Is managing money just about having a budget and planning for retirement?
Or does how we manage our money have something to do with eternity? Check out
this message from Randy Alcorn on the topic.
When Hudson Taylor opened a bank
account for the China Inland Mission, the application form asked for an asset
list. Taylor wrote the following as the sum total of his assets: “Ten pounds
and all the promises of God.” Our greatest resources are spiritual, not material.
They come from another world, not this one.
One morning I was at a restaurant
when a frazzled woman blew through the door and loudly complained to her
friend, “The wipers aren’t working again on my Porsche, and the Audi’s in for
repairs. I’ve had it!”
I smiled but at the same time was
saddened for this poor woman. (Yes, poor
woman.) What a contrast to the believer with eternal perspective:
I have
learned to be content whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in
need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content
in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in
plenty or in want. I can do everything through him who gives me strength. (Philippians
4:11-13)
Paul doesn’t say it is wrong to live
in plenty, but that the same secret to contentment applies then as when we’re
in poverty. Contentment isn’t the product of material abundance; it results
from our invisible resources in Christ. In the third century, Cyprian, bishop
of Carthage, wrote this description of the affluent:
Their
property held them in chains . . . chains which shackled their
courage and choked their faith and hampered their judgment and throttled their
souls. . . . If they stored up their treasure in heaven, they would
not now have an enemy and a thief within their household. . . . They
think of themselves as owners, whereas it is they rather who are owned:
enslaved as they are to their own property, they are not the masters of their
money but its slaves.
God keeps records of what we do with
his money. At the moment we meet Christ—at our death or his return—all accounts
will be frozen, all assets and expenditures opened for the Final Audit. And
then it’s God himself—the Owner, Manager, and Auditor of the Bank of
Eternity—who will make eternal dispersals based on how our account reads after
the last deposit has been made and the account finally closed.
C. T. Studd was a rich and famous
English athlete who sold his entire estate, gave it away, and went to the
mission field to serve Christ. He summed up the perspective that motivated him:
“Only one life, ’twill soon be past. Only what’s done for Christ will last.”
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