strength of journey
[By Joe Stowell from the pages of Our Daily Bread.]
Feb. 28,2012
Take heed and beware of covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses. —Luke 12:15
I
find it interesting that Jesus taught more about money than anything
else. And He wasn’t trying to ratchet up the treasury. As far as we
know, He never even asked for an offering. The reason He taught
extensively on the subject is that nothing clogs our spiritual arteries
more quickly than money—either working to have a lot of it or wishing
that we had.
Think of the man who brazenly asked Jesus, “Teacher,
tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me” (Luke 12:13).
Amazing! He had an opportunity to “go deep” with Jesus, but instead he
wanted deep pockets.
Jesus responded with a stunning,
counterintuitive statement: “Beware of covetousness, for one’s life
does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses” (Luke
12:15). He then went on to tell the parable of a rich man who was
wildly successful from a worldly standpoint—having so many crops that
he had to keep building bigger barns—but who, in God’s eyes, was
actually a “fool.” Not because he was rich, but because he was not rich
toward God.
You’ll hear a lot of advice about how to become rich.
But only Jesus tells it to us straight. It’s not about the money. It’s
about the richness of our relationship with Him and the joy of turning
our greed into generosity.
The riches of this world are vain,
They vanish in a day;
But sweet the treasures of God’s love—
They never pass away. —Bosch
They vanish in a day;
But sweet the treasures of God’s love—
They never pass away. —Bosch
Learning how to be rich toward God yields eternal dividends.
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