "come to pass." Therefore, it is imperative that we set our spirit,
soul (mind), and body in agreement with God's laws and principles concerning wealth and riches,
not society's.
|
 |
|
| |
Got Questions?
Enrollment:
1-800-403-3287
Customer Support:
1-800-887-2389
|