American stand-up comic Henry Youngman, once said, “What's the use of happiness? It can't buy you money.”
Actress Bo
Derek gave another perspective when she said, “Whoever said money can't buy
happiness simply didn't know where to go shopping!”
And British
comedian Spike Milligan put it another way; “Money can't buy happiness, but it
can get you a more pleasant form of misery!”
Oddly
enough, the word “contentment” occurs seven times in the Bible, and in six of
them the context is money.
It is
sometimes noted that Jesus spoke more about money than about almost anything
else. It
was he who said that our attitude towards money is a gauge of our spiritual
health. “For where your treasure is there your heart will also be.” (Matthew
6.21). No wonder; it impacts so many aspects of our lives; earning, budgeting, saving,
spending, hording, wasting, gambling, running up debt and giving.
He also
said that managing our personal finances diligently is a requirement for being
given spiritual responsibility. “If you have not been trustworthy in handling
worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches?” (Luke 16.11).
When Jesus questioned
people on how serious they were about following him, he often did so in the
very un-British way of bringing up the subject of money.
“Sell everything
you have and give to the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven. Then
come, follow me.” (Luke 18.22).
“No one can
serve two masters; either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will
be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.”
(Matthew 6.24).
And again:
“It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone
who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.” (Mark 10.25).
I once
challenged a congregation (in a very un-British way) from the pulpit to conduct
an experiment to determine if God can be trusted. Since God permits us - indeed
invites us - to test him in Malachi 3.10 by tithing and then seeing if he will
not pour out abundant blessing in return, I invited anyone who had never given
the Lord their first tenth to start doing so, and then see if he disappointed
them afterwards.
For anyone
who has never done this before, this is terrifying. What if it doesn’t work for
me? Isn’t this irresponsible given my situation? What if it plunges me into
debt?
So I
offered a three-month trial. The deal? You give God your first 10% and pray
that he will bless and provide in such a way that the remaining 90% goes
further during that time.
If, at the
end of three months, anyone felt that God had not blessed them as he has
promised, the church treasurer would refund them every penny. No questions
asked, no judging, no assumption of failure… all your money back, case closed.
Three
months on, no one claimed a refund from the treasurer. Because not one person
dared take up the challenge.
Would you have done? What do you think the way you handle money says about your faith? And about your general state of happiness?
No comments:
Post a Comment